‘Double Tap Drone King’: Socialists Crash Out After Mamdani Meets With ‘War Criminal’ Obama

Apr 21, 2026 - 07:28
Apr 21, 2026 - 08:47
 0  1
‘Double Tap Drone King’: Socialists Crash Out After Mamdani Meets With ‘War Criminal’ Obama

The Democratic Socialists of America’s online base spent the weekend in full meltdown mode after New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani was seen singing “The Wheels on the Bus” alongside former President Barack Obama, a development that, for a movement obsessed with ideological purity, landed somewhere between betrayal and heresy.

4 Fs

Live Your Best Retirement

Fun • Funds • Fitness • Freedom

Learn More
Retirement Has More Than One Number
The Four Fs helps you.
Fun
Funds
Fitness
Freedom
See How It Works

The backlash was immediate and, in typical fashion, unfiltered.

“If Mamdani invited genocidal war criminal Netanyahu to read stories to preschoolers the American left would be up in arms,” one post read. “But of course this war criminal … still gets an inexplicable pass.” Another user fumed: “Why is a DSA member casually hanging out with the double tap drone king who isn’t even president anymore.”

Others went further, accusing Obama of sabotaging the Left outright. “Barack Obama literally made phone calls and got personally involved to kill the Bernie Sanders campaign,” one user wrote, as Mamdani supporters were accused of “rehabilitating his image.” The tone across the board was less disappointment than revolt. “Zohran dragged you mfs to the right,” the post declared flatly.

The irony is hard to miss. Mamdani, who just reaffirmed that he believes in Democratic socialism “even more than I did the day before,” is now being cast as insufficiently radical by the very coalition that helped elevate him.

But the composition of that coalition helps explain the dynamic. Despite the rhetoric of revolution and working-class solidarity, the DSA’s own internal data paint a different picture. A majority of its members sit squarely in the professional-managerial class: 10% identify as academics, 13% as white-collar professionals, 9% as tech workers, with additional shares in nonprofits and the public sector. Altogether, roughly 54% hold what would broadly be considered credentialed and insulated jobs.

Another 23% are either students or unemployed.

The demographic breakdown is just as revealing. The organization is 85% white, with single-digit representation across Hispanic, Asian, and black members. For a movement that frequently frames itself as a vehicle for marginalized voices, its base remains overwhelmingly homogeneous.

The gap between self-image and reality is where the Mamdani-Obama backlash starts to make more sense. What presents itself as ideological rigor often functions like cultural signaling, where proximity to perceived impurity becomes grounds for denunciation.

For a movement that claims to prioritize material outcomes, the reaction suggests something else is at play — a politics driven as much by identity and posture as by policy — and when even one of their own can’t pass the test, it raises questions about whether that pure standard is attainable at all.

What's Your Reaction?

Like Like 0
Dislike Dislike 0
Love Love 0
Funny Funny 0
Angry Angry 0
Sad Sad 0
Wow Wow 0
Fibis I am just an average American. My teen years were in the late 70s and I participated in all that that decade offered. Started working young, too young. Then I joined the Army before I graduated High School. I spent 25 years in, mostly in Infantry units. Since then I've worked in information technology positions all at small family owned companies. At this rate I'll never be a tech millionaire. When I was young I rode horses as much as I could. I do believe I should have been a cowboy. I'm getting in the saddle again by taking riding lessons and see where it goes.