MESSAGE
DATE | 2008-01-27 |
FROM | From: "Michael L. Richardson"
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SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Republican Endorsements and the facts
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Ruben, I totally disagree. The best thing to happen to New York City was Giulliani leaving office. His first 4 years in office he did not meet with any Black Leaders (elected or otherwise) creating his own racial polarizing. When he finally meet with black Leaders he ignored them. I am a 55 year old Black Man and I have lived my entire life in one or another of the Five Boughs. I never feared for my life until Giullani's permissiveness with the Police (it's the Police I feared shooting me not any would be mugger). The police violence against has not ended. The events after 9-11 saved him from the righteous anger of the people of this city. Don't forget he Sold us (New York City) down the river [why else would he fly the Arkansas flag over city hall? Arkansas did not take the City by force]. I leave you with this question, If he was such a good Mayor why did he barricade himself in City Hall? You do remember the barricades?
Ruben Safir wrote: > Brooklyn, NY > January 27th, 2008 > > To The Editors of the New York Times > > The endorsements that the NY Times made this week of John McCain in the > Republican primary had acute inaccuracies with regard to Mayor Giulliani. > The Times wrote: > > “The real Mr. Giuliani, whom many New Yorkers came to know and mistrust, > is a narrow, obsessively secretive, vindictive man who saw no need to > limit police power. Racial polarization was as much a legacy of his > tenure as the rebirth of Times Square. > > Mr. Giuliani’s arrogance and bad judgment are breathtaking. When he > claims fiscal prudence, we remember how he ran through surpluses without > a thought to the inevitable downturn and bequeathed huge deficits to his > successor. He fired Police Commissioner William Bratton, the architect of > the drop in crime, because he couldn’t share the limelight. He later > gave the job to Bernard Kerik, who has now been indicted on fraud and > corruption charges.†> > The complaint by the Times that Giuliani is a secretive vindictive > person is not news. Up until riots broke out in Brooklyn, the Times > banged this drum relentlessly. But the claims that he saw no need to > limit police power and was racially polarizing, or left a legacy of > racial polarization make me wonder if the current editors of the Times > actually lived in New York City in the years prior to the Rudy miracle. > > Giuliani didn't create the racially charged atmosphere in New York > prior to his election. He inherited. Did the times forget the race > riots that pit West Indian Blacks against Orthodox Jews under the > Dinken's administration? Did they forget the 2000 murders a month, > mostly of Black and minority young people prior to Giuliani removing > 50,000 illegal handguns off the street? Did the Major forget how race > baiting politics by previous administrations allowed Sunny Carson and > Al Sharpton to protest in front of an innocent Korean Grocery store on > Church Avenue for nearly two years which resulted in a racially charged > powder keg which nearly exploded in the face of the entire outer boroughs? > > New York's current state of racial harmony, good but hardly perfect, > is a direct result of a Giuliani ending violence. In fact, the Rudy > Miracle which ended violence all across New York made the job of his > predecessor easy. Slum and crime infested communities all across this > city where made safe for the first time in generations. Williamsburg, > Harlem, Long Island City, Washington Heights, Red Hook, Cobble Hill, Fort > Greene, Greenpoint, Bushwick and Bedford-Stuyvesant, bastions of murder, > drug deaths, AID's and hopelessness have opened up to young people, > businesses and the arts. Young women who now job without any fears > down Hoyt street, 125th Street, and Lafayette Avenue would have been > attacked, raped and driven from their homes just a few short years ago. > Does the Times have a nostalgic remembrance or just bias with the facts? > > The financial problems that Rudy left the city with, even after 9-11, > was in no way close to the institutional budget disasters which dated > back to Laguardia. One out of four people in New York City were on > public support prior to his miracle on city government. I was victimized > by the previous ideas of city finance when school days were cut back > from 10AM – 2PM and class sizes swelled to 50 kids in a class room? > Did Rudy leave Blomberg with such an intolerable mess? > > Furthermore, you fail to mention that Rudy is an administrative genius. > Nobody of any of the current candidates is even remotely capable of > administrating government as the Mayor. His government was one of the > most open ones ever and his morning round table meetings which called > all levels of administration to account for itself in light of statical > facts, and which pressed for results is unheard of in current or previous > administrations. Up and down the entire hierarchy of Government, everyone > who worked for New York City knew they were being watched, judged and > being held accountable. None of the Democratic candidates could ever > say that. In fact, the Clinton administration was a free for all. > > In my opinion, the nation must have that kind of government going into the > next decade. And if a few political eggs need to be broken on the road > to regaining control of our foreign policy, our intelligence community > and the federal bureaucracy, so be it. I'd be happy to send them all > to the same place the Mafia went after it was drummed from the private > sanitation business in this town. And if there isn't enough room for > both the ego's of Rudy and Branton, so be it. Who cares. > > The Mayor made safe the nice new location of the NY Times billion dollar > building. So considering the fortune of money the Mayor's policies > and administration made possible for the paper and the Times family. > You would think they'd be a little more truthful. Or perhaps they would > prefer to go back to having crack adicts in their loading docks. > > One last point. While the Mayor was busy after 9-11 holding the city > and nation together, the Times executives were busy giving directives > to move their entire computer infrastructure outside of the “dead > zone†of New York City? What was the dead zone? The area around > New York where, if it was attacked by a nuclear weapon by a terrorist, > that the systems would be unaffected so that they could still publish. > The Times put its money on a bet the the city would be nuked. The Mayor > has done the opposite. > > > Ruben Safir >
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