On September 11, 2001, Rudy Giuliani, whose tenure as mayor would be ending in less than four months, far less gloriously than it began, pitched his own perfect game on the worst day New York City has ever endured: He was calm and compassionate. Strong, yet soothing. Rudy has long admired Winston Churchill, and surely Churchill, who strode defiantly through the craters of the bomb-blasted East End of London during the Battle of Britain, would have applauded Giuliani's resolve.
Rudy Giuliani has engaged in myriad activities since his days as mayor, and now hosts a weekday afternoon talk show in New York, where he basks in the understandable adulation of listeners who remember his performance on that sun-soaked Tuesday, not so long ago.
But Rudy also traffics in conspiracy theories that are pathetically and increasingly ludicrous and even bizarre, blaming all that is bad in the world on Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and George Soros. The man who built his reputation and risked his life seeking to imprison the leaders of organized crime now seems equally eager to imprison the leaders of the Democratic Party.
On September eleventh, and all future September elevenths for the remainder of his life, New York, America, and indeed the world will salute, celebrate, and revere Rudy Giuliani for what he was.
But, not, unfortunately, for what he is now. —Jim V., New York
This week the president had the audacity to compare himself to Dwight Eisenhower. That's an insult. Anyone who has read even one of Eisenhower's self-authored books can see he was a man of integrity, committed to this nation, and faithful to his word. In contrast, anyone who has read the books that ghostwriters crafted for the tweeter-in-chief can see that he is committed only to himself and to creating crises and confusion. Ike was a war hero who helped stabilize America. Trump is a draft-dodger whose goal is to destabilize America. —Tim P., New Mexico
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