Foreign dictators just bought a borough of New York City—and nobody blinked.

Foreign money and radical ideology turned Queens into a laboratory for authoritarian influence. By election day, less than half of the online engagement for the winning candidate came from American users. The rest was a ghost army of overseas bots, proxies, and paid operatives.

On the streets, “Bangladeshi aunties” weren’t neighbors. They answered to Kazi Fouzia, a veteran organizer tied to Islamist-Maoist revolutionaries. She funneled activists and messaging through U.S. nonprofits.

Those nonprofits are Trojan Horses. The People’s Forum, bankrolled by Neville Roy Singham—an identified CCP asset—is under House Ways and Means investigation for acting as a foreign agent. It supplied staff, strategy sessions, and staging ground for rallies.

Singham’s network even spawned Jews for Zohran, led by his niece Alicia Singham Goodwin. It squelched criticism, whipped up turnout, and polished the candidate’s image with squeaky-clean appeal.

On Instagram, algorithmic cells amplified foreign audiences. On TikTok, pro-Mamdani clips out-reached organic content by 55 percent, while independent-candidate coverage was throttled. These are not anomalies. They are deliberate, measurable distortions of American civic life.

Behind the smiling campaign posters and phone-banking drives lay Haqooq-e-Khalq, a Pakistani socialist party modeled on the revolutions in Cuba and China. Its organizers worked hand-in-glove with Fouzia’s crews, channeling radical doctrine into local precincts.

American ideals were left out of the equation. Instead, Marxist ideologues, Islamist movements, and CCP proxies built a hidden operating system inside Queens—and proved it can bend our elections to foreign will.

If they can rig a mayoral race in Queens, they can rig one anywhere. American democracy is under siege, and the warning signs are right here on our own streets.