Saturday, June 9, 2007

GIULIANI IN 2008. DOGCATCHER OF NEW YORK

HE PUTS THE "RUDE" BACK IN RUDY.



CLEAN IT UP AGAIN RUDY BABY...CLEAN IT UP AGAIN.

RUDY HAS SOMETHING TO SHOW FOR HIS LUNCH MEETINGS WITH BUSH

RUDY GIULIANI, STRONG ADVOCATE OF PRESIDENT BUSH'S POLICY ON IRAQ, DOES HAVE SOMETHING TO SHOW FOR ALL THOSE LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS WITH GEORGIE BUSH.
HE PROUDLY SHOWS WHAT HE AND PRESIDENT BUSH WERE ABLE TO ACCOMPLISH AS A RESULT OF THEIR LUNCHEON AND DINNER MEETINGS.

TOO MUCH ROUGE RUDY GIULIANI CLAIMS HE TURNED NEW YORK AROUND...WELL, CHANGES WERE MADE TO THE CITY ON YOUR WATCH..

RUDOLPH GIULIANI CLAIMS HE TURNED THE CITY OF NEW YORK AROUND AS MAYOR...
WELL, CHANGES TO THE CITY SURE HAPPENED ON YOUR WATCH , OLD
TOO MUCH ROUGE RUDY...SEE BELOW...I DON'T THINK AMERICA WANTS ANY CHANGES
LIKE HAPPENED TO NEW YORK WHILE YOU WERE MAYOR , TOO MUCH ROUGE RUDY...

Giuliani's Ties to Black New York Troubled

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/09/AR2007060901420.html
"NEW YORK -- Once the cultural capital of black America, Harlem had reached the bottom of decades of decline by the late 1980s, with streets full of abandoned houses, virtually an open-air crack cocaine market and thousands of violent crimes each year. It took the collaboration of people including Rudolph W. Giuliani, the mayor of New York from 1994 to 2001, and Karen Phillips, who ran the development arm of a historic black church, to turn it around.
Under policies advanced by the Giuliani administration and carried out by Phillips and other activists dedicated to saving the neighborhood, real estate and retail boomed and crime plunged. It was dubbed the second Harlem Renaissance, and Giuliani seemed quite proud of his achievements there, telling the New York Daily News in December 2000 that "the reality is that my administration has done more for Harlem than any administration in the last 50 years."

Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani ran afoul of blacks in New York City over what some describe as heavy-handed political tactics and police stop-and-frisk procedures when he was mayor. (By Chris Greenberg -- Associated Press)
'08 Presidential Race
Check out this guide to all the Democrats and Republicans who are running (or are likely to run) for president next year.
Meet the Candidates
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Phillips, however, now finds nothing positive to say about Giuliani. Besides being "vindictive," his approach was "you're either with me or you're my enemy," Phillips, a member of New York's city planning commission, said in a recent interview. "I can't see him as president. I would not like to see his hand on the red phone."
As Giuliani seeks the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, he cites his achievements in turning around New York as one of the main reasons he should be elected, specifically highlighting a dramatic reduction in crime.
But Giuliani's mayoral tenure was also marked by an almost toxic relationship with African Americans in the city, a relationship that shows no sign of healing 5 1/2 years after Giuliani left Gracie Mansion. When he won a second term in 1997 with more than 55 percent of the vote, he received just 20 percent of the black vote.
That disaffection was often a source of frustration for Giuliani. Asked about the strains in 1997, he replied: "They are alive -- how 'bout we start with that. You can't help people more directly than to save lives."
More recently, at a presidential debate last month, he said "I tried very, very hard to treat everyone in New York City the same," and again cited the city's reduction in crime when he was mayor.
Few GOP primary voters are African American, so any lingering tension is unlikely to have any direct effect on his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. But Giuliani's reputation as a polarizing force in his home town could undermine his image as a unifying figure in American politics because of his role in calming New Yorkers after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001."

Giuliani's Ties to Black New York Troubled

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/09/AR2007060901420.html
"NEW YORK -- Once the cultural capital of black America, Harlem had reached the bottom of decades of decline by the late 1980s, with streets full of abandoned houses, virtually an open-air crack cocaine market and thousands of violent crimes each year. It took the collaboration of people including Rudolph W. Giuliani, the mayor of New York from 1994 to 2001, and Karen Phillips, who ran the development arm of a historic black church, to turn it around.
Under policies advanced by the Giuliani administration and carried out by Phillips and other activists dedicated to saving the neighborhood, real estate and retail boomed and crime plunged. It was dubbed the second Harlem Renaissance, and Giuliani seemed quite proud of his achievements there, telling the New York Daily News in December 2000 that "the reality is that my administration has done more for Harlem than any administration in the last 50 years."

Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani ran afoul of blacks in New York City over what some describe as heavy-handed political tactics and police stop-and-frisk procedures when he was mayor. (By Chris Greenberg -- Associated Press)
'08 Presidential Race
Check out this guide to all the Democrats and Republicans who are running (or are likely to run) for president next year.
Meet the Candidates
var technorati = new Technorati() ;
technorati.setProperty('url','http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/09/AR2007060901420_Technorati.html') ;
technorati.article = new item('Giuliani\'s Ties to Black New York Troubled','http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/09/AR2007060901420.html','NEW YORK -- Once the cultural capital of black America, Harlem had reached the bottom of decades of decline by the late 1980s, with streets full of abandoned houses, virtually an open-air crack cocaine market and thousands of violent crimes each year. It took the collaboration of people includin...','Perry Bacon Jr.') ;
document.write( technorati.getDisplaySidebar() );
Save & Share Article
What's This?
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Phillips, however, now finds nothing positive to say about Giuliani. Besides being "vindictive," his approach was "you're either with me or you're my enemy," Phillips, a member of New York's city planning commission, said in a recent interview. "I can't see him as president. I would not like to see his hand on the red phone."
As Giuliani seeks the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, he cites his achievements in turning around New York as one of the main reasons he should be elected, specifically highlighting a dramatic reduction in crime.
But Giuliani's mayoral tenure was also marked by an almost toxic relationship with African Americans in the city, a relationship that shows no sign of healing 5 1/2 years after Giuliani left Gracie Mansion. When he won a second term in 1997 with more than 55 percent of the vote, he received just 20 percent of the black vote.
That disaffection was often a source of frustration for Giuliani. Asked about the strains in 1997, he replied: "They are alive -- how 'bout we start with that. You can't help people more directly than to save lives."
More recently, at a presidential debate last month, he said "I tried very, very hard to treat everyone in New York City the same," and again cited the city's reduction in crime when he was mayor.
Few GOP primary voters are African American, so any lingering tension is unlikely to have any direct effect on his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. But Giuliani's reputation as a polarizing force in his home town could undermine his image as a unifying figure in American politics because of his role in calming New Yorkers after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001."

TOO MUCH ROUGE RUDY SHOWS HIS HIDDEN PASSION