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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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Rudy will not win the Republican nomination because enough of the people who vote in Republican caucuses and primaries still respect life and marriage
1 posted on 02/06/2007 10:43:33 AM PST by ElkGroveDan
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To: 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.”

That is a brilliant quote.

2 posted on 02/06/2007 10:45:33 AM PST by jdm
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To: ElkGroveDan

Well, count my vote for Rudy. And I do vote in primaries.


3 posted on 02/06/2007 10:45:57 AM PST by GSlob
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To: ElkGroveDan

don't tell that to the rudy fans on the board. That must mean that conservative primary voters actually want hillary to be elected president if they don't vote for rudy.


4 posted on 02/06/2007 10:46:04 AM PST by flashbunny (<---------- Hate RINOs? Click my name for 2008 GOP RINO collector cards.)
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To: ElkGroveDan

Immigration and gay marriage would have been stopped him from winning anyway.


5 posted on 02/06/2007 10:47:11 AM PST by Pro-Bush (hater)
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To: ElkGroveDan

Someone needs to report this thread to a mod....uh...never mind.


6 posted on 02/06/2007 10:48:35 AM PST by zarf
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To: ElkGroveDan

Rudy has a strong 84% conservative approval rating. (Battle ground poll as of Jan.11, '07)


7 posted on 02/06/2007 10:49:09 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: ElkGroveDan

Rudy would never get involved in any discussion of gays or abortion or anything else involving morality, since he knows he'd be (justly) accused of hypocrisy.


8 posted on 02/06/2007 10:49:09 AM PST by Redbob
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To: All

Indeed, in one recent poll, majorities of Republicans who were informed of Giuliani’s views on social issues said that they were either minor issues or no issues at all; only 16% said that they wouldn't vote for him after being informed of these views.

In the online GOP Bloggers poll, Giuliani is consistently one of the few candidates to end up with a net positive acceptability rating. These internet denizens are well-informed, and overwhelmingly self-describe as conservative (78% self-describe as 7 or higher on a 10-scale of conservatism). If these people can support Rudy, anyone can.

http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/


9 posted on 02/06/2007 10:49:37 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: GSlob

"Well, count my vote for Rudy. And I do vote in primaries."

Seconded.


10 posted on 02/06/2007 10:49:54 AM PST by L98Fiero (A fool who'll waste his life, God rest his guts.)
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To: ElkGroveDan
Someone FINALLY gets it about Rudy. I would hope the rest of the 'Rudy can beat Hillary" crowd get the point.

It's about CORE values, and Rudy is nowhere near the real Republican core values.

11 posted on 02/06/2007 10:49:56 AM PST by Pistolshot (Condi 2008.<------added January 2004. Remember you heard it here first)
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To: Peach

In fact, an exit poll question from Pew in 2004 revealed that only 3% of voters named abortion as their top voting issue, 2% named religiosity, and 2% named gay marriage.
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1780060/posts


12 posted on 02/06/2007 10:50:04 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: ElkGroveDan
Rudy is for the planned murder of the most helpless, for gun grabbing from honest citizens and for illegal aliens rights and welfare!

The RNC went from Conservative to moderate to loss of POTUS to more moderate.
Now some on FR and the RNC seem to want to go left wing with Rudy, Romney or McCain!
13 posted on 02/06/2007 10:50:09 AM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran ("Remember the Alamo, Goliad and WACO, It is Time for a new San Jacinto")
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To: Peach

Ultra social conservative Pat Robertson thinks Rudy would make a good president.

Asked if Giuliani would be an acceptable 2008 presidential candidate to Christian conservatives, Pat Robertson told ABC's "This Week:" "He did a super job running the city of New York and I think he'd make a good president."

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/5/1/102522.shtml


14 posted on 02/06/2007 10:50:29 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: flashbunny

Rudy can win. He can and might actually bring some other down ticket candidates in the House and Senate with him. No other Pub candidate will do that. Surely not St.John or Mitt or Newt(sadly because he is brilliant), nor the rest of the wannabes. No Dem is worthy of the Prez or even Congress just to spite our faces with the 'perfect' conserv. Who might that be? Mike Savage, Hunter, Tancredo? Pullllleeeze. Now Hunter could be a nice VP fit if some other name raising conserv for Rudy would not be the choice.


15 posted on 02/06/2007 10:50:32 AM PST by phillyfanatic
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To: Peach

As George Will said on “This Week,” “His eight years as mayor of New York were the most successful episode of conservative governance in this country in the last 50 years, on welfare and crime particularly." Giuliani, more than any other candidate (Romney comes the closest) has the record of taking on major institutions and reforming them. Think about tourist magnet that is New York now. When Rudy Giuliani took office, 59% of New Yorkers said they would leave the city the next day if they could. Under Rudy Giuliani’s leadership as Mayor of the nation’s largest city, murders were cut from 1,946 in 1993 to 649 in 2001, while overall crime – including rapes, assaults, burglary and auto-thefts – fell by an average of 57%. Not only did he fight crime in Gotham like Batman, despite being constantly vilified by the New York Times, he took head on the multiculturalism and victimization perpetuated by Al Sharpton and his cohort of race baiters. He ended New York’s set-aside program for minority contractors and rejected the idea of lowering standards for minorities. As far as the economy goes, Rudy reduced or eliminated 23 city taxes. He faced a $2.3 billion budget deficit but cut spending instead hiking taxes.

http://www.redstate.com/blogs/dmeaton/2007/feb/04/achieving_socially_conservative_ideals_through_liberal_means_making_the_case_for_rudy




16 posted on 02/06/2007 10:51:04 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: Peach

believe that life is sacred and should not be treated as a commodity. I believe that the institution of marriage needs to be preserved. For now at least, good judges are best way to protect the institution of marriage and move America closer to the day when a debate on the local level can begin again about the value of human life. In order for us to have this debate in state legislatures we must win the next fight over the next Supreme Court vacancy, and if we lose the next presidential election than we will have taken a major step backwards in our quest to replace the current liberal ideology on the highest bench. More than any potential Republican president, Rudy Giuliani will have the easiest time getting strict constructionists confirmed to the Supreme Court and the lower courts.

Think of four scenarios: 1) A Hillary appointment 2) A court battle in which a thinly elected Republican administration that is led by someone who is avidly pro-life faces down a probably Democratic controlled Senate 3) A court battle in which the overwhelmingly elected Republican administration is led by the Bull Moose lover himself, Mr. McCain 4) A court battle in which pro-choice Giuliani, elected and respected by a huge majority of Americans, makes the argument that strict constructionist jurisprudence is needed in the 21st century. He did after all strongly support Justice Roberts, Justice Alito, and he said that he would have made Justice Scalia Chief Justice. As important, Giuliani can actually make a personal case for a specific legal doctrine. The mayor is a former high ranking Justice department attorney who has argued before the Supreme Court.

To reclaim the Senate and Congress, to hold onto the White House, to build a sustainable Republican majority, and to advance conservative principles, we Republicans must unite together and support a candidate who can win the hearts of the vast majority of Americans.

Only when we win hearts can we then win minds.

http://www.redstate.com/blogs/dmeaton/2007/feb/04/achieving_socially_conservative_ideals_through_liberal_means_making_the_case_for_rudy


17 posted on 02/06/2007 10:51:22 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: jdm
I don't understand - does that quote mean -
If I tolerate graffiti then I may tolerate murder?
18 posted on 02/06/2007 10:51:45 AM PST by SF Republican
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To: flashbunny
"...conservative primary voters actually want hillary to be elected president if they don't vote for rudy."

This is one of the most ridiculous statements I've ever seen on FreeRepublic.

It's either Hillary or Rudy, eh?
LOL!

19 posted on 02/06/2007 10:51:58 AM PST by Redbob
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To: L98Fiero

I plan to vote for Duncan Hunter in the primary, but if he cannot gain traction, I will vote for Rudy.


20 posted on 02/06/2007 10:52:12 AM PST by James Ewell Brown Stuart (Happy Birthday Jeb Stuart - America's greatest cavalry leader - February 6th!)
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