Internet "Alpha Males" Seek to Instill Fear of Zohran Mamdani in White America

Zohran Mamdani will have to get used to it. The Democratic candidate for mayor of New York City hasn’t even won the general election, but he’s already become public enemy number one in the online manosphere, the world of alpha male influencers and masculinity content creators who thrive on having an enemy to attack.

Mamdani, 33, a Democratic Socialist and state assembly member, is facing a digital firestorm from a coalition of conservative commentators, far-right figures, and online alpha influencers. These men, who have built vast online followings by selling a hyper-individualist, hyper-capitalist vision of masculinity, are now rallying their audiences around one shared goal: stopping Mamdani’s rise to power.

The attacks are deeply racialized, overtly Islamophobic, and framed as a battle between “the West” and “the East.” Mamdani, who is Indian-Ugandan and Muslim, has been branded a “Muslim communist” and accused of being a Trojan horse for radical anti-American ideologies.

“New York City is the battlefield for the future of the West,” declared right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk on June 30.

 

“He wants to steal other people’s stuff,” Kirk wrote in another post, calling Mamdani “resentful of the rich, of white people, of Westerners.”

 

Kirk, who has over 5 million followers on X, is just one voice in a growing chorus. Others include billionaire Trump supporter Bill Ackman, who ominously warned, “Watch him and listen to his words,” and tech investor Chamath Palihapitiya, who claimed that if Mamdani wins, “it will most likely ruin NYC and degrade one of the world’s greatest cities.”

Jack Posobiec, a far-right influencer known for promoting conspiracy theories, posted a cinematic trailer filled with violent protest footage and flag-burning imagery. “UNDERSTAND NYC IS ON THE SAME TRAJECTORY AS LONDON,” he wrote, invoking a frequent manosphere talking point: that the city will decline under a Muslim mayor, just as they claim London has under Sadiq Khan.

Their goal is clear: make Zohran Mamdani look dangerous. Use fear, Islamophobia, and racialized language to scare New Yorkers, especially white, middle-class moderates, away from a candidate who speaks openly about wealth redistribution, affordable housing, and taxing billionaires. Paint him not just as a progressive, but as a threat to civilization.

This is classic manosphere playbook strategy. The manosphere refers to the sprawling ecosystem of male influencers, YouTubers, and podcast hosts who monetize grievances about masculinity, feminism, race, and power. It includes figures like Andrew Tate, Sneako, and Ben Shapiro, and operates by casting progressive politics as an existential threat to men.

In Mamdani, they’ve found a perfect antagonist: a young, charismatic, nonwhite Muslim leftist with real political momentum.

They mock his campaign videos while refusing to address the issues he actually talks about: sky-high rent, public transportation, homelessness, and the city’s wealth gap. Instead, they post memes, inflammatory edits, and clips taken out of context to project an image of chaos and destruction.

“Zohran Mamdani’s radicalism is the future of the Democratic Party,” warned Shapiro, adding, “mainly because of the cuckold Democrats rolling over for him.”

 

“This guy is bad,” Ackman posted flatly, offering no policy critique, only vibes and threat.

 

What is at stake for these online figures is their ability to influence real-world politics. By creating a high-profile enemy, they can consolidate their audience and test their power. Their strategy is to redefine Mamdani before he can define himself to a broader electorate. While they raise the specter of New York’s decline, they rarely offer solutions to the very real problems Mamdani’s campaign addresses, chiefly the city’s crushing cost of living. This is particularly ironic given that many of these figures portray themselves as self-made wealthy men who have succeeded through sheer effort.

Mamdani won the Democratic primary by defeating former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in a surprising upset. Because New York is a Democratic stronghold, he has a good chance of winning the general election scheduled for November 4. This makes the campaign to define him now all the more urgent for his opponents.

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