This is what hope looks like..
(not my words)
On Saturday, former President Barack Obama and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani sat on the floor of a South Bronx preschool, sang "Wheels on the Bus," read a book about community to a room full of wide-eyed toddlers, and debated whose city has the better pizza.
And I need you to take a moment to really feel what this image represents.
The two most popular, most genuinely charismatic, most beloved political figures in America right now — one the son of a Kenyan immigrant, the other the son of Ugandan and Indian immigrants. Products of the beautiful, messy, powerful promise of this country. Showing up not for cameras and headlines, but to fight for free child care for the kids who need it most.
In a time when the White House is being used as a weapon against the very idea of America — dismantling democracy, wrecking the world economy, treating cruelty as a virtue — this is the counter-movement. Quiet, joyful, purposeful. Children laughing. Leaders who actually listen.
And that's exactly why the MAGAts are so filled with rage. Because Obama and Mamdani aren't anomalies; they are the future. They are proof that when Americans choose empathy over fear, eloquence over cruelty, and community over chaos, we win. And those who built their power on division know it.
We are not powerless. This is what the resistance looks like. And on Saturday, it sounded like a singalong in the Bronx!





