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A Message to Rudy Giuliani and His Supporters (VANITY)
Self | February 23, 2007 | Alberta's Child

Posted on 02/23/2007 7:45:02 AM PST by Alberta's Child

There have been quite a few threads posted on the subject of Rudy Giuliani’s prospective candidacy for the Republican nomination in 2008, and the endless back-and-forth on these threads has reached a fever pitch at times. I’ve refrained from posting extensively on these threads in recent days because they’ve started to get someone repetitive and tiresome, but also because I’ve been compiling a lot of material to include in a thread of my own. I post my comments here without any “cross-dressing” photos or “Rudy trading card” images (though I do appreciate them, folks!), and without any personal animosity toward anyone, though many of you may know me as one who has strongly opposed his candidacy for quite some time.

I don’t post vanities here very often (and usually only when I’m looking for advice!), so I think my comments here are worth a read.

The “pro-Rudy” arguments typically fall along these lines:

1. Rudy Giuliani is really a conservative. Freepers who use this argument will often cite examples -- sometimes accurate, sometimes exaggerated, but occasionally even downright false -- of cases in which his mayoral administration in New York City pursued a particular course of action that most of us would agree is conservative from a political/philosophical standpoint. His well-documented track record as mayor of NYC offers plenty of such examples, some of which would include his administration’s success in fighting crime (for all his baggage associated with this, as described below), improving the business climate in the city, etc. The biggest flaw in this approach is that his track record is only “conservative” if you focus entirely on these specific issues and ignore the rest of them. I believe this specific view of Giuliani’s background has been sufficiently debunked by substantial, accurate references to his public statements and actual record in public office.

2. Rudy Giuliani is not a 100% conservative, and it’s unrealistic for anyone to think a 100% conservative could be elected president in 2008. The underlying point here is valid in general, but the argument is usually accompanied by accusations that opponents of Rudy Giuliani are "100-Percenters" who insist on a candidate’s fealty to the entire conservative agenda. This would only be a legitimate argument if applied to a candidate who is conservative on, say, 70% of the issues -- but it is awfully silly when used to support a candidate who is conservative on about 20% of the issues -- especially the "defining issues" for so many conservatives. Calling someone who refuses to support a liberal candidate a "100-Precenters" is comical -- and certainly isn’t going to get a candidate any more support among conservative voters.

3. Rudy Giuliani is not a 100% conservative, but he’ll be relentless in the "war on terror" (whatever the heck that means) and therefore he’s the best GOP candidate in 2008. This is basically a corollary to Point #2, in which a Giuliani supporter who knows damn well that he’s conservative on only 20% of the issues will try to transform him into a hard-core conservative by pretending that one issue is somehow weighted disproportionately to the others and therefore this 20% is magically transformed to 80%. That doesn’t fly with me, folks. Basing your support of a candidate on your own assertion of "the most important issue" is silly, especially when you consider that most voters may not necessarily agree with (A) your presumption of the most important issue, or (B) your view of which candidate is in the best position to address this issue.

4. Rudy Giuliani may only be 20% conservative, but that’s better than Hillary/Obama/Stalin/Pol Pot/etc. At least this argument is based on an honest assessment of Mr. Giuliani’s political philosophy, but this is no way to win elections. Yes, a "20% conservative" is better than a "10% conservative," but then pneumonia is a terrible affliction except in comparison to tuberculosis, too. Supporting an unabashed liberal candidate is basically a complete abdication of our principles on the altar of "pragmatism," and while this is one thing when we’re talking about the minutiae of tax policy, entitlement reform, etc., it is entirely different when we are dealing with political principles that serve as the underlying foundation of our political views.

THERE ARE A NUMBER OF REASONS WHY I HAVE BEEN ADAMANTLY OPPOSED TO GIULIANI’S CANDIDACY FOR SO LONG. I’LL LIST THEM ALL HERE, AND THEN FOLLOW THEM UP WITH A MORE GENERAL PERSPECTIVE AT THE END.

Reason #1: The Pro-Life Issue

Rudy Giuliani’s background and public statements on this issue have been well-documented here on FreeRepublic in recent months. It’s bad enough that legitimate conservative opposition to him on this issue is dismissed so readily by lumping it together with “social issues” (as if the protection of human life is nothing more than a social construct and not at the root of any functioning culture that intends to survive over a long period of time), but what is particularly preposterous is that Giuliani’s views on this issue represent a radical, left-wing extremist position that even many pro-abortion Democrats find completely unacceptable (Joe Biden, Patrick Leahy, and Tom Daschle were three of many Democrats in the U.S. Senate to vote in favor of the Federal late-term abortion ban in 2003). Some people right here on FreeRepublic -- for some reason that baffles the hell out of me -- have even go so far as to suggest that his obfuscation on this issue makes him something of a “sort of pro-life” candidate. His track record particularly with regard to the issue of late-term abortion illustrates how utterly absurd this is.

Keep in mind that the Republican Party has not had a pro-abortion presidential candidate since Gerald Ford ran and lost in 1976 -- which means no pro-abortion GOP candidate has ever won a presidential election. In fact, much of the party’s success at the voting booth over the last 30 years was attributable to its ability to capitalize on pro-life Democrats who had become utterly repulsed by their own party’s stand on this issue. The Republican Party ought to think long and hard about turning its back on the pro-life movement right now.

Reason #2: Illegal Immigration

This issue has been a hot topic of discussion over the last 12-18 months in the mainstream media as well as right here on FreeRepublic, and any candidate who ignores it does so at his own peril. Unfortunately for Giuliani, it is impossible for him to reconcile his track record with anything other than the most permissive open-borders policy imaginable. While mayor of New York City he was an unabashed supporter of illegal immigration, and even went so far as to maintain a “sanctuary city” policy regarding illegal immigrants in direct violation of those provisions in the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 that specifically outlawed this type of crap. His actions with regard to that Federal law were particularly disgraceful in light of the fact that he himself had been a Federal prosecutor at one time, and with this one issue he has effectively exposed his "law & order" reputation -- which people might otherwise consider a strong asset -- as a complete fraud.

It also made him terribly weak on other issues -- especially in the aftermath of 9/11. If the mayor of New York City could take it upon himself to blatantly ignore key provisions of this Federal law, would it be acceptable for a mayor or governor to knowingly and egregiously violate terms of the Patriot Act for purely political reasons? Would it be acceptable for the mayor of Dearborn, Michigan to harbor militants from Hamas and Hezbollah in his city? Would it be acceptable for mayors of other cities to ignore the various Federal laws that Rudy Giuliani himself called for incessantly when he was the mayor of New York City?

Reason #3: Gun Control

That last statement is a perfect lead-in to my third point. I thought the pro-life movement would be the most difficult hurdle for a Giuliani campaign to overcome, but the backlash among gun owners here on FreeRepublic to his recent appearance on Hannity & Colmes was pretty shocking. Watching Giuliani twist himself into knots while engaging in that pathetic display of political gymnastics even made me embarrassed for him. As with the pro-life issue, this is one in which his background and well-documented track record cannot possibly be rationalized from a conservative standpoint.

And for all the silly nonsense I’ve heard about how “tough” Rudy Giuliani would be against terrorism, the reality is that he has an extensive track record of opposing the most effective means of protection Americans have at their disposal against the kind of “terrorism” they are most likely to encounter in their lives -- e.g., a couple of homosexual Muslims driving around the D.C. suburbs shooting people at random, some loser Muslim from Bosnia shooting people at random in a Salt Lake City shopping mall, an Iranian-born jack@ss driving his car onto a crowded sidewalk in North Carolina, etc.

And in the one specific case before 9/11 where Rudy Giuliani had to deal with a terrorist attack as mayor of New York City -- the case of the Palestinian malcontent shooting people on the observation deck of the Empire State Building in 1997 -- Giuliani was complicit in the media cover-up of the incident (in which the perpetrator’s political motivations were brushed aside, he was portrayed as a mentally unstable loner, and the gun he used became the primary culprit). His public statements in the aftermath of that attack contained no mention of terrorism at all -- and in fact he went so far as to use the attack to support his public anti-gun campaign. His statements in the days and weeks after the incident have been posted here a number of times, and ought to be a shocking, disgraceful warning sign even for his strongest supporters here.

“Tough on terrorism,” my @ss.

Reason #4: If You Can Make it There, You’re Disqualified

In one sense, Giuliani’s approach to law enforcement, gun control, etc. was perfectly acceptable when he was the mayor of New York City. But it was for all the wrong reasons when it comes to presidential politics. In some ways his no-holds-barred approach to law enforcement (selective as it was, as I have pointed out above in Reason #2) and blatant antagonism toward the Bill of Rights would appeal to some folks the same way they would find the streets of Tokyo or Singapore safe and clean, or the same way they might be quite comfortable with Alberto Fujimori’s strong-arm tactics against the Shining Path militants in Peru. But Tokyo is not an American city, and Peru is not the United States . . . and nor, quite frankly, is New York City. People who walk around New York City can take some comfort in the notion that there are 40,000 police officers in that jurisdiction, and that few of their fellow pedestrians are permitted to carry guns. The city is just a place to do business, and for all intents and purposes these people aren’t even Americans anyway (Rudy Giuliani himself formally acknowledged this when he climbed his pedestal as an unabashed champion of illegal immigration) -- so who really cares? New York City might as well be an international protectorate, and the political climate there is such that anyone who can win an election in that city has no business leading this country. Conservatives ought to be no more willing to trust this man to uphold basic principles of constitutional law than they would trust Michael Bloomberg.

It’s no coincidence that there hasn’t been a New Yorker on a successful national ticket since a nearly-deceased FDR won for the last time in 1944 -- a period that now exceeds 60 years even though New York has been one of the three largest states in the U.S. in terms of electoral votes for that entire time. Most of the issues that occupy the minds of voters in New York are completely alien to ordinary Americans -- which is why the Big Apple has been at the forefront among big cities in almost every recent story involving the intrusion of a big, nanny-state government into the personal lives of its residents . . . from smoking bans, to laws against trans-fats, to the latest half-baked idea to hit the airwaves: the prohibition against the used of cell phones by pedestrians.

None of this should come as any surprise to us, since New York City has long been detached from reality when it comes to American culture and politics. The American Revolution was fought throughout most of the Thirteen Colonies, but was won largely the South -- New York City having remained in British hands throughout most of the conflict. Mass immigration from Ireland and Wales made it a “foreign” city even as far back as 160 years ago, and the Eastern European immigration of the early 20th Century introduced an element -- radical secularism and (later) communism -- that has only grown stronger over time. Almost every rabidly anti-American ideology at work in this country can trace its roots to New York’s academic and cultural institutions.

Today, much of Rudy Giuliani’s media support is coming from big-city, cosmopolitan “neo-conservatives” who have a long history of supporting interventionist foreign policy (I would have to devote an entire thread to this one issue), but have never been much for supporting traditional American values and often give some pretty clear indications that they have never even read the U.S. Constitution (the New York Post has a long-held editorial view in favor of gun control, and have the words “Second Amendment” or the phrase “right to keep and bear arms” ever been printed in the Weekly Standard?

These people have an agenda that is not mine, and any lapdog in the neo-conservative media -- and that includes Rupert Murdoch’s mouthpieces at Fox News, the New York Post, etc. -- who goes out on a limb to support such a radical left-wing candidate (that means you, Sean Hannity and Deroy Murdock) has basically lost all of his/her credibility as a conservative commentator.

. . .

What this all comes down to is that each and every one of us is either a Republican or a conservative. Because the Republican Party platform has been quite conservative (and downright hard-core right-wing, in comparison to the Democratic platform) in recent decades, we’ve managed to delude ourselves into believing that ‘Republican” and “conservative” are always synonymous. Rudy Giuliani’s prospective candidacy for the GOP nomination in 2008 should put this tenuous relationship between party affiliation and political philosophy in the proper light. We are either Republicans first, or we are conservatives first -- there is no middle road here.

Regarding one other item related to Rudy Giuliani’s campaign that pops up on these threads repeatedly (I’ve steadfastly tried to avoid mentioning it, but it cannot be overlooked) . . .

Anyone who has the time to do some research on Rudy Giuliani might want to sit down and do an extensive search through old newspaper articles, internet articles, etc. -- and try to find any such article where Mr. Giuliani is doing something that anyone would consider “manly” in any normal sense -- and by this I mean engaging in physical activity, playing a sport, or doing just about anything that most normal people would associate with manliness. I’ve looked long and hard for this, and I simply can’t find one. I mean, even something staged as a photo-op for PR purposes -- like Ronald Reagan riding a horse or chopping wood on his California ranch, George W. Bush clearing brush on his ranch or driving around Crawford in that big white Ford F-350 Super Duty truck -- is nowhere to be found.

If the “cross-dressing” photos of Rudy Giuliani aren’t necessarily bothersome in and of themselves, they raise some serious warning flags in light of the points I’ve mentioned above. I suspect this is what Giuliani’s own campaign staff had in mind when they referred to the “weirdness factor” as a potential stumbling block in an election campaign. And it’s very important to note that this warning was documented all the way back in 1993, not 2007 -- which means it dates all the way back to his second mayoral race in New York City. Anyone who comes across as “weird” in New York City would be a bizarre freak according to the standards of at least 95% of the people in this country.

Call me paranoid, and call me judgmental, but something about this whole thing just ain’t right. Run down the list of all those things that ought to be setting off warning bells in the minds of normal, decent people . . . the cross-dressing . . . the public statements extolling the work of Planned Parenthood and eugenicist Margaret Sanger . . . the enthusiastic support from NARAL . . . the hosting of those Gay Pride and Stonewall Veterans Association events . . . those bizarre marriages.

Perhaps Freud had it right when he postulated that “a fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity.” (General Introduction to Psychoanalysis, 1952)

The last thing this country needs right now is an effete, dysfunctional weirdo from New York City serving as its chief executive.

And lest anyone think I’m an unreasonable man, I’d like everyone to take a look at the article posted below. I wrote it in the turbulent aftermath of the 2000 election, and posted it here on FreeRepublic when the election results were finally certified in mid-December of that that year. (The link below is a re-post of that article from 2004).

The Triumph of Little America

You can be sure that the passionate (but also extremely objective) conservative who penned those words in December of 2000 will never support Rudy Giuliani in 2008. I’ve traveled across this country too many times -- and know too much about what this country is really all about -- for me to support a big-government, liberal globalist from New York City in a presidential race, regardless of his party affiliation.

And anyone here who works for the Republican Party in any capacity -- and anyone regularly browses through various threads here on FreeRepublic on behalf of a GOP candidate or a GOP media outlet -- should heed this message . . .

IF YOU’RE TRYING TO SELL A PHONY CONSERVATIVE, THEN THIS FELLA AIN’T GONNA BE YOUR CUSTOMER.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Politics/Elections; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: 2008election; aliens; choosinghillary; duncanhunter; giuliani; gungrabber; koolaidersaremad; lostertarian; notvoting4rudyever; oompaloompa; paleos4hillary; paleos4obama; republicanparty; rino; ronpaul08; rudy; rudylegacy; spamo; tomtancredo; whino; yawn
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To: Gop1040
You anti-Rudy types are good at throwing mud and making accusations, but not very good at backing it up with RELEVANT facts.

I guess the definition of RELEVANT facts are only those that make Rudy look good. All the others are irrelevant, even though they vastly outweigh the "relevant" ones.

621 posted on 02/24/2007 10:54:24 AM PST by dirtboy (Duncan Hunter 08)
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To: restornu

Remeber - I qualified the statment with NOT ALL.


622 posted on 02/24/2007 11:07:24 AM PST by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts and guns made America great.)
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To: dirtboy
"I guess the definition of RELEVANT facts are only those that make Rudy look good. All the others are irrelevant, even though they vastly outweigh the "relevant" ones."

Why don't read the whole article. Didn't I concede that Kirik's actions embarrassed everyone around him including Rudy and Bush. And that makes Rudy look good?

Please educate us poor blind Rudy supporters on what else is it that we're missing?

I forgot to include in the "I must ask list" the ALCU and the Porto Rican Terrorists Group FALON pardoned by Hillary's husband (who Rudy helped put in jail). I'm working on more.
623 posted on 02/24/2007 11:27:23 AM PST by Gop1040
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To: Alberta's Child
"Did they appear there together? I ran through the text of his speech there, and there is no mention of Rudy Giuliani at all."

Rudy and Bush may or may not have been together at the NIAF Gala. I really don't care nor does it matter. If it's such a big deal to you, why not research and verify yourself just like the anti-Rudy crowd want all others to do when posting liberal talking points against Rudy.

The point is neither, McCain, Hunter, Gingrich, Tancredo or other candidates have been seen with Bush W. recently. So what was your original point other than innuendo, innuendo?
624 posted on 02/24/2007 12:17:16 PM PST by Gop1040
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To: Beagle8U; TommyDale; Gop1040; Peach; BunnySlippers

It's intriguing to me that the overwhelming majority of articles that have been cited by Giuliani's opponents on this thread are from snarky tabloid-style journals. They use extremely loaded language to criticise people, and they don't even pretend to attempt to show the other side of the story.

Entertainment? Sure.

Journalism? No.

Unfortunately, I believe that Giuliani and his friends deserve a fair shake, and I think the general public does, too. Fortunately for Rudy, the national media market is not New York's.

I'm sure Rudy was responsible for hiring hundreds, if not thousands, of people during his career as Mayor. Even President Bush, with huge resources to check out potential employees, ran into problems with the people he hired.

So unless a pattern of extremely poor judgement can be found, I don't think this is an issue. Anyone who hires huge numbers of people hires good people and bad. I do see Rudy as someone who makes quick judgments of people and elevates people quickly from low positions to high if they impress him with their ability. That's his management style, and the results speak for themselves.

I find it interesting that the press suffers from credentialism, the idea that someone with a college degree is always better than someone without. This seems to be their biggest complaint against many of his hires. Sometimes that's not true and someone street smart works out better.

Again, his results speak for themselves. Every administration has scandals and blow-ups. They are a part of life, like the weather. If the overall result is positive, I predict that what I'm heaing about today will be long forgotten by the general election if Rudy is nominated.

D


625 posted on 02/24/2007 12:44:30 PM PST by daviddennis (If you like my stuff, please visit amazing.com, my new social networking site!)
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To: Gop1040
Actually, I've lived in this metro area for most of my life and worked in New York City for most of the last 15 years.

Bernard Kerik was Rudy Giuliani's chauffer and bodyguard while people like Bill Bratton, Jack Maple and John Timoney (and later Howard Safir) were the ones leading the NYPD's vaunted crime-fighting initiatives during Giuliani's first term in office.

Kerik, in fact, was named police commissioner in 2000 even though he didn't even have sufficient qualifications at the time to hold any rank in the NYPD higher than captain (this is why there was a lot of resentment of him among rank-and-file officers in the NYPD who knew damn well that he was nothing more than a well-connected hack).

So -- no, I'm still not impressed with him.

626 posted on 02/24/2007 12:46:31 PM PST by Alberta's Child (Can money pay for all the days I lived awake but half asleep?)
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To: Gop1040
How many of those guys made a point of campaigning with Bush in 2004?


627 posted on 02/24/2007 12:50:57 PM PST by Alberta's Child (Can money pay for all the days I lived awake but half asleep?)
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To: Alberta's Child
"So -- no, I'm still not impressed with him."

Fine with me. So don't vote for Kirik in the primaries.
628 posted on 02/24/2007 12:52:16 PM PST by Gop1040
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To: daviddennis
I find it interesting that the press suffers from credentialism, the idea that someone with a college degree is always better than someone without. This seems to be their biggest complaint against many of his hires.

In some cases, yes.

In the case of the NYPD, a college degree was actually supposed to be a formal requirement for the job.

629 posted on 02/24/2007 12:52:56 PM PST by Alberta's Child (Can money pay for all the days I lived awake but half asleep?)
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To: daviddennis

AMEN.


630 posted on 02/24/2007 12:55:40 PM PST by Gop1040
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To: Alberta's Child

"How many of those guys made a point of campaigning with Bush in 2004?"

Sorry, I don't get it.


631 posted on 02/24/2007 12:58:02 PM PST by Gop1040
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To: DustyMoment

Let's say we have $x to fight crime.

We have two choices: We can put a fence on the border that prevents illegal aliens from coming in, or we can increase law enforcement for all criminals, regardless of whether they are illegal or not.

If the goal is to reduce crime, would the latter not be a great deal more effective? And doubly so with terrorism since when terrorists come in the first thing they do is contact their fellows. This is probably why we have not had a successful major attack here since 9/11.

There was a long article - I think it was in the City Journal but I'm not sure - that said immigraiton patterns are actually pretty similar to what they were in years past. People left Italy, for instance, because they were unable to make a living. They came here, and at first they stayed in exclusively Italian communities.

Then the next generation became more of an American generation, which is apparently happening; the story said that children of illegal immigrants are far more interested in English and fitting in than their parents.

Perhaps the biggest difference is that today it's easy and relatively affordable to keep contact with the old country and that makes it possible for loyalties to it to stay firm for longer.

It's probably better for the American economy to have these workers work here and buy stuff here than it would be for them to work in Mexico and buy stuff there. As I said, I worked for a company that might not have existed without illegal immigration and so perhaps I am biased in its favor.

Whose fault is the illegals' refusal to learn our language and adopt to our customs? The real problem is our own government, which cheerfully prints out election ballots in 14 different languages, lets you take your driving test in Spanish and so on. I don't think it should be doing those things, but it does. And of course private industry follows the lead of business and so we have Spanish language radio stations, TV and so on.

I think our laws that subsidize the policy of immigration without assimilation should change. We should not make it easy to vote unless you know enough English to read a ballot printed in English, for example.

And perhaps we need to figure out how to work out a cheaper medical care system too. Frankly, I don't just want that for illegals; I want it for myself, too. I paid (well, my insurance paid) almost $3,000 for a one day hospital visit where nothing was done but diagnostic tests! That is just plain unacceptable.

Bringing basic care to illegals and other people should not bankrupt our hospitals. Their problems seem like testimony to how bloated they are and how poorly they are run more than anything bad about illegals.

D


632 posted on 02/24/2007 1:04:45 PM PST by daviddennis (If you like my stuff, please visit amazing.com, my new social networking site!)
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To: Alberta's Child
he was nothing more than a well-connected hack.

Way is it that almost everyone of this site who experienced the Giuliani mayoralty personally, supports him for President? What is one to think? On the one hand you post how you are a New Yorker and on the other hand so many of your posts about NYC and the Giuliani mayoralty are- to be kind- so full of errors.

Is it ignorance or something worse?

Why Giuliani appointed Kerik Police Concessioner? I'm impressed with those numbers. I also remember the stories of the violence in the jail system prior to Kerik.

Commissioner of NYC Department of Correction

Kerik served as Commissioner of the New York City Department of Correction, a position to which he was appointed on January 1, 1998. He previously served for three years as the Department of Correction's First Deputy Commissioner and, prior to that, as the agency's Executive Assistant to the Commissioner and Director of the Investigations Division. He is credited with dramatically improving the safety of the city's jail system, reducing inmate-on-inmate violence by 93% over a 5 year period, and staff use of force by 76%. His tenure was also marked by greatly improved agency efficiency, including a 44% reduction in agency overtime expenditures and a 31% reduction in staff sick leave. In 2000, his Total Efficiency Accountability Management System (T.E.A.M.S.) was a finalist for the prestigious Innovations in American Government Award sponsored by Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Kerik

If you are correct and Giuliani surrounded himself with hacks, if he accomplished the NYC miracle on his own, he should be declared President by acclamation.

633 posted on 02/24/2007 1:17:26 PM PST by Sabramerican
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To: Alberta's Child

It seems to me that someone with a bit of a criminal mind might be best at catching criminals, and such a person is unlikely to have a degree.

I don't think such a requirement is such a great idea, in other words. It's not unreasonable to waive requirements if someone otherwise good comes to your attention.

It seems weird that so little attention is given to what happened when our pal Bernie was police commissioner. It seems like most of the bad news was after he left the job, which makes me think he was a good police commissioner, or perhaps him and Rudy worked more effectively as a team than he could without Rudy.

That certainly doesn't reflect negatively on Rudy.

D


634 posted on 02/24/2007 1:26:51 PM PST by daviddennis (If you like my stuff, please visit amazing.com, my new social networking site!)
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To: daviddennis

So do you consider the Washington Post, Washington Times, Wall Street Journal and the New Your Times to be "snarky tabloids"? Just exactly who will you accept as "legitimate" journalism? You are in denial because you know that Giuliani Partners, Giuliani, Kerik and other employees are under scrutiny.


635 posted on 02/24/2007 2:00:11 PM PST by TommyDale (What will Rudy do in the War on Terror? Implement gun control on insurgents and Al Qaeda?)
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To: Gop1040
"So don't vote for Kirik in the primaries."

Men are judged by the company they keep. Giuliani will be judged from his tight relationship with Kerik. I think many people are going to wonder why Giuliani saw Homeland Security funds for New York City were appropriated to Giuliani Partners. That is a blatant conflict of interest. Where will that money trail lead?

636 posted on 02/24/2007 2:05:27 PM PST by TommyDale (What will Rudy do in the War on Terror? Implement gun control on insurgents and Al Qaeda?)
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To: TommyDale

I doubt that Giuliani Partners did anything wrong, but I don't doubt that they are under scrutiny, as they have been for the firm's entire life. You don't get much higher profile than that.

Why do you always mention articles from credible news sources, but don't provide links? One or two links would immensely bolster your case and take this from mud-slinging to legitimate discourse.

The world is waiting ...

D


637 posted on 02/24/2007 2:13:47 PM PST by daviddennis (If you like my stuff, please visit amazing.com, my new social networking site!)
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To: daviddennis

All those other links carry the same information as the articles in other mainstream newspapers. I don't post from the others, but Google is your friend if you want to look for yourself. I'm sure you won't.


638 posted on 02/24/2007 2:30:52 PM PST by TommyDale (What will Rudy do in the War on Terror? Implement gun control on insurgents and Al Qaeda?)
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To: DustyMoment

Mayor Rudy Giuliani on the campaign trail
The Hugh Hewitt Show
2-23-07 at 6:11 PM

http://hughhewitt.townhall.com/Transcript_Page.aspx?ContentGuid=946ea11b-064a-4272-90d2-1e2eda6678f4

(snip)

HH: Did you have a litmus test for those hundred?


RG: No. No, not a litmus test on a single issue, a philosophical test, meaning what I wanted to know was what’s their view of how you interpret the Constitution and laws? Are they…do the Constitution and laws exist as the thing from which you have to discern the meaning and the intent? Or are you going to superimpose your own social views? And I want, I like the first kind of judge, who is a judge who looks to the meaning of the Constitution, doesn’t try to create it.


HH: A pro-life voter looking at you, knowing that you’re pro-choice, but not concerned that presidents really matter so much in that, except as far as judges are concerned, what do you tell them about who you’re going to be putting on the federal bench?


RG: I’m going to say I’d put people like…I mean, the best way to do it is to just say I would, I could just have easily have appointed Sam Alito or Chief Justice Roberts as President Bush did, in fact. I’d have been pretty proud of myself if I had been smart enough to make that choice if I were the president.


HH: Do you expect justices like Roberts and Alito to come out of a Giuliani administration?


RG: I hope. I mean, that would be my goal. I mean, they’re sort of a very high standard, and so is Justices Scalia and Thomas. That would be the kind of judges I would look for, both in terms of their background and their integrity, but also the intellectual honesty with which they interpret the law.
(snip)


639 posted on 02/24/2007 3:56:04 PM PST by Valin (History takes time. It is not an instant thing.)
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To: TommyDale
"Men are judged by the company they keep.....Where will that money trail lead?"

A combination of wishful thinking and desperation taken directly from the Hillary/DNC/MSM talking points by someone with no candidate.
640 posted on 02/24/2007 5:17:28 PM PST by Gop1040
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