Tuesday, January 6, 2015

New York's Mayor, Bill de Blasio, age 53, 6'5"



Who is Bill de Blasio?
He’s really Warren Wilhelm, Jr. for starters

New York's Mayor Bill de Blasio and family, 2013


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Bill de Blasio (born Warren Wilhelm, Jr.,[1] May 8, 1961) is an American politician currently serving as the 109th mayor of New York City. From 2010 to 2013, he held the citywide office of New York City Public Advocate, serving as an ombudsman between the electorate and the city government. He formerly served as a New York City Council member, representing the 39th District in Brooklyn (Borough Park, Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, Gowanus, Kensington, Park Slope, and Windsor Terrace). The Democratic Party nominee for mayor of New York City in the 2013 election, de Blasio defeated Republican Joe Lhota, with more than 73% of the vote. He is the first Democratic mayor of the city since 1993.[2]

He ran for mayor promising to end stop and frisk and heal bitter relations between police and New Yorkers of color. His tenure has seen a spike in anti-police protests and disaffection with law enforcement, and he has been charged by the NYPD union with putting the interests of protesters above those of the police. He initiated new de-escalation training for officers,[3] more lax marijuana prosecution,[4] and oversaw the beginning of body cameras worn by police.[5][6]

Early Life and Education

De Blasio was born Warren Wilhelm, Jr. in Manhattan, the son of Maria (née de Blasio) and Warren Wilhelm.[1] His father was of German ancestry, and his maternal grandparents, Giovanni and Anna, were Italian immigrants[7][8] from the city of Sant'Agata de' Goti in the province of Benevento.[9]

De Blasio was raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[10] His mother graduated from Smith College in 1938, and his father graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Yale University. His mother was 44 years old when he was born, and he has two older brothers, Steven and Donald.[11] De Blasio's grandfather, Donald Wilhelm, an author, graduated from Harvard University.[11] Although he was baptized Catholic, de Blasio is nonpracticing. He speaks Italian.[11]

De Blasio has stated that his father first left home when he was seven years old and, shortly after, his parents divorced.[12] In a 2012 interview, de Blasio described his upbringing: "[My dad] was an officer in the Pacific in the army, [and fought] in an extraordinary number of very, very difficult, horrible battles, including Okinawa.... And I think honestly, as we now know about veterans who return, [he] was going through physically and mentally a lot.... He was an alcoholic, and my mother and father broke up very early on in the time I came along, and I was brought up by my mother's family—that's the bottom line—the de Blasio family."[13] In September 2013, de Blasio revealed that his father had committed suicide in 1979 while suffering from incurable lung cancer.[14]

In 1983, he changed his name to Warren de Blasio-Wilhelm, which he described in April 2012: "I started by putting the name into my diploma, and then I hyphenated it legally when I finished NYU, and then, more and more, I realized that was the right identity." By the time he appeared on the public stage in 1990, he was using the name Bill de Blasio as he explained he had been called "Bill" or "Billy" in his personal life.[13] He did not legally change over to this new name until 2002, when the discrepancy was noted during an election.[15]

De Blasio received a B.A. from New York University, majoring in metropolitan studies, a program in urban studies, and a Master of International Affairs from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs.[16] He is a 1981 Harry S. Truman Scholar.[17]

Bill de Blasio, or was it still Warren Wilhelm? in 1983

Early Career

De Blasio's first post-college job was part of the Urban Fellows Program for the New York City Department of Juvenile Justice in 1984.[18][19] In 1987, shortly after completing graduate school at Columbia University, he was hired to work as a political organizer by the Quixote Center in Maryland. In 1988, de Blasio traveled with the Quixote Center to Nicaragua for 10 days to help distribute food and medicine during the Nicaraguan Revolution. De Blasio was an ardent supporter of the ruling Sandinista government, which was at that time opposed by the Reagan administration.[19]

After returning from Nicaragua, de Blasio moved to New York City where he worked for a nonprofit organization focused on improving health care in Central America.[19] De Blasio continued to support the Sandinistas in his spare time, joining a group called the Nicaragua Solidarity Network of Greater New York, which held meetings and fundraisers for the Sandinista political party.[19] De Blasio's introduction to city politics came during David Dinkins' 1989 mayoral campaign, for which he was a volunteer coordinator.[20] Following the campaign, de Blasio served as an aide in City Hall.[21]

U.S. Representative Charlie Rangel tapped de Blasio to be his campaign manager for his successful 1994 re-election bid.[22] In 1997, he was appointed to serve as the Regional Director for the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for New York and New Jersey under the administration of President Bill Clinton. As the tri-state region's highest-ranking HUD official, de Blasio led a small executive staff and took part in outreach to residents of substandard housing.[23][24] In 1999, he was elected a member of Community School Board 15.[25] He was tapped to serve as campaign manager for Hillary Rodham Clinton's successful United States Senate bid in 2000.[25]

New York City Council (2001–2009)[edit]

Elections

In 2001, de Blasio decided to run for the New York City Council's 39th district, which includes the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Borough Park, Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, Gowanus, Kensington, Park Slope, and Windsor Terrace. He won the crowded primary election with 32% of the vote.[26] In the general election, he defeated Republican Robert A. Bell by 71%–17%.[27] In 2003, he won re-election to a second term with 72% of the vote.[28] In 2005, he won re-election to a third term with 83% of the vote.[29]

Tenure

On the City Council, de Blasio passed legislation to prevent landlord discrimination against tenants who hold federal housing subsidy vouchers and helped pass the HIV/AIDS Housing Services Law, improving housing services for low income New Yorkers living with HIV/AIDS.[30][31] As head of the City Council's General Welfare Committee, de Blasio helped pass the Gender-Based Discrimination Protection Law to protect transgender New Yorkers and passed the Domestic Partnership Recognition Law to ensure that same-sex couples in a legal partnership could enjoy the same legal benefits as heterosexual couples in New York City.[32] During his tenure, the General Welfare Committee also passed the Benefits Translation for Immigrants Law, which helped non-English speakers access free language assistance services when accessing government programs.[33]

Committee Assignments

Education;[34]
Environmental Protection;[35]
Finance;[36]
General Welfare (Chair)[37]
Technology in Government.[38]
New York City Public Advocate (2010–2013)[edit]

Election



De Blasio speaking after being inaugurated as New York City Public Advocate
In November 2008, he announced his candidacy for Public Advocate, entering a crowded field of candidates vying for the Democratic nomination, which included former Public Advocate Mark J. Green. The New York Times endorsed de Blasio in an editorial published during the primary, praising his efforts to improve public schools and "[help] many less-fortunate New Yorkers with food stamps, housing, and children's health" as a councilmember. The editorial went on to declare de Blasio the best candidate for the job "because he has shown that he can work well with Mayor Bloomberg when it makes sense to do so while vehemently and eloquently opposing him when justified".[39] His candidacy was endorsed by then Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum, former Mayor Ed Koch, former Governor Mario Cuomo, and Reverend Al Sharpton.[40]
On September 15, 2009, de Blasio came in first in the Democratic primary, garnering 33% of the vote.[41] He won the run-off primary election on September 29, 2009 defeating Mark Green 62%–38%.[42] On November 3, 2009, he defeated Republican Alex Zablocki 78%–18%.[43][44]

De Blasio was inaugurated as New York City's third Public Advocate on January 1, 2010. In his inauguration speech, he challenged the administration of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, specifically criticizing Mayor Bloomberg's homelessness and education policies.[45]

Educational Policies

As Public Advocate, de Blasio repeatedly criticized Mayor Bloomberg's education policies. He called for Cathie Black, Mayor Bloomberg's nominee for New York City Schools Chancellor, to take part in public forums and criticized her for not sending her own children to public schools.[46][47] In March 2010, he spoke against an MTA proposal to eliminate free MetroCards for students, arguing the measure would take a significant toll on school attendance.[48] Three months later, he voiced opposition to the mayor's proposed budget containing more than $34 million in cuts to childcare services.[49] 

In June 2011, de Blasio outlined a plan to improve the process of school co-location, by which multiple schools are housed in one building. His study found community input was often ignored by the mayor's Department of Education, resulting in top-down decisions made without sufficient regard for negative impact. He outlined eight solutions to improve the process and incorporate community opinion into the decision-making process.[50] The same month, he also criticized a proposal by the Bloomberg administration to lay off more than 4,600 teachers to balance the city's budget, organizing parents and communities against the proposed cuts and staging a last-minute call-a-thon. Bloomberg restored the funding, agreeing to find savings elsewhere in the budget.[51]

During his mayoral campaign, de Blasio outlined a plan to raise taxes on residents earning over $500,000 a year to pay for universal pre-kindergarten programs and to expand after-school programs at middle schools.[52][53] He also plans to invest $150 million annually into the City University of New York to lower tuition and improve degree programs.[53]

In September 2013, de Blasio voiced his opposition to charter schools, maintaining that their funding saps resources from classes like art and physical education and after-school programs. He outlined a plan to discontinue the policy of offering rent-free space to the city's 183 charter schools and to place a moratorium on the co-location of charters schools in public school buildings. "I won't favor charters," says de Blasio. "Our central focus is traditional public schools."[54] In October 2013, nearly 20,000 demonstrators marched across the Brooklyn Bridge to protest de Blasio's proposal to charge rent to charter schools.[55]

Housing

In June 2010, de Blasio opposed a New York City Housing Authority decision to cut the number of Section 8 vouchers issued to low-income New Yorkers. The cut was announced after the NYCHA discovered it could not pay for approximately 2,600 vouchers that had already been issued. The Housing Authority reversed its decision a month later.[56] Two months later, he launched an online "NYC's Worst Landlords Watchlist" to track landlords who failed to repair dangerous living conditions. The list drew widespread media coverage and highlighted hundreds of landlords across the city. "We want these landlords to feel like they're being watched," de Blasio told the Daily News. "We need to shine a light on these folks to shame them into action."[57]

Campaign Finance

De Blasio has been a vocal opponent of Citizens United, the January 2010 U.S. Supreme Court decision which overturned portions of the 2002 McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act. He argued that "corporations should not be allowed to buy elections", and launched a national campaign by elected officials to reverse the effects of the court decision.[58]
Mayor of New York City (2014–present)[edit]

2013 Mayoral Election

On January 27, 2013, de Blasio announced his candidacy for Mayor of New York City in the fall election.[59][60]

The Democratic primary race included nine candidates, among them Council Speaker Christine Quinn, former U.S. Representative Anthony Weiner, and former New York City Comptroller and 2009 mayoral nominee Bill Thompson.[61][62] After Weiner joined the race in April, early polls showed de Blasio in fourth or fifth place.[63]

Despite this poor starting position, de Blasio was able to gain the endorsements of major Democratic clubs such as the Barack Obama Democratic Club of Upper Manhattan as well as New York City's largest trade union, SEIU Local 1199. Celebrities such as Alec Baldwin and Sarah Jessica Parker and prominent politicians such as former Vermont Governor Howard Dean and U.S. Congresswoman Yvette Clarke also gave endorsements.[64][65][66] By August, Harry Belafonte and Susan Sarandon had endorsed de Blasio.[67]

De Blasio gained media attention during the campaign when he and a dozen others, including city councillor Stephen Levin, were arrested while protesting the closing of Long Island College Hospital.[68] Fellow Democratic mayoral hopefuls Anthony Weiner and City Comptroller John Liu were also at the protest but were not arrested. De Blasio and Levin were released a few hours later with disorderly conduct summonses.[69]

Over time, de Blasio moved up in the polls and in mid-August, for the first time, a poll showed him taking the Democratic lead.[70] He reached 43 percent in a Quinnipiac poll released September 3.[71]

Preliminary results showed de Blasio winning the September 10 primary election with 40.12% of the votes, slightly more than the 40% needed to avoid a runoff.[72] On September 16, second-place finisher Bill Thompson conceded, citing the unlikelihood of winning a runoff even if uncounted absentee and military ballots pushed de Blasio below the 40% threshold. Thompson's withdrawal cleared the way for de Blasio to become the Democratic nominee against Republican Joe Lhota in the general election.[73] After the Democratic primary, de Blasio was announced as the nominee on the Working Families Party line.[74] The issue that most aided de Blasio's primary victory was his unequivocal opposition to "stop and frisk."[75]

In the general election, de Blasio defeated Lhota in a landslide, winning 72.2% to 24%.[76] Voter turnout for the 2013 election set a new record low of only 24 percent of registered voters, which the New York Times attributed to the expectation of a landslide.[77]

Tenure

De Blasio was sworn into office on January 1, 2014, by former President Bill Clinton. In his inaugural address, he reiterated his campaign pledge to address "economic and social inequalities" within the city.[78] The New York Times noted that "The elevation of an assertive, tax-the-rich liberal to the nation's most prominent municipal office has fanned hopes that hot-button causes like universal prekindergarten and low-wage worker benefits... could be aided by the imprimatur of being proved workable in New York".[79]

In the first weeks of de Blasio's mayorship New York City was struck by a series of snowstorms.[80] In January, De Blasio was criticized by Upper East Side residents when snow clearing seemed to be lagging in the wealthy neighborhood.[81] The mayor apologized the next day, admitting that "more could have been done to serve the Upper East Side."[81] On February 13, 2014, heavy snowstorms again hit the East Coast. Under instructions from the mayor and the school chancellor, Carmen Fariña, the city's public schools were kept open. The decision was criticized by teacher unions, parents and the media as the city saw up to 9.5 inches of snow that day.[82] By the middle of February, the city had been forced to add $35 million to the Sanitation Department's budget for snow removal costs.[80]

In July 2014, De Blasio signed a bill that created municipal ID card, securing benefits to all residents.[83]

NYPD Relations

De Blasio ran for mayor making opposition to "stop and frisk" a centerpiece of his campaign.[84] The practice had been challenged by civil rights groups in federal court, where it was ruled unconstitutional in 2013. A legal appeal to this decision filed by the Bloomberg administration was promptly dropped by DeBlasio upon taking office. DeBlasio vowed to settle cases with claimants who had ongoing litigation against the police for stop and frisk arrests. The NYPD union appealed the decision without DeBlasio's support, and was rejected.[85]

De Blasio selected Bill Bratton to be New York City Police Commissioner, a position he previously held under Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Bratton, who introduced stop-and-frisk under Giuliani, promised it would be used "legally, respectfully" and less frequently.[86][87] Some de Blasio supporters were disappointed with Bratton's appointment.[88]

In February 2014, Mayor de Blasio came under criticism for making a call to the police shortly after a supporter of his was detained by the police. Pastor Bishop Orlando Findlayter—the founder of the New Hope Christian Fellowship Church, and a friend of de Blasio—was pulled over by the police for failing to signal on a left turn. Bishop was then detained by police on outstanding warrants and for driving with a suspended license.[89] De Blasio is alleged to have called the police on Findlayter's behalf. Findlayter was released shortly thereafter. In a press conference, de Blasio told reporters that—while he had called the police to make an inquiry regarding Bishop's arrest—he did not request the police to release Findlayter.[90] A spokesperson for the mayor stated that the mayor's call occurred after the police already had decided to release Bishop.[89] While both the police and City Hall denied that the mayor asked for preferential treatment, the city comptroller, Scott M. Stringer, stated that the mayor's behavior was problematic, because "[t]he rule is, the mayor shouldn't be involved in any way about somebody's arrest."[91]

On December 3, 2014, de Blasio stated in a speech following a grand jury decision not to indict NYPD officer Daniel Panteleo in the death of Eric Garner that he and his black wife Chirlane McCray, had had many conversations[92] with their son regarding taking "special care in any encounters he has with the police officers who are there to protect him."[93] The mayor explained that what he and his wife did was "What parents have done for decades who have children of color, especially young men of color, [which] is train them to be very careful whenever they have an encounter with a police officer," adding "I have talked to many families of color. They have had to have the same conversation with their sons."[94] In response, the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association of the City of New York, a labor union for police officers, issued a flier encouraging members to request that de Blasio as well as Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Vivereto not attend their funerals should they die in the line of duty.[95] De Blasio and Mark-Vivereto criticized the move, issuing a joint statement which read in part: "Incendiary rhetoric like this serves only to divide the city, and New Yorkers reject these tactics."[95] Following the December 20, 2014 deaths of two NYPD officers in an "execution" style "revenge" attack for Eric Garner, numerous police unions issued statements blaming de Blasio for their deaths and police officers turned their backs to the mayor when he visited the hospital where the two officers' bodies were taken.[96] On December 26, a plane pulling a banner stating "De Blasio, Our Backs Have Turned To You" was spotted. John Cardillo, a former NYPD officer as well as a blogger, tweeted out a picture of the plane with the banner saying that a coalition of both retired and current NYPD officers had paid to have the banner flown, and the same group had asked him to release a statement which states they no longer have "confidence" or believe in the "ability to lead New York City" of the mayor.[97] The following day, de Blasio attended the funeral of officer Rafael Ramos. While making his remarks, hundreds of officers were seen to have turned their backs to the screen projecting the mayor's remarks at the funeral,[98] further highlighting the continuing tension.[97][98]

Political Positions on Transportation and Horse-Drawn Carriages

At a December 2013 news conference, de Blasio reiterated that he would outlaw Central Park's horse-drawn carriages once he took office, saying that he believes they are inhumane. He said, "We are going to get rid of horse carriages, period." He confirmed to the media that he hired legal counsel who will deal with the legislative approach. To replace them, de Blasio has proposed electric antique cars.[99]

Such a position incurred the opposition of carriage supporters such as actor Liam Neeson who in March 2014 challenged the mayor to visit the Clinton Park Stables with him. The mayor declined saying he'd visit on his own.[100]

Transit Service and 
Traffic Safety

In 2014, de Blasio released a report dedicated to "better transit for New York City". Some of the ideas brought up in the report were to rebuild Penn Station/Madison Square Garden, create more bus rapid transit routes,[101] and a "Vision Zero" initiative to reduce traffic-related deaths in the city.[102]

Charter Schools

Bill de Blasio's decision to deny the use of public space to several New York City charter schools provoked controversy. This decision overturned an arrangement made by the Bloomberg administration which allowed for "co-locations" where charter schools were housed in public school buildings.[103] The mayor also revoked $200 million of capital funding which had been earmarked for charter schools.[104]

The New York Times emphasized that de Blasio approved fourteen charter school co-locations and denied approval for just three, suggesting that the mayor is being unfairly cast as being opposed to charter schools.[105]

Approximately two months after the initial decision, the mayor's office announced that it had found space for the three schools. The city will lease three buildings from the Archdiocese of New York which were previously used as Catholic schools, and will renovate and maintain the properties. The three charter schools are run by Success Academy Charter Schools.[106]

Universal Pre-K

Bill de Blasio is an advocate of "Universal Pre-K," the availability of publicly funded pre-kindergarten for all NYC residents.[107] De Blasio sought to fund the program by increasing taxes on New York City residents earning $500,000 or more.[108]

Personal Life

De Blasio and his wife, activist and poet Chirlane McCray, met while both were working for the Dinkins administration and married in 1994.[109] They live in Park Slope, Brooklyn, with their two children, Dante, a high school junior at Brooklyn Technical High School in New York City, and Chiara, a student at Santa Clara University in California.[109][110][111] His daughter Chiara addressed her own challenges with substance abuse and depression in late December 2013, through a four-minute video that the mayor's transition team released.[112]

Standing at a height of 6 foot 5 inches, De Blasio is the tallest mayor in New York City's history.

40 comments:

  1. U.S. Representative Charlie Rangel tapped de Blasio to be his campaign manager for his successful 1994 re-election bid.

    Say no more!

    Birds of a feather flock together!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And throw Al Shapton into that mix, and you have a barrel of S--t

      Delete
    2. Oh, I think we owe it to the mayor to examine his background in some depth. That's why I published all that WIKI had o say about him.

      After hearing him speak for the first time I realized he was no typical D'Rat guttersnipe. He doesn't talk with that hideous NOO YAWK accent, and that alone counts in his favor with me.

      On the surface he seems a benign, kind-hearted, not-unattractive figure. Considering the heavy Ivy League influence in his background it's no wonder he's such a flaming liberal. I don't sense the cynical abominably condescending attitude most of them have n him, however.

      God help us, he seems utterly SINCERE.

      Certainly not the demonic OGRE the perennially obnoxious Bill O'Reilly has portrayed him to be.

      Delete
  2. S. Melly Fish said

    So he was born Warren Wilhelm, Jr. So what? Did you forget Gerald Ford was born Leslie Lynch King, Jr? I'll bet that didn't bother you when you voted for him, so why should Mayor de Blasio's name change bother you now?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mis Melly, what made you think I was "bothered" by the name change? It did make me wonder why the MAYOR, himself, was so bothered by his perfectly good sounding given name that he'd want to change it so radically.

      Thank you for the information on Gerald Ford. I'd forgotten that. Did you think it was dishonest or in any way reprehensible of Ford?

      Delete
    2. Would you like some herr-ring Ms. S. Melly?

      Delete
  3. FT that photo of the Di Blasio family would make a Google "caption this" blog.

    Just Sayin

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, get your creative juices flowing and give us a caption or two. It might be amusing as long as you are not just plain nasty. Nastiness is always a bore.

      Delete
  4. I give him a lot of credit. He's a patient and mature gentleman. If I was him, I'd be viscerally furious with the police right now.

    JMJ

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Patient? MATURE?

      If he were either, the police would be fully behind him.

      Delete
    2. He's also a foolish stupid and hated man.
      As well as a One Term Mayor.

      Delete
    3. New York city is not in the feudal custody of the police department. You stupid sycophants need to get your priorities straight. The police answer to the people, not the other way around, you frightened little sissy morons.

      JMJ

      Delete
    4. Indeed they do, Jersey. And WE are the people, not the minority of criminal lawbreakers who occasionally "occupy" the streets.

      Delete
    5. The "disgruntled few" DESERVE to get their heads bashed in. And THAT is what we pay the police to do. But if you don't like THAT, then we're perfectly fine "regressing" to a country dependent upon the 2nd Amendment for its law and order. :)

      Delete
    6. You're a backwards slob. And you're wrong. THAT is NOT what we pay the police to do, you backwards, third world, Isis-like moron.

      JMJ

      Delete
    7. Tell Eric Holder that the local cops represent US, and not a few egghead Blacktivists in DC.

      Delete
    8. Holder has nothing to do with this. Get off your insipid hatred of the federal government for one second and take your head out of your ass. The police work for the executive branch, at any level, and they are paid for by ALL the people, not just you. You backwards idiot. Do you WANT a police state, stupid?

      JMJ

      Delete
    9. Your Muda's a $2.00 blow jobJanuary 6, 2015 at 3:00 PM

      This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

      Delete
    10. The feds don't pay the salaries of ANY local police jurisdictions. And the Executives of 31 of 50 said jurisdictions are REPUBLICANS.

      and ps - poor people don't pay taxes. If you don't like the way the police behave, perhaps you should do something about all those unwed mothers that your party enables and subsidizes.

      Delete
    11. ...that way, I can afford more salaries for my "police state of necessity"..

      Delete
  5. This is what happens when you put academics in charge of anything major. They're all high-sounding theory with very little substance and no practical experience to back it up. He belongs on a college campus somewhere not in New York's Gracie Mansion.

    -----------------------> Katharine Heartburn

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes that's my impression too, Katharine. Not a bad guy, personally, but a bit daft and a poor excuse for an administrator.

      Delete
  6. DeBlasio is the absolute prototype for future US Presidents. A committed leftwing progressive without the beard, beret, foaming at the mouth rhetoric and whiff of pot smoke.

    In a word, dangerous.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's right. His outward appearance is straight, white, pleasant, calm and "reasonable." In this regard he is very like Howard Dean. From a superficial perspective one would never take either of those two as a committed Marxist, but ...

      Whoever thought a clean, close shave, a suit and tie, a regulation haircut, and a notable lack of body odor (I'm assuming this, I admit) would function as armor while providing The Perfect Disguise for a classic Loony Leftist.

      The greasy, grubby, unkempt, ill-mannered, malodorous image of the Sick-sties Marxist insurgent is O-U-T, and falsely reassuring, well-tailored caricature of WASP Respectability is now I-N.

      Dangerous, indeed, since the masses are so easily taken in by charlatans and demagogues.

      I still think, however, that a thorough examination of de Blasio's background and record of service should be the basis of any serious opinion formed, and not just a typical knee-kerk reaction to his current dealings with the NYPD, etc.

      Delete
  7. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  8. The progressive blogs are full of lies and distortions. All the folks know over there are how to name call and insult people.
    Kind of like What Jersey McJobrs does here.

    ReplyDelete
  9. JERSEY!

    Behave yourself. You are perfectly capable of expressing your views without insulting people, I know.

    Please see that you do. Your street fighter style damages your credibility.

    In short act more like Warren Wilhelm. ;-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sorry, FT, but that guy is how totalitarian states get started! And he think "poor people don't pay taxes." I think he's got damage to a lobe or something.

      JMJ

      Delete
    2. Stupid is thinking that the police are responsible for a "crime problem", and NOT the A-hole criminals.

      Delete
    3. FJ,
      The Left abhors accountability.

      Delete
    4. Jersey:

      Leftwing progs like you who bow down and worship the strongman are how totalitarian states get started.

      In case you haven't noticed, we've had some pretty lively debate here in Right Blogistan about the police. While we don't spew wholesale condemnation at them like you leftwing progs do, we do question their actions when individual cases come up, like with Mr. Garner, so you can knock off your crap.

      Delete
    5. Jersey: Go Yahoogle "Earned Income Credit"

      Educate yourself for once before shooting off your mouth

      Delete
  10. Jersey's ire has kicked in.

    ReplyDelete
  11. I guess all you have to do to become the mayor of New York is have a Son who has an Afro Haircut.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Profitt Byrd said

    If no one reads, no one studies, no one does anything but insult others who think differently, and offer knee-jerk reactions to fleeting impressions of what they want to believe is the truth, society will disintegrate, as it appears now to be doing, and descend into madness and utter chaos.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And the ignorant socialist Jerkey McJackass is leading the charge

      Delete
  13. Be "viscerally furious " at the police? For what? Having the nerve to be ambushed and assassinated on the job?

    Having the temerity to have a hatchet slammed into the back of his head walking down a Queens Boulevard?

    ReplyDelete
  14. Indeed.

    Michael Savage is right: Liberalism is a mental disorder.

    ReplyDelete

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