The Radical Left Moves From Protest to Plumbing
The Democratic Socialist victory in New York is not just a local curiosity. New York is local the way a fire in one apartment is local until the hallway fills with smoke. The same politics is moving through the inner machinery of big cities across the country, and it is worth watching without pretending surprise.
The promise is simple: free access to everything, consequences for almost nothing, and a permanent moral claim on other people’s labor. Housing is a right. Transit is a right. Healthcare is a right. Debt is oppression. Borders are cruelty. Police are the problem until someone actually needs one. Property is theft until the assessor comes calling.
This is naturally attractive to people with little real stake in whether the larger system succeeds. If you do not run a business, meet payroll, own property, maintain order, or expect to be around when the bill comes due, the offer has a certain shabby glamour. You get the thrill of revolution with municipal benefits. Leninism with bike lanes.
In large cities, that is no longer a dorm-room mood. It is a coalition: activists, public-sector unions, nonprofit operators, downwardly mobile graduates, and voters trained to confuse appetite with justice. The old urban Democrats at least retained some ancestral memory of arithmetic. They knew, dimly, that taxes required taxpayers and services required a functioning city beneath them. The new left treats arithmetic as a hostile witness.
The question is not whether many of these policies will fail. They will. Price controls will reduce supply. Anti-policing will produce disorder. Endless benefits will invite dependency and fraud. Punishing capital will cause capital to leave, because capital, unlike progressive slogans, has legs.
The better question is whether failure will teach anything. Here the record is poor. When radical policies fail, the answer is rarely, “Perhaps the premise was wrong.” It is almost always, “We lacked enough money, power, purity, or enforcement.” The wreckage becomes evidence not of error, but of insufficient obedience.
That is the durable trick of the radical left. Every failure is converted into an argument for the next escalation.
So take New York as warning and observation. Make of it what you will. The radical left has moved from protest into power, and power is where theories become rent, taxes, school discipline, police response times, grocery prices, and whether ordinary people still feel safe walking home. History has seen this carnival before. The buncombe is familiar. The bill, unfortunately, is always new.











.jpg)









