Freedom to Fascism

 
Jones Report
 

Rudy rattles some with Vito Corleone's voice

 

VIDEO: Rumsfeld Says Flight 93 Shot Down

OTHER NEWS
__________

Russo: Rockefeller Revealed Elite Agenda During Friendship

Creating a North American Union?

Police take control of Mexican city

Poll: Majority Believes Gov't Doing Too Much

Swiss Re Insurance Defeats Silverstein Claim of WTC Double Incident

9/11 Only "Make Believe" Says Iranian Govt Official

Scientific Method vs. Political Method: The US Administration and 9/11

Minutemen 'expose' Bush's 'shadow government'

Guantanamo may be final home for many detainees

US Nat'l ID Cards by 2008

Corp Awarded Patent for Implantable RFID chips

School Safety Drill Upsets Some Parents

Global Warming Tax: Pay Up...Or the Planet Gets It

US to Conduct Gulf Naval Maneuvers Off Iran

Israel Preparing Broad Gaza Operation

Audit Finds Missing U.S. Weapons in Iraq

U.S. Military's October Death Toll at 100

Al Qaeda Plans for an October Surprise?

FBI Probing 'Nuclear Info Leak'

Airport Screeners Fail to See Most Test Bombs

Secret Cabinet Memo Admits Iraq is Fuelling UK Terror

Leak Defies Blair Terror Claim

Afghanistan War is 'Cuckoo,' Says Blair's Favourite General

Muse's Bellamy Discusses Uncle Killed by IRA

Operation Hollywood

Early Voting 'Glitches' in Florida

1 in 4 Using Absentee Ballot

Election Meltdown Brewing Everywhere...

Orange Co. Indicts 11 GOP Operatives for Voter Registration Fraud

GOP 'Party of Death', Too

Christians Dissatisfied with Public Education

Get TERRORSTORM on DVD now

9/11 and more at PrisonPlanet.tv

Craig Gordon / Newsday | April 6, 2007

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Rudolph Giuliani launched into a California campaign speech recently with an opening line the crowd surely didn't expect -- his husky-voiced impersonation of Don Corleone in "The Godfather."

"Thank youse all very much for invitin' me here tuh-day, to this meeting of the families from different parts'a California," Giuliani said, recycling his old New York gag to laughter and scattered applause.

Then this week, Giuliani used the reference again, invoking the mob's code of honor to explain why reporters should lay off his wife. "I am a candidate. She's a civilian, to use the old Mafia distinction," he said.

Other Italian-American politicians have shunned references to organized crime, fearful of being tarred unfairly by anti-Italian stereotyping. Not Giuliani, who has in the past embraced such talk to remind voters he helped bust up the New York mob as a federal prosecutor. Plus, he's an unabashed "Godfather" fan.

But some political analysts are puzzled why a man seeking to become the first Italian-American president would dabble so blithely with the darkest stereotypes of his heritage, especially before voters really get to know him.

And a leader in the nation's largest Italian-American organization said Thursday that Giuliani should drop his Corleone impersonations because they are insensitive to Italian-Americans trying to dispel the linkages between being Italian and being in the mob.

"It's unfortunate for him to make light of a stereotype that creates a lot of discomfort for millions of other Italian-Americans," said Dona De Sanctis of the Order Sons of Italy in America. "We would hope that Mr. Giuliani would try to find humor in other aspects of his candidacy rather than his Italian heritage that way.

"We don't think it's funny," she said of such jokes. "We stopped laughing a long time ago."

Giuliani's campaign Thursday night issued a statement that did not address the Sons of Italy directly. "Mayor Giuliani is proud of his Italian heritage and has a record celebrating the country's culture and the important contributions Italian-Americans have made to New York City and the United States."

Giuliani's comments didn't bother Joseph Scelsa, president of the Italian American Museum in New York and the Coalition of Italian American Associations. He called himself a Giuliani supporter and said the mob references were "in jest. ... He's done more to advance the image of Italian-Americans."

So far, Giuliani's heritage -- he is the grandson of Italian immigrants -- has not been in an issue in the campaign, seemingly because so many Americans already know him and his record in New York City and on 9/11.

But the Marlon Brando impersonation has been a longtime favorite of Giuliani's, including from his days giving paid motivational speeches. One real-estate Web site quoted him at a March 2006 convention appearance, saying in the Brando voice, "Welcome to Las Vegas -- a city which we used to own."

In the February appearance in California, Giuliani told the crowd he opened with the impersonation because he listened to 2,000 hours of men on tape talking that way to carry out his groundbreaking mob prosecutions in the "Pizza Connection" case and others. Plus, it's important to have a "sense of humor" about such things, he said.

Get TERRORSTORM Before the History of Government-Sponsored Terrorism Catches Up With You.

CLICK ON THE BANNER TO BUY TERRORSTORM IN HARD COPY

Get Terrorstorm on DVD

See a Scanner Darkly

Visit the Infowars Store

Join Prison Planet.tv