by JdN contributing writer.
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The Rise of America’s Mayor
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Today I read an especially heinous article in the Guardian (far Left Wing news rag poisoning my news feed on a daily basis) about Rudy Giuliani’s role in President Trump’s noble fight to stay in office.
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It was so shockingly egregious in its bias, I decided to have a little fun with the first few lines, and then just ran with it.
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I only adjusted the first few lines. The remainder of the article is all ours.
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The Guardian wrote,
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“On election night, as it started to become clear that the presidency was slipping away from Donald Trump, his son-in-law and senior aide Jared Kushner was looking for a hero.
He wanted someone like James Baker, the New York Times reported, the former White House chief of staff, Treasury secretary and Secretary of State, who led George W. Bush’s legal team during the Florida recount in 2000 in a role that won him praise as a strategic and diplomatic genius.
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He got Rudy Giuliani.”
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Here’s my take on the despicable Fake News tale originally spat out by yellow journalist Archie Bland – yeah that’s actually the buffoon’s name.
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Enjoy!
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On Election Night, as it started to become clear that the presidency was being stolen from the American people – the silent majority and members of the Trump family were looking for some hope.
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Someone like warmongering RINO, James Baker, perhaps – the former White House Chief of Staff and United States Secretary of the Treasury under President Ronald Reagan, and as U.S. Secretary of State and White House Chief of Staff under President George H. W. Bush, who led George W Bush’s legal team to victory during the 2002 Florida recount.
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Did Trump have such a man on his side?
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There’s the Attorney General for Utah, Sean Reyes – America’s first state attorney general of Japanese descent – and Trump’s main man on the ground in the desert.
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Although Reyes, who has played a key role in Nevada and Arizona since the election debacle, is indubitably a good man and solid prosecutor – would he have the chops to deal with the sort of endemically corrupt and morally bankrupt swamp rats one finds scurrying about the Philadelphia underworld?
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No.
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Enter Rudolph William Louis Giuliani – “America’s lawyer” and honorary Knight of the British Empire – one of the single most successful prosecuting attorneys in the history of the United States.
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The man who single-handedly took out the New York Metropolitan area Mob and made a name for himself by stomping out their international heroin and cocaine ring in the infamous “Pizza Connection” case.
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One need only look at Mr. Giuliani’s background prosecuting North Eastern Democrat criminals and mobsters, and even more importantly WHERE he was raised, his overall record as a prosecutor and where his people hail from – their experiences with organized criminality and corruption in general – to get a feel for where Trump’s forthcoming legal battle is headed, and just what these low-life Left Wing criminals are up against.
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Will we win?
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Who knows.
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But Mr Giuliani, a man who has proven his loyalty to President Trump ten times over, certainly has the chops, experience and intestinal fortitude to get the job done.
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So, just who is Rudy Giuliani?
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To get to know the man who is now being entrusted with the survival of Donald Trump’s presidency, let’s start with something perhaps he is least remembered for, but that defined him early on in his career, and I think WILL define him in the annals of American history and New York City lore – his success cleaning up the cesspool that was 1980s Manhattan.
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During Rudy Giuliani’s six years as top prosecutor in New York’s Southern District, he was perhaps the most famous law enforcement official in the HISTORY of the United States, leaving behind a legacy unsurpassed anywhere else in the nation.
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While the likes of Mayor Rahm Emmanuel and Mayor Bill DiBlasio pander to the mob, while stuffing their own pockets – Giuliani prosecuted the very worst of New York’s criminal overworld – starting with crooked cops, New York’s “Commission” of organized crime families and ending with the corrupt Democrat Establishment that was enabling these monsters.
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I say “overworld” as these fiends were operating right out in broad daylight for all the world to see.
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As top prosecutor, Giuliani cleaned up a city that was so filthy in EVERY way imaginable, it made the likes of 2020 Philadelphia and Detroit look pristine.
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And there was no one tougher on the sort of thugs that have bankrolled Beijing Biden’s presidential campaign than Mr. Giuliani.
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After serving as NYC’s top prosecutor Rudy set his sights on the mayorship of New York. After losing to the inept David Dinkins in 1990 in the closest mayoral election in decades, Giuliani won his first term in 1994 – securing both the NY Republican and now defunct LIBERAL party endorsements – and has since not looked back.
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As Mayor of New York [a city of eight million people and the financial and media capital of the US] for eight years, Giuliani made sweeping changes to law-enforcement policies that reduced both violent and non-violent crime in the city by more than 50 percent and calmly shepherded the city and nation through the catastrophic 9/11 terrorist attacks, which had been orchestrated by the US Deep State and destroyed the World Trade Center.
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(Don’t think for a second Rudy doesn’t know WHO was behind the attack on his beloved city.)
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Let’s take Mr Giuliani’s story back a few decades to meet the person behind the public persona.
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Giuliani was born in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, which until the 1960’s remained a working class Italian-American enclave.
He was the only child of working-class parents, Harold and Helen Giuliani. Both Giuliani’s parents were of Tuscan ancestry – his father hailing from Montecatini Terme, in the Pistoia region of Eastern Tuscany, Italy, his Tuscan background being important, as I will again reference later.
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Rudy had a rather peculiar upbringing.
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Although Wikipedia, which goes to great lengths to harm the valiant Giuliani’s reputation, alleging that Rudy’ father was a low-level m?Mafia enforcer, other sources I’ve found claim that although Harold Giuliani did have run-ins with the law as a young man, he was deeply opposed to the rot he saw that the Mafia inflicted on New York’s predominantly Southern Italian immigrants.
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In fact, one site, The National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, claims that “Rudy grew up with a father who reviled NY’s ethnic Italians” who, he said, “tarnished their community by turning to organized crime.”
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If this is genuinely the case, I feel that this animus can be attributed to Rudy’s father’s Tuscan heritage.
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Remember the vast majority of America’s Italian crime families hail from regions like Sicily and Calabria – inhabited by a people vastly different to the cultured central Italian Etruscan folk of Toscana – the birthplace of the Renaissance as well as of both Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci and thousands of years of indigenous Etruscan “storia”.
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Working-class Harold immediately saw a bright future for his ambitious young son, noting early on in Rudy’s academic career that there were no federal judges of Italian extraction in New York in the mid-1960s due to the fact Italians routinely found themselves on the wrong side of the law.
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It was at this stage that he encouraged his son to pursue a career in law enforcement, not as a cop, but as a jurist.
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The younger Giuliani completed his undergraduate degree at local Manhattan College, which in spite of its name, is based not in Manhattan, but in a pretty rancid area of the Bronx. After completing his juris doctorate at New York University Law School in 1970, Giuliani was then hired as an Assistant U.S. attorney in New York’s Southern District, which I’ve discovered covers a masses area, comprising “the counties of Bronx, Dutchess, New York, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan and Westchester and concurrently with the Eastern District, the waters within the Eastern District.”
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Lots of crime there!
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By age 30, Giuliani was that office’s third-highest-ranking prosecutor, and, boy, did he ever get to prosecuting – setting his sights on corrupt cops, labor union bosses, Democrat officials, Mafia hitmen, sex and drug traffickers and the very worst “white-collar” criminals on Wall Street.
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As per The National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement,
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“One of the federal cases Giuliani prosecuted in the 1970s came after he and his colleagues convinced New York Police detective, Robert Leuci, to work undercover within the force to report back about police corruption. Leuci’s story was told by Robert Daley in the non-fiction book Prince of the City that later became an acclaimed 2001 movie by the same name.
Fifty-two New York cops were indicted on corruption-related allegations based on the evidence. Giuliani also won a conviction against Brooklyn-area U.S. Congressman Bertram Podell, a Democrat who served several months in federal prison for accepting a $41,000 bribe.”
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Giuliani was well on his way to legislative stardom regardless of whether he decided to stay in the law or to run for public office, as he would in New York.
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After the widespread notoriety of the young Giuliani’s successful prosecutions of both public and private sector scumbags, Giuliani had many options, but knew his heart was in the prosecution of the very worst humanity had to offer.
Eventually a recommendation from a federal judge he had clerked for in law school arrived, taking Giuliani to Gerald Ford’s White House where he would work as Assistant Attorney General for Harold Tyler.
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After Ford lost the 1976 presidential election to Jimmy Carter, Tyler brought Giuliani in as a partner in his corporate law-firm in downtown Manhattan but his heart was not in it.
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Though Giuliani would remain at the firm until 1981, after GOP presidential candidate, Ronald Reagan, defeated Carter, he looked for a way out.
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Giuliani then, through contacts, was appointed US Associate Attorney General, the third-highest position in the Justice Department, under William French Smith.
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Giuliani’s next move was to become U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York just two years later, in June of 1983.
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As per Rudy’s biography in the The National Museum of Organize Crime and Law Enforcement, fittingly based in Las Vegas, Nevada – a site I expect much of Mr Giuliani’s most important work will take place over the next few weeks.
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“Giuliani announced that his top priority as U.S. attorney was to defeat organized crime in New York, where the chiefs of the so-called ‘Five Families’ lived and operated. He read Mob boss Joseph Bonanno’s 1983 memoir A Man of Honor, in which Bonanno described meetings with bosses of the other four families — Colombo, Gambino, Genovese and Lucchese — a national ruling body referred to as “the Commission.” The Commission, going back to 1931, met secretly to settle differences, consider new members, approve murders and dole out money earned through racketeering. Giuliani received permission from Washington to pursue a case against the Commission.
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By 1984, 350 FBI agents and 100 New York Police detectives were investigating the Mob. At the time, an estimated 1,000 “made” men and 5,000 Mob associates lived in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and elsewhere.
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Giuliani’s probe included the placement of court-allowed recording devices in 1984 in places such as the Palma Boys Social Club in New York, where Anthony “Fat Tony” Salerno held court, Paul Castellano’s home on Staten Island, an automobile used by a Colombo family member and a Jaguar car used by Lucchese family associate, Sal Avellino, to chauffeur various mobsters.
From hundreds of hours of recorded conversations, investigators heard the gangsters talk about the Commission, narcotics sales and the contract murder of Bonanno figure Carmine Galante in 1979.
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Giuliani decided to prosecute the leaders of the families and their upper-level cohorts together under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO, for allegedly conspiring to commit felonies, including contract murders, loan sharking, extortion, labor racketeering and drug trafficking. It was the first time RICO, passed by Congress in 1970, was employed to prosecute a major federal case.
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He argued the case before a federal grand jury and in February 1985 obtained indictments against a laundry list of New York’s Mob leaders and their lieutenants: Bonanno family boss Phil Rastelli and capo Anthony Indelicato; Colombo boss Carmine Persico and member Ralph Scopo; Gambino boss Paul Castellano; Genovese boss Anthony Salerno and member Gennaro Langella; Lucchese boss Anthony Corallo, underboss Salvatore Santoro and consigliere Christopher Furnari. Soon afterward, Castellano was shot and killed outside a restaurant in Manhattan and Rastelli was tried in a separate RICO case.
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The case brought to light the Concrete Club, a scheme where Castellano and other mobsters demanded and received kickbacks on the cost of cement for building projects in New York in exchange for peace from Mob-controlled labor unions. In November 1986, the mobster defendants – including family leaders Salerno, Persico and Corallo – were convicted in the 21-count indictment and made to serve sentences of 40 to 100 years in prison, a crippling blow to the decades-old New York Mafia.
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Giuliani also won racketeering indictments in 1986, during the Commission trial, in a separate case against Salerno and mobsters Vincent Cafaro, John Tronolone and Milton Rockman. The grand jury alleged that Genovese boss Salerno and the others conspired to engineer the selection of Jackie Presser for president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters in 1983 to control him and obtain union loans and jobs.
Lonardo testified in the case, saying that he and Rockman met with Mob leaders in Chicago and with Salerno in New York to gather support for putting Presser in as head of the Teamsters. He also stated that the Mafia had controlled induction of the previous Teamsters president, Roy Williams.
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This time, the jury acquitted Salerno and the others of rigging Teamster elections for Presser and Williams. Meanwhile, in May 1988, Giuliani’s office got guilty verdicts on Salerno, Genovese family member Matthew Ianniello and two others in a RICO case alleging extortion, union fraud and rigging bids for $30 million in cement work at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York.
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The following month, Giuliani filed suit in New York to force the Teamsters to hold free elections and institute other reforms to eliminate organized crime influence in its locals.
“The government’s complaint alleges that organized crime has deprived union members of their rights through a pattern of racketeering that includes 20 murders, a number of shootings, bombings, beatings, a campaign of fear, extortion and theft,” Giuliani stated.
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In October 1988, a federal judge sentenced Salerno, who was already serving a 100-year sentence in the 1986 Commission case, to an additional 70 years for his conviction in the Javits center bid-rigging.
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Another major Mafia case that came to Giuliani’s office was the famous “Pizza Connection” caper, in which the former chief of the Sicilian Mafia, Gaetano Badalamenti, and Bonanno crime family member Salvatore Catalano were charged as leaders of a $1.6 billion international heroin and cocaine smuggling and sales operation using pizza restaurants in New York as fronts since 1979.
The 18 defendants were convicted in 1987. “It is a tremendous victory in the effort to crush the Mafia,” Giuliani stated in the Washington Post.
“Five years ago nobody would have thought it possible to convict the head of the Sicilian Mafia and the head of a major part of an American Mafia family. The impact on the Mafia of these cases has been devastating. If this continues, there’s not going to be a Mafia.”
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Before leaving office in January 1989, Giuliani also successfully prosecuted cases of alleged illegal insider trading on Wall Street and corruption in New York political circles.
In 1987, Ivan Boesky, a Wall Street arbitrager who amassed $200 million investing in companies about to be taken over or bought out, was convicted of conspiring to file false documents, served two years in prison and was fined $100 million.
In 1988, Giuliani then focused on a Boesky associate, Michael Milken, known as the “king” of selling unsecured “junk” bonds to raise funds for businesses. Milken was indicted on 98 counts including racketeering, insider trading and securities fraud, went to prison for nearly two years and paid $900 million in fines.
Giuliani prosecuted and won racketeering convictions against Bronx Democratic leader Stanley Friedman and others in a bribery scheme involving the city’s parking meter violations agency.
In 1988, four executives of the defense contractor firm Wedtech pleaded guilty to federal charges filed by Giuliani in illegal payoffs to public officials in exchange for no-bid contracts. The case also ended with the conviction of Congressman Mario Biaggi, a New York Democrat, for extorting payoffs from Wedtech.”
End NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ORGANIZED CRIME & LAW ENFORCEMENT bio.
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With Giuliani’s years as a “Mob, Union and Democrat buster” over, he decided to enter politics and run for mayor of New York City, winning the Republican nomination in 1989 but narrowly losing to Democrat David Dinkins in the general election, in the closest election the city had seen in decades.
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Giuliani ran for mayor again in 1993, this time handily defeating dopey Dinkins. He won re-election in 1997.
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While mayor, Giuliani sought to reduce crime in a city regarded as the nation’s crime capital.
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Although New York is once again being overrun with criminality, this was NOT the case when the city was on Rudy’s watch.
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Giuliani, who was in fact very concerned for the city’s most vulnerable, implemented what became known as his “broken windows” policy: a no-tolerance stance toward petty crimes such as vandalism and panhandling.
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Giuliani’s administration was, in fact, credited with reducing violent and other “serious” crime in New York City by over 56 percent during his time in office. This includes a 66 percent decline in murders, 54% reduction in rape and 70 percent drop in shootings.
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Giuliani ordered police sweeps to get rid low-level drug dealers in Lower Manhattan, much to the delight of the city’s poorest people, who have to live in these rat-infested, Democrat-run communities.
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Like Trump during this recent presidential election, Rudy saw record support from Black and Hispanic New Yorkers who too were sick of the crime.
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Note – Rudy Giuliani was so concerned about corruption in the city – as well as the apearance of being seen as clean by the people what worked for him – that he turned down numerous invitations to dine with one very prominent, RELENTLESS New York City businessman.
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The name of that infamous businessman?
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You’ll have to read on to find out 🙂
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Then on September 11, 2001, during what should have been Giuliani’s final three months in office, Giuliani was thrust into the international spotlight, becoming the face of New York after the Deep State and other enemies of the American people successfully took down lower Manhattan’s World Trade Center’s iconic Twin Towers, causing both skyscrapers to collapse and killing nearly 3,000 people.
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Giuliani visited the site even when it was unsafe to do so.
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So let me ask you.
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If Giuliani can handle the Gambino and Salerno crime families, take out powerful mobbed-up union bosses and some of the city’s most corrupt cops and Democrat politicians, don’t you think he can handle a few low-IQ Philly swamp rats?
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We do!
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And we will have part two of our two part series on Mr Giuliani for you tomorrow. A man as loyal and noble as Mr Giuliani deserves our utmost respect…
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Stay strong, and please remember to donate and help us with our efforts.
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Oh, before I forget. that businessman he would not let pay for his meal was none other than ……. Donald John Trump. 🙂
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End Article
The Guardian rag, what a joke of a paper.
More copies of the Guardian are given away than are actually sold. It’s given away every day to all teachers and union knobs that can read. It’s kept afloat via donations from trade unions.
Same thing goes on in France. The communist rag “Libération” survives only by massive subsidies.
No real white working man would buy and read that pro-gay, pro-muslim, pro-African bullsh–. 😉