He's consistently associated himself with people notorious for fueling anti-cop bias, chief among them the Rev. Al Sharpton, who's wrong about almost everything (ie, blame everything on racism). By 'associations,' I mean de Blasio having Sharpton behind him during his speeches.
He ran on a campaign promise to eliminate the controversial "stop & frisk" program by the NYPD. It involved firing the current commissioner at the time, Ray Kelly, and instead hiring Bill Bratton, who also supports the policy. There was really no other purpose to the move other than to satisfy the ignorant folks who actually believe it's a valid change.
And regardless of how you feel about the Eric Garner grand-jury decision, de Blasio made some rather disingenuous statements about what he tells his son (as if Dante would even get in trouble like that, anyway). But more importantly, it was hardly a neutral reaction to the decision. There's an undertone of discontent that's tough to ignore.
So now I get to the question of Rachel Noerdlinger: should de Blasio have fired her? The controversy surrounding her being that she was the First Lady's chief of staff and her ex-con boyfriend made aggressively anti-cop statements on the Internet.She's since been fired since the information came out. Did she really deserve it?Let's take a look at the facts (Wikipedia has citations for now, can't be arsed to link this stuff individually):-She did not disclose in her background questionnare that she was living with a convicted felon-She's had various troubles paying her taxes-She was granted a residency waiver because she claimed her son was injured in a car accident, despite being healthy enough to play football (sounds awfully fraudulent, doesn't it?)
Her son also has a criminal record and has also bashed the cops online.
Any disagreements?
I don't disagree - but you also have to understand the power Al Sharpton has in terms of politics and minority communities - even without holding elected office.
"Political Official makes Politically-Motivated Firing: Tonight at 10"Not exactly scandalous. And yeah, going behind on campaign promises is a dick move, but again - common in politics.
No disagreement that his statements could have been slightly more neutral - but De Blasio also knows he was elected to represent the people of New York City, not the NYPD or the Police Union - he is going to play to that as well.
First off - was she good at her job?Second off - if you're firing her, you fire her for failing to disclose information on the hiring papers, or fraudulent housing waivers. You don't fire her because "Oh, she had an ex-boyfriend who has illegal activity" - because that is a shitty precedent to begin.
So, she can control what her son says? Again, it's a shitty precedent. You fire her on HER merits and whether she did something wrong, not because of what her family or ex-lovers do.
lol the fags itt are going at it and not in the hot way
Giuliani was a great mayor for NYC
Quote from: Kinder Graham on January 07, 2015, 03:08:51 PMGiuliani was a great mayor for NYCRudolf "9/11" Giuliani?
Quote from: Mad Max on January 07, 2015, 04:52:36 PMQuote from: Kinder Graham on January 07, 2015, 03:08:51 PMGiuliani was a great mayor for NYCRudolf "9/11" Giuliani?His actions during and after the attack gave him the title of America's Mayor