One social media user wrote that the hedge fund executive Bill Ackman “went from acting like Mamdani was going to import ISIS to extending a friendly handshake… in like six hours.”
. . . Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman poured over $1.75 million into the mayor’s race with a laser focus on stopping Mamdani, whom he often ambushed with several-thousand-word screeds on his X account, which boasts nearly 2 million followers. He accused Mamdani—a staunch critic of Israel—of “amplifying hate” against Jewish New Yorkers, while suggesting that his followers (which happened to include many Jewish New Yorkers) were “terror supporters.”
Meanwhile, the billionaire suggested that the democratic socialist Mamdani’s “affordability” centered agenda, which includes increasing taxes on corporations and the city’s wealthiest residents to fund universal childcare, free buses, and a rent freeze for stabilized units, would make the city “much more dangerous and economically unviable,” in part by causing an exodus of billionaires like himself.
In turn, Mamdani often invoked Ackman’s name on the campaign trail, using him as the poster boy for the cossetted New York elite that was almost uniformly arrayed against his candidacy. In one exchange, Mamdani joked that Ackman was “spending more money against me than I would even tax him.”
After Mamdani’s convincing victory Tuesday night, fueled in large part by his dominant performance among the city’s working-class voters, Ackman surprisingly did not respond with “the longest tweet in the history of tweets” to lament the result as some predicted. Instead, he came to the mayor-elect hat in hand.
“Congrats on the win,” he told Mamdani on X. “Now you have a big responsibility. If I can help NYC, just let me know what I can do.”



Not only do you have to be capable of immoral actions to amass that much wealth, but having power has all sorts of neurological effects.
People who gain power become less capable of empathy. If you gave a “good” person that much money, they would be less able to think about how their actions hurt others.
I’m a bastard and if you gave me that much money I’d probably spend a disturbing chunk within a week get bored and then piss about funding archeologists. But I’m also autistic and think power is for bitches to the point that there’s a solid chance I’d ban myself from living off said wealth.
This is why the people we see who are billionaires are depraved.
Before any normal person became that wealthy, they would find ways to spread that wealth.
Fair enough, even my generally frugal old money ancestors didn’t hoard wealth like these bastards. They preferred to etch their name in stone by financing the construction of libraries and historical societies, hell one bank rolled the start up for a volunteer fire brigade bank rolled a quarter of their budged for 50 years. I guess that’s kinda the key difference between the billionaires and regular folks be they rich or poor normal humans want to do shit and not sit around like a bunch of boring ass dragons.
I have often thought that if i got a bunch of money i’d make sure not to move house, quit my job or otherwise change my lifestyle. I’m also neurodivergent and quite devoted to avoiding ever excercising power and to ignoring authority as much as i can.
Realistically I suspect we’d get food delivered multiple times a day.
But of course i don’t think me-without-a-billion could ever really know what me-with-a-billion would do.
Here’s some anecdata: someone close to me became accidentally moderately rich (somwhere in the 50-100M range). Before that, he’d worked hard his whole life and endured hardship due to some of the usual problems that life throws at a working person. In the several years since the windfall, he has drifted from (by US standards) radical leftism to vaguely-leftish centrism. However, he does give away half the earnings on his wealth every year, and is very diligent in making sure that the groups he funds are efficient at delivering on their stated objectives. The programs he supports are soft-left and none of his money goes to anything remotely MAGA.
As for lifestyle: he moved to a bigger but discreetly anonymous house, replaced his ancient and rusting economy car with a more recent (but still second-hand) one, and he and his partner dine out more often than they previously did. No nouveau-riche glitz. If you saw him on the street, you’d assume he’s a hippyish retired tradesman. So I’d characterize him as slightly warped by the sudden change in circumstance, but still self-aware.
Now, if a billion had landed in his lap, the warping power might have been proportionatey greater.
I like to think I’d be more resistant to the corrupting power of money, but like you, I don’t know.