Posted on 02/13/2007 10:25:55 AM PST by NormsRevenge
New York City before Rudy was an aging courtesan. Visiting New York City was a trip to a third-world country that had become so by choice.
Times-Square was disgusting . . . full of the sort of raunchy shops that the morally stunted think are adult. Much of the city smelled of urine and I could hear gun shots in the distance walking back to my rooms . . . not once but often in my short trips to pre-Rudy New York.
It was obvious why people stayed in New York City, even loved her, but it was a dying, even fetid, beauty . . . and I was sorry to be too late to fall for her. I remember thinking, She must have been something once.
When I visited New York City post-Rudy, I could not believe the difference. Times-Square was fun again . . . and the entire City was cleaner, vibrant, and was young. . . nor was the change cosmetic surgery, because the City has continued to be vibrant long after Rudy left.
Obviously, Giuliani had not been responsible for all this miracle, but leaders deserve credit and Giuliani led by making the tough decisions. He led and the results were good for traditionalists. He made the City better for families, of all colors, and the voters have never looked back.
On the day of 9/11 and the immediate after-math, Rudy Giuliani was masterful and he has been sound on the War . . . the single most important issue of our time.
The Mayor is smart, a great speaker, and will be able to raise buckets of money. He can also win by putting many blue states in play.
Rudy is no Lincoln Chafee . . . he is the sort of left-of-center Republican I personally admire . . . up to a point.
Despite this, I certainly will not vote for Rudy Giuliani in the primaries and I am not sure I could do it in the general election. My presidential vote just might stay at home (the Republic will survive!).
Why?
First, New York City is not the United States . . . as shocking as this news might be to my friends who live in the Big Apple. The brash and by-the-throat style that worked well in the tabloid consuming subways is not the proper style for the White House . . .
In ancient times, when Rome was in a mess, they would call in a strong man . . . a Roman dictator to straighten out the problems before sending him home. New York City was rotting in the 1970s and it need someone like Rudy Giuliani, a Roman patrician and strong man, to save it. America is not so badly off . . . the economy is sound and the War is still winnable.
Giuliani is an ambitious man, all men who run for the Presidency are ambitious men, but his is the sort of raw ambition that does not sit well with me so close to power in war time. He wants to be president too openly . . . to much. Rudy Giuliani does not have the personality to lead the whole nation. I dont think he would wear well and bluntly I fear such ambition untempered by any ideology or religion so close to power.
Second, Rudy Giuliani has a philosophy in his personal life that is antithetical to the American tradition. Giuliani has secular-elite morality . . . more libertine than conservative. Can traditionalists trust his basic impulses?
What do I mean? Nobody can anticipate the challenges a President will face . . . remember 9/11 and George Bush. Gay marriage was not the issue it became in 2000. How will a man react to new challenges? His personal life philosophy is a good measure.
Rudy Giulianis personal life indicates that in any new challenge his deepest predispositions will be hostile to traditionalists.
When he does not need our votes, he will forget us utterly. He has no friends in our camp or memories that can stir him to sympathy with our point of view.
A comparison with another blue-state Republican might help make what I am saying plain.
Mitt Romney is a Republican who has often taken wrong positions on important issues. . . changed his mind . . . and grown as all statesmen do. I dont agree with him on all the issues. This I know about Romney: he has friends who are very conservative, family who is very conservative, and is a traditionalist in his religious view of the world. His deepest and first impulse will be to understand the American tradition . . . not to innovate.
Given the quick changes that happen in American politics, a mans fundamental view of the world (secular/progressive or traditionalist/Burkean) is more important to me than the way he answers issues.
Romney disappointed liberal Republicans in Massachusetts by governing as a conservative . . . he did not mean to deceive in his answers to the overly tight questions of a campaign . . . it is just the actual demands of office are never like the neat check boxes of campaign position lists. (Are you for legal abortion? told us nothing of what Romney would do about stem cells.)
I dont trust Giuliani to be our friend when the new issues arise . . . as they surely will.
Finally, Giuliani is on the side of what the blessed Pope John Paul the Great called the culture of death. As a secularist (whatever his claimed religion), he views life and death as in the hands of men. Instead of our right to life being secured by God as our Declaration of Independence says, he would negotiate it or leave it to the whims of Courts. Rudy Giuliani will not even pretend to be in favor of traditional American views on the sanctity of life . . . and if a politician will not even pander on an issue, you know he means it . . . really means it.
Rudy Giuliani would be the first open culture-of-death candidate to receive the Republican nomination since the Reagan Revolution. He would shatter the pro-life Republican presidential monolith that provided key margins in so many states.
Against another pro-culture-of-death candidate (like Hilary!) perhaps Rudy Giuliani would get my vote as the lesser of two evils, but without enthusiasm and with little support.
Or I might stay at home, waste my vote on a protest candidate, and wait for better days.
The fact that a Republican such as I (in a family Republican since Lincoln) would consider this . . . is a bad sign.
The realistic candidates for President on the Republican side at the moment are Giuliani, McCain, and Romney. Only these three have the money, broad support, and chance of winning to make it all the way . . . unless someone else shows up or one of them falters there is simply not room in the media mind for more than three candidates.
McCain is faltering . . . aging before our eyes and struggling to raise money. I know of nobody who wants him . . . and his polling may simply be name recognition. I think him the most likely to vanish in a puff of smoke.
If he fades, then who? Nobody has the money to fill the gap . . . or the charisma. I challenge anyone to name an electable Republican with money raising prowess who in now in the race outside of the Big Three.
Newt? Get real. Democrats might as well nominate Ted Kennedy.
Newt may be popular with some Republicans, but my wife turns off the television any time he appears. She really, really dislikes him. If you cannot carry Hopes vote, then you cannot win!
Giuliani has much dirty linen, but the media likes his kind of secret and will protect him (as it can) the way it protected Clinton. He will be a player to the end.
Romney? He is far and away the best of the three . . . and it may be coming down to voting for the traditionalist of the heart who swears he has learned some things over time over two men (Giuliani and McCain) who lack the temperament to be in the White House.
Schwarzkopf, he's Ok by me
Tommy Franks, I like him too.
"If you are someone who normally votes Democrat, then yes. Otherwise, no. The symmetry in your question doesn't hold."
I normally vote pro-life.
You already did, my friend, you already did,, ;-)
LOL. Fair enough.
Put it this way: the kind of voter interested in Guiliani or Romney (whom I have said I am particularly interested in) is not likely to be enthusiastic about Duncan Hunter.
"You're going to make 'em pop a blood vessel and have a hissy fit.
You are not supposed to ask those kinds of questions."
Mr President, Sir!!
They do get angry, don't they!! Why do I have to vote for Rudy just to make them all happy? They have all those new voters who have been waiting for the party to become neolibs. They should be extatic!!
Rudy isn't electable, but that doesn't matter?
Mitt needs to let it all hang out and quick, the Rudy express has already left the station ..
Those out front now may not be so in a few months, we'll see in a year's time who is left standing.
In the end, the voters wil decide, not a bunch of freepers running around like chicken with their heads cut off like you see here of late. ;-)
Really? He's got the best numbers of any of the Republican nominees right now.
I'll say this for Romney - his mobilization of the yoots is better than Guilini's. Romney is on Facebook and Myspace. Guiliani is not. That's going to help.
n the end, the voters wil decide, not a bunch of freepers running around like chicken with their heads cut off like you see here of late. ;-)
Absolutely. We lose sight that FR is far to the right of the electorate. It has to do with the group dynamics. I'm probably one of the more moderate guys on this board, but when I step onto campus, I am one of the more conservative.
I think the US is much more conservative than you might think.
So would you say FR is a bastion of Extreme right wingers for the most part based on your assessment?
It might explain the "civil war" going on here the last couple weeks as "centrists" and moderates work their wiles for folks with more liberal leanings than most would care to back.
Doesn't matter! I don't think he can get the nomination, but if he did, so many of us would sit it out or vote for some conservative 3rd party. Rudy would get trounced!!
I am not willing to let the Republican party, the party of life, be taken over by liberals.
No. I would say, however, that the dynamic of this group (it is a decidedly right-wing blog!) means that the the hard right has a disproportionate influence.
It's clearly to the right of the country.
There's not that many of you.
so you don't buy that a good chunk of the nation is still conservative but many who are turned off by the behavior and seeming abandonment of its own party in a drift to the middle?
Uhh, also, FR is not a blog! lol
You would be amazed how many would not be able to vote for anyone who supports murdering babies. I know people don't like it phrased that way, but for someone who is truly pro-life, that is what it means. The beating Rudy would take would not be pretty. Why do you think there are those who are trying to steer the party back to the right? We don't want HIllary, either, but once the GOP is lost to the pro life cause, the GOP is lost, period.
No, I do not. I am more inclined to believe that a good chunk of the nation is either moderate or politically disinclined. Neither of those groups are likely to be attracted by a hard-right candidate.
Stop being so blinded by one issue!
If YOU allow Hillary to win the White House - that will be YOUR fault - not the fault of the party that didn't nominate YOUR "perfect candidate".
Just like a spoiled child - "if I don't get MY way - then EVERYBODY will suffer - and it's EVERYBODY else's fault because I didn't get MY way!"
Sheeesh!
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