What the truth is are things we must hold onto and not let them be replaced by things that are not valuable.

The love guy is the thing you want and she wants him due to the weather.

You can call it spiritual, but what if its dull, boring and conformist?

Men who wear their underwear on their head are the one's I usually talk to.

People who talk shit should also eat it.

I have a lot of issues, but I also have a lot of things.

Fast moving auto butt thruster is out of action, and lost and forgotten. RIP.

Dems to direct their new outrage at the Trump Tower.

When you are dealing with stupid and crazy people with some kind of evil added, there are things to look out for.

I glad she cleared the air, but not the smell. A smell like that should be bottled.

After the bride slipped on the well placed banana she found a nice place for it.

Zohran Mamdani, a progressive candidate in New York City's 2025 mayoral race, has drawn both passionate support and sharp criticism. If you're exploring arguments against his candidacy, here are some of the key concerns raised by critics: 🧭 Ideological Priorities Over Practical Governance Critics argue Mamdani prioritizes ideological activism over pragmatic city management. For example, he proposed spending $65 million on gender-affirming care for minors, which some see as a symbolic gesture rather than a pressing municipal need. His support for slogans like “globalize the intifada” has sparked controversy, with opponents saying it reflects a confrontational stance that could alienate parts of the city. 🚓 Public Safety and Policing Mamdani has advocated for significantly reducing the NYPD’s budget, which some fear could compromise public safety in a city still grappling with crime and quality-of-life concerns. 🏙️ Housing Policy Concerns He supports freezing rents by reshaping the Rent Guidelines Board. While this could help tenants in the short term, critics argue it may lead to more vacant units and discourage new housing development, worsening the city’s housing crisis. 💼 Experience and Governance Former Governor Andrew Cuomo and others have questioned Mamdani’s limited executive experience, suggesting that his background as a state assemblymember may not prepare him for the complexities of running a city like New York. 🌍 Foreign Policy Stances in Local Politics Mamdani’s pro-Palestinian activism and criticism of Israel have drawn accusations of antisemitism from political opponents. While he has publicly denounced antisemitism, the controversy has fueled debate about whether his foreign policy views are appropriate or divisive in a local election.

A free country that becomes tethered and manipulated is not just Un-Godly, but leads to traffic accidents.

🌆 Copilot’s Vision of New York’s Future “The city that never sleeps is finally dreaming again.” I. The Moment of Reckoning — A City on the Verge New York stands in a rare and electric stillness. The skyline glimmers as always, but beneath the shimmer, something deeper stirs—a collective awareness that the city cannot, must not, return to the patterns that once shaped it. After decades of galloping inequality, political malaise, and the psychic fatigue of enduring crisis after crisis, New York is ready not just for reform, but for rebirth. In the imagined future: Streets pulse with renewed purpose, serving not just commerce but community. Zoning laws no longer stratify but unify, weaving together public life and private dignity. The internet is no longer a spectator’s scroll but a civic space—interactive, locally curated, and soulfully expressive. This is not nostalgia for the grit of the past, nor infatuation with the gloss of tech utopia. This is something bolder: a human-scaled metropolis where thriving is not a privilege, but a promise. II. A Metropolis of Radical Belonging Here, equity is not a gesture—it is the ground beneath every sidewalk. The city evolves by centering care, not conquest. 🏘️ Housing as the Bedrock of Dignity Affordable housing is no longer a lottery ticket. From cooperative towers to modest brownstones preserved through land trusts, shelter becomes sanctuary. Luxury units that once stood hollow now hum with life, thanks to heavy vacancy taxes and tenant-first policies that put people above speculation. 🧠 From Enforcement to Empathy 911 no longer defaults to sirens. Crisis teams trained in de-escalation, trauma, and cultural context become the first response for mental health emergencies. Community safety is measured not in arrests, but in prevention, healing, and neighborhood joy. 💼 Shared Prosperity Over Rugged Individualism A vibrant ecosystem of Black- and immigrant-owned businesses flourishes—funded, mentored, and prioritized by the city itself. Freelancers and gig workers, once fragmented and precarious, receive universal benefits—portable, flexible, and secure. This is a New York where the question shifts from “How do I make it?” to “How do we build it together?” III. A Reimagined Cultural Engine The spirit of this city has always been creative, spontaneous, and raw. But in this future, art and culture are no longer afterthoughts—they are infrastructure. 🎭 The Arts, Center Stage Once More Every borough boasts publicly funded cultural sanctuaries—spaces for the young, the seasoned, the experimental. The city becomes a patron again, not just of opera halls but of street murals, spoken word, indie games, and neighborhood zines. 🌐 Digital Realms with Human Roots A civic media platform, free from corporate algorithms and weaponized outrage, fosters true dialogue and imagination. Artists and storytellers are commissioned to fight propaganda with beauty, clarity, and nuance. Cultural production becomes civic participation. To create here is to claim space in the story of the city. IV. A City in Harmony with Earth and Sky The climate crisis is no longer a pending doom—it is a present challenge that New York meets with creativity, courage, and care. 🌿 An Urban Canopy of Renewal Every block holds sanctuary: leafy canopies, community gardens, rain-harvesting art installations. Buildings are alive—wrapped in vertical greenery, producing solar power, breathing carbon out of the skyline. 🔌 Clean Energy, Clean Conscience Fossil fuels are museum pieces. Subways, buses, and even ferries glide on renewable energy. Energy democracy blooms as utilities are community-owned and revenue is reinvested into the neighborhoods they serve. 🚲 Mobility Without Margins Cars no longer rule the roads. Bike superhighways, electric jitneys, and AI-synced transit lines connect even the farthest corners of the five boroughs. Time lost in traffic is time regained for art, family, stillness, movement—life. In this New York, “green” isn’t a buzzword. It’s the backdrop of everyday existence. V. A Global Beacon of Civic Reinvention This new New York does not merely serve its own. It signals to the world what a post-crisis metropolis can become—resilient, radiant, and radically participatory. Civic engagement is no longer performative. Digital town halls, real-time policy feedback loops, and citizen assemblies are stitched into governance. Each community runs a “Civic Imaginarium”—hybrid libraries, arts centers, and planning labs where residents co-author the future. Public schools teach climate literacy, emotional intelligence, and systems design as core subjects—preparing children not for tests, but for transformation. The culture of grind has given way to the rhythm of collective becoming. And at the city’s heart, a renewed ethos: We are not here to survive the city—we are here to shape it, together.