The New York Times Runs Interference For A Racist To Manufacture A Fake Scandal About Zohran Mamdani

from the manufactured-outrage-is-still-manufactured dept

The New York Times has had a rough few decades when it comes to being manipulated by bad actors. But their latest embarrassment—a complete non-story about NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani’s college application to Columbia University from 2009—represents a new low in journalistic malpractice that combines hacked materials, racist sources, and a breathtaking willingness to be used as a vehicle for right-wing propaganda. Oh, and all for a story that has zero news value and zero insight into Mamdani’s qualifications to be mayor of New York City.

Here’s what happened: The Times published a story claiming that Mamdani, who was born in Uganda to parents of Indian descent, checked both “Asian” and “Black or African American” boxes on his Columbia University application all the way back in 2009. The implication, pushed by the story’s framing, was that this was somehow scandalous—a case of gaming the system for affirmative action benefits.

As he runs for mayor of New York City, Zohran Mamdani has made his identity as a Muslim immigrant of South Asian descent a key part of his appeal.

But as a high school senior in 2009, Mr. Mamdani, the Democratic nominee, claimed another label when he applied to Columbia University. Asked to identify his race, he checked a box that he was “Asian” but also “Black or African American,” according to internal data derived from a hack of Columbia University that was shared with The New York Times.

Columbia, like many elite universities, used a race-conscious affirmative action admissions program at the time. Reporting that his race was Black or African American in addition to Asian could have given an advantage to Mr. Mamdani, who was born in Uganda and spent his earliest years there.

I’m genuinely curious about the Times’ logic here. Person born in Uganda checks “African American” box. Where’s the lie? Did Uganda move? Is it not in Africa anymore? Are we really going to pretend that America’s racial categories, designed primarily for descendants of American slavery, map perfectly onto the global complexity of human identity?

If there is a story, it is solely about the Times’ decision and later justification for publishing this non-story.

Mamdani has a complex racial and ethnic background that doesn’t fit neatly into America’s crude racial categories. As he told the Times: “Most college applications don’t have a box for Indian-Ugandans, so I checked multiple boxes trying to capture the fullness of my background.” He also noted that he wrote in “Ugandan” in the space provided for additional information.

Oh, and for all the “could have given an advantage to Mr. Mamdani” reporting in the piece: it didn’t. He didn’t even get into Columbia. Even though his father is a professor there.

So much for gaming the system.

But here’s where it gets really ugly: The Times obtained this information from a massive hack of Columbia’s database, and their source was Jordan Lasker, who goes by the online handle “Cremieux” and whose hobbies include arguing that Black people are genetically inferior. Yes, really. The Times initially described him merely as “an academic who opposes affirmative action,” but as The Guardian previously reported, Lasker regularly argues that Black people are mentally inferior to other races and has written posts defending the idea that African countries have “average national IQs at a level that experts associate with mental impairment.”

But wait, it gets worse. The NY Time’s description of him as “an academic” is generous at best (or perhaps just credulous). His own sister claimed that the family has no evidence he ever graduated and that he didn’t walk at the graduation ceremony that year and his name wasn’t listed in the graduation program. An analysis by another account noted that while he was a PhD student between 2021 and 2024 at Texas Tech, the only academic publication they could find by him turned into a huge scandal that got the professor he co-authored with fired. The paper was not just racist pseudoscience—it also involved lying to the NIH to get access to data. Two-fer!

That article also suggests Lasker (in that paper) lied about his supposed affiliation with the University of Minnesota. When asked about it, the University of Minnesota revealed that Lasker had been a “non-employee” “data consultant” and they had asked him not to claim an academic affiliation:

So, to summarize the Times’ sourcing: They granted anonymity to a person whose identity was already publicly known, who promotes ideas about racial hierarchy that would make a 1930s eugenicist blush, who may have lied about his academic credentials, and whose main claim to fame is getting a professor fired for publishing racist garbage research. And this seemed like a credible source to them for a story attacking a Muslim candidate of color.

What could possibly go wrong?

The Rufo Connection Makes It Even Worse

If this sounds familiar, it should. As Semafor reported, the Times rushed to publish this non-story because they were afraid of being “scooped” by Chris Rufo, the right-wing activist who has openly bragged about manipulating mainstream media to advance his culture war agenda.

The paper believed it had reason to push the story out quickly: It did not want to be scooped by the independent journalist Christopher Rufo. Two people familiar with the reporting process told Semafor that the paper was aware that other journalists were working on the admissions story, including Rufo, a conservative best known for his crusade against critical race theory.

Rufo literally announces his manipulation tactics on Twitter. He’s written about how he plans to get outlets like the Times to amplify his disingenuous and misleading campaigns. And yet, the Times still falls for it every single time, then acts surprised when people point out they’re being played.

As Jamison Foser noted months ago about this dynamic, this isn’t really about the Times being “manipulated”—it’s about the Times wanting to publish these stories and using figures like Rufo as an excuse to do what they already wanted to do.

The Times had a choice: they could have ignored this obvious non-story, or they could have served as a willing vehicle for racists and right-wing propagandists to manufacture a fake scandal. They chose the latter. And then they doubled down on it.

But here’s what kills me: they could have written a fascinating story about how a network of racist activists was trying to weaponize hacked university data that revealed nothing particularly interesting to attack a Muslim mayoral candidate. They could have exposed the whole operation. Instead, they decided to become part of it. It’s like if Woodward and Bernstein, upon discovering Watergate, had decided to focus their expose on how the security at the Watergate Hotel was top notch, with an anonymous quote from G. Gordon Liddy.

The Double Standard Is Glaring

The Times’ decision becomes even more indefensible when you consider their recent editorial choices. They refused to publish hacked materials about JD Vance during the 2024 election and declined to explain why. But when a racist hands them a hacked college application from 2009 that reveals nothing of public interest, suddenly those ethical concerns disappear.

The paper also famously decided not to endorse candidates in local elections—except when it came to Mamdani, whom they specifically urged voters not to rank at all on their ballots. Interestingly, they didn’t issue similar “please don’t vote for this person” guidance about Andrew Cuomo, the disgraced former governor who resigned over sexual harassment allegations and has been plagued with scandals from his mismanagement during the pandemic. Apparently checking the objectively accurate box on a college application is more disqualifying than a pattern of sexual misconduct and mismanagement.

Manufacturing Controversy To Justify Bad Journalism

Perhaps most galling is the Times’ response to criticism. When readers and media critics pointed out how absurd this story was, an anonymous Times source told Semafor that the controversy proved they were right to publish this:

“The fact that this story engendered all the conversation and debate that it has feels like all the evidence you need that this was a legit line of reporting,” one senior reporter told Semafor.

But that’s not how any of this works. At all. Sometimes the “conversation and debate” is about how you should have known better.

Times editor Patrick Healy also doubled down, claiming—in a lengthy rambling thread on ExTwitter—that Mamdani responding honestly to their questions about this made it into a story.

The Times then published a follow-up piece asking readers about frustrations with racial categories on forms—a transparent attempt to retroactively justify their original story by suggesting there’s some broader conversation about racial identity that needed to be had.

But there was already a conversation about racial identity. It’s been going on for centuries. The Times didn’t need to platform a racist and manufacture a fake scandal to contribute to it.

The Real Story They Missed

As Margaret Sullivan, the Times’ former public editor, noted in The Guardian, this story tells us nothing about Mamdani’s qualifications or policy positions. It’s the journalistic equivalent of spending your time investigating whether someone returned their elementary school library books on time instead of, you know, whether they’d be competent at running a city.

Traditional journalism ethics suggests that when news organizations base a story on hacked or stolen information, there should be an extra high bar of newsworthiness to justify publication. Much of Big Journalism, for example, turned their noses up at insider documents offered to them about JD Vance during last year’s presidential campaign, in part because the source was Iranian hackers; in some cases, they wrote about the hack but not the documents.

The Mamdani story, however, fell far short of the newsworthiness bar.

The real story here is how easily America’s supposed “paper of record” can be manipulated by bad actors who openly announce their manipulation tactics. It’s about how the Times’ apparent opposition to certain candidates leads them to abandon basic journalistic standards. And it’s about how the paper’s desperate desire to appear “balanced” makes them perfect marks for right-wing propagandists who understand exactly which buttons to push.

As Hell Gate put it: “The failing, bumbling New York Times” has become a vehicle for race science and manufactured outrage, all while pretending they’re just doing journalism.

So who does this put the Times in league with? Much like its coverage of trans youth, it’s helpful to look around and see who else is pushing the same line of coverage. It’s hard-right ideology laundered as legitimate journalistic inquiry. The article’s print edition on Sunday ran under the title “Mamdani Faces Scrutiny Over College Application.” From who? For what? The Times clearly doesn’t feel all that interested in answering these questions, other than its providing cover for fascistic ideologues. The Times is coordinating with people whose work is actively eroding what’s left of America’s attempts at racial equity. 

Again, it’s hard to tsk-tsk a newspaper that said it wasn’t endorsing candidates in local elections anymore, and then revised that to actually be like, “unless you’re thinking of electing a socialist, which in that case do not do that and instead vote for this sexual harasser.” Having failed spectacularly at stopping Mamdani, the Times is now unveiling its tried-and-true strategy to drum up controversy—and question the legitimacy of a person’s humanity—by doing the dirtiest of work for the worst-faith actors.

The Times owes its readers an explanation for why they thought this was a story worth telling. Why they granted anonymity to a person who promotes racial pseudoscience. Why they rushed to publish obvious non-news to avoid being “scooped” by a known manipulator. And why they continue to provide aid and comfort to people whose stated goal is to manipulate them.

But the paper has shown no inclination toward introspection. Instead, they’ve doubled down, claiming that the controversy they manufactured proves they were right to manufacture it.

In the meantime, the rest of us can learn something from this debacle: when someone tells you who they are, believe them. Chris Rufo has told us he manipulates mainstream media. Jordan Lasker has told us he believes in debunked racist pseudoscience about “racial hierarchy.” And the New York Times has told us that they’re willing to amplify both of them if it serves their editorial agenda.

We should believe them all.

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Comments on “The New York Times Runs Interference For A Racist To Manufacture A Fake Scandal About Zohran Mamdani”

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39 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

Willing accomplices

Given their other actions it’s pretty clear that The New York Times ran a non-story hit-piece submitted by a known racist because they wanted to run a non-story hit-piece submitted by a known racist.

He told them what they wanted to hear and gave them an excuse to say what they wanted to say.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Mr. Koby,

what you’ve just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard.
At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought.

Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

Re:

Except there is no appropriation or “sin” here at all. This is literally just right wing trolls trying that age-old tactic of using their obtuse, intentional misunderstanding of values they oppose against the people they also oppose. The messenger is literally making up the scandal with false implications and disingenuous pearl-clutching. And you’re doing the same here when you pretend there really is an issue.

That Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

I enjoy the latest round of bullshit from the Nazi paper of record, they claim that his score was at the low end for regular people and he ticked black and magically he was in.

Funny the math, which I know I do not have a good grasp of, doesn’t work out. The percentage they used is artificially lowered. I’m sure that the Nazis aren’t just twisting facts to support a narrative (Hey Kid, wanna buy a bridge in Brooklyn?) and that no fact checking took place on the article (that has sense been quietly updated but still tries to ride the dead horse of he only got ahead by ticking black & stealing a slot of a good upstanding white person.)

This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
Thad (profile) says:

“The fact that this story engendered all the conversation and debate that it has feels like all the evidence you need that this was a legit line of reporting,” one senior reporter told Semafor.

I bet you’d get engagement like a motherfucker for an article titled “We Should Beat AG Sulzberger with a Stick Until Candy Comes Out”. Go to it, Times.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

nzeid (profile) says:

As someone who’s also literally African American but caucasian, I was aware of the history of the term African American and knew to always flag myself as “white” in things America. I get it. It’s a stupid, antiquated term. But it does give the impression to universities that you are Black American. Mamdani didn’t receive a worse history education than me and he should have known better.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

So how black do you need to be to check the box? Black as night? Do one of those colour matches?

Or do you need to do a dna test? What’s the percentage required? Can white people with enough black dna check the box?

You sir, have fallen for the right wing idiocy of how this is all determined.

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This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

White people of European heritage being “African American” is significantly different than a person of Indian heritage being born in Uganda. Indians weren’t slavers of black people during the first hundred years of American history. You should know better than to try to whitesplain proper labels to a Ugandan-Indian-American.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Said Ugandan-Indian American effectively told Columbia University that he was Black American.

No, he didn’t. He didn’t write the form. He didn’t limit the unclear, poorly worded choices. He answered as accurately as he thought he could in the moment. And the burden is on you to prove that they actually thought he was a black person and that such a thought actually helped his enrollment. This is just speculation from people looking for any excuse to start a scandal. By pretending it’s legitimate, you’re doing their work for them.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

At which point the story would have been that Zohran is a hypocrite ashamed of his birthplace who tried to hide it from Columbia. The application matters only as a vehicle to attack Zohran with – to pretend there’s an ounce of sincerity here is to make cause with Rufo and Lasker.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

At which point the story would have been that Zohran is a hypocrite ashamed of his birthplace who tried to hide it from Columbia.

Except the article says…

[Mamdani] also noted that he wrote in “Ugandan” in the space provided for additional information.

…so that story wouldn’t have held water for more than a microsecond before it fell apart.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

It’s definitely not a dealbreaker for me and I will rank Mamdani again.

That’s a lie.

But it’s not unreasonable for me to expect him to respond to the situation more apologetically and convince me that he understands race relations in our city and that it’s important that he does.

Thanks for going on to prove my assertion above.

FellaVague says:

A modest proposal: Convince some credulous Times reporter that brave citizen-journalists like Nick Fuentes or Bronze Age Pervert are about to scoop them with a massive story about how the Trump administration is destroying liberal democracy in the US. Then the Times would have no choice but to report the news! We could recruit the folks impersonating Marco Rubio and Susie Wiles to really give it that added touch of authenticity.

Anonymous Coward says:

The New York Crimes publishes racist red scare hit piece, nobody shocked

Republicans and Democrats alike desperately want to generate a scandal around Mamdani. They tried claiming he’s a spoiler for the Right, they tried focusing on his support for Palestine, and now they’ve tried making a fuss about how he filled out his college applications (on a way that taps into nonsense about affirmative action and “reverse racism”).

All this despite the fact that Mamdani is not that far left – he could be seen as something of a pressure release valve for revolutionary sentiment, a DSA member who wants to reform the system rather than scrap the whole thing and start over as more militant socialists would prefer. And if he wins, it isn’t like he’d be able to effect that much change all on his lonesome; he’ll need to work with other politicians and officials on the city and state levels to get anything done, so even his already -moderate left-wing goals would be further weakened by the Democrats.

But the Democrats (now generally to the right of Reagan) and especially the Republicans aren’t willing to live with such a reformer. Even if he DOES act as a way to bring leftists into the system, they are unwilling to accept ANY potential threat to their hegemony over American politics or to the profits of their corporate sponsors.

This attempt seems to have fizzled, so any guesses on what “scandal” they’ll associate with him next?

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