New York’s Jews after Mamdani’s victory
They can choose quiescence, flight, organization, or resistance.
As the title of this newsletter suggests, I do not care for delusions, and we should have none.
It is all-important, then, to acknowledge the fact that Zohran Mamdani will unquestionably be the next mayor of New York. There are too many votes in cheap populist demagoguery and hating the Jews to stop him.
So, the question now is not how to prevent a Mamdani victory. The question is how the Jews ought to deal with the fact that an open antisemite will soon rule America’s leading—if declining—city with its million-strong Jewish minority.
There would seem to be four options:
Quiescence
Historically, Diaspora Jews’ default option has been to keep quiet, avoid trouble, and hope for the best. This strategy has been somewhat viable in the short term, but it always fails in the long term, with devastating consequences. Despite this, it has been learned over centuries and will likely be the initial reaction to Mamdani’s election.
Indeed, it has already been effectively adopted by America’s decadent and depraved Jewish leadership. These so-called “leaders have said little if anything against Mamdani, for obvious reasons: They are prisoners of their own privilege and their useless loyalties to Democratic Party and progressive politics.
Even in the medium term, quiescence will not work. It is all but inevitable that Mamdani and his minions will enable and incite violence against Jews of a much more extreme variety than we have yet seen, including outright pogroms.
Those who commit such crimes will be protected by Mamdani and his administration, facing few if any consequences. The result, of course, will be further escalation.
In the face of this, a strategy of quiescence is not only bound to fail. It will also be a shameful submission to racist violence, oppression, and violation. This is the worst of all possible options.
Flight
Flight is also a well-worn Jewish survival strategy: When things become intolerable, get out.
Jews are already leaving systemically antisemitic northern US cities for less racist southern municipalities. Under a Mamdani regime, this trend could accelerate, leading to the disappearance of a significant portion of the New York Jewish community.
Mamdani and his minions would no doubt rejoice in this, regarding it as “the chickens coming home to roost.” It would also remove a possible source of powerful political opposition.
It would, however, be a historical tragedy and, on Mamdani’s part, a historical crime.
The New York Jewish community is, after all, several centuries old. To New York Jews, Mamdani just got here yesterday, and in persecuting them, he is invading their centuries-old home. It is their city, not his.
Given this, Jews should not give Mamdani the satisfaction of seeing them decamp elsewhere. They ought to stay and engage in the long but promising struggle against him and his neo-antisemitic movement.
Organize
This struggle will require extensive organization and activism. What form this might take is not currently known. However, New York Jews have a good model in the form of the movement undertaken by British Jews to oppose the former neo-antisemitic head of the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn.
Coordinating non-violent action both in the streets and through official channels, British Jews slowly wore down Corbyn’s authority, punctured his carefully crafted image of compassion and care, exposed the crypto-racism behind his façade of anti-racism, and contributed mightily to his ultimate landslide defeat.
Such a struggle will require the extensive and coordinated organization between individuals and groups that American Jews excel at on behalf of others but rarely undertake on behalf of themselves.
This, in turn, will require a change in mentality. New York Jews will have to accept that they are no longer a comfortable and prosperous community, but an embattled minority under existential threat that can no longer afford quiescence.
It remains to be seen if this change can and will happen.
Resist
Finally, there is the “nuclear option.” If Mamdani’s tyranny will not yield to non-violent tactics and the neo-antisemites succeed in committing and getting away with increasingly violent atrocities, then New York Jews will have to look to their own physical self-defense.
This will involve organizing not just for opposition but active resistance. New York Jews will have to form aggressive self-defense organizations, exercise their Second Amendment rights to arm themselves for self-defense, and prepare for potentially violent confrontations with Mamdani’s street minions within the bounds of law and morality.
This will require an even greater change in mentality than non-violent organization. The change, however, will be the simple recognition of a reality widely accepted among non-Jews. It was put concisely by the writer James Burnham when he said, “In real social life, only power can control power.”
So, if they are to survive “real social life,” the Jews must have power. If Mamdani gives them no option other than the acquisition of power by active resistance, so be it. Under such circumstances, resistance will be nothing more than the logical outcome.
There is no doubt that New York’s Jewish community is about to face an ordeal of the most grievous kind. It will be a long, sometimes twilight struggle that, if they steel themselves for the task, they can and will win. But victory will require a sea change in the mentality of New York Jews and a new understanding of their place in the city’s social, cultural, and political hierarchy.
We should hope that this change takes place and yet another millennial crime is prevented. It must be prevented before the new Hamans seize not only municipal but potentially national power. This is the great task before New York’s Jews, who, whether they know it or not, are about to become the vanguard of the struggle.
Mr Kerstein, I have been reading you for some time but subscribed so I could add to this discussion that I have already addressed in a sarcastic manner in my own Substack under the title "Imagine New York without Jews". It featured an AI cartoon of Sinatra singing New York, New York... "Start spreading the news... New York has no Jews!"
I was obviously making the point that should Mandani win the mayoralty, many Jews would flee NYC. Unlike you, I think this is a good idea. I am not that much of admirer of the war on the wretched Corbyn successful az that may have been. The UK remains a hotbed of antisemitism and Islamism and is not, in my view, to be imitated. As one who was born in Manhattan, lived decades in LA as a screenwriter, and now in NAshville, New York even now (before Mandani) is intolerable to me.
All great cities have their days in the sun--Rome, Athens and so forth--and the time for NY to go is gone. It will be hastened by many successful Jews leaving (largely to Miami or Tel Aviv) and New York will have to stew in its juices. The city will go into a rapid, and VERY DESERVED, decline. A lesson (hopefully) will be learned. Some of this is sad. I love the Metropolitan Museum and the Opera as much as most people (the theater is already a wasteland) but nothing is perfect. One can always visit.
But NYC was largely (not exclusively of course) built by Jews in almost every area of life. Jesse Jackson called it "hymie town" for a reason, obnoxious as that term was. We can, and have, built great things in other places and other times. . Socialism, meanwhile, as anyone with an IQ in the proverbial triple digits knows, has never worked and never will, The wretched Jewish pols of NY like Schumer can go stuff it in their slavish hypocrisy as they take a knee for Mamdani. They have been less than pond scum for years. Florida has better government anyway by far. Move there. Or head to Jerusalem, or anywhere in Eretz Israel. In January, every Jew reading this will thank me as New York turns into more of a hellhole than it already is. You will be doing something more revolutionary than marching against stupid progressives who won't listen to you.. (When have they ever?). And if New York comes back to its senses because it goes broke, you can always return. But don't hold your breath.
Too many New York Jews are in denial, apathetic or internally anti-semitic. Jews in my circles do not even talk about it among themselves. I do not think the community has the fight, or the self-respect in them. I wish it were not so, but my romance with New York is over. I would like to leave.