Posted on 12/26/2001 8:36:47 AM PST by Aurelius
Ive always hated Rudy Giuliani but never more than now.
His face fills the screen on every tv channel. Even watching the World Series on the tube provides no sanctuary. Between every inning, there he was, grinning, wearing his silly Yankee baseball cap, seated next to one of my other favorites, warmonger Senator John McCain.
The soon-to-be ex-mayor raises the temperature and gets a standing ovation every time he enters a room. Cameras pass over presidents and governors to focus on Rudy when he comes on stage. He seems ready for sainthood. Its enough to make you sick.
How did all this happen?
On that horrid day in September, Giuliani was trapped in a corridor in one of the World Trade Center buildings and was almost a casualty. This close brush with death energized him, propelling him tirelessly from every newly discovered horror to the next. Rudy was everywhere. The media, impressed, anointed him the icon of the disaster: the brash, bona fide New Yorker with his bona fide New York accent became a stand-in symbol for the citys courage and resolution.
The shell-shocked Gothamites were easy to persuade. Here was an untested, verbally bumbling president in the White House and a fast-talking New Yorker, both doing terrific jobs, werent they? With each passing day, the mythology fed upon itself, and King Rudy reigned supreme.
Actually, Rudy Giuliani doesnt represent the spirit of New York City. Sanctified by the media, the only thing Giuliani represents is the government itself. To listen to the media, one would think that the only casualty of September 11 was the government. Giuliani filled the role of a functionary who roamed from one funeral to the next, a sort of toastmaster general helping bury New Yorks uniformed dignitaries.
It was a top-down event. The mayor represented the upper echelons of the citys apparatus, with an occasional moment of grieving for the hardworking, tragic victims from the real world of commerce.
Politically, Giuliani is like the horror film monster who refuses to stay dead. His prostate surgery forced him to drop out of the much anticipated senate race against Hillary. Pundits have little doubt, however, that Rudy would have fared no better against La Clinton than poor Lazio. (Clinton garnered 55% to Lazios 44%.)
Even term limits ordinarily a stake in the political heart were almost side-stepped by Rudy. For a brief moment there was serious consideration to change the constitution of New York state allowing him to run again for mayor of the Big Apple. Fortunately, the New York pols were not ready for dictator Rudy.
Murray Rothbard used to say whenever a name suddenly becomes household, that he or she didnt drop down from the sky.
Rudolph Giuliani certainly didnt drop down from the sky. He came from Brooklyn.
Rudy was an ambitious lad who once considered entering the priesthood. His father, Harold, had a criminal record before Rudy was born.
In author Wayne Barretts book, Rudy!: An Investigative Biography of Rudolph Giuliani, he says, "The father he celebrated so often was a pathological predator. His extended family harbored a junkie, a crooked cop and a murky mob wing. He dissolved his first marriage with a lie so he could appear Catholic when he remarried. The very personal jewelry his first wife found in her bedroom wasnt hers." (Read the book for the answer to that and a lot more.)
In 1983 Rudy was appointed US Attorney for the Southern District of New York. His record 4,152 convictions with a mere 25 reversals is a testament to his zeal for the job.
Giuliani did not accumulate this glittering record on behalf of the citizens of the Southern District. He was motivated purely by political ambition.
As a prosecutor he employed ruthless tactics such as seizing prominent stockbrokers and traders from the floor of the exchanges and dragging them away in handcuffs with the television cameras already in place and rolling.
In his most famous case, against stock market innovator Michael Milken of Drexel Burnham, Giuliani used the threat of the Racketeering-Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act (RICO) statutes which were so draconian that Milken had no choice but to make a deal with the federal government.
Prosecuting attorneys are never lovable, but Rudy Giuliani was despicable.
Happily, I come to you today with good news. The free ride that Rudy Giuliani has enjoyed since September 11 may be coming to an end.
Last week Rudy made what I consider a fatal political blunder. He urged all New Yorkers to rush out to get flu shots. Since the symptoms of influenza mirrored those of anthrax, eliminating the flu would mean less confusion thus less possible panic. Huh? Poor Rudy didnt calculate the reactions of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
The CDC was shocked at his recommendation. What was Giuliani thinking? It was impossible to supply sufficient flu vaccine for everyone in New York. Giulianis advice would markedly increase demand, leading to shortages, followed by frustration or worse. If nothing else, those high-risk folks who really needed the flu vaccine would be denied.
The New York Times expressed great concern over Rudys advice, and in an op-ed piece ("The Civics of Flu Shots," Nov. 3, 2001), sought to douse the flame Rudys advice would cause. The op-ed urged readers not to panic, not to rush to get their flu vaccine. Dont forget, they reminded readers, there are many diseases that have similar symptoms to anthrax other than the flu. The flu vaccine wouldnt necessarily solve that problem.
At this writing, Rudy has not responded. He will probably bite the bullet and admit his remarks were either misreported or misunderstood, but this genie may be impossible to put back in the bottle.
Rudy, your days spent walking on water are near an end. Youll probably get a job in the Bush administration (not too big, however, as politicians are wary of ambitious New Yorkers.)
We all hope you recover from your recent surgery and that your personal life stays out of the gossip column on Page Six of the New York Post.
As far as Im concerned, Rudy, Id be relieved to see you relegated to that insignificant never-never land occupied by ex-New York city mayors.
Because they can't generate enough hits to their site without spamming FR. Expect the LR drones to come onto this thread & defend the site in seconds.
But then you knew that already.
So your response to an authoritarian like Guliani is to demand that we take liberties with the Constitution to block him from higher office. What a laff.
- LOWER crime rates are better than HIGHER crime rates
- LOWER taxes are better than HIGHER taxes
etc. The man has been a Godsend for that city, for SURE.
Now, switch on your brain, and stop visiting Lew's insane site...
;) ttt
The best description of LewRockwell.com that I've seen yet ... except for Obi-wan Kenobi's description of Mos Eisley Spaceport; that would be the only better description: (paraphrased) a greater den of liars, thieves and inequity cannot be found in the known universe.
Why can't his drivel be confined to the LewRockwell.com site?
I'm sorry that you have such a low threshold for cognitive dissonance.
Gee, no--I just resent a LR post from 11/5/2001, a piece that's almost two months old and not aging well.
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