
Mamdani must do a lot more than ‘condemn violence’ after ISIS bombs fly in NYC
NY Post
Mayor Zohran Mamdani can’t just condemn “violence at a protest” now that the key facts are out about Saturday’s chaos near Gracie Mansion: He needs to call out where the threats of violence come from, and denounce them.
We now know those were genuine explosive devices, hurled by ISIS-loving radicals — people seduced by evil that exists within Gotham’s own Muslim community.
The mayor should name the poison plaguing his co-religionists — and the madness among his Democratic socialist allies that mourns the killing of a monster like Ali Khameini.
It’s easy to slam low-rent hate exhibitionists like Jake Lang, the agitator whose protest the bomb-throwers attacked, but also beside the point: That counter-protesters outnumbered his tiny crowd by six to one shows what a sideshow Lang’s ilk will always be.
What can truly make a difference is calling out the people who seem to be on your side, but aren’t — the ones who claim that Islamic values support attacks on innocents, who deny the mass rapes and other crimes of supposed “freedom fighters,” who pretend that the “anti-imperialist” cause requires sympathy for terror-promoting tyrants.
Mamdani would also be wise to express his concern for the communities that feel most at risk from this violence, and come out in support of City Council Speaker Julie Menin’s package of bills to fight antisemitism and protect the rights to worship of all New Yorkers.

“Everyone is worrying about what comes next,” reports David Patrikarakos at The Free Press of what people in Iran are telling him. He talked to “a friend in Tehran I will call Reza. ‘The bombing is heavy,’ he told me. ‘And it’s frightening. But we have been frightened and terrorized for almost 50 years.’ ” No one sees any “signs of mass uprising — it’s just too dangerous” as “gangs of Basij enforcers, often heavily armed, roam the streets, threatening civilians and forcing them indoors.” Indeed, “the entire regime is now on a war footing,” but: “The state is in disarray. Senior officials are scattered and confused” and “an internal power struggle appears to be under way.” He concludes: “Despite the Islamic Republic’s best efforts, the battle for Iran — by both external powers and Iranians inside the country — is far from over. It may take time, but I am convinced this regime will fall.”












