-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [911InsideJobbers] Re: Why isn't this man (Giuliani) the
target of activists in NYC?
Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 17:53:39 -0000
From: Lynn Ertell <
lynnertell@...>
Reply-To:
911InsideJobbers@yahoogroups.com
To:
911InsideJobbers@yahoogroups.com
My thoughts exactly.
How is it possible for New Yorkers to be so compliant and supine ...
while knowing that they have been used as bloody props in the hoax of
the century ?
How degraded and impotent they must feel ...
Especially the huge numbers of prostituted firemen, cops and city
workers who know the truth about what happened on 9/11 ....
If they even pause for a moment in thought, in self-conscious
reflection of their situation, having to acknowledge such submission
to corrupt authority, and pure humiliation ...
plus the large numbers of sick and dying from the longer-term effects
of the demolitions ....
Imagine how those New Yorkers must be rationalizing their continuing
tolerance of him; let alone the public and media rituals of adoration
over his "heroism"; Giuliani now fabulously wealthy, fattened by an
endless gravy train of "Homeland Security" consulting contracts.
And all those New Yorkers had to do was let themselves be USED as
passive props in a giant staged pyro-technic display, complete with
exploding skyscrapers and falling bodies.
Not REAL PEOPLE (with the real emotional affect of outraged victims),
but rather, mute objects - moving props and stage "extras" ...
shuffling off to the rest of their enslaved lives.
--- In
911InsideJobbers@yahoogroups.com, "Greg Nixon" <nxngrg@...> wrote:
>
> In a city of how many million...he should NEVER be able to leave his
> office or speak without being callled out as a monster and mass
> murderer. What is NYC doing? I see NY911truth.org picked up on the
> Spitzer angle, why not Giuliani?
>
>
> Giuliani urges calm in times of chaos
> By HANK DANISZEWSKI, FREE PRESS REPORTER
>
http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/Local/2006/04/22/pf-1545235.html
>
> As mayor of the city he proudly calls "the capital of the world,"
> Rudy Giuliani thought he had prepared for every kind of disaster.
> But he told a London audience last night that on Sept 11, 2001, he
> hadn't counted on terrorists using planes as missiles to destroy the
> World Trade Center in New York.
> But Giuliani said he remembered the advice his father gave him if he
> ever was trapped in a fire.
> "Become the calmest person in the room, or pretend that you are, and
> you will find the way out," he said.
> Giuliani's confident and decisive manner made him a beacon of hope
> in the hysteria that followed the terrorist attacks.
> He's now being touted as a possible Republican presidential
> candidate.
> Giuliani was the featured speaker at a day-long conference on crisis
> leadership organized by students of the Richard Ivey School of
> Business at the University of Western Ontario.
> Introduced by former London and Toronto police chief Julian Fantino,
> now Ontario's emergency commissioner, Giuliani gave an animated
> speech to about 1,100 people at the London Convention Centre,
> outlining the qualities of great leadership as he strode back and
> forth across the stage.
> He said Winston Churchill and Ronald Reagan were examples of great
> leaders who were guided by their principles, not public opinion
> polls.
> "You find out what people want and then you say it to them. It feels
> good, but it isn't leadership."
> Giuliani recalled going to Ground Zero on Sept. 11 and watching in
> horror as victims jumped out of the burning towers to their death.
> Though the disaster could not have been imagined, he said the city
> had plans for other disasters which could quickly be adapted.
> "If you prepare for everything you can anticipate, you will be
> prepared for the unanticipated because it will just be a variation,"
> he said.
> Born to a working-class family in Brooklyn, Giuliani became a lawyer
> and gained a reputation as a tough prosecutor.
> In 1993, he was elected mayor of New York and was credited for
> turning the city around, with a steep drop in crime and welfare
> rates.
> In a news conference, Giuliani said London is on the right track in
> tackling smaller problems such as graffiti and vandalism.
> Giuliani said even though New York had more than 2,000 murders a
> year when he became mayor, he also went after smaller problems such
> as vandalism and graffiti because it degraded neighbourhoods. He
> said graffiti offenders often were sentenced to clean up the mess.
> "You have to attack the big problems, but you cannot ignore the
> small -- one has a relationship to the other."
> Giuliani told the audience terrorism attacks will always pose a
> risk, but Americans and Canadians must prepare and not be ruled by
> fear.
> "You have to take risks to live."
>
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