They Voted Socialist — Now the Bill Is Due

February 20
5 mins

Episode Description

A majority of Gen Z voters in New York backed Zoran Mamdani. One month later? Property taxes up. Police cuts. Budget chaos. Tara breaks down the math, the promises, the Florida comparison, and why socialism always runs out of other people’s money.

🎧 EPISODE SUMMARY

A majority of Gen Z voters in New York chose Zoran Mamdani.

Now the reality is setting in.

During the campaign, the promises were sweeping:

Free public buses

Government-run grocery stores

Lower rent

“Tax the rich” to pay for it all

But at the first budget meeting, the numbers told a different story.

Instead of relief:

Proposed 10% property tax increase

$1 billion drained from the city’s rainy-day fund

5,000 NYPD positions cut

Millions redirected toward expanded “racial equity” offices

Tara walks through the basic math.

The budget of New York City:
$127 billion for roughly 8 million residents.

The budget of Florida:
$117 billion for 23 million residents.

Under Governor Ron DeSantis, Florida is seeing population growth and business migration — including companies like Palantir Technologies and Meta Platforms, led by Mark Zuckerberg.

So why can one state operate on less per capita… while New York claims it’s running out of money?

💰 The “Tax the Rich” Question

The episode revisits a simple observation:

There are not enough billionaires to fund permanent entitlement expansion at city scale.

Tara connects this to the broader history of socialist theory, tracing back to Karl Marx and the long-running promise that wealth redistribution will permanently solve inequality.

Critics point to 20th-century authoritarian regimes that implemented Marxist systems with catastrophic outcomes.

Supporters argue modern democratic socialism is fundamentally different.

Tara argues the pattern is familiar:

Promise benefits

Blame “the rich”

Raise taxes on everyone

Expand bureaucracy

Cut core services

Ask for more money

🚔 Police Cuts & Bureaucracy Growth

One of the most controversial elements:

Cutting 5,000 police jobs while expanding administrative equity offices.

The central question Tara raises:

Why do essential services shrink while non-essential departments grow?

Is it ideological prioritization — or budgetary mismanagement?

🏛 Bigger Themes in This Episode

Are Gen Z voters confronting unintended consequences?

Can large cities sustain expansive public benefits?

Does high taxation drive capital and businesses elsewhere?

Is Florida’s model scalable nationwide?

What happens when rainy-day funds run dry?

Is this ideology — or simple fiscal math?

📢 TALKING POINTS

NYC $127B budget breakdown

Florida $117B state comparison

Gen Z voting trends

Property tax increase proposal

NYPD staffing reductions

Corporate migration to Florida

Government-run grocery proposal

Rainy day fund withdrawal

“Tax the rich” math debate

🎯 SOCIAL MEDIA POST

They were promised free buses.
Lower rent.
Government grocery stores.
Tax the billionaires.

One month later?

10% property tax hike.
5,000 police jobs cut.
$1B drained from savings.

There are never enough “rich people” to fund the promise.

New episode of AmperWave Daily — out now.

#NYCPolitics #SocialismDebate #TaxTheRich #GenZVoters #BudgetCrisis

🏷 HASHTAGS (First Comment)

#RonDeSantis #FloridaVsNewYork #PublicPolicy #CityBudget #PoliceFunding #EconomicReality #FiscalPolicy #UrbanPolitics

🏷 CUSTOM LABELS

zoran mamdani new york, nyc property tax increase, nypd job cuts, florida budget comparison, ron desantis governance, gen z socialist vote, government grocery stores proposal, rainy day fund drain, marx manifesto debate, urban fiscal crisis
See all episodes

Never lose your place, on any device

Create a free account to sync, back up, and get personal recommendations.