Posted on 12/31/2007 3:16:44 AM PST by Liz
WEST DES MOINES, Iowa - Giuliani's support here has plummeted into single digits....according to new surveys released yesterday. A Reuters poll shows the ex-mayor capturing just 8% of the vote - tied for fourth place with Thompson and Ron Paul. An MSNBC poll shows Giuliani tied with Paul for fifth place with a measly 5% of the vote - near the bottom of the pack. "Where has he been? He stopped showing up," said conservative activist Jamie Johnson, who runs a radio station. Giuliani did not air a single TV ad in Iowa, and his 15 trips here were far fewer than front-runners Romney and Huckabee.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Not if he beats Rudy there too!!!!...lol
Heh---good one.
The quicker Rudi the cross dresser goes away, along with McScream, Rummmmmanie, Nutcase Paul, and a couple of others.
You got that s-o-o-o-o right.
Some of us predicted this long ago. GOP primary voters are conservative. Giuliani is not conservative.
Gotta make a note of that.
No one benefits from the "CLINTON VACCINE" (personal life, conduct, character and integrity don't matter, only professional life matters) than Giuliani. NO ONE!!!
Rudy owes Clinton BIG TIME for that one!
With some of the garbage I've seen peddled here by Rudy supporters, nothing is obvious.
And this...
And now that I think of it, when is Money Bags Rooty going to release the client list of Julie-Annie Partners and all his other money laundering front companies?????
For all we know Osama bin Laden or a Mexican Drug Cartel could be clients.
I can’t help but think Liz is actually Donna Hanover. Has anyone ever seen them in the same room?
Well, Bernard Kerik was training 40,000 of Saddam Hussein’s Bathe Soldiers.
Bernard B. Kerik: “Baghdad City Cop”, The Wall Street Journal, September 28, 2003
Liz is waaaay to smart to have ever married Rudy Giuliani.
>>>>Mexican Drug Cartel could be clients.
Oops, finding stuff now (more coming):
2003, Mexico City: Residents of Américas largest metropolis live in fear of kidnappings, rape, and murder. A city perceived by the foreign press as lacking rule of law stumbles through another decade of the drug war with crime on the rise. Enter Rudy Giuliani to bring his crime fighting expertise to Mexico Citys embattled residents many of whom call themselves Chilangos.
The formula is largely the same, except that this time Giuliani wasnt elected. He was not hired by any public agency or official. His consulting firm, Guiliani Partners LLC, was hired by a group of private business interests led by Carlos Slim, Mexicos richest man, for a stated price tag of $4.3 million. But when Giuliani Partners announced its 146 recommendations of how to fight crime in the nations capital, Mexico Citys police chief and Mayor hailed the recommendations and announced they would adopt every single one.
The whole process had the look of a well-orchestrated show: in January, Giuliani toured Mexico Citys toughest neighborhoods, surrounded by 300 bodyguards (as one journalist asked me, Does he walk around New York that way?); in early August, the city government appeared with the Giuliani recommendations in hand, confident that Mexico City would follow in the footsteps of New York Citys reportedly historic crime rate drop. By September, Mexicos downtown historical district already sported new video cameras and mounted police monitoring the streets.
Underneath the gleam of new police uniforms and in the backrooms of business suites used for triumphant press conferences exists a more complex reality. Just as the residents of Bedford-Stuyvesant, (a historically poor neighborhood in New Yorks borough of Brooklyn), and the employees of legal aid and the New Yorks mayors office know, as residents in the northern barrios of Mexico city and keen businessmen downtown all know, there is more behind the official version of this story.
continued with excerpting:
Pepe Martinez, a nationally syndicated Mexican columnist and author of the definitive biographies on two of Mexicos richest men, Carlos Slim (Carlos Slim: Retrato Inedito. Oceano publishers, 2003) and Carlos Hank González (Las Enseñanzas del Profesor: Indigación de Carlos Hank González, Oceano publishers, 1999), tells Narco News that the Mexican side of this story can be traced back to September 11, 2001. As Rudy Giuliani began his political resurrection as the stand-in Commander and Chief, Carlos Slim donated large sums to aid New York. Little more than a year later, with Rudy Giuliani in private-money-making mode, and considered on the short list of future Republican Presidential hopefuls, Carlos Slim offered him $4.3 to lend Mexico City a hand.
Interestingly, Mexico Citys leftwing mayor, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, of the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD, in its Spanish initials) soon joined his Police Commissioner Marcelo Ebrard in welcoming Giulianis report. Here are some of Mexicos most powerful figures politicians with aspirations, Mexicos richest man Slim who has a history of philanthropy, but no aspirations to run for office himself (according to biographer Martinez) standing together in an unconventional marriage. But, what about Mexico Citys 12 million-plus Chilangos where do they stand in this equation?
There is no doubt that many city residents live in fear of crime and there is a pervading sense that something must be done. In that sense, most residents seemed to welcome a new approach and many were open-minded about the Giuliani announcement. But the questioning began in many circles even before the 146 planks of the crime plan were announced.
Highlighted for interest:
>>>Giulianis famed Zero tolerance strategy from New York, which itself was copied from George Kellings 1980s No More Broken Windows study.<<<
continued with excerpting:
Originally promised for January, 2003, the Giuliani report did not arrive until August. Raul Fraga is a journalist and professor who has studied crime in the United States and Mexico since the 1980s. He told Narco News that there were many explanations circulating about the delay, principally that the Giuliani team had not been able to do a sufficient diagnostic evaluation of the reality and problems in Mexico City and that there were discrepancies between preliminary recommendations and their applicability.
Fraga says the report is basically the re-application, with a few modifications, of Giulianis famed Zero tolerance strategy from New York, which itself was copied from George Kellings 1980s No More Broken Windows study. Kellings thesis held that by cracking down on low-level crimes, a respect for authority would develop, eradicating an incipient culture of crime. Giuliani recently denied that he subscribes to zero tolerance measures for Mexico City, but his report notes that small crimes should be made a priority: They should respect and comply with the law, which includes simple actions like obeying traffic signals and not offering bribes to police officers. Indeed, the report calls for harsh drug penalties in drug free school zones, for eliminating prostitution on the streets, for anti-graffiti and anti-noise police units, and for a crackdown on the informal economy of squeegee men, street children who perform magic tricks for pesos, and frenaleros who watch over parked cars for a few pesos.
While the report also calls for reorganizing the police force, combating corruption, and revising the criminal justice system, the Mexican public quickly jumped on the recommendations carrying the most immediate consequences: crackdowns on quality of life crimes. As squeegee-man Israel Jorge Peralta, 17, told the New York daily Newsday, If they put me in jail for this, who will feed my family? Why should I be punished for trying to earn money honestly when there are no jobs? Human rights groups denounced the move to criminalize the citys more than 20,000 homeless children, without offering adequate alternatives. Perhaps the most significant challenge came from Mexico Citys District Attorney Bernardo Batíz Vásquez, who declared to reporters that some of the recommendations run contrary to the Mexican Constitution, leading many to question whether the Giuliani team had done its homework.
How experts and everyday Chilangos want to know does Giuliani think he can export strategies tailored for New Yorks well-financed and modern police force to the Mexican city of the legendary mordita, a systemized bribery of under-paid police? Not to mention the challenge of projecting a crime-fighting approach built for New York onto a city with a vastly different socio-economic mix? Whatever the differences in culture, background and laws, the objective for all decent societies is absolutely the same, and that is protection and safety: the single most important human right, Giuliani told the Guardian of London.
In impoverished Mexico City, the buying power of wages has fallen steadily over the past decade, and much of Mexico Citys population is not formally employed. The English language press from AP to Newsday to alternative papers like the Village Voice speak of skyrocketing crime and regale us with stories of express kidnappings. This trend in which taxi passengers are forced to empty their ATM accounts by drivers holding them prisoner is not new and effects only the minority of Chilangos who have ATM cards. These papers say that there are 500-600 crimes reported daily, but that criminologists believe that these make up only 10% of actual crimes committed. Most crimes do indeed go unreported because Chilangos seem to have more fear of policemen than faith in them. Policemen routinely pad their low wages with bribe money. Pepe Martinez goes so far as to say that there is a policeman behind virtually every crime.
Many Chilangos worry that while crime may or may not go down, giving the police broader powers may lead to increased abuses by the police. At a recent meeting in response to the Giuliani report, called by a local educational organization, the Mexican Association for Cannabis Studies (AMECA, in its Spanish initials), David Rodriguez worried, The police are going to begin to act tougher, because they will feel they have more moral power. Even if some of these recommendations dont pass, the cops are going to perceive this new approach. Ignacio Saiz of Amnesty International agreed in a recent Village Voice article, saying, Zero tolerance encourages police to act on their instincts, including their discriminatory instincts.
According to Fraga, Mexican security experts who have studied crime in Mexico for decades believe that the Giuliani plan does not make a convincing case that it can be an effective model to resolve the high delinquency in Mexico City. Journalist Carlos Ramirez compares the approach to what happens in the movies, saying officials are going after the most visible criminals while ignoring the mafias responsible for the major crimes and forgetting about the societys structural problems that cause the high crime rate. These observers speak of a spectacular show being staged, one that creates an illusion of action and safety, but is constructed in a way that impedes delivery of its promises.
Source:
http://www.narconews.com/Issue31/article867.html
Giuliani’s Mexico City Game
A story of Fear, Power, and Money
By Noah Friedsky
Special to The Narco News Bulletin
Why are you so indifferent to people in power being funded by the same sources as NAMBLA?
? How did you make that leap?
I already posted that here on this thread.
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