He always seemed to me to be part of the GOP establishment. He was weak on core conservative issues such as abortion. That's a big negative to me. But obviously there is a clear break from his establishment roots. He has stood with Trump from the very beginning. Very few Republicans have done that. He's not some Johnny come lately. I think if we dig deeply enough we can find enough consistency to Rudy to admire him even though we may not agree with all of his positions.
As many former NYC mobsters will attest, Rudy is a pitbull. Left to his own devices, he'll do what he wants and more harm will come than good.
When chained, trained and focused in the right direction, he can launch devastating attacks on his opponents.
“...don’t agree with Rudy...”
Don’t forget that Rudy took down the mob:
985-1986: Giuliani crushes Five Families finest
In the 1960s and 1970s, a series of developments paved the way for the U.S. government to pursue mobsters more aggressively and on a larger scale. First, in 1963, convicted New York mobster Joseph Valachi broke La Cosa Nostras sacred code of silence to become an informant, revealing key details about its structure and customs. In 1968 Congress passed a law allowing wiretap evidence in federal courts, providing investigators with a vital (and controversial) weapon in their war against organized crime. Two years later, it passed the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, which allows for prosecutions against criminal organizations and the seizure of their assets.
Armed with these new tools, future New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, then a federal prosecutor, masterminded the indictment of 11 Mafia leaders, including the heads of New Yorks five dominant crime families, in February 1985. The case against them relied on bugs planted in strategic locationssuch as the dashboard of a Jaguar owned by Lucchese family chief Anthony Tony Ducks Coralloover the course of a four-year investigation. Eight of the original defendants stood trial together and were convicted in November 1986.
Known as the Mafia Commission Trial, the case marked a turning point in prosecutors approach to crushing La Cosa Nostra, as Giuliani put it. Rather than hunting down an individual capo (boss) or underboss, who would quickly be replaced by the next in line, they would seek to dismantle entire chains of command.
Rudy is the real deal as far as prosecution and greatly to be admired.
I think you nailed it.
You can disagree with someone but respect them i.e I respect Tulsi Gabbard but I don’t like her politics.