De Blasio Argues โMAGA Extremismโ Will Be Floridaโs Achilles Heel
During a debate that pitted Florida against New York, former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio claimed that โMAGA extremismโ will ultimately undermine the Sunshine State, even as it attracts tens of thousands of former New Yorkers.
The Democrat predicted many skilled Floridians would leave the state due to policies such as a newly passed six-week abortion ban. (Good, if they donโt like the no state taxes, they can go, but 1,000s are moving their daily)
New Yorkers, by contrast, โfeel safe from extremismโ and โfeel safe from intolerance,โ according to de Blasio, who was succeeded as mayor by Eric Adams in 2022. (Are you fucking kidding me, they are getting mugged, shot, knifed, beat up daily and they are afraid of extremism in speech?)
He argued that his home city remains anunmatched place for opportunitydespite what he characterized as โoverly restrictive immigration laws.โ New York, a self-described โsanctuary city,โ limits cooperation between local law enforcement and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The debate titled โIs Florida Eating New Yorkโs Lunch?โ was organized by Intelligence Squared and will air on public radio May 5. The former two-term mayor, now teaching a course at New York University, squared off against Reihan Salam, president of the conservative Manhattan Institute, and himself the son of Bangladeshi immigrants.
Salam presented the viewpoint that Florida is beating New York, while de Blasio took the opposing view. Salam never seriously challenged de Blasioโs culture war broadsides, which the politician did not fail to miss.
The Manhattan Institute president did note that New York State had been bleeding population at least since 2010 even as Floridaโs population surpassed that of the Empire State in 2013. New York, he pointed out, had not become less tolerant during that period, suggesting other factors were at play.
Salam zeroed in onschool test scores, public disorder, and, in particular, housing costs. He argued that those factors worked to the disadvantage of New York, driving away the working and middle class even as millionaires proliferated. โWeโre really losing strivers,โ Salam declared.
He claimed that the cityโs density, which makes it commercially and culturally vibrant, leaves it vulnerable to even small increases in crime, noise, and congestion. Unlike tightly packed New Yorkers, Floridians โcan just hop in their SUVsโ to get away from certain nuisances, he said.
De Blasio, born Warren Wilhelm, Jr., began by telling the story of his maternal grandparents, who came to Gotham from southern Italy, and whose name he adopted in 2002. He said he respected Florida and was โnot here to be negative to another state.โ That assertion, however, appeared tocontradicthis repeated references to โMAGA extremism.โ
Salam, for his part, repeatedly stressed his own love of New York City, saying he personally wouldnโt choose to live in Florida. De Blasio asserted that the cityโs improved tourist numbers since the end of COVID showed that it was gaining new strength. (what??? Of course it went up, but itโs not as high as before)
He argued that even itshigh housing pricessignaled the cityโs essential vitality: โThe rents are high because people want to be here.โ Moderator John Donvan pointed out that the debaters were conflating New York City and New York State.
On Salamโs telling, that strengthened the case thatFlorida is indeed โeating New Yorkโs lunch.โ The conservative commentator argued that Upstate New York had lost out because of policies that are more to New York Cityโs liking. He also blamed unaffordable housing in and beyond the city, also citing suburban sprawl and long, tiresome commutes from places like the Lehigh Valley in Pennsylvania.
โDo some people end up going to suburbs? Sure,โ de Blasio said, adding that New York is far from the only place in America where sprawl is a problem. He argued that Floridaโs conservative politics would ultimately make immigrants feel unwelcome.
De Blasio disagreed with Salamโs assertion that New Yorkersโhigh taxesdeliver relatively poor services. According to de Blasio, Salam had offended the cityโs workforce.
The former mayor also took issue with Salamโs emphasis on school test scores, saying they were โnot the onlyโ way to assess educational performance. (Yeah, actually it is! This guy is dumber than anyone could imagine)
https://www.theepochtimes.com/de-blasio-argues-maga-extremism-will-be-floridas-achilles-heel_5196707.html