
Razib Khan's Unsupervised Learning Zineb Riboua: Zohran Mamdani and Third-Worldism ascendent
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Dec 2, 2025 In this insightful discussion, Zineb Riboua, a Hudson Institute research fellow, delves into the complex world of Zohran Mamdani and Third-Worldism. She explains how Mamdani, a product of the post-colonial landscape, reinterprets Marxism through an anti-colonial lens. Riboua explores the intellectual legacy of the Algerian Revolution and the strategic use of Islam in Mamdani's politics. The conversation further touches on the evolving role of decolonial narratives in U.S. politics and their potential to reshape global alliances.
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Algeria Rewrote Leftist Language
- The Algerian War of Independence reshaped leftist thought into an anti-imperial, Third-World framework.
- Intellectuals like Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon provided the vocabulary that later fueled global decolonial movements.
Islam As Political Language
- Zoran Mamdani weaponizes Islam as a political language rather than theological governance.
- Riboua argues Mamdani treats religion as a mobilizing tool within an anti-colonial materialist frame.
Third-Worldism Fills A Post‑Woke Void
- Third-Worldist rhetoric fills a post-woke ideological void on the American left.
- Mamdani's cosmopolitan background makes that language second nature and broadly appealing.

