• Science
    • Planetary Material Conditions
    • Doomscroll Comments
    • Society
    • Politics
    • Doom
    • Doom Philosophy
    • Solutions
    • General category
    • Revolution
  • Move
  • Topic
  • Back
  • Next

    Mayor Zaran Maldani on War Funding

    Started by K-Dog Apr 02, 2026, 08:00 PM

    Message path : / Doomscroll Comments / Crazy times / Mayor Zaran Maldani on War Funding


    Selected path :

    K-Dog

    • Administrator
    • *****
    • Warden of Oblivion
    • Posts: 2,254
    • Location: Seattle
    Apr 02, 2026, 08:00 PM
    • EXCLUSIVE: NYC Mayor Zaran Maldani on War Funding, Universal Child Care, Rent Freeze, and Democratic Socialism
      Reporter: (Name not provided in transcript) | Outlet: (Not specified)
      Date of Recording: (Not specified, but references "just passed your 100 day mark in office") | Location: New York City, USA

      1. INTRODUCTION & MAYOR'S REACTION TO WAR FUNDING
      The reporter interviews New York City Mayor Zaran Maldani. The first topic is breaking news that the Republican party is considering healthcare cuts to fund a war in Iran, which they are trying to push through with $200 billion. Mayor Maldani reacts strongly against the war funding.

      Key Facts:
      • Interviewee: Zaran Maldani, Mayor of New York City
      • War Cost Cited: $23 billion already spent; $200 billion proposed
      • Mayor's Position: Opposes the war on procedural, moral, and political grounds
      2. UPDATE ON CAMPAIGN PROMISES (100 DAYS IN OFFICE)
      The mayor provides detailed updates on three major campaign promises: universal child care, free buses, and rent freeze.

      Universal Child Care
      • On day eight of the administration, joined with Governor Hochul to announce a roadmap
      • $1.2 billion in state funding secured
      • Free child care for two-year-olds: 2,000 kids starting this fall
      • Next year: 12,000 kids
      • By end of first term (four years): universal child care for every two-year-old in NYC
      • Also adding approximately 1,000 more seats for three-year-olds (fixing previous system that could not meet demand)
      • Context: Child care costs at least $20,000 per year — insurmountable for those making $50k, $100k, or even $200k

      Free and Fast Buses
      • Recently made policy decisions to speed up bus routes used by over 130,000 New Yorkers daily
      • Goal: Take buses that crawl slower than a walking New Yorker and make them "the envy of the country"
      • Working with the state to make them free
      • Both NY State Assembly and Senate have proposed making routes free
      • Hopeful that the budget process will result in a pilot program across the city

      Rent Freeze
      • Mayor believes New Yorkers deserve a rent freeze when landlord profits are increasing
      • Median household income for tenants in rent-stabilized units: $60,000 last year
      • Final decision rests with the Rent Guidelines Board
      • Determination expected summer 2026
      • Public hearings in June; information at nyc.gov/rgb

      3. WEALTH TAX PROPOSAL AND RESPONSE TO CAPITAL FLIGHT THREATS

      Proposed Tax
      • Campaign proposal: 2% citywide income tax on individuals earning over $1 million
      • Broader aim alongside Senator Bernie Sanders: wealth tax on those making over a certain threshold
      • Context: NYC is the wealthiest city in the wealthiest country in history, yet one in four New Yorkers live in poverty
      • Mayor states inequality is "not natural" but the result of political choices

      Response to Critics Who Threaten Capital Flight
      • Mayor cites 2021 experience in the state assembly advocating for higher taxes on millionaires
      • Critics then said millionaires would flee; they raised $4 billion in additional revenue
      • Result: NYC now has more millionaires than before
      • Similar threats were made during his mayoral campaign ("leaving on day one") — did not happen
      • Mayor acknowledges threats should be taken seriously but demands evidence behind them
      • Contrast: $3 bus/train fare is out of reach for one in five New Yorkers, while some buy condos for $260 million
      • Conclusion: "What our current approach is is not working"

      4. BIGGER VISION & DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST GOVERNING PHILOSOPHY

      Ultimate Goal
      • Working-class people can feel policies in their lives on a day-to-day basis
      • The costs of bus fare, child care, and rent are giving people anxiety about making it to next month
      • Long-term goal: "a working person has an easier life to live in this city"

      Democratic Socialism Defined by Mayor
      • Ran as a democratic socialist; now governing as a democratic socialist
      • Belief that democracy must be extended from the ballot box into the rest of people's lives
      • People should feel like actors, not that things just happen to them
      • Goal: Where a cost of living crisis is taking "oxygen out of their bodies and lives," bring it back

      5. MENTORSHIP FROM BERNIE SANDERS & POTHOLE POLITICS

      Bernie Sanders' Influence
      • Political mentor: Senator Bernie Sanders (former mayor of Burlington)
      • In regular touch with Sanders
      • Sanders emphasizes focus on "day-to-day things" alongside big visions
      • Key advice: "There's no problem too big, no task too small" (mayor notes this slogan has a connection to Paw Patrol)
      • Concept of "sewer socialism" — delivering expansive vision through fixes to the most granular problems
      • People lose faith in government because they see examples of failure regularly
      • To regain faith: take care of the thing they point to as reason for disbelief, not through great speeches

      Pothole Achievement
      • Approximately 100,000 potholes filled within first 100 days in office
      • Mayor cannot speak to previous administration's priorities ("sometimes they were abroad")
      • Philosophy: Filling a pothole is not small — "If you can't fill a pothole, how are you going to deliver universal child care?"
      • Credits NYC DOT workers who work hard every day and have not been recognized

      6. ON ABUNDANCE POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE EFFICIENCY
      The reporter asks about the "abundance" conversation — critics say abundance policies could smooth over bigger structural fixes.

      Mayor's Response:
      • Does not see innate tension in abundance proposals
      • Appealing aspects: focus on efficiency and understanding that "to have public goods you have to have public excellence"
      • Proceduralism has rendered some ambitious ideas impractical
      • Fix the procedures to deliver the ideas
      • When a procedure is broken, people mistakenly take failure as a reflection on the idea itself
      • Conclusion: There is a way to do this work if you are as serious about the intent as you are about the outcome

      KEY DATA SUMMARY

      • Date Reference: Approximately 100 days into mayor's term (exact date not provided)
      • Location: New York City, USA
      • Key Figure Interviewed: Zaran Maldani, Mayor of New York City
      • War Funding Cited (proposed): $200 billion
      • War Funding Cited (already spent): $23 billion
      • State Funding for Child Care: $1.2 billion
      • Child Care Cost per Year: At least $20,000
      • Child Care Rollout: 2,000 kids (fall 2026), 12,000 kids (2027), universal for all two-year-olds by end of first term
      • Bus Ridership Figure: Over 130,000 New Yorkers daily on targeted routes
      • Median Tenant Income (rent-stabilized units): $60,000 per year
      • Poverty Statistic: One in four New Yorkers live in poverty
      • Condo Price Contrast: $260 million for some condos vs. $3 bus fare out of reach for one in five
      • Tax Revenue Raised in 2021 (state level): $4 billion additional
      • Potholes Filled: Approximately 100,000 in first 100 days
      • Municipal Workers: 300,000
      • Mentor: Bernie Sanders (U.S. Senator, former Burlington mayor)

      End of Extraction

    This is a

    new Diner page

    Logged in as:Guest
    Forum Home