Watching political news out of the United States can make you feel genuinely unhinged. For today’s WTF dispatch: New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani broke down the virtues of charitable giving via an extended Mario Kart metaphor, and it was AWESOME. This is the type of unhinged political news we can all use more of… instead of the unhinged ravings of the Orange Man.

Transcript below, for those of you on public transit without headphones—or anyone like me who simply prefers words on a screen instead of video:

“I like to think of it this way: government is driving the racecar, and philanthropy is there to give it that turbo boost across the finish line. Or, if you are a Mario Kart fan, government is Yoshi and philanthropy is the golden mushroom—that edge we need to beat Bowser on the Rainbow Road. To belabor this metaphor even further, Bowser is corporate greed in this scenario.”

“While even some of his aides standing beside him gave little smirks, the analogy isn’t as absurd as it initially seems,” Kotaku aptly explains. “One of the foundational design principles of modern Mario Kart is that people who are losing get better items like lightning and blue shells to help them try to get back in the race, while those who are already winning get banana peels and other junk.”

At a press briefing on April 16, 2026, Mayor Mamdani, Elle Bisgaard-Church, and other board members of the newly established Mayor’s Fund were on hand to discuss what the new philanthropic fund will do, who could and should contribute, and how this money pot will benefit every New Yorker in every borough. According to the briefing, the first cause of the fund will be the Child Care Action Fund, which will push for universal child care for any New Yorker who needs it and has already earned $3.5 million toward its $20 million target. Donors to the Mayor’s Fund, for their part, will be disclosed on an annual basis, according to Mamdani’s office.

But the bigger picture (at least in terms of political news) is the Pied-à-Terre Tax, a first-of-its-kind in New York, where owners of luxury properties who don’t live in the city but keep their assets here will pay an annual fee projected to raise at least $500 million for free child care, cleaner streets, and safer neighborhoods. In the world of Marvel Comics, this is the part where a gang of costumed criminals, helmed by Wilson Fisk (also a NYC mayor), bursts in and takes everyone hostage. In the real one, the loudest complainers are second-home owners suddenly facing a tax bump on properties worth north of $5 million.

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