Mosab Hassan Yousef — the man born into the heart of Hamas who later turned on the terror group and even worked with Israeli intelligence — went on Fox to deliver a blunt warning to New Yorkers about the radical forces now jockeying for power in the city. He is not a casual commentator; he grew up inside the organization he now calls a religious movement bent on annihilation, and when he speaks about Islamist extremism Americans should listen.
On The Will Cain Show and across Fox’s platforms, voices like Yousef’s are being used to sound an alarm about Zohran Mamdani — a self-described democratic socialist whose rhetoric on Israel, policing, and taxes has set off real alarm bells across the city. Conservative hosts and guests have argued that Mamdani’s charm offensive masks a radical agenda that would remake New York on the taxpayer’s dime, and they’re right to press that argument hard as Election Day approaches.
Make no mistake about what Mamdani represents: a new generation of leftist politicians promising free services, steep tax hikes on businesses and millionaires, and audacious power grabs over everyday life — a package he sold to voters as relief from rising costs. His platform includes rent freezes, free public buses, municipal grocery stores, and higher taxes on corporations and the wealthy, ideas that will be paid for by the people who still keep this city functioning. Voters deserve to know the cost and consequence of those promises before they hand over the keys.
Conservatives aren’t raising these warnings as partisan fear-mongering but as a defense of livelihoods, public safety, and Jewish neighbors who have been unnerved by Mamdani’s past statements and his flirtation with BDS-style policies. The reaction has been immediate: business leaders, community activists, and even some Jewish organizations have publicly expressed fear about the direction his policies could take the city — fears that could produce a mass exodus of jobs, investment, and stability if ignored. The choice facing New Yorkers is stark and costly.
Patriotic Americans should take Mosab Yousef’s verdict seriously: when someone with his background warns about Islamist extremism and the company radical politicians keep, it’s not a bumper sticker argument — it’s a life-and-death red flag. If conservatives and sensible independents want to keep New York as a place of enterprise, public safety, and pluralism, now is the time to get informed, get loud, and hold the line against experiments that have bankrupted other cities. The future of the nation’s greatest city depends on whether voters choose common sense over ideological fantasy.

