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Rudy’s a No-Go
National Review ^ | 2/6/2007 | Terence P. Jeffrey

Posted on 02/06/2007 10:43:27 AM PST by ElkGroveDan

“Murder and graffiti are two vastly different crimes,” Rudy Giuliani once said. “But they are part of the same continuum, and a climate that tolerates one is more likely to tolerate the other.”

Good point, Rudy.

Now, what about a climate — not to mention a Republican presidential candidate — that not only tolerates, but allows unelected judges to legalize the practice of delivering a child until only its head remains within its mothers womb so the child can be killed by sucking out its brains?

What about a climate where same-sex couples are given the same legal status as married couples, whether the resulting arrangements are candidly called “same-sex marriages,” or are semantically papered-over with terms such as “civil unions” or “domestic partnerships”?

Apply the Giuliani Continuum to fundamental issues such as marriage and the right to life, and where does it lead?

Not where conservatives want America to be.

Rudy Giuliani’s observation about the “continuum” running from graffiti to murder was quoted in a piece in the winter edition of City Journal by Steven Malanga. The title of Malanga’s piece neatly encapsulates his argument: “Yes, Rudy is a Conservative — and an electable one at that.”

I believe Malanga is wrong on both counts. Rudy is neither conservative, nor electable — at least, not as a Republican presidential candidate.

As Malanga seems to define it, a politician dedicated to good police work and free-market economics qualifies as a conservative. “Far from being a liberal,” Malanga writes of Giuliani, “he ran New York with a conservative’s priorities: government exists above all to keep people safe in their homes and in the streets, he said, not to redistribute income, run a welfare state, or perform social engineering. The private economy, not government, creates opportunity, he argued; government should just deliver basic services well and then get out of the private sector’s way.”

But that’s not enough. While advocating law and order, self-reliance, and capitalism is laudable, it does not entitle a politician to a free pass for advocating other causes that are deeply destructive of American society.

While it is always wrong to take an innocent human life — whether on a New York sidewalk or in a mother’s womb — Giuliani is highly selective in applying this principle. In 1999, when he was pondering a run for the U.S. Senate, he was asked whether he supported banning partial-birth abortion. “No, I have not supported that,” he said, “and I don’t see my position on that changing.”

“I'm pro-gay rights,” he also said. Indeed, his position is so radical in this area that as New York City mayor he promoted a city ordinance that removed the distinctions in municipal law between married and unmarried couples, regardless of their gender.

“What it really is doing is preventing discrimination against people who have different sexual orientations, or make different preferences in which they want to lead their lives,” Giuliani said, explaining the ordinance to the New York Times. “Domestic partnerships not only affect gays and lesbians, but they also affect heterosexuals who choose to lead their lives in different ways.”

In other words, preserving a legal order that prefers traditional marriage and traditional families is “discrimination.”

Giuliani’s positions on abortion and marriage disqualify him as a conservative because they annihilate the link between the natural law and man-made laws. Indeed, they use man-made law to promote and protect acts that violate the natural law.

Given his argument that there is a “continuum” between graffiti and murder, you would think that Giuliani would understand the importance of the link between the natural law and the laws of New York City, let alone the laws of the United States. At the heart of Rudy’s “continuum” argument, is the realization that when society refuses to enforce a just law it teaches people to disrespect the moral principles underlying just laws.

The late Russell Kirk argued in The Conservative Mind that the first canon of conservatism is “[b]elief in a transcendent order, or body of natural law, which rules society as well as conscience. Political problems, at bottom, are religious and moral problems. … True politics is the art of apprehending and applying the Justice which ought to prevail in a community of souls.”

It is simply not justice to take the life of an unborn child. Nor is it justice to codify same-sex relationships so that, by design of the state itself, a child can be denied a mother or a father from birth, which is one thing legalized same-sex unions would do.

By advocating abortion on demand and same-sex unions, Rudy is doing something far more egregious than, say, defacing a New York subway train. He is defacing the institution that forms the foundation of human civilization.

That is not conservative.

Rudy will not win the Republican nomination because enough of the people who vote in Republican caucuses and primaries still respect life and marriage, and are not ready to give up on them — or on the Republican party as an agent for protecting them.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: abortion; elections; gays; giuliani; giuliani2008; homosexualagenda; liberalagenda; moralabsolutes; pitchforkers; prolife; rubots; rudyagogo; rudycanbeathillary; rudytherednosedrino; singleissuevoters; unappeaseables; wot
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To: ElkGroveDan

Perhaps not enough. Rudy may have the momentum to bring ALL Republicans out to the primaries.


21 posted on 02/06/2007 10:52:33 AM PST by EnquiringMind
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran

It didn't take long for the Rudy fan club to get here did it?


22 posted on 02/06/2007 10:52:42 AM PST by dmw (Aren't you glad you use common sense, don't you wish everybody did?)
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To: Pistolshot

What does a candidate who believes in all the "core values" get you in the general election? 40-44% of the vote and that ain't gonna cut it in 2008. Pick your battles my friend as losing in 2008 is not a pleasant thought.


23 posted on 02/06/2007 10:53:34 AM PST by rhc2000
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To: dmw
Rudy RotoRooters trying to hide his sewer pipes!
24 posted on 02/06/2007 10:55:46 AM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran ("Remember the Alamo, Goliad and WACO, It is Time for a new San Jacinto")
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To: ElkGroveDan

This thread will prove how some "conservatives" want Republicans to lose every election possible.


25 posted on 02/06/2007 10:56:08 AM PST by Niteranger68 (Point your toilets towards Mecca!)
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To: Peach

Ultra social conservative is a leftist term, just like right wing extremist.


26 posted on 02/06/2007 10:56:36 AM PST by upsdriver
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To: Pro-Bush
Rudi can't be any worse on immigration than Bush.
I will vote for Rudi...
27 posted on 02/06/2007 10:56:48 AM PST by Fawn (Vista stinks)
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To: ElkGroveDan

Giuliani (D-NY) is pond scum if he won't stand up for the lives of unborn children.

if all the GOP can come up with in 2008 are left-wing scum like Giuliani and McCain and if the GOP refuses to kick those 2 losers out of the party, I hope Hillary wins in 2008, maybe then the GOP will learn another lesson, they obviously learned nothing in 2006 by Pelosi taking control of the House and Republicans getting beat all across the country


28 posted on 02/06/2007 10:57:04 AM PST by TracyTucson (Teachers : Overpaid and Underworked........ Eliminate > ADA, EOE, NLRB, SS, DOE)
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To: Liz; Reagan Man; TommyDale; Spiff; narses

fyi


29 posted on 02/06/2007 10:58:08 AM PST by jla
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To: GSlob
Well, count my vote for Rudy. And I do vote in primaries.

Thanks for the warning. I'll hide the babies when you are out and about on election day.

30 posted on 02/06/2007 10:58:36 AM PST by ElkGroveDan (When toilet paper is a luxury, you have achieved communism.)
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To: James Ewell Brown Stuart

I like Hunter, too. I just think Rudy can be a vocal and visual reminder of what this country faces every day. Hunter would be a good choice if were in peacetime, IMO, to get back to what conservatism should be. I think Rudy is a quality administrator and well aware of the issues we face from Islamic extremists. He's got some bags but I think he would be a good war-fighter.

It's a tough choice.


31 posted on 02/06/2007 10:58:47 AM PST by L98Fiero (A fool who'll waste his life, God rest his guts.)
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To: Peach

Will I get berated for questioning as follows?

Are the socons nervous about Rudy because, if he were to win, it would demonstrate that the socons are not as much of the base as they would like to believe?


32 posted on 02/06/2007 10:58:47 AM PST by dmz
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To: ElkGroveDan

Pro life conservatives are the strongest grassroots primary voters.


33 posted on 02/06/2007 10:58:50 AM PST by upsdriver
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To: TracyTucson

I could not agree more.


34 posted on 02/06/2007 10:59:00 AM PST by thepresidentsbestfriend (God be merciful to me a sinner. I have no respect for persons that trash GW Bush.)
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To: GSlob
This article seems to say that we should be single issue voters. I don't like abortion, and I want to limit it as much as possible, but don't want to criminalize it for first trimester. Too many people are single issue voters on both sides of the political spectrum.
Also, Rudy's position has been mischaracterized somewhat here. He is pro-choice, but believes marriage is between a man and woman. I don't have a problem with civil unions, and Rudy doesn't want to take away my gun.
See his interview with Sean Hannity.
35 posted on 02/06/2007 10:59:08 AM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: dmw
It didn't take long for the Rudy fan club to get here did it?

There are a lot of us. More than you know.

36 posted on 02/06/2007 10:59:11 AM PST by EnquiringMind
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To: dmw
It didn't take long for the Rudy fan club to get here did it?

There are a lot of us. More than you know.

37 posted on 02/06/2007 10:59:13 AM PST by EnquiringMind
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To: ElkGroveDan

"Now, what about a climate — not to mention a Republican presidential candidate — that not only tolerates, but allows unelected judges to legalize the practice of delivering a child until only its head remains within its mothers womb so the child can be killed by sucking out its brains?

What about a climate where same-sex couples are given the same legal status as married couples, whether the resulting arrangements are candidly called “same-sex marriages,” or are semantically papered-over with terms such as “civil unions” or “domestic partnerships”? "

I noticed how Reagan managed to change this? Wasn't he a Conservative? How did this work out for him?


38 posted on 02/06/2007 11:00:26 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (The Clintons: A Malignant Malfeasance of the Most Morbid)
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To: James Ewell Brown Stuart
"I plan to vote for Duncan Hunter in the primary, but if he cannot gain traction, I will vote for Rudy."

Hunter's biggest job between now and the primaries will be getting as much face time as he can. As it stands, he doesn't have the name recognition to carry an election against a "popular" Dem, or even enough to beat Giuliani in the 'Pubbie primary.

The good news is that, if he does manage to get the 'Pub nod, he has a good, clean (there's that word again) personal background, so the only thing the libs and media will be able to attack him on will be his conservatie views. And that certainly won't hurt him with 'Pubs.
39 posted on 02/06/2007 11:00:54 AM PST by LIConFem
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To: Peach

My nephew used to work for Media Research Center. Said Rudy polls very well in the Bible Belt.


40 posted on 02/06/2007 11:01:38 AM PST by gov_bean_ counter ( I am sitting under my cone of silence, inside a copper wire cage wearing a tin foil hat...)
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