Yang Gang Back? Update: Yang loses NYC Mayoral Race; Adams wins over Garcia!

Scholar

Superstar
Joined
Dec 11, 2015
Messages
8,939
Reputation
795
Daps
24,340
This Kathryn Garcia thing is wild. like how did this happen?
NYC Mayor's races have always been decided within the month of the primary. Been telling ya for months, she's the most competent person in this race. She understands the details of city government and how to get things done.

If she wins she would be the first woman to serve as mayor in NYC
 

kingjones29

All Star
Joined
Aug 4, 2013
Messages
4,850
Reputation
-804
Daps
10,909
I looked up Garcia, honestly didn’t know much about her. She ran the department of sanitation, was the ceo of NYCHA, was born and raised in Brooklyn and was adopted. If she gets it, I won’t be mad. Rather than the two republicans in disguise. She knows the system inside and out I just have to see what she’s running on

I hope this cartoon doesn’t give Yang a surge due to the asianhate hashtag. He just needs to go away.
Adams is going to win his support is solid, unlike the rest.
 

Scholar

Superstar
Joined
Dec 11, 2015
Messages
8,939
Reputation
795
Daps
24,340
Adams is going to win his support is solid, unlike the rest.
In a traditional primary yes. With ranked choice voting maybe not. I don't see him gaining many 2nd choice votes. He's either one or further down a ballot.

Also, Adams is in the lead because city players believed he was the only viable candidate to win. With Garcia's surge i can see players shifting support. Strong political clubs have recently endorsed Garcia.

We will see :yeshrug:
 

No1

Retired.
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
28,891
Reputation
4,589
Daps
63,393
In a traditional primary yes. With ranked choice voting maybe not. I don't see him gaining many 2nd choice votes. He's either one or further down a ballot.

Also, Adams is in the lead because city players believed he was the only viable candidate to win. With Garcia's surge i can see players shifting support. Strong political clubs have recently endorsed Garcia.

We will see :yeshrug:
I thought stringer would win because of his background before the me too shyt came up.
 

88m3

Fast Money & Foreign Objects
Joined
May 21, 2012
Messages
85,312
Reputation
3,531
Daps
150,501
Reppin
Brooklyn


full
 

FAH1223

Go Wizards, Go Terps, Go Packers!
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
May 16, 2012
Messages
68,436
Reputation
8,017
Daps
207,521
Reppin
WASHINGTON, DC
6eC7asTKNH6hG3-nw5aESgYaN9nmUwOE4r8ogqWNlKL_7s73hSGOlzEqFw32iSJMQmA996RhEEqMAw7_KnIIenHf2JULtWOGHNU1nfc-pOvsfxDQO9nV20oPBkiOUiLJUai7pQHxz_eskNp9vHM_FA=s0-d-e1-ft

MAY 27, 2021
Meyerson on TAP

The Two Cults of Andrew Yang
According to some of the polls in the notoriously difficult to poll Democratic mayoral primary in New York City, Andrew Yang may be falling behind Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams with just a few weeks remaining before Election Day. Whether Yang makes the cut or not, we have to recognize that by one metric—the ability to appeal to improbably diverse groups of voters—he’s either a political genius or one of the most cynical politicos in the game today.

The smart money’s on the latter.

In his campaign for the 2020 Democratic nomination, Yang was able to assemble a smallish group of devotees—chiefly young, male techies who dubbed themselves the Yang Gang. The meme the campaign devised for them was "Make America Think Harder," and its acronym—MATH—was emblazoned on campaign caps and T-shirts as a rejoinder to and parody of the Trumpies’ MAGA slogan. This first Yang cult, if we may call it that, was a subset of Silicon Valley wannabes, who, by current Democratic standards, tilted disproportionately to private-sector solutions for public problems and a mild brand of libertarianism.

In his current campaign for mayor, however, Yang’s core constituency, besides, understandably enough, Asian Americans, is the city’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish sects, who number perhaps half a million of New York’s eight million residents. The key issue for the Haredim, as they’re called, is keeping their own ultra-Orthodox schools—their yeshivas—free from governmental regulation. An 1894 state law requires private and religious schools to provide a secular education equivalent to that in public schools, in addition to their instruction in religious doctrines and such. As the ultra-Orthodox have grown in number and political clout, however, the yeshivas have managed to skirt this requirement. A 2018 city survey of yeshivas found that 26 of the 28 in the study failed to provide anything resembling a basic education. Graduates have complained that they never heard about such well-known events as the Civil War and American slavery until after they graduated and gingerly set foot outside the Haredi self-created ghettos. Over multiple millennia, anti-Semites have persecuted Jews, but not even they ever managed to dumb them down. That achievement belongs to the Haredim.


This lack of knowledge about anything except ultra-Orthodox ritual not only reinforces the insularity of the various Haredi sects, but gives them political clout, since the Haredi defer to their respective rabbis (or "rebbes" in Haredi-speak) for instructions on how to vote. This top-down uniformity at the voting booth has magnified the sects’ political influence in jurisdictions—chiefly, New York—where the rebbes’ endorsements really matter come election season. That’s one reason why the yeshivas have been able to duck the requirement to teach history, English, science, and math.

This year’s multitudinous crop of Democratic mayoral candidates has largely come down on the side of requiring those yeshivas to provide some verifiable facts and how-to skills to their students—with one prominent exception. "We shouldn’t interfere with their religious and parental choice," Yang has said on multiple occasions. The MATH man has been to the mountain (of votes, he hopes) and now saith that Haredi kids won’t have to learn science, math, and history. And as the MATH man surely intended, his position has won him virtually universal support among the rebbes, who produce lockstep voting at a level that would have awed the Tammany bosses of old.

The problem for Yang is that for years, the rebbes have instructed their followers to register Republican, as the party that defends religious orthodoxy. The number of Haredi who can actually vote in the Democratic primary, accordingly, isn’t that great.

Nonetheless, we need to salute Yang’s achievement. Alongside his Asian American supporters, he’s managed to build two very distinct cults: Young techie science-math semi-libertarians in 2019–2020, and ultra-Orthodox anti-empiricism, anti-science semi-authoritarians in 2020–2021. Like I said, that qualifies Yang either as a political genius or a pol who stands out for his cynicism even in this most cynical of times.
~ HAROLD MEYERSON
Follow Harold Meyerson on Twitter
 
Top