Stu Smith Profile picture
May 16 9 tweets 7 min read Read on X
🧵 What a rough night for Nithya Raman.

Hasan Piker put the LA mayoral candidate and DSA member through a full-on struggle session over her record, repeatedly pressing her to explain where she had fallen short of the movement line.

And honestly, even as a conservative, I felt bad for her. This was brutal.

One flashpoint was a DSA criticism over Raman’s role in a city resolution tied to the UTLA BDS fight. But the exchange was bigger than that. This was not a good-faith interview. It was an ideological audit.

Raman mostly tried to answer politically. She came to DSA through housing and homelessness, said this was not her area of expertise, said she had learned more, and promised she was “committed to learning more.”

Stick around for more, because by the end of this even Hasan’s chat wanted his head.
This is where Piker's “interview” really became a purity test.

“Do you believe Israel has a right to exist in its current form as an ethnostate that’s currently being investigated for genocide at the International Court of Justice?”

Raman answered, “Yes, I do believe that Israel has a right to exist,” but added that she wants countries to operate “without apartheid” and “with equality in their borders.”

Hasan immediately followed up: “Do you believe that Israel is an apartheid state then?”

Raman said, “I think that it is, yeah.”

Then Hasan brought up her 2024 censure from DSA-LA over accepting the Democrats for Israel LA endorsement, asking whether, “knowing what we know now and seeing the videos of Gaza in ruins,” she would still seek it out.

Raman said, “I wouldn’t seek it out now,” pointed to her ceasefire resolution, and then tried to bring the conversation back to what a mayor actually does: keeping Angelenos safe, protecting protest rights, and pushing back against both antisemitism and Islamophobia.
Hasan brought up Raman’s 2020 call to “defund the police” and her old platform calling for LAPD to become a “much smaller specialized force.”

Then he contrasted that with her 2026 mayoral line to NBC LA: “we need to maintain the size of our police force.”

“Was it, you know, wokeness rising up everywhere in 2020 that led you to say that?”

Raman’s answer was basically that governing happened. After five years in office, she said the city has to “respond to calls for help from the public,” and if 911 calls are not answered quickly, “we lose the faith of Angelenos.”

Then came the real admission, “We don’t have an alternative crisis response system built out citywide.”

Raman still wants unarmed crisis response, but admits the current system is “patchwork,” poorly integrated with 911, and can leave people on hold for “50 minutes.”
This might be my favorite moment because it has the energy of a mom explaining reality to a little boy.

Hasan brings up his own clash with LAPD, saying officers shot rubber bullets at him during the ICE protest.

Then he presses Raman for voting in favor of a $5 million loan to pay police overtime.

“Is this just the cost of doing business? Is this just politics?”

Raman’s answer was simply bureaucratic reality.

“When people work overtime, the city has to pay them.”

She explains that the officers had already worked the overtime, and if the city refused to pay, they would sue. Then taxpayers would end up paying the overtime plus the cost of the lawsuit.

Again, perfect snapshot of the whole interview. Hasan is demanding ideological accountability. Raman is explaining how municipal government works.
Hasan presses Raman on supporting LA’s mansion tax, then later moving to create a 15-year exemption for new multifamily housing.

He asks whether tenant organizers are wrong, or whether she is “giving developers what they want under the YIMBY label.”

Raman’s answer is basically that she was trying to save the mansion tax from a broader repeal effort.

But then she makes the larger point that public housing, social housing, and affordable housing are only producing “a few hundred units” a year in LA.

Then the line that probably drives the activist left insane.

“I will never back away from the statement that we need more market rate housing as well because the city simply cannot fund all of the housing that is needed.”

Again, this is why the interview is so revealing. Hasan is asking whether she betrayed the tenant-organizer line. Raman is explaining that a city cannot slogan its way out of a housing shortage.
Hasan presses Raman on Casey Wasserman, his Epstein/Ghislaine Maxwell controversy, and his meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu.

Raman had called for Wasserman to resign, but also said she would work with him if the LA28 board kept him in place. Hasan asks whether that is “capitulation.”

Raman says the board controls its own leadership, and the mayor still has to deliver for Los Angeles.

“You don’t always get to pick your partners, you don’t always get to pick who you’re working with.”

Hasan wants politics to operate like a permanent purity test. Raman is explaining that leadership means dealing with reality, flawed institutions, and people you may not like.
Hasan presses Raman on the Olympics again, noting that she voted against the host city agreement over taxpayer overrun liability, but later joined the council in waiving planning, zoning, and environmental review for Olympics construction.

Then he asks what she would do to make sure homeless people are not swept ahead of the Games.

Raman’s answer is not “abolish sweeps” rhetoric. It is capacity.

She says LA has “a third of the shelter beds” it needs, while New York has “100% of the shelter beds” it needs.

Raman is explaining the operational problem once again.
Hasan ends with a rapid-fire purity test. Medicare for All. Universal childcare. Abolish ICE. Raise taxes on billionaires. End encampment sweeps in LA.

On sweeps, she does not give the activist answer. She says it “depends on your definition,” then adds, “We’d have to be able to do cleanups.”

Then Hasan keeps going: $30 citywide minimum wage, LAPD trips to Israel, “free Palestine.”

Raman survived the struggle session, but the whole thing exposed the tension perfectly. The activist left wants ideological compliance. But governing a city requires reality, even when the person saying it is a DSA member.

And after all that, Raman still had to end by making the actual pitch: vote for me, because I’m the only viable alternative to the broken status quo or a MAGA Republican.
And after nearly 50 minutes of hardball questions, Hasan endorsed her anyway. He told his chat he wanted to give Raman a “tough but fair shake” and insisted he was not there to “disparage her.”

“She’s obviously a million times better than Karen Bass and certainly better than Spencer Pratt.”

Even Hasan’s own chat thought the interview had gone too far. He had to scold them.

“You guys treat it like it’s fucking blood sports, and it’s not good.”

If I were Raman, I would have made my pitch, thanked him for the time, and walked out. No candidate should sit through a 50-minute ideological hazing just to get an endorsement.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Stu Smith

Stu Smith Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @thestustustudio

May 12
🚨 Los Angeles Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez says her office built a “community defense network” to respond to federal immigration raids.

She also says her office invested $500,000 in rental assistance and $400,000 in food assistance, argues DSA should become a bigger “political home,” and claims LA activists were “literally battling to prevent martial law.”

At a recent DSA-LA panel, “socialists in office” from Los Angeles, Chicago, and Minnesota explained how they use public office to advance movement politics, anti-ICE organizing, mutual aid, and attacks on the Democratic establishment.

I break it all down in my latest for @CityJournal!
These officials aren’t just doing constituent service. They’re using public office to build and protect DSA-aligned movements, steering resources, legal support, and government legitimacy toward a narrower activist base. That’s clientelism. city-journal.org/article/democr…
DSA-LA’s own writeup frames Eunisses Hernandez as the model “socialist in office”: using City Council power for anti-police crisis response, immigration defense, tenant protections, food distribution, and attacks on LAPD funding. That is movement politics through public office. Image
Read 4 tweets
May 11
📰 My latest for @CityJournal!

Sunrise’s rebrand is not subtle. The group now wants to build the “muscle of non-cooperation,” escalate student walkouts, target companies linked to ICE, and move toward mass student strikes in 2027 and a general strike in 2028.
@CityJournal I’ve been buried and haven’t had time to cut a promo video for this article.

It’s a great look at where the Sunrise Movement is in 2026. Climate activism has taken a back seat to “getting rid of the authoritarian government we’re in.” city-journal.org/article/sunris…
@CityJournal And if you’ve been following me for some time, you know how I feel about trips to Cuba.

But did you know Aru Shiney-Ajay, the executive director of the Sunrise Movement as of fall 2023, went on one of these Cuba trips?
Read 4 tweets
May 9
🧵DSA-LA’s 2026 voter guide is not just a list of endorsements. It is full of dirty laundry and ruthless pragmatism.

They recommend Nithya Raman for mayor over DSA member Rae Huang, even after admitting DSA-LA previously censured Raman for accepting a pro-Israel Democratic club endorsement.

They frame Marissa Roy as their first citywide power play, celebrate Eunisses Hernandez as the anti-LAPD model of socialist electoralism, praise Hugo Soto-Martinez’s “co-governance,” and describe Faizah Malik’s opponent Traci Park as “a nexus point of every working class enemy interest in LA.”Image
It certainly says a lot that @spencerpratt’s section in DSA-LA’s Primary Election Voter Guide focuses more on The Hills than on his actual platform.

DSA-LA does not refute Spencer Pratt’s ideas. It doesn't even mention them. Instead, the guide treats him like a pop-culture punchline because engaging his actual message would mean admitting he is speaking to real frustration in Los Angeles politics.

And that treatment appears to be unique. Other candidates get ideological labels, policy summaries, donor analysis, and strategic assessments. Pratt gets reality TV jokes, an AARP bit, and a hat joke.

But the funny part is that Pratt’s rise is still forcing DSA-LA into a tactical corner. Their own guide admits he is polling high enough to make the runoff, and that if he does, Karen Bass is probably cruising to a second term.

So after all the internal drama, the straw poll, and the obvious discomfort with Nithya Raman, DSA-LA still lands on Raman because Pratt has made the math unavoidable. They may mock him, but they are also reacting to him.Image
Image
DSA-LA’s writeup on Nithya Raman is basically a case study in reluctant pragmatism.

They admit Raman has repeatedly broken with the left. She accepted an endorsement from a pro-Israel Democratic club, which led DSA-LA members to approve a censure in 2024. She broke ranks on Measure ULA. She has split from other socialist councilmembers on police funding. And she has said she would not shrink LAPD manpower as mayor.

They also admit Rae Huang has the more radical grassroots platform. But then they turn around and recommend Raman anyway.

Why? Because DSA-LA knows the math. Raman is the only candidate besides Bass and Spencer Pratt polling in double digits, and Pratt’s rise has made the jungle primary impossible for them to ignore. DSA-LA lands on the candidate they are clearly uneasy about because she is the only realistic left-wing vehicle to stop a Bass vs. Pratt runoff.

They even underline the point themselves: “It is not an endorsement.” 😆Image
Image
Image
Image
Read 9 tweets
May 2
🚨 BREAKING: “Death to America” Comes to @virginia_tech

At Virginia Tech tonight, Mohamed Abdou opened his “Death to the Akademy” speech by declaring, “We are in a war, a racial religious war since 1492.”

He told students America is “the larger monster,” praised “General Sinwar,” called October 7 the “blessed day of Al-Aqsa Flood,” and said jihad can mean defending life “using the sword.”

Then he praised students as “a branch of the resistance” and said they were recognized as “a branch of the mujahideen.”

And when he explained “Death to America,” he was explicit.

“When we say Death to America, we mean, and loud and clear, a total end to U.S. empire. The destruction of this crusading settler colony, their entire project.”

Virginia Tech spent the last few days insisting this event was not happening. It happened. And this is what was said.

Stick around, because there is a lot more to unpack. We are not even halfway through his speech yet.
Attention: @CACIIntl, @SystemsPlanning, @MITREcorp, @LeidosInc, @northropgrumman, and @LockheedMartin.

You all have documented partnerships, funding relationships, or national-security recruiting pipelines with Virginia Tech.

You may want to know what Mohamed Abdou told students there.

He urged people to “halt the weapons industry,” “destroy locally where you are at,” and disrupt “every single choke point” and “every single supply chain bottleneck” by “all means necessary.”

Why should any defense contractor keep investing in a university that is trying to downplay this?
You already heard Mohamed Abdou frame this as a “racial war” and invoke jihad.

He told students not merely to oppose Hitler, but to “understand what Hitler stands for.” Then he immediately claimed the “modern Zionist entity” manifests a “Hitlerite mentality.”

He went further, racializing Jews as white people who can pass unnoticed unless they are “wearing a yarmulke,” which erases the identity and lived reality of Jews of every background worldwide.
Read 8 tweets
May 1
🚨 BREAKING: Far-left May Day agitators are shutting down major roadways across Washington, D.C.

Blocking highways isn’t “peaceful protest.” It’s organized coercion through public disruption. This is what civil terrorism looks like.
“This is what democracy looks like,” according to Free DC: blocking roads so ordinary people can’t get to work.

They say they’re trying to “end the occupation,” raise awareness for May Day, and push D.C. statehood.

Instead, they’re staging a little occupation of their own.
Outside of protesting someone at their home, this might be my least favorite activist tactic.

Blocking roads so ordinary people can’t go places is truly scumbag behavior. Image
Image
Image
Image
Read 4 tweets
Apr 29
🚨 At The People’s Forum, Mohsen Mahdawi Says Social Media Built the Pro-Palestinian Movement’s “Infrastructure,” Calls It a “New Revolution”

Former Columbia encampment leader Mohsen Mahdawi, whose path to a Columbia philosophy degree stretched from his 2014 arrival in the U.S. to his 2025 graduation, spoke at The People’s Forum earlier this week.

Mahdawi described social media as one of the pro-Palestinian movement’s most powerful achievements. He said the movement has built an “infrastructure” through social media that lets activists bypass mass media, share information directly, and decide where to focus their energy.

Mahdawi later framed social media as part of a “new revolution” in campaigning: a way to “present yourself,” “combat big money” and “AIPAC money,” and speak “your truth” against established institutions.

His praise for Hasan Piker fits into that analysis too. Mahdawi called Hasan “a force” who helped bring many people together, even though Hasan ultimately skipped the event over safety concerns.
Remember, Mahdawi presents himself as a prime mover of the Palestinian movement at Columbia, with organizing plans that he says predated October 7.
And then there is the gun shop incident, which still stands out as one of the stranger, murkier episodes from Mahdawi’s time in the United States.
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(