Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s wife, Rama Duwaji, liked a celebratory Instagram post on the day of Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack that shared images from the murderous assault on Israel, according to a report Friday.The posts in question don't really celebrate violence against Israelis, but I expected Duwaji's social media activity to be a major scandal for Mamdani. It hasn't been.
The inflammatory social media posts by lefty groups included images allegedly taken from livestreamed footage of the attack, showing a gleeful group riding on what appeared to be a commandeered Israel Defense Forces vehicle with the words “resisting apartheid since 1948,” the report from Jewish Insider said.
“Breaking the walls of apartheid and military occupation. Oct. 7, 2023,” read another image on the same post, which the outlet reported showed a bulldozer used by terrorists to breach the barrier between Gaza and Israel that day.
This story doesn't seem to be breaking through, either:
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s wife, Rama Duwaji, created artwork for an essay book compiled by an anti-Israel activist who has described Jewish people as “vampires,” “demons” and “ghouls” — and celebrated the Oct. 7, 2023, terror attack on Israel.The story Duwaji illustrated is introduced but not written by Abulhawa. The author, Diana Islayih, describes using a shared toilet at an encamment in Gaza where there's no available water, so she must rely on dish soap to keep her hands clean.
Duwaji, a Syrian-American artist and first lady of New York City, drew the lead graphic for “A Trail of Soap,” an essay published by Susan Abulhawa in the Slow Factory’s latest issue of Everything Is Political magazine, the Washington Free Beacon reported Thursday.
The mayor has distanced himself from Abulhawa.
A spokeswoman for Mamdani told the Washington Free Beacon that Duwaji does not have a relationship with Abulhawa.And Mamdani has criticized the social media messages:
“As is common for freelance illustrators, the First Lady was commissioned to illustrate an excerpt of Abulhawa’s book by an outside publisher,” the spokeswoman said. “She has never engaged with or met Susan Abulhawa, nor had she seen the tweets in question.”
“And we stand in our administration, and I can tell you, our administration – which is separate from the first lady, she doesn’t have a role within it – is against bigotry of all forms … unflinchingly,” he told reporters.This is a story in New York, but it's not a big story. It won't end Mamdani's political career. It doesn't seem to be damaging his standing with New Yorkers. And it's barely a story in the national press, despite the media's (and the right's) fascination with Mamdani.
“I think that that rhetoric is patently unacceptable. I think it’s reprehensible,” he added, in reference to Abulhawa’s posts.
I bring this up in the context of the latest news about Graham Platner:
Maine Senate hopeful Graham Platner isn’t apologizing anymore for the Nazi-linked tattoo he was caught with last year, and he’s claiming Jewish leaders buy his excuse about it.Zeteo's Platner interview appears under the headline "Graham Platner Was Left for Dead. So Why Is He Winning?" The progressive news outlet seems to find it baffling that Platner is still in the race:
Platner, who is running for the Democratic nod for Senate and previously apologized for the offensive ink on his chest, argued that headlines have left voters with the impression that his tattoo had a more obvious link to Nazis.
“I had a meeting in New York not that long ago with a number of Jewish leaders, we started talking about it, and when we started, somebody was like, ‘Wait a second. We thought you had a swastika,'” Platner told Zeteo.
“When I explain the actual story, pretty much everybody’s like, again, ‘That seems like an eminently reasonable thing.’”
Many people assumed Graham Platner’s Senate candidacy was dead in October. Instead, the oyster farmer and veteran kept campaigning, and continued drawing overflow crowds to town halls all over Maine.It isn't just the tattoo:
His Democratic opponent, Janet Mills, Maine’s current two-term governor, has led a quieter campaign, and with three months left in the primary, polls suggest Platner is in the lead. Recent surveys, including a poll released Monday, suggest Platner would be a stronger candidate to face incumbent Republican Senator Susan Collins, too.
It was, of course, fair to expect Platner wouldn’t get past the news that he, for years, had a chest tattoo – dating back to his time in the Marines – that resembled a skull-and-crossbones symbol used by the Nazis, even after he apologized and got the tattoo covered up.
Months later, it’s clear the conventional wisdom about Platner’s demise was wrong.
Last year, unearthed Reddit and other social media posts showed Platner vented that “Cops are bas—s. All of them, in fact,” and responding to a post that said, “White people aren’t as racist or stupid as Trump thinks,” writing “Living in white rural America, I’m afraid to tell you they actually are.”Also, Platner recently sat for an interview with a podcaster named Nate Cornacchia who has advanced anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. Platner has said he's "a longtime fan" of Cornacchia.
Platner also pondered why black people “don’t tip.” He has since apologized for those past posts.
How is Platner getting away with this? Is the Maine Democratic electorate rife with Nazis?
Many politcal commentators argue that Platner is clearly a dyed-in-the-wool Nazi. Their politcal ideas are deep-seated and well thought out, so they assume everyone's politcal ideas are deep-seated and well thought out.
I think many of the people who support Platner aren't deeply political. Platner clearly wasn't deeply political until recently, and it's unclear how deep-rooted the ideas he now expresses are. Platner now seems to be a compelling, passionate advocate of progressive ideas. But he doesn't seem to have thought deeply about politics for most of his life, which led him to indulge some nasty prejudices, and left him unable to recognize the harm that offensive speech can do to real people.
Which makes him similar to a lot of normal people.
I think many people are open to liberal or progressive ideas and also not particularly vigilant about bigotry. They're not free of prejudice -- who is? -- and they want some leeway on their own speech and behavior. They've been encouraged to think that "political correctness" is a greater scourge than bigotry by both conservatives and anti-progressive moderates. They associate speech monitoring with authority, at a time when they hold authorities in extremely low esteem.
But their views are a muddle. Here's some data from a 2024 Pew poll:
About six-in-ten U.S. adults (62%) say that “people being too easily offended by things others say” is a major problem in the country today.(Emphasis in original.)
In a separate question, 47% say that “people saying things that are very offensive to others” is a major problem....
* Eight-in-ten Republicans and Republican-leaning independents say people being too easily offended by what others say is a major problem. By comparison, 45% of Democrats and Democratic leaners say the same.
* In contrast, Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say that people saying things that are very offensive is a major problem in the country today. A 59% majority of Democrats say this, compared with 34% of Republicans.
Looking at Americans’ views on these two questions together, about a third (32%) say that people being too easily offended by things others say and people saying very offensive things to others are both major problems.
Nearly half the Democrats in this survey said that "people being too easily offended by what others say is a major problem," even though nearly 60% of Democrats agreed that "saying things that are very offensive is a major problem in the country today."
I think an unexpectedly large portion of the Democratic voter base is annoyed by speech monitoring and doesn't respond well to it. They've been encouraged to feel this way by a "PC"-hating culture. And so they're turning the Rana Duwaji stories into a non-scandal -- and possibly rallying around Graham Platner in part because he's being attacked for speech. It's possible he'll be able to survive all the attacks on him all the way to November -- and only after that will we learn who he really is now.


