“A rat in a maze is free to go anywhere, as long as it stays in the maze.”
Dec 08, 2025


“The Days of the United States Propping Up the Entire World Order Like Atlas Are Over.” On Thursday, the White House released the new National Security Strategy for the United States. Others may well give it a different read, but here is my quick take:
The document is ghoulish, abhorrent, repetitious, and sometimes incoherent, but I found its honesty refreshing. The mask is torn off sanctimonious bullshit, tall tales about spreading democracy and caring about human rights. The US is “not grounded in traditional political idealism,” but by “America First.” (P.8) A bit of the usual boilerplate is here, but for the most part, the ideological cover is gone.
Dan Caldwell, onetime advisor to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, applauded the new American military restraint, saying, “For too long, delusion undergirded our foreign policy, delusion about America’s role in the world, delusion about our interests, and delusion about what we can achieve through military force. This is a reality-based document in that regard.” (NY Times,12/7/2025)
In place of pretense, the document spells out what US policy has always been about: undisguised economic nationalism — whatever benefits American grifter capitalism. All this unexpected candor required the New York Times to lamentably and hypocritically describe the new doctrine as “Security Strategy Focused on Profit, Not Spreading Democracy.”
Going further, General Wesley Clark, former NATO Commander, joined in by saying that
“The United States has sacrificed the magic of America. For 250 years, America lived the dream that we gave to all mankind. And we acted to protect that. The rules-based international order has served us so well.”
Yes, he actually said that…

Oh? These cunts, and so the Semen Drip Trump is flailing with his pedophile pedigree:
President Trump lambasted former ally Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene on Truth Social Monday morning, after the Georgia Republican told CBS News’ “60 Minutes“ the president has forsaken his base.
Once one of Mr. Trump’s staunchest allies in Congress, Greene has become one of the few Republicans willing to speak out against him in public. As she prepares to resign from Congress before her term ends, Greene told “60 Minutes” correspondent Lesley Stahl the president isn’t living up to his “America First” motto, and she connected death threats she says she has received with the president’s comments about her.
The president said the only reason Greene “went BAD is that she was JILTED by the president of the United States.”
“Marjorie is not AMERICA FIRST or MAGA, because nobody could have changed her views so fast, and her new views are those of a very dumb person,” the president wrote on Truth Social, calling Greene “washed up” and a “low IQ traitor.”
The president also blasted Stahl, “60 Minutes” and the new ownership of Paramount, CBS’s parent company, decrying the company’s decision to “allow a show like this to air.” He added, “Since they bought it, 60 Minutes has actually gotten WORSE!”




Fucking clowns with fucking power. White POWER.
The mother of White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt’s nephew was ordered released from immigration detention on Monday, according to her attorney.
Bruna Caroline Ferreira, who is in the process of obtaining a green card and previously held DACA status, was ordered released by an immigration judge on a minimum bond of $1,500.
Ferreira’s attorney, Todd Pomerleau, told ABC News that he argued at a hearing that his client is not a “criminal illegal alien,” as described by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), nor that she is a flight risk.
Ferreira is expected to be released Monday or Tuesday, according to Pomerleau.
The White House did not immediately respond to an ABC News request for comment.
DHS confirmed two weeks ago that Ferreira had been detained. A reporter with ABC New Hampshire station WMUR spoke with Leavitt’s brother, Michael Leavitt, who also confirmed the arrest and said Ferreira had been detained a few weeks previously.

PSYCHOSIS of whiteness.

A recent commission to photograph a set of images of Kehinde Andrews; academic and author of Afro-Caribbean heritage. His name Kehinde is a yoruba name of a second born of the twin. He is an associate professor of Sociology at Birmingham City University, the director of the Centre for Critical Social Research, founder of the Organisation of Black Unity, and co-chair of the Black Studies Association. He is “the UK’s first professor of black studies. His most recent book is titled ‘Back to Black’ and as a portrait photographer is was fascinating to talk to him.

We are domestic terrorists, questioning Zuckerberg and Meta and Google and Brin and Karp and Palantir and all the other data center fascists . . . and calling for a stop of data centers is, of course, antisemitism!
A coalition of more than 230 environmental groups has demanded a national moratorium on new datacenters in the US, the latest salvo in a growing backlash to a booming artificial intelligence industry that has been blamed for escalating electricity bills and worsening the climate crisis.
The green groups, including Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Food & Water Watch and dozens of local organizations, have urged members of Congress to halt the proliferation of energy-hungry datacenters, accusing them of causing planet-heating emissions, sucking up vast amounts of water and exacerbating electricity bill increases that have hit Americans this year.
“The rapid, largely unregulated rise of datacenters to fuel the AI and crypto frenzy is disrupting communities across the country and threatening Americans’ economic, environmental, climate and water security,” the letter states, adding that approval of new data centers should be paused until new regulations are put in place.

Fucking Jew telling the world what Santa and his Elves shouldn’t eat. Handmaid’s tale for Goyim.
Dr. Oz Tells His Federal Employees to Eat Less
“You don’t have to try every cookie on the holiday table,” wrote Mehmet Oz in an email to all Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services staffers.

These fucking cunts, man, on every fucking level: Republicans push high deductible plans and health savings accounts.
Sarah Monroe once had a relatively comfortable middle-class life.
She and her family lived in a neatly landscaped neighborhood near Cleveland. They had a six-figure income and health insurance through her job. Then, four years ago, when Monroe was pregnant with twin girls, something started to feel off.
“I kept having to come into the emergency room for fainting and other symptoms,” recalled Monroe, 43, who works for an insurance company.
The babies were fine. But after months of tests and hospital trips, Monroe was diagnosed with a potentially dangerous heart condition.
It would be costly. Within a year, as she juggled a serious illness and a pair of newborns, Monroe was buried under more than $13,000 in medical debt.
About 100 million people in the U.S. have some form of health care debt, a 2022 survey showed.
Most, like Monroe, are insured.
Jews: Really fucked up Money and Jew and Zionism First, at any fucking cost, really, Arabs and Warner Brothers and Discovery?

- Paramount owners Larry and David Ellison are making a hostile bid for Warner Bros. Discovery.
- But they’re not doing it alone: Three of their partners are oil-rich Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi.
- Those three nations won’t have any say over a combined Paramount-WBD, the Ellisons say. So what will they get?

They are neuroperverts, sorry, Jews: Palantir launches ‘Neurodivergent Fellowship’ after video of its CEO unable to sit still goes viral
In the job description, Palantir said the “Neurodivergent Fellowship” is a “recruitment pathway for exceptional neurodivergent talent.”
“This is not a diversity initiative,” the job description states, referencing a hot-button topic among company leaders.


Jew Glosser Miller is key to the Gestapo:

This week, Corrie found herself in a group rushing to support her friend, Rhoda Christenson. She’d just learned that Christenson’s husband was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Already in disbelief, she was shocked to learn that ICE was describing him as a violent gang member.
“He’s always been a person that would give his shirt off of his back to anybody. He’s always been there to support people,” Corrie said. “I don’t believe you can look at a person from 20 years ago and base decisions on that person today.”
Abdulkadir Sharif Abdi is among twelve people detained in the Department of Homeland Security’s “Operation Metro Surge” in the Twin Cities. The enforcement came as President Trump launched insults at Somali Minnesotans, calling the community GARBAGE.

Handmaid’s tale . . . . VIEWPOINT DISCRIMINATION. There you have Orwell on TikTok. A statement from the university said the instructor “allegedly demonstrated viewpoint discrimination by excusing students who intended to miss class to attend a protest on campus, but not extending the same benefit to students who intended to miss class to express a counter-viewpoint.”

Students had gathered on Friday to protest the decision to put a graduate student on leave after giving undergraduate student Samantha Fulnecky a failing grade on her essay, which cited the Bible to assert that the “belief in multiple genders” was “demonic.”

More Jewish Aryan SHIT: Israel’s Top Court Rules Law of Return Not Applicable for Children Whose Father Converted After Birth
Non-Jewish minors whose father received Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return after they were born are not entitled to receive citizenship under the auspices of this same law, the Supreme Court ruled on Sunday in a precedent-setting decision.

Ever the fucking Totalitarian Capitalists: DOT temporarily halts enforcement of Biden-era refund requirements for airline flight renumbering
Transportation department pauses enforcement until June 30 following airline requests

Mass murdering and mass raping cunts, and this is it for the Occupation Felons?
A team commander, a squad commander, and two soldiers in the Maglan commando unit have been jailed after one of their comrades was mistakenly briefly abandoned in a building in the West Bank town of Qabatiya last week, in what the army describes as a “grave incident.”
According to the IDF, troops had left one building in the town and headed to another, while leaving behind a soldier who was asleep. After some 40 minutes, the soldier joined up with his team at the nearby site.
“The incident was immediately reported to commanders, and an in-depth investigation was conducted by the unit commander and the commander of the Commando Brigade,” the military says, adding that the findings were presented to the commanders of the 98th Division and the Judea and Samaria Division.

The non-Jew looking to be a Jew: Anduril’s Palmer Luckey makes an ethical case for using AI in war: ‘There is no moral high ground in using inferior technology’

They destroyed every college and school in Gaza, but these Jew cunts, man oh man . . . Perverted souls:
Charlemagne, the 8th-century Frankish king, was reputed to have said, “To have another language is to possess a second soul.” While proficiency in English may not grant Hebrew-speaking Israelis an additional soul, it is a compulsory subject in elementary and high schools, the primary language of international business, and is required for university entry.
“English is a core language that opens doors to many opportunities,” says Tziona Levi, director of the Languages Department at the Education Ministry. “English can inspire hope. When you’re strong in it, your path forward often feels more open and inviting.”
At first glance, it would seem that the group best suited to teach English in this country would be olim from English-speaking countries, who are familiar with the language, and speak and read it fluently. But it is a bit more complicated than that. English teachers must not only be able to speak the language at a mother-tongue level but also be well-versed in the pedagogical fundamentals of education – and capable of managing crowded, occasionally rowdy, Israeli classrooms.

[Billy Stinson (L), his wife Sandra Stinson (C) and daughter Erin Stinson comfort each other as they sit on the steps where their cottage once stood August 28, 2011 in Nags Head, North Carolina. The cottage, built in 1903 and destroyed yesterday by Hurricane Irene, was one of the first vacation cottages built on Albemarle Sound in Nags Head. Stinson has owned the home, which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places, since 1963. “We were pretending, just for a moment, that the cottage was still behind us and we were just sitting there watching the sunset,” said Erin afterward.]
According to a new study, one of the first estimates of sea level rise made by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change closely matches what actually happened over the past 30 years.
Törnqvist: “What we found was that they did remarkably well.”
That’s Torbjörn Törnqvist of Tulane University.
In the nineties, the IPCC released a report with different scenarios for carbon emissions and what each would mean for global sea level rise.
Törnqvist’s study found that real-world emissions have closely tracked one of the report’s middle-of-the-road scenarios.
And global sea levels have risen about nine centimeters – very close to the eight predicted by the U.N. report.
Those early predictions were made without today’s advanced computer models, and they over- or underestimated the impacts of some drivers of sea level rise.
But Törnqvist says it shows that even 30 years ago, scientists understood the fundamentals of climate change.
Törnqvist: “I find it hard to think of any other form of evidence that is more compelling to demonstrate that this is happening, it has been happening for a long time, and we know why, and we understand it, and we can make credible projections.”

Pedophile and Rapist and narcolepsy-fueled Trump:

NIH shut out hundreds of young scientists from funding to start their own labs
Cuts to diversity transition grants slow research and lengthen job searches
By Anil Oza and J. Emory Parker
Dec. 8, 2025
The MOSAIC program is the type of early-career research grant that checks many of the boxes of the Trump administration.
National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya listed “training future biomedical scientists” as one of his top priorities, and has spoken often about the need to support researchers at the start of their careers, when they tend to do their most original work. MOSAIC is meant to do just that, funding scholars during the precarious transition from postdoctoral researchers under the wings of more established scientists to independent lab heads.
Dispersing federal research funding, largely concentrated at private universities on the coasts, to the rest of the country is another NIH goal, and scientists supported by transition awards have a track record of migrating away from the coasts, and from private institutions to public ones.
This is part 5 of American Science, Shattered The series looks at how the Trump administration has disrupted labs, upended lives, and delayed discoveries. Read the series
But none of that mattered. Over the first several months of the administration, the MOSAIC program was terminated because it was seen as running afoul of President Trump’s executive order to eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. It was one of several awards that the NIH had created to diversify its grant recipients, targeting a point in the training pipeline where academia often loses people underrepresented in the field. It was offered to scientists from a broad range of disadvantaged backgrounds, defined more broadly than just race and ethnicity.
Many of the MOSAIC scholars felt betrayed, because they had been urged to seek funding through the program when they could have qualified for other training grants not focused on diversity. Now they’re scrambling for other jobs, or to set up their new labs with limited resources.

Jews Jews, run the country:
A Gallatin administrator in charge of managing disruptions at the school’s 2025 graduation ceremony was effectively fired as a “fall guy” after valedictorian Logan Rozos’ speech sparked national backlash, several faculty members told WSN.
Nick Likos, who worked at the university for over 24 years, was reportedly responsible for cutting the microphone if speeches at the school’s graduation ceremony turned disruptive. A Gallatin administrator said that Likos left unannounced around July and that the school’s dean Victoria Rosner announced his departure in an Aug. 1 email.
“That was the first official correspondence about Nick being relieved of his duty,” the Gallatin administrator, who requested to remain anonymous out of fear of retaliation, told WSN. “It wasn’t the same kind of email that you would see from other people who are leaving or retiring — the kind of flowery language that’s done — and there was no celebration or going away given.”
NYU spokesperson John Beckman told WSN that he could not comment on details relating to specific faculty members.
In the email, Rosner said that Likos is “no longer with NYU,” but that the school is “grateful to him for his many years of service,” citing his contribution to renovating the Gallatin building. She thanked faculty for their “patience and understanding” during the transition.
The administrator told WSN that they were made aware of Likos’ departure in mid-July, when they received an automated email response that said, “I am no longer with New York University” after inquiring about a work order. They said they were never given additional details about the reason for his departure.
“I don’t think it’s far-fetched for me to connect these dots that would show that Logan’s speech would be considered inflammatory to certain people and certain donors,” the administrator said. “It’s not unfeasible that Nick, who was head of making sure that disruptions were curtailed, would be the person that would take the brunt of this.”
During his valedictorian speech, Rozos said that his “moral and political commitments” led him to speak on behalf of those affected by Israel’s ongoing siege in Gaza. A few hours later, NYU issued a statement claiming that he “lied about the speech he was going to deliver” and announcing that it would withhold his diploma. The incident sparked nationwide debate, with some criticizing the university for hosting a speaker with “pure, unchecked Jew-hatred” while others accused it of violating academic freedom.
“It makes me question when and where I would be allowed to say something either in my personal life or my professional life,” the administrator said. “Would I feel comfortable putting myself on the outside politically, if I have a certain belief that I could be targeted and given a roundabout reason for why I’m being let go?”
Dear President Mills, Provost Dopico and Dean Rosner:
We write on behalf of the Middle East Studies Association of North America (MESA) and its Committee on Academic Freedom to express our grave concern about the decision of New York University to withhold the diploma of graduating senior Logan Rozos and subject him to disciplinary action because of remarks he made about Israel’s war on Gaza during the recent graduation ceremony of NYU’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study. Your administration’s action is an egregious violation of the right to free speech and of academic freedom, and it makes a mockery of NYU’s avowed commitment to foster an environment in which its students, faculty and staff can freely share their opinions on matters of public concern.
Founded in 1966, MESA promotes scholarship and teaching on the Middle East and North Africa. As the preeminent organization in the field, the Association publishes the prestigious International Journal of Middle East Studies and has nearly 2,800 members worldwide. Our organization is committed to ensuring academic freedom and freedom of expression both within the region and in connection with the study of the region in North America and outside of North America.
Logan Rozos was the designated student speaker at Gallatin’s graduation, held on 14 May 2025. Instead of delivering the remarks that NYU had pre-approved, he chose to say the following:
I’ve been freaking out a lot about this speech, honestly, and as I search my heart today in addressing you, all my moral and political commitments guide me to say that the only thing that is appropriate to say in this time and to a group this large is a recognition of the atrocities currently happening in Palestine. I want to say that the genocide currently occurring is supported politically and militarily by the United States, is paid for by our tax dollars, and has been live streamed to our phones for the past 18 months. And that I do not wish to speak only to my own politics today, but speak for all people of conscience, all people who feel the moral injury of this atrocity. And I want to say that I condemn this genocide and complicity in this genocide.
According to media reports, the audience responded to Rozos’s remarks with enthusiastic applause and cheers. However, apparently at the insistence of President Mills, NYU promptly announced that Rozos’s degree would be withheld and disciplinary action would be initiated against him. A university spokesperson vehemently denounced Rozos’s action and alleged that he had “misuse[d] his role as student speaker to express his personal and one-sided political views.”
We note that it is in fact quite common for commencement speakers at colleges and universities in the United States to share their “personal political views” on issues of current concern, and we must wonder on what basis NYU has determined that Rozos’s views are “one-sided.” It would seem that NYU is unwilling to tolerate the expression of certain views when it comes to Gaza and the broader Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We must also point out that, unfortunately, NYU has in the past year and a half repeatedly acted in a repressive manner toward students and faculty who were expressing their opposition to Israel’s war on Gaza; see our past letters here, here, here and here. The university’s punishment of Rozos seems to be a continuation of this policy.
We call on NYU to immediately award Logan Rozos his degree, terminate disciplinary proceedings against him and apologize to him for the distress its actions have caused him. We further call on NYU to desist from the harsh stance it has taken toward members of the university community who have manifested opposition to the ongoing war on Gaza and the complicity in it of the United States government. Finally, we call on NYU to at long last actually respect and uphold the principles of academic freedom and freedom of speech that it claims to embrace.
We look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
Aslı Ü. Bâli
MESA President
Professor, Yale Law School
Laurie A. Brand
Chair, Committee on Academic Freedom
Professor Emerita, University of Southern California

Them Superlatives are awards for our favorite people made up by our favorite people. Read more from the series here.
As we have repeatedly seen, anyone who takes a stand publicly for Palestine does so knowing that it could imperil their academic or professional career — and the NYU student Logan Rozos was no exception. Following his highly publicized graduation speech taking such a stand, NYU said in a statement the following day that the institution would withhold his diploma while considering “disciplinary actions.”
To give Rozos the credit he is due is Afeef Nessouli, a New York City-based journalist who covers queerness and resistance in the Middle East. Nessouli learned of Rozos’ speech while he was in Gaza for a two-month volunteer rotation with Glia International. He had just returned to their place in Deir Al-Balah when he watched the video of Rozos’ speech on his phone. “Logan’s commencement address gave me my own emotional lifeline,” he later said.
In the joint slay to end all joint slays, Nessouli bestows Logan Rozos with the Superlative title Forever Class President in the tribute below. —Sal Tamarkin
“As I search my heart today in addressing you all … the only thing that is appropriate to say in this time and to a group this large is a recognition of the atrocities currently happening in Palestine.”
These words were the start of Logan Rozos’ commencement speech. It was May 14 and Rozos was on stage at New York City’s Beacon Theatre, addressing his fellow graduates at New York University’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study. I was in Gaza on a volunteer medical rotation with Glia International, watching the video of his speech on my phone.
“I condemn this genocide and complicity in this genocide,” he went on. My heart swelled. A young person, thousands of miles away, boldly carrying a message. Rozos is one of a handful of student speakers at universities around the world who used their commencement addresses to bring such truth to power.
Although the audience cheered rapturously when he brought up Gaza at points throughout his speech, and again when he left the stage, the university’s response was a different story. After all was said and done, he was swiftly punished. The very same day, NYU Senior Vice President for Public Affairs and Strategic Communications John Beckman issued a statement accusing Rozos of “misus[ing] his role as student speaker to express his personal and one-sided political views.” This was shared with the news that the university was withholding his diploma while administrators pursue “disciplinary actions.” Rozos then received an email from the Office of Student Conduct saying that it had received an incident report alleging that Rozos engaged in behavior prohibited by the school’s conduct policy, that he would be required to attend a “conduct conference,” and that in the meantime, he would be prohibited from accessing any NYU facility or program.
Rozos, a gay Black trans man, studied cultural criticism and political economy at Gallatin, which means he’s spent much of his education thinking and writing about the interactions between culture and the economic conditions that produce it. A lifelong New Yorker, Rozos, who is also a professional actor — his 2019 acting debut was for the Peabody-nominated TV drama David Makes Man — is a committed Letterboxd user who loves theater and cooking competition shows.
Rozos explained he doesn’t “want any spotlight shone on me that makes my tiny contribution out to be larger than it is. What I did and what I risked is, in the grand scheme of things, miniscule.”
Asked about what he planned to say at commencement, he says, “I can’t say I decided what to say until the moment I got up to speak…I mean, I didn’t write a secret second speech beforehand to keep up my sleeve. I just slowly realized I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night if I spoke to a crowd of that size at this moment and acted like the genocide was not occurring or wasn’t on my mind.”
Rozos explains he was “never going to say something that wasn’t controversial,” and that every draft he presented to the school contained political speech in one way or another. “I knew I would ruffle feathers,” he tells me over email. He also knew of the doxxing campaigns pro-Palestinian public figures face, and the threats of violence he had already faced while protesting.
But, one thing he never expected? The public denunciation from the university itself. Rozos says he was told immediately after walking across the stage to receive his diploma that he “was banned from the all-university graduation commencement the following day,” with NYU’s statement following shortly after.
“I am glad if my speech served as a moment for all of us to turn our eyes back to Gaza and to renew our commitment to ending the genocide and to the struggle for Palestinian liberation.” When asked, Rozos explained he doesn’t “want any spotlight shone on me that makes my tiny contribution out to be larger than it is. What I did and what I risked is, in the grand scheme of things, miniscule.”
For Rozos, the last few weeks have been “odd.” In many ways, he’s like any new college graduate, spending his time looking for full-time jobs, bumping Chappell Roan, and spending time with his friends — cooking for them, going to trivia nights, seeing movies. But in other ways, of course, things can feel surreal. He was on the train a few days after his speech and saw a fellow passenger watching the video of his speech on their phone. He’s been recognized in public a couple of times — once at a noodle shop and another time when he was in a friend’s apartment building. He has received support from the solidarity movement for Palestine at NYU and in New York City at large. He says that groups for academic freedom and labor organizers, other gay and trans people, have all reached out to offer solidarity and encouragement. He even had support letters written to him or sent on his behalf by professors, artists, and activists from around the world. Someone even Venmoed him $20 with the subject line “courage,” which he thought was “so sweet.” (He gave that $20 to a Palestinian survival crowdfunding campaign.)
Although right-wing outlets published “pretty vile coverage” of him, Rozos regrets nothing. Right now, Rozos says he is about to start a job at a children’s summer program, and is also fundraising for a documentary called What Will I Become? about trans masculinities and depression. For the most part, this summer he plans to “mostly hang out with theater gays.”
He says, “I would love to sell some of my writing on politics and culture and maybe even, not to sound like every NYU student, write a book someday.”

Jew York City? Words, man, no call to action. Like . . . surround the fucking kidnappers. Put your cars in the way. Take the air out of their fucking SUV’s. Throw paint on their Gestapo windshields.
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani posted a video to social media on Sunday explaining immigrants’ right to refuse to speak to or comply with agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, days after federal agents carried out a raid in Manhattan.
In the video, Mamdani vowed to protect the city’s 3 million immigrants, saying, “We can all stand up to ICE if you know your rights.”
He explained that people in the U.S. can chose not to speak to federal immigration agents, film them without interfering and refuse their requests to enter private spaces. ICE agents cannot enter spaces like a home, school or private area of a workplace without a judicial warrant signed by a judge, Mamdani said.
“ICE is legally allowed to lie to you, but you have the right to remain silent. If you’re being detained, you may always ask, ‘Am I free to go?’ repeatedly until they answer you,” said Mamdani, who will be sworn in as mayor on Jan 1.
His comments came a week after demonstrators gathered as ICE attempted to detain people on Canal Street near New York’s Chinatown. A similar immigration sweep in the same neighborhood last October was also met with protests.
“New York will always welcome immigrants, and I will fight each and every day to protect, support, and celebrate our immigrant brothers and sisters,” Mamdani said in Sunday’s video.
