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The Ben Ferguson Podcast

Welcome to Mamdani's NY where Inmates Run the Asylum plus Inside the Warner Brothers Deal

The Ben Ferguson Podcast

iHeartPodcasts

News, Politics, News Commentary

4.8 • 5.4K Ratings

🗓️ 2 February 2026

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

1. Strong Criticism of New York City Leadership and Ideology

  • New York City’s current mayor (referred to as Mandani) holds anti‑police, anti‑incarceration, and far‑left ideological views (socialist/Marxist).
  • The mayor believes policing and incarceration are inherently harmful and should be replaced with community‑based or civilian alternatives.

2. Controversial Appointment to Head NYC Corrections

  • The mayor appointed Stanley Richards, a formerly incarcerated individual, as Commissioner of the NYC Department of Corrections.
  • The author frames this appointment as symbolic of rejecting punishment‑based incarceration in favor of rehabilitation.
  • While acknowledging that rehabilitation is possible, rejecting incarceration as punishment undermines accountability and public safety.

3. Concerns About Jail Safety and System Failure

  • NYC jails are described as being in deep crisis, citing:
    • Staff misconduct
    • Violence
    • Drug overdoses
    • At least 76 deaths in custody (2019–2025)
  • Federal oversight has been imposed due to the city’s failure to fix conditions at Rikers Island.
  • The closure of Rikers and replacement borough-based jails is portrayed as stalled, corrupt, and vastly over budget.

4. Opposition to Progressive Criminal Justice Reform

  • The author criticizes:
    • Bail reform
    • Prison reform
    • Defunding police
  • These policies are described as ideological rather than practical, prioritizing criminals’ comfort over victims’ rights and community safety.

5. Hostility Toward Law Enforcement

  • The mayor is portrayed as:
    • Openly distrustful of police
    • Supportive of defunding or reducing police authority
    • Favoring civilian agencies to handle mental health and crisis situations
  • The text argues that removing police authority in crisis situations endangers both civilians and responders.

6. Handling of Homelessness and Mental Health Crisis

  • The mayor is accused of changing cold‑weather emergency policies, allegedly resulting in homeless individuals freezing to death.
  • This is framed as moral hypocrisy: claiming compassion while allowing avoidable deaths.
  • The author asserts that forced intervention during extreme weather is necessary to save lives, regardless of ideological objections.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.3

Guaranteed Human.

0:05.4

When they tell you just how crazy they are, always believe them.

0:11.8

Inmates are running the asylum in New York City as Mondani's new corrections commission actually did time.

0:20.4

In the same jail, he will now oversee.

0:24.2

Appointee rejects punishment-centered incarceration. Yeah, Mundani, you know, the

0:31.6

communist socialist, Marxist mayor of New York City has now tapped literally an ex-convict to run the city's correction system.

0:41.2

Now, with the appointee is set to oversee the same jail where he served time for robbery.

0:48.0

Named Saturday as a commissioner of the city's Department of Corrections was Stanley Richards, a former felon term

0:55.8

criminal justice reformer. That's what they call themselves now, as the new mayor's administration

1:01.6

aims to, quote, push a rehabilitation-focused overhaul instead of, you know, like basic law and

1:08.5

order. They call it corrections.

1:19.2

The 64-year-old Richards will take office in mid-February with an annual salary of $243,000.

1:30.8

Quote, Stanley will make history in his role as the first ever formerly incarcerated person to serve as Commissioner Mundani said.

1:40.3

I will turn to Stanley as we work to build a city where justice is at the heart of our correction system.

1:47.2

Doesn't sound like justice, but okay, we'll keep going. Now, Richards previously worked is president of a nonprofit fortune society that provides housing and other services for ex-cons.

1:52.9

Now, let me be clear. I have no problem with someone running and being involved in law and

2:00.7

order. If they've had a criminal background in the past, it wasn't, you know, violent or something. and being involved in law and order,

2:01.1

if they've had a criminal background in the past

2:03.4

that wasn't violent or something horrific,

2:06.4

I believe that people can be rehabilitated.

2:10.0

What I don't believe in,

...

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