There’s a particular breed of hypocrisy that stings worse than others. It’s the kind where someone lectures you about your carbon footprint while boarding a private jet, or tells you to tighten your belt while they loosen theirs at a five-star resort. New York City’s new democratic socialist mayor, Zohran Mamdani, and his wife Rama Duwaji just gave us a masterclass in exactly this phenomenon.

While Mamdani spent America’s 250th birthday criticizing capitalism, ICE, and what he called an “arena of supremacy,” his wife was roughly 3,700 miles away at a luxury Islamic spiritual retreat in Mallorca. Let that sink in for a moment. The mayor spent Independence Day trashing the country while his spouse couldn’t even be bothered to stick around for the celebration.

Duwaji flew out of Newark Liberty International Airport earlier this week, headed for the Mediterranean island off Spain’s western coast. She’s not just lounging on a beach somewhere. She’s serving as artist-in-residence and featured host for a sold-out Women’s Sanctuary retreat. The price tag? A cool $3,400 per guest. The program focuses on “Plants of the Quran” through art, botanical workshops, and Islamic spiritual reflection. She’s also scheduled to co-host another sold-out retreat in Corsica later this month exploring “Mary in the Quran.”

Now look, people are free to spend their money however they want. That’s capitalism, baby. The free market at work. But you can’t spend years railing against wealth, privilege, and excess while your household lives exactly that lifestyle. You just can’t. Well, you can, but don’t expect the rest of us to take you seriously.

The timing is what really galls. Mamdani recently told New Yorkers to lower their air conditioning. Think about that. He wants working families sweating through July in their apartments while his wife jets off to the Mediterranean for a month of spiritual retreats that cost more than many New Yorkers make in a month. The cognitive dissonance is staggering.

This is the champagne socialist problem writ large. These are people who’ve discovered that preaching socialism is incredibly profitable, as long as you don’t actually have to live under it yourself. They’ll advocate for policies that restrict your choices, limit your opportunities, and redistribute your earnings. Meanwhile, they’re booking luxury retreats and living lives insulated from the consequences of their own ideology.

Critics were quick to point out that Duwaji conveniently deleted her social media accounts after some allegedly offensive tweets surfaced. Funny how that works. Preach accountability for everyone else, then vanish when your own words come back to haunt you. It’s the digital equivalent of “rules for thee but not for me.”

The broader issue here isn’t about Islamic retreats or European vacations. It’s about authenticity and consistency. If you’re going to build your political brand on criticizing American capitalism and wealth inequality, maybe don’t live like you’re auditioning for Real Housewives of Socialist NYC.

Americans are tired of being lectured by people who clearly don’t believe their own message. We see through it. The working families Mamdani claims to represent? They’re not spending $3,400 on retreats. They’re trying to figure out how to pay for groceries while their mayor tells them to turn down the AC during a heat wave.

This isn’t about left versus right. It’s about basic honesty. If socialism is so great, live it. If capitalism is so evil, stop enjoying its fruits. But this constant double standard where the rules apply to everyone except the enlightened elite? That’s exactly the kind of supremacy Mamdani claims to oppose.

You want to represent the working class? Start by acting like you’re actually part of it.

Related: The Fourth of July Speech That Reminded Us Why America Still Matters