đŸ—œ Zohran Mamdani, Mayor of New York

November 4, 2025, enters history not as the symbol of radical Islam’s entry into the establishment—with its undertones of suspicion toward what is “ethnically pure” or “civilizationally sound”—but as a moment of moral rebirth and reconstruction. As New York emerges from the shadow of September 11, 2001, the shadow of October 7, 2023 now tries to catch up with the momentum of the city that never sleeps.

For several weeks, Zohran Mamdani’s candidacy for mayor of New York had crystallized tensions and fantasies. His critical stance toward Israel’s policy in Gaza was enough to trigger a wave of hostility. Neoconservative circles, supported by certain Republican lawmakers, tried to turn him into the symbol of ideological infiltration.
Thus, Congressman @RepOgles posted, with the caption “WAKE UP NEW YORK!”, the video of the first plane crashing into the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
This gesture, seemingly trivial, reactivates the deepest wound in contemporary America: September 11 as a matrix of fear and a tool of political disqualification.

Yet where others might have faltered, Zohran Mamdani embodied a generational rupture.
The son of immigrants, a practicing Muslim and an avowed socialist, he represents the New York that no longer lives under the shadow of 9/11, but emerges from it.
His discourse does not deny trauma; it transmutes it into collective responsibility.
Where the hawks built a moral order out of fear, he proposes a civic order rooted in social justice and reconciled memory.

His emergence signals a profound shift: Ground Zero, which one must not forget also served—under the guise of Western solidarity—as a global stage for Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu, finally offers a face of inner reconstruction.
Where tragedy once cemented alliances of fear, legitimized wars, and founded a new security order, a face of reconciliation now rises.
Ground Zero, once the symbolic epicenter of a world divided between Good and Evil, becomes, with Zohran Mamdani, a site of moral reconciliation.

In this sense, his election marks a historic turning point. Twenty-four years after the collapse of the towers, New York no longer speaks from its wound but from its scar.
The America that emerges here is no longer one that seeks enemies, but one that seeks meaning.

Yet the danger remains. For the manipulation of fear has its mirror image: ideological capture.
While conservative circles attempt to demonize Mamdani, others—on the far left or in Islamist-leaning movements, such as La France insoumise in Europe—hasten to recycle him as a symbol of communal revenge.
This, too, is a betrayal of what he represents. His victory must not become a banner of identity, but a signal of reconciliation—a moral and democratic reappropriation of the city by itself.

Between fear and recuperation, Mamdani stands as a fragile yet decisive figure: the first serene heir of a traumatized system.
Through him, New York ceases to be the wounded city of 9/11 and becomes once more what it was always meant to be: a living laboratory of resilience and courage.

Subliminal / Supraliminal

Some still circulate the image of 9/11 to shame those who have “forgotten”, as if voting freely were a betrayal.
That is the power of a subliminal image: it works below consciousness, reawakens fear, and lulls reason to sleep.

But Zohran Mamdani’s election reverses the mechanism.
It belongs to the realm of the supraliminal — no longer the image that haunts, but the one that reveals.
New York is no longer hypnotized by trauma; it finally faces itself.

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