“Little Pakistan” — New York’s New Colony
At a Brooklyn rally, New York mayoral hopeful Muslim Socialist Zohran Mamdani stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Pakistani political operatives who now openly describe parts of the city as “Little Pakistan.”
Before a crowd of Urdu-language media and foreign-linked activists, Mamdani framed his campaign as a movement of Desis and Muslims, boasting of 100,000 volunteers and vowing to “make history in four days.”
He spoke of canvassing Pakistani taxi drivers, coordinating through mosques, and rallying every uncle, auntie, and youngster to vote as a bloc.
And when challenged, he claimed he was facing “Islamophobia” not seen since 9/11 — reducing legitimate criticism of foreign political coordination to “racism.”
Then came the part that said the quiet part out loud.
“When Zohran wins, we will go back to Little Pakistan and hold the biggest rally for him there,” one organizer declared, thanking the Pakistani media, the Pakistani Consul General, and bragging that his group, APAG, had already delivered Mamdani a reliable Pakistani-American voting bloc.
That “Little Pakistan” corridor — along Coney Island Avenue — now bears a new name: “Muhammad Ali Jinnah Way.”
Named for the founder of Pakistan, Jinnah didn’t build a democracy; he built a partitioned religious state born out of violence and segregation.
Pakistan was not founded; it was carved out of India on the belief that Muslims could not coexist with others. And now, that same ideology, separation under the banner of “representation,” is being exported, sanctified, and rewarded on American soil.
This is not local politics.
This is transnational colonization, coordinated through tax-exempt mosques, 501(c)(3) “charities”, and a foreign media network that praises American candidates for “representing Pakistan.”
You can listen to the attached clip below, where Pakistan’s former president, Dr. Arif Alvi, addressed U.S. mosques and Pakistani-American leaders, urging them to enter U.S. politics to serve Pakistan’s interests.
“Your country needs you,” Alvi told them. “Pakistan Zindabad!”
The message could not be clearer:
Foreign governments are mobilizing their diasporas as political weapons inside the United States – and American politicians like Zohran Mamdani are their willing instruments.
This is not assimilation. It is replication.
The Pakistanification of America is not coming. It has arrived – and it’s being celebrated on Muhammad Ali Jinnah Way.
