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Foreign. Hello, it's Miranda. I'm back with a new mini episode of Pod Force One. This feature is a little more topical and relevant to my job as a columnist for the New York Post. Today's topic is about New York's Marxist mayor, Zoran Mamdani, and his ominous promise to solve the city's housing problems by seizing private property block by block. It's a path that has always ended in misery, but we can't say we weren't warned. Zoran Mamdani's promise to seize the properties of landlords he deems unworthy should send a chill down the spine of every New Yorker. When necessary, we will take aggressive legal action to remove negligent owners and property managers, the socialist mayor told a cheering crowd of leftists in Brooklyn on Tuesday when he unveiled his block by block housing plan for buildings that have suffered chronic neglect. We will work to transfer ownership to responsible stewards, including community land trusts, non profits, or even the tenants themselves. Wherever in history his Marxist prescriptions have been applied, misery and tyranny follow. From Stalin to Mao to Pol Pot, 100 million deaths were caused by communist regimes in the 20th century alone. This is a lesson the 34 year old nepo baby appears to have missed or doesn't care to heed, because the revolution is never about improving the lot of the downtrodden. It's all about seizing power. Mandani, having won office on the Democratic Socialists of America ticket, told us just what he thought of America in his enormous inaugural address. We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism, he said. By collectivism he means the state must seize the means of production, the factories, land, businesses, property and capital that generate wealth. This requires total economic control, which is impossible without total social control. The result is always one party rule, secret police, censorship and tyranny. In his victory speech, Mamdani singled out non Western immigrants for praise. I speak of Yemeni bodega owners and Mexican abuelas, Senegalese taxi drivers and Uzbek nurses, Trinidadian line cooks and Ethiopian aunties. End quote. He gave a special shout out to neighborhoods with a heavy Muslim presence. Every New Yorker in Kensington and Midwood and Hunts Point know that this city is your city and this democracy is yours too. End quote. Thus, the Ugandan born Muslim signalled from day one that his mayoralty would elevate only people like him, recent arrivals from countries plagued by failed socialist policies, weak institutions, minimal property rights and a breakdown in law and order. Ironically, while he claims to champion these refugees of failed collectivism. He works to recreate those same miserable conditions in New York. The plight of hard working fourth generation New Yorker Tom Diana, 64, is a salutary example of how the little guy gets screwed under the radical left policies that have accumulated in this city over the past decade. Diana, a father of three, hails from Italian, Irish and German roots. His wife is a legal immigrant of Indian British extraction. He grew up in queens and worked 45 years in heavy construction as a licensed engineer and builder. In 1988 he set himself up for retirement by buying a rundown eight unit apartment building in Park Slope. For years he laboriously renovated the building, working all day on construction jobs, coming home and putting in another four or five hours on the tools, sleeping on a mattress on the floor, cooking in a microwave and taking his laundry to his mother's place on weekends. But for the past eight years, one of his tenants has refused to pay rent and refuses to move out of the building, leaving diana More than $200,000 out of pocket while still having to pay $1,500 a month in out for the two bedroom apartment, plus thousands in legal costs trying to have the squatter evicted. To rub salt in the wound, he pays exorbitant property taxes to the city that gives his rorting tenant free legal representation in front of activist left wing judges who regard her as a victim and Diana as a greedy capitalist. He was back in court again last month, but got word from his lawyer this week that his case has been postponed yet again to August. I have no money left, he says. It's not fair. If it weren't for the fact that he still works and his two builder sons help him with the building's maintenance, he would be underwater. He can't even help his daughter with tuition for community college. With all the work I put into that building, I wonder if it would have been worth it if I just worked overtime at the job. Problem is, I'm a builder. I like building things. End quote Mamdani uses phony smiles and soft cliches to disguise his intent, but his friend and fellow Champagne socialist, the dog torturing Turkish American twitch Streamer Hassan Piker, 34, spelled it out during one of his live stream rants against landlords like Diana. Kill them, he said. Murder those mother effers in the streets. Let the streets soak in their effing red capitalist blood. Sia Weaver, the 37 year old militant trust fund socialist whom Mamdani appointed director of the New York City Mayor's Office to protect tenants, was more specific property is theft. Seize all property. Home ownership is a weapon of white supremacy, she has said on social media. In a 2021 DSA video, she declared transitioning to treating private property as a collective good towards a model of shared equity will mean that families and white families especially who are homeowners, are going to have a different relationship to property than the one that we currently have said with a smile. While some New Yorkers dismiss Mamdani's ravings about seizing private property as childish babble, pointing out the mayor can't override the rule of law, sage political operatives are less sanguine. Queens firebrand Vicki Palladino, one of only five Republicans on the New York City Council, works inside the belly of the beast that is the Democrat machine controlling the city. The former small business owner has observed policies once unthinkable come to fruition under the ascendant far left of the Democrat Party, like defunding the police, catch and release bail and sanctuary city protection for illegal migrant criminals. She warns that Mamdani and other DSA organisers like Weaver will weaponise the city Buildings Department to begin writing as many violations as possible in order to bolster the city's effort to justify a seizure. The combination of hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines, rent strikes and constant threats and harassment against landlords by militant activists will make the situation untenable for any property owner to realistically fight and the city will seize the property, she wrote this week on X. The landlord will be lucky to walk away without prison or being beaten to death in the street by an angry mob. Palladino also points out the ominous intent behind Mamdani's promise to turn the seized properties over to nonprofits. The Trump administration's moves to dismantle leftist boondoggles such as usaid, indict the Southern Poverty Law cent and investigate CCP linked megadonors like Neville Roy Singham represent an existential threat to the funding networks that sustain the militant left's activist infrastructure. So Mamdani's solution is to allocate potentially hundreds of billions of dollars of New York real estate to allied nonprofits to make them financially self sufficient. No matter who is in the White House, there are no bad ideas, former VP Kamala Harris recently declared in a speech pandering to her party's new socialist base for a potential presidential run. That's the specialty of the dsa, reviving bad ideas that history has proven disastrous. Thanks for listening. I'll be back with another mini episode on Monday. Hope you can tune in and. And enjoy the rest of your week.
Host: Miranda Devine (New York Post)
Date: May 29, 2026
In this PF1 Friday Minisode, Miranda Devine offers a pointed critique of New York Mayor Zoran Mamdani’s newly announced “block by block” housing plan—a policy that, she argues, is rooted in Marxist ideology and endangers the private property rights of city landlords. The episode covers Mamdani’s proposals, their ideological dimensions, historical parallels, and anticipated real-world consequences, highlighting both political strategies and personal narratives impacted by the policy.
Announcement & Intent
“Zoran Mamdani’s promise to seize the properties of landlords he deems unworthy should send a chill down the spine of every New Yorker.”
Collectivism & Historical Parallels
“By collectivism, he means the state must seize the means of production, the factories, land, businesses, property, and capital that generate wealth. This requires total economic control, which is impossible without total social control.”
Identity Politics & Immigration
“I speak of Yemeni bodega owners and Mexican abuelas, Senegalese taxi drivers and Uzbek nurses, Trinidadian line cooks and Ethiopian aunties… Every New Yorker in Kensington and Midwood and Hunts Point know that this city is your city and this democracy is yours too.”
Background
Systemic Problems
“I have no money left. It’s not fair.”
Personal Toll
“With all the work I put into that building, I wonder if it would have been worth it if I just worked overtime at the job. Problem is, I’m a builder. I like building things.”
Harsh Rhetoric from Political Allies
Sia Weaver’s Position on Property
Sia Weaver, appointed by Mamdani to head the Mayor’s Office to protect tenants, is quoted declaring:
Further, on a 2021 DSA video:
"Transitioning to treating private property as a collective good towards a model of shared equity will mean that families, and white families especially who are homeowners, are going to have a different relationship to property than the one we currently have." (delivered with a smile)
Warnings from the Opposition
Queens City Council Republican Vickie Palladino expresses that incremental changes under the Democratic Socialists are already eroding landlord protections:
Palladino predicts an escalation of city efforts to seize property via regulatory means:
Allocation to Non-Profits & Power Consolidation
Wider Political Context
Miranda’s tone throughout is urgent, critical, and combatively skeptical, blending journalistic narrative with polemic warnings about the dangers of Mamdani’s policy proposals. The episode frames the debate as a struggle over the city’s values, the sanctity of private property, and the city’s future direction.
End of Summary