T. A. Gardner
Serial Thread Killer
This post mixes one real policy discussion with several unsupported or exaggerated claims. Let’s separate what’s real, misleading, and false.
1) Is there actually a “government-run grocery store plan” in NYC?
Partly true (but often misrepresented)
Yes, there is a plan and it isn't "partially true."
2) “$30 million store” claim
Not verified / likely misleading framing
NYC’s first city-owned grocery store under lefty Mayor Mamdani to open in East Harlem: report
Mamdani’s proposal for the East Harlem store would eat up nearly half of the $70 million he proposed for the five-store program as recently as February.
The NY Post says it's true. The NYT says its true.
Mamdani Plans to Open City-Owned Grocery Store in East Harlem
Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced plans for a city-owned grocery store at La Marqueta, moving to deliver on a campaign pledge.
How do city-owned grocery stores work? What to expect at NYC's first
What’s affordable, healthy, and consumed all over? Groceries from your local city-owned supermarket. Mayor Zohran Mamdani is generating some buzz this week with his announcement that New York City is gearing up to open its first batch. Joined by a number of city officials, Mamdani on Monday...
www.nbcnewyork.com
Your AI source is an idiot.
3) “Four times the cost of private grocery stores”
Unproven / oversimplified
Not "oversimplified." It is an estimate by experts. Given the track record of government in general, it is probably a pretty good estimate, and likely an underestimate.
4) “Using eminent domain to seize land”
No evidence (for this specific grocery proposal)
Not for the first one at least. It is being built on a lot the city already owns. That doesn't mean the other 4 planned, with a total of $70 million budgeted, won't follow suit. It is likely, given that there is a dearth of city land suitable for this project that at some point eminent domain will have to be used to acquire the necessary lot for a store.
Your idiot AI source is giving too much credit to government and not enough to history.
5) “Direct competition causing bankruptcy of private stores”
Speculative political argument
Again, it's a pretty good opinion. If Mamdani's store is selling at a subsidized discount compared to other stores nearby, it is likely it will bankrupt some private stores.
6) About the source (Townhall op-ed)
The cited article is from Townhall, which is:
That doesn’t automatically make everything false, but it does mean:
- A partisan opinion site
- Not a neutral investigative or peer-reviewed source
- Often uses ideological framing (“socialism,” “insanity”)
It should not be treated as an objective economic analysis.
This is an irrelevant appeal to authority combined with a No True Scotsman. Nothing is offered by the AI to back the claims made here. Aside from that, there are dozens of other sources reporting the same thing.
Bottom line: You shouldn't rely on half-assed AI to do your thinking for you.7) Bias analysis of the post
The language signals strong ideological framing:
Loaded terms
- “insanity of socialism”
- “government-run grocery stores”
- “bankruptcy”
Claims that one pilot concept implies systemic failure of socialism
Slippery slope argument
Treats speculative cost estimates as confirmed reality
Worst-case assumption framing
Bottom line
There are proposals for public/nonprofit grocery stores in NYC
No verified $30M finalized store with the described details
No evidence of eminent domain being used for this purpose
“4× cost” claim is not established fact
Economic and competitive impact claims are speculative
The post is ideologically framed and mixes real policy ideas with exaggerated or unverified claims
