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Aug 9 6 tweets 5 min read Read on X
🧵 DSA Co-Chair Hails Zohran Mamdani as “Generational Talent” and Blueprint for Socialist Power in America

At the Socialism 2025 conference, Democratic Socialists of America Co-Chair Ashik Siddique painted a sweeping vision for the future — one built around Zohran Mamdani’s rise from DSA’s ranks to the brink of becoming New York City’s mayor.

Siddique called Mamdani “a unique generational talent” and said his campaign proves the DSA can “have people like Zohran all over the country.” He openly embraced naming “class enemies” and promised that with Mamdani in office, socialists could “confront capital where it matters” in America’s wealthiest city.

The DSA leader credited Mamdani’s win to years of post-Bernie DSA organizing, strong union support, and the group’s coordinated “socialists in office” blocs nationwide. He called the primary victory “the biggest thing for the socialist left in the past century,” praising Mamdani as an “organizer in office” who joins strikes, hunger fasts, and direct actions.

“We are trying to build the party and in many ways, we’re already doing it.”

Not the wildest thread you will read today but a revealing look at how DSA built its power and where it plans to take it next.
DSA Co-Chair Ashik Siddique laid out the group’s strategy for using the Democratic Party as a launching pad for an independent socialist party.

Siddique said DSA is a “big tent” that includes members who want to reform Democrats, those calling for a clean break, and others pursuing a “dirty break” using the party’s ballot line until they are forced out.

He described the prevailing “party surrogate model” as running DSA candidates under the Democratic label while building the infrastructure for a future socialist party. Representing the DSA’s Groundwork Caucus, Siddique made the goal explicit: “We are trying to build the party, and in many ways we’re already doing it.”

It is important to understand that Siddique is the DSA’s respectable frontman, the buttoned up figure they present so attention drifts away from members calling to abolish the family or boasting that New York City is flying people in for trans healthcare and footing the bill.

It is an open admission that the DSA’s long game is to hollow out the Democratic Party from the inside until it is ready to replace it or compete against it directly, which, as you will hear later, is exactly what they do in deep blue areas.
Siddique dismissed both major U.S. parties as hollow “funding networks” for competing sectors of capital and claimed the DSA is already building a true party infrastructure to replace them.

Quoting Jacobin publisher Bhaskar Sunkara, Siddique said the United States has a “no party system” where Democrats and Republicans lack membership structures or internal democracy.

“It’s just which sector of capital pours more money into politics."

By contrast, Siddique boasted that DSA has grown to more than 80,000 dues-paying members, making it the largest socialist organization in decades, with an independent funding base and internal decision-making. Through what he called the “party surrogate model,” the group is building the functions of a political party while still running candidates on the Democratic ballot line.
Siddique hailed Zohran Mamdani’s Democratic primary victory for New York City mayor as the most significant achievement for the socialist movement in the last hundred years.

“In many ways, it’s the biggest thing for the socialist left in the past century,” Siddique said, framing Mamdani as “meaningfully different” from past New York leaders. He said the campaign reflects the type of party DSA is building, one prepared to govern the nation’s largest and wealthiest city.

Siddique contrasted Mamdani’s ascent with what he called the Democratic Party’s national failures, pointing to Kamala Harris’s loss to Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 defeat as proof Democrats “did not map any real alternative.” He credited Bernie Sanders’ run for inspiring “millions” and fueling DSA’s rapid growth.
Siddique described the turning point after Bernie Sanders’ campaign when members embraced a new identity and mission.

“What do we do after Bernie? I guess we’re socialists now. What does that mean?”

Many entered DSA by simply backing candidates who supported policies like Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, and social housing, but quickly learned that electing individuals with a good platform wasn’t enough without a strong mass base and organized pressure.

From 2017 to 2020, DSA chapters experimented with local endorsements and campaign tactics, refining a model that combines “strong field campaigns” with ongoing organizing once candidates are in office.

Siddique said that strategy has produced “hundreds” of DSA members in state and local office nationwide, with coordinated “socialists in office” blocs in cities like New York, Minneapolis–St. Paul, Los Angeles, and Portland working directly with DSA chapters to advance their program.
Siddique credited Zohran Mamdani’s rise to the mayoral race with his years as part of a tightly organized “socialists in office” bloc in the New York State Assembly.

Siddique described how DSA spent years targeting entrenched Democrats, including those enabled by former Governor Andrew Cuomo, who blocked left wing legislation. Through coordinated campaigns, primary challenges, and alliances with community groups, DSA grew its ranks to nine socialists in office, giving the organization the ability to “operate like a party in New York State.”

He pointed to the Build Public Renewables Act as the most ambitious Green New Deal style state law in the country and a model DSA helped make possible. Siddique said Mamdani’s campaign also reflects DSA’s push to prioritize labor organizers as candidates, citing UAW Region 9A’s early endorsement and the election of UAW organizer Claire Valdez.

“Different threads of organizing can come together,” Siddique said, “not just in electoral power but with labor power.”

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More from @thestustustudio

Aug 6
🔥DSA Organizer in Texas: We’re Embracing "Direct Confrontation and Contradiction with the State"

This is Saya Clarke. Trans rights activist. DSA organizer. Former addict and sex worker. Co-chair of DSA North Texas.

She took the mic at the now-viral “United Struggles” panel at Socialism 2025 — and delivered a blunt, radical vision of DSA’s work in one of the reddest states in the country.

In Dallas, Clarke helped...

-Pass a trans sanctuary resolution
-Build an underground-aboveground coalition of queer, labor, anti-war, and Palestinian groups
-Spread Marxist feminist political education
-Compile a survival guide for trans and queer services in North Texas

She says her chapter is embracing “direct confrontation and contradiction with the state.”

Then she runs through the latest laws in Texas...

-Retroactive bans on ID changes (Refers to laws prohibiting or reversing changes to legal documents like birth certificates and driver’s licenses)

-Mandated detransition coverage for insurers (If insurance covers gender-affirming care, it must also cover detransition procedures — including retroactively)

-Legalized conversion therapy (Texas never banned it — and “conversion therapy” here includes talk therapy or parental guidance that doesn’t affirm gender identity)

-Stripped protections from LGBTQ youth (This means banning gender-affirming medical interventions for minors — puberty blockers, hormones, surgeries)

“Even my own documents are now illegal.”
Clarke describes life as a trans person under "hostile" law:

“The state is actively hostile to my and my loved ones’ way of life.”

She draws a parallel between abortion bans and trans repression, saying lawmakers now use the same “framework of cruelty and denial of dignity” to block “self-determination.”

On the failure of liberal politics:

“We’re living in the unfortunate aftermath of the flawed piecemeal approach to sustaining trans life by a political class that wants you to work when you're sick, that considers pitching a tent to survive a crime against property, that happily shuffled right on immigration, legal or otherwise — the effects of which we are now seeing, that allow police to destroy encampments and arrest students protesting a generational crime against humanity, and that continues to vote to send money to a genocidal colonial ethno-state that livestreams its ethnic cleansing campaign and lashes out at its neighbors.”

She challenges the notion of sanctuary.

“So the word ‘sanctuary’ really does sound great, right? ‘Sanctus’ means holy, and early use was in reference to a church or other sacred place where a fugitive was immune by the law of the medieval church from arrest. Interesting, right? You are still a fugitive and protected by law. Do we remember who makes laws? Do we know how little a supposed law matters when a fascist is out for blood?”

Clarke calls for international solidarity and a unification of all struggles around bodily autonomy.

“We must reorient our politics around bodily autonomy. It is the one feature that unites struggle that connects the children of Gaza being starved to migrants being kidnapped to trans people searching for a truly safe place. Our struggle is by necessity international.”
🏳️‍⚧️“Only under socialism and maybe even communism can clear trans liberation, working class liberation be fully and permanently realized.” — Saya Clarke at Socialism 2025

At the close of her Socialism 2025 remarks, DSA organizer Saya Clarke warns of a coming collapse and calls for radical self-reliance. This feels like a manifesto so I am including a full text transcript of it.

“I believe a time will come when we will only have each other to rely on — when the state will not only have completely abandoned the marginalized, it already has, but the larger working class.”

“If we want to feel safe, if we want to feel protected. If we want our bodies to belong to us, we must begin to wean ourselves off of the state as it exists. It's a hard habit to break, I know, but we must break our dependency before they break it for us, and then where will we be?”

“This isn't to say no state could ever protect us or have our best interests at heart or hold sacred one's belonging to oneself. Quite the opposite actually.”

“What we are capable of building, what we will build, what many of you are building in your own communities right now — these are the structures, the ideas, the community formations, the ways of relating to each other, caring for each other, that will plant the multi-colored international seeds for a future.”

“The key to all of this is bodily autonomy. Capitalism runs on alienated, desecrated bodies. It compels them, it sorts them, it pacifies them, it exhausts them, it maims them, it burns them, it deprives them of joy and eventually of life.”

“This is why socialism is not only the ownership of production — it is the ownership of one's body. Only under socialism and maybe even communism can clear trans liberation, working class liberation be fully and permanently realized.”

“If the city will have you, let them. If the police will ignore you, let them. If the doctor will see you, let them. But we must begin to invest in another strategy, a strategy of cooperative reliance — a break, yes, a prefigurative modality that requires a thoughtful vision of the future provided by the people at the margins of society, people like us.”
Read 4 tweets
Aug 4
🚨 “Zohran is literally attempting to do what conservatives say we want to do, which is provide gender affirming care to anyone who wants it for free. We're gonna fly people in and pay for their hotel rooms.”

That’s Daniel Goulden, a member of NYC DSA’s Steering Committee, speaking on a panel DSA just uploaded from last month’s Socialism 2025 conference.

Goulden worked on Zohran Mamdani’s campaign, helped write the trans policy platform, and says he regularly meets with Zohran and his staff.

“We collaborated with the Zohran Mamdani campaign on his trans rights platform, and what we explicitly wanted to do was use the power of New York City to provide free gender affirming care—and I say free in case insurance companies decide to boot us off—free gender affirming care not just to people in New York City but across the country.”

“DSA has regular meetings with him, let alone his team. His policy director is my friend. I've been working with his campaign manager for well over a year.”

This isn’t hypothetical. DSA operatives are openly planning to turn New York City into a national hub for trans healthcare—flying people in, paying for hotels, mailing prescriptions across state lines—and doing it on the taxpayer’s dime.

And it’s not just about healthcare. It’s about power.

“With Zohran, we’re in basically the best possible position to seize state power.”

They’re not hiding it. They’re posting it proudly. The Democratic Socialists of America are building a machine—rooted in radicalism, empowered by city government, and led by a man now poised to run the largest city in America.
“We wrote the platform with him… now he’s going to be mayor.”

In this clip, NYC DSA’s Daniel Goulden spells it out. Zohran Mamdani didn’t just accept support—he let DSA write his trans policy platform. Their goal? Turn NYC into the national distribution hub for gender transition procedures.

“What we explicitly wanted to do was use the power of New York City to provide free gender affirming care and I say free in case insurance companies decide to boot us off.. Free gendering affirming care, not just to people in New York City but across the country.”

They're planning to override red states by any means necessary.

“There’s no reason at all that we can’t use telehealth and mailing prescriptions to people across the country to undermine state bans.”

Goulden lays out just how deeply NYC DSA is embedded in Mamdani’s campaign.

“The Zohran campaign was always eager to work with us… the team was so happy to work with us on this.”

“All of a sudden my work shifts from being on the outside to thinking about how to utilize the fairly significant municipal power of New York City.”

“The model we used in New York is 100% replicatable [SIC] both in terms of our trans organizing, but also getting Zohran elected mayor.”

This is the plan. In their own words.
Daniel Goulden starts by griping about a centrist op-ed attacking Zohran—then immediately pivots to bragging about how radical Zohran actually is by framing it as Fox News' worst nightmare.

“Zohran is literally attempting to do what conservatives say we want to do which is provide gender affirming care to anyone who wants it for free. We’re gonna fly people in and pay for their hotel rooms.”

“Zohran is literally attempting to do what conservatives say we want to do… provide gender affirming care to anyone who wants it for free. We’re gonna fly people in and pay for their hotel rooms.”

From there, he explains how Mamdani’s focus on cost of living wasn’t just practical—it was, in his words, the politics of solidarity. By centering shared material struggles, Goulden argues, the campaign automatically reached the most marginalized and built a broader coalition than he thought possible.

“Basically, when you use the politics of solidarity, you are automatically targeting the most marginalized… because the most marginalized communities are experiencing the hellishness of capitalism the most acutely.”
Read 6 tweets
Aug 2
🚨 The Family Must Go: DSA Panel Pushes Full-Scale Cultural Revolution

“I want to perform abortions at a church before it’s all said and done.”

“The only real difference between marriage and prostitution is the price and the duration of the contract.”

“Sex work and marriage can’t exist without each other—they’re two sides of the same coin.”

“We argue for abolition of the family in general… the institution of the family acts as part of the carceral system.”

“When we talk about family abolition, we’re talking about the abolition of the economic unit… all of our material needs taken care of by the collective.”

I don’t know what the National Democratic Socialists of America are thinking—but they just uploaded a panel to their YouTube channel from Socialism 2025 called “The Left and the Family,” and no surprise, it is anti-family, anti-children, and deeply disturbing.

The panelists:
– Emily Janakiram, writer and organizer with New York City for Abortion Rights
– Katie Gibson, Teaching Fellow at the University of Chicago
– Eman Abdelhadi, University of Chicago sociologist (and somehow the most reasonable one)

This is their “future of care”: abolish the family, collectivize child-rearing, normalize sex work, and radicalize children into the movement.

It feels like the Democratic Socialists of America are drunk off their Zohran Mamdani win—and now they want to burn the whole house down.
Eman Abdelhadi is the "moderate" on the family abolition panel—but that’s more strategic, not an ideological compromise. Her argument is clear: incremental material wins like universal pre-K are worth pursuing only as steps toward a more radical future—one in which the family, capitalism, and liberal society are dismantled entirely.

“We live in a shitty, horrible-ass, no-good society… We might fight for material improvements… under a system that is frankly horrifying.”

She frames family abolition as a “liberatory horizon,” something to be held alongside short-term policy goals. The danger, in her view, is not being too radical—but becoming satisfied with reforms and mistaking them for real liberation. Her concern is being “bought off.”

“Otherwise we fall into a liberal tendency… to be like, okay, we’re bought off now.”

She doesn't reject reform. She co-opts it—to normalize revolutionary goals over time and shift the Overton window without triggering backlash. It's an explicit call for ideological patience and strategic duality.

“They're not two things to reconcile. They're two things to hold at once.”

This is not moderation. It's a roadmap for revolution by way of reforms.
University of Chicago Teaching Fellow Katie Gibson says children are “legally the property of their guardians” and “treated as if they’ve committed a crime” for being poor.

“If you are born into a home headed by a Christian fundamentalist tyrant, you have the rights that that tyrant gives you.”

“Think about that on the scale of all the children who are going to become wards of the state under the fundamentalist tyrant we have now.”

She’s clearly talking about Trump—but the real target is the family itself.

Gibson claims kids are criminalized simply for being born into poverty. It’s true that poverty is often mislabeled as “neglect” by child welfare agencies. But...

-Children are not legally considered property. That’s false.
-Children do have rights independent of parents in criminal, medical, and educational contexts.
-It’s true that around 400,000–450,000 children are in U.S. foster care at any given time. It's hovered around there for a decade.

But the point isn’t policy reform. It’s ideological. Gibson sees the family as a carceral institution—and wants it abolished because she believes life in the collective will be better.
Read 16 tweets
Jul 23
Mahmoud Khalil is back in the spotlight — first meeting with Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill, then speaking at the “Stop ICE Abductions and Block the Bombs” event tonight.

This is the same guy who led campus building takeovers and spoke in favor of violent resistance. Not exactly someone politcians should be elevating.
American Friends Service Committee's Nusaiba Mubarak introduced activist Mahmoud Khalil with incendiary language accusing the U.S. government of politically motivated repression.

“Mahmoud was effectively kidnapped by plainclothes federal immigration agents and wrongfully detained for over 100 days without charge, because of his advocacy against Israel’s ongoing genocide.”

Mubarak painted a sweeping picture of persecution.

“Activists… have faced increasing retaliation, including deportation threats, visa revocations, detention, and heightened surveillance.”

Khalil echoed the same framing, portraying his ICE detention as part of a coordinated campaign:

“It’s part of a broader campaign to silence dissent, to criminalize solidarity, to repress the movement… and the U.S. government’s complicity in genocide.”

He claimed he was targeted “For my freedom of speech… for being Palestinian.”

It’s mentioned in passing, but we learn that Khalil wasn’t lobbying alone—he was joined in these meetings by Brad Parker, Associate Director of Policy at the Center for Constitutional Rights, a group known for defending radical activism under the banner of civil liberties.
In his remarks, Mahmoud Khalil portrayed his ICE detention as part of a larger campaign of political repression. He described meeting fellow detainees whose only "crime" was wanting “to just have a better future here,” including a man who had lived in the U.S. for over 20 years, had American-citizen children, and still was ordered deported.

“The court found him removable because of lack of connection to the community. So what’s more connections than, you know, like, living most of your life in this country?”

Khalil framed his own case as part of a weaponized system.

“My case is a clear example of the weaponization of the immigration system to achieve political gain.”

He claimed he was detained not for any legal violation, but because “I dared to say that Palestinians deserve to live in freedom and dignity… because I protested the bombing of Palestinians.”

Khalil accused authorities of relying on Canary Mission, which he called a “shadowy organization,” to identify and target activists like him.

“I ended up in detention not because I broke any laws, but because I spoke out.”

He warned the audience that “This government is acting as if there is no limit to their cruelty… to the levels of dehumanization they’ve been inflicting on a lot of us.”

What Khalil leaves out, however, is the nature of his “speech” and “protest.” Publicly available footage and reporting show Khalil participating in aggressive anti-Israel demonstrations, where rhetoric often veered into violent or incendiary territory.

His self-portrayal as a peaceful dissident glosses over the broader context of activism that frequently traffics in provocation, glorifies resistance movements with documented terror ties, and seeks to dismantle American support for a key democratic ally and America itself. His activism is far from benign.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 21
“Death to America.”

That’s the phrase 20-year-old American activist Calla Walsh chants from Tehran—“Marg bar Âmrikâ”—while praising “all the martyrs” and glorifying the “axis of resistance,” Iran’s alliance with terror groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

“Glory to all the martyrs, glory to the axis of resistance. May we see victory within our lifetimes. Marg bar Âmrikâ.”

If she loves the “axis of resistance” so much, she’s welcome to stay there.
This isn’t just fringe rhetoric—Walsh has acted on her ideology here at home, becoming the “resistance” herself through direct action with Palestine Action US, now rebranded as Unity of Fields.

In November 2023, she was arrested as part of the “Merrimack 4,” a militant group that attacked the Elbit Systems facility in New Hampshire. The site—owned by an Israeli defense contractor—was broken into, vandalized, spray-painted, and smoke-bombed. Walsh and her comrades climbed the roof, livestreamed the raid, and were caught with an incendiary device. The FBI later seized her phone and opened an investigation into her ties to Palestine Action US and funder Fergie Chambers.Image
She initially faced multiple felonies—including riot, sabotage, burglary, and conspiracy—with a potential 37-year prison sentence. Instead, she cut a deal: 60 days in jail and guilty pleas on two misdemeanors—criminal trespass and criminal mischief—along with restitution, community service, and a two-year stay-away order from Elbit.Image
Read 5 tweets
Jul 18
🧵With Zohran Mamdani’s primary win shaking up New York politics, people are finally paying attention to the socialist movement in America again. It’s long overdue.

Yes, the landscape is fractured — a maze of groups, egos, ideological turf wars, and purity tests. But one organization is crystal clear about what it wants: revolution. Enter Freedom Road Socialist Organization...

To catch people up, we’re taking a look at FRSO’s May 29, 2025 broadcast — a national event marking their 40th anniversary, where they laid their revolutionary agenda bare.

“The U.S. is a prison house of nations, and it’s time to open the prison gates.”

“Capitalism is a failed system and it must be replaced with socialism… the rule of the working class.”

They reject gradualism and mock nonviolence.

“We are not the turn the other cheek club.”

“When we encounter fires, we're not going to try to put them out… we're going to try to bring fuel to them.”

They take credit for the George Floyd riots: “We were part of leading the largest Black-led rebellion in history.”

And they’re not shy about the endgame!

“We believe we can build a new party… to lead the working class in overthrowing the 1%.”

“The working class can and will reorganize society… free of private exploitation, oppression, war, and destruction.”

This isn’t just rhetoric. FRSO is active — from college campuses to labor unions to street protests. They are organizing for power, not policy tweaks.
Crisley Carpio opened by calling FRSO “a group that is serious about revolution and applying revolutionary science to the United States.” The event, she said, would reflect on “our past, our present… and how we’re gonna define our future and define our own destiny.”

She linked the group’s roots to anti-war radicals inspired by “national liberation movements in Vietnam and in China led by communist revolutionaries.”

Carpio highlighted FRSO’s ideological resilience: “Disheartened by the fall of the Soviet Union, many revolutionaries across the U.S. gave up — but not us... We resisted attempts to liquidate Marxism-Leninism… and came out of it hardened and sealed.”

She noted the group’s experience with FBI repression and survival strategy: “We withstood FBI raids… Our organization actually has a methodical way of dealing with repression.”

What she didn’t say outright — but clearly laid out — was a roadmap of the night’s presenters: veterans of the "anti-war" left, labor organizers, national liberation activists, and the emerging front against Trump.

Who is this and where may you know them from?

Carpio is a longtime activist, member of FRSO’s Central Committee, and chair of its student commission. A former Students for a Democratic Society organizer, she was also one of the “Tampa 5” arrested after protesting Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
Mick Kelly opened with the group’s core premise.

“Capitalism is a failed system and it must be replaced with socialism, and by that we mean the rule of the working class.”

Reflecting on FRSO’s 40-year history, Kelly emphasized ideological discipline and results over rhetoric:

“We have consistently been able to find our bearings as revolutionaries.”

“We judge ourselves by our accomplishments in practice… not what great things we can say about ourselves... We see that as the sole criterion of truth.”

He laid out FRSO’s three guiding objectives.

“One, we want to win all that can be won and weaken our enemies. Two, we want to develop the general level of consciousness, organization, and struggle. Three, we want to construct communist organization.”

Kelly reiterated the group’s long-term goal: “We aim to build a new Communist Party in this country.”

Turning personal, he noted his legacy in the revolutionary movement.

“I was an active participant in the new communist movement that came into being in the late ’60s and early ’70s, and I helped to found Freedom Road Socialist Organization. So I was actually there at the beginning.”

Who is this and where may you know them from?

Mick Kelly is a founding member of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO), a veteran of the New Communist Movement, and one of the group’s chief strategists. He rose to national prominence after being targeted in the 2010 FBI raids on “anti-war” activists—raids tied to material support for terrorism, though no charges were ultimately filed. Today, he serves as editor of Fight Back! News and is widely regarded as the architect of FRSO’s long-term strategy to build a new communist party in the United States.
Read 12 tweets

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