Even if you don’t live in NYC, please retweet this and get the word out so that the ppl in YOUR city also learn that they too can have politicians who get things done if they mobilize and vote socialist in other elections! 🗣️
So Mamdani got landlords to fix their properties, balanced the city budget, lowered crime, froze rent, taxed the rich, and launched a free day care program and y’all still saying socialism will fail.
Ignorance.
What kinda jobs ya’ll working that ya’ll are shocked someone is being fired for going viral for emptying a garbage can full of garbage on the street and stealing said garbage can?
BREAKING
Darializa Avila Chevalier has won the Democratic primary in New York's 13th District. She was backed by the Democratic Socialists of America and Mayor Mamdani.
She defeats the Senior Whip of the House Democratic Caucus, incumbent rep. Adriano Espaillat.
Just stunning
'Intentarán matarme y sumir al Congo en guerras interminables porque saben que una África unida e independiente, tanto política como económicamente, marcaría el fin de su dominio y el comienzo de nuestra verdadera libertad".
Patrice Lumumba, lider anti-colonial congoleño, vaticinaba en 1960 lo que pasó en el Congo, fue descuartizado y disuelto en ácido por Bélgica y EEUU.... apenas un año después de estas palabras.
A JPMorgan Chase executive was fired after a viral video showed her dumping trash out of a Knicks-themed public trash can and taking the can during the Knicks championship parade in New York City.
🎥:mel_aston
Fox News commentator threatens to "Call ICE" on Hispanic woman—over Starbucks drive thru dispute.
Nyanza Moore is a regular contributor on Fox 26 Houston television coverage.
"Go back to Mexico!" she yells.
"You'll have to prove you're not illegal when I call ICE!"
She works as a lawyer—and is the Founder and Managing Attorney of her own firm The Moore Law Group.
The incident occurred at a Starbucks location in Houston, Texas.
On June 19, 1865, African American communities in Galveston, Texas, finally learned of their freedom from slavery — two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation took effect.
For 161 years, Juneteenth has been a day of remembrance for the freedom that was delayed. It is also a celebration of the joy and resilience that flourished despite that delay.
The contributions of African Americans, whose struggle for freedom shaped our nation, are immeasurable. Yet too many Black families continue to bear the brunt of an affordability crisis that has pushed them out of the neighborhoods and communities they've built.
True freedom has a tangible impact on daily life: the ability to afford housing, earn a living wage, put food on the table, support a family, and create a future for generations to come.
As we celebrate today, we must recommit ourselves to ensuring this freedom is fully realized.
Happy Juneteenth, New York City.