Rusted Rudy
"IN THE plaintiffs' counties, they were denied the opportunity to have an unobstructed observation and ensure opacity," Mr. Giuliani said. "I'm not quite sure I know what opacity means. It probably means you can see, right?"
"It
means you can't," said U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann.
So
blundered Rudy Giuliani in a Pennsylvania court as he tried to make the case
that President Donald Trump was robbed of re-election.
“Over
the next few hours [Giuliani] fiddled with his Twitter account, forgot which
judge he was talking to and threw around wild, unsupported accusations about a
nationwide conspiracy by Democrats to steal the election,” reported the UK’s Evening
Standard on Nov. 18.
“Rusty”
the paper called Rudy, the “hard-nosed federal prosecutor who made a name for himself
going after New York mobsters in the 1980s” absent from court as an attorney
since 1992.
Rusted
is more like it, from where I sit, given that steely determination, of that solid
character that Mayor Giuliani impacted the whole world with in resurrecting
his New York City from the utter devastation of the 9/11 attacks.
That
solid leadership in the worst of crises made of Giuliani a presidential timber.
As he, indeed, made his bid for the Republican nomination: starting off with a “significant
lead” in the national polls but cutting his run short in Jan. 2008 when he
finished third in the Florida primary to eventual nominee John McCain.
Still,
the adulation of Giuliani remained high worldwide. Here’s something I wrote
here in Aug. 2008 of that high-priced speaking engagement he did in
Manila.
Leadership crisis
“WHY PAY P22,000 per seat when we have plenty of heroes here, leaders
that are tried and tested in crisis?” asked Senator Richard Gordon, finding
incredulous the high cost of hearing former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani
speak in person.
Giuliani was speaker in a forum dubbed “Leadership in Times of Crisis” at the
Makati Shangri-la Tuesday where a table for 12 cost P242,000, a “priority table”
near the stage, P300,000 and the last two rows the P22,000-seat.
The erudite Gordon has a point. We have a surfeit of tried and tested leaders
like himself, like City of San Fernando Mayor Oscar Rodriguez – to name just
two – whose characters were forged through the crucible of crises, not the
least of which was the Mount Pinatubo catastrophe.
A nation in perpetual crisis, both natural and man-made, the Philippines is the
perfect laboratory for “Leadership in Times of Crisis.”
So, why the need for Rudy the Rock – the moniker he got for presiding over the
rise of New York City from the devastation of 9/11 – to tell us what it’s all
about?
Blame the persistence in our collective memory of the superiority of the White
Big Brother in knowing what is best for us little brown ‘uns. Ah, the
indelibility of our colonial mentality. After all these years of our proclaimed
independence, the 300 years of Spanish colonialism and more than 50 years of
American imperialism are still well ensconced in the Filipino psyche.
Especially among our ilustrados who find P22,000 a seat –
take-home pay for the day of some 50 wage earners – loose change vis-à-vis the
great opportunity offered only to the chosen few to rub elbows with Giuliani.
It was all image, not message that they paid for.
What Giuliani spoke about was the least that mattered to these ilustrados.
Leadership manuals from the Harvard Business School, and those culled from the
experiences of business and political leaders have certainly more substance
than Giuliani’s talk.
Even if one wanted pure Giuliani leadership, he need not fork over P22,000 just
to get something from him.
Saturday before Giuliani’s expensive peroration, I was rummaging through the
stacks of books at Booksale in Robinsons Starmills. Guess what I found – Leadership by
Rudolph W. Giuliani, talk miramax books, published 2002 by Hyperion, New York.
Giuliani’s talk at the Makati forum centered on his “Six Pillars” of
leadership. The book had not only six but 14 great columns that provide the
base of support to leadership, which comprised the very titles of the chapters.
So self-explanatory, a simple scan of the table of contents would make the
reader readily understand what the book was all about.
In my case, there was automatic cross-checking of Giuliani’s precepts with some
similar, as well as dissimilar ones, from other books on leadership,
including The Art of War, Leadership Secrets of Attila the Hun, The 48
Steps to Power, Certain Trumpets, and The Heart of a Leader to
name but a few.
And some introspection too: I put the faces of local leaders either as the
theses or antitheses to Giuliani’s chapter titles.
Like Mabalacat Mayor Boking Morales as a testament to Weddings
Discretionary, Funerals Mandatory. No, this has nothing to do with the
five-term mayor’s marital state but everything with his self-imposed obligation
to attend the wakes and funerals of his constituents.
Vice Gov. Yeng Guiao makes a paladin for First Things First and Prepare
Relentlessly be it in his coaching job in the PBA or in going about
his work at the capitol, especially when at odds with the Governor.
Ah, the Governor. Notwithstanding the accolades from the ilustrados’ Ateneo
de Manila and the inquisitorial Inquirer, Eddie Panlilio makes the
antithetical representation for the chapters, to wit:
Surround Yourself With Great People, he being surrounded by only one,
and not even near-great, at that.
Everyone Accountable, All of the Time, exempting himself as he lays the
blame on others for any failure of his administration.
Reflect, Then Decide, kneejerk urges and surges were those insipid memos
of “caretaker administration,” “blanket authority,” and the non-confirmation,
to name just three.
Be Your Own Man, so, ain’t the Governor unbecomed by a woman?
Loyalty: The Vital Virtue, so why are his campaign supporters Madame
Lolita Hizon and family, Rene Romero and fellow businessmen now saying those
nasty things about his (mal)administration? So what do you make of the constant
comings and goings of staff at the Governor’s Office?
Underpromise and Overdeliver, he promised to take the concerns of the
poor to the Capitol, he delivered the desperate charity-seekers to the fund-challenged
provincial board.
For the rest of the chapters – Develop and Communicate Strong Beliefs;
Stand Up to Bullies; Study. Read. Learn Independently; Organize Around a
Purpose; Bribe Only Those Who Will Stay Bribed – make your own
opinion.
This much, and more, I got from Giuliani without having to attend that Makati
forum and scrape my knees for P22,000. The cover price of his book? US$25.95. I
got it for a measly P120.00, jacketed and hardcover.
As an aside now, maybe I may have been hasty in dismissing Giuliani’s talk
about “Leadership in Times of Crisis,” believing that Filipinos can do a lot
better.
I guess the subject I had in mind was “Times of Crisis in Leadership.”
COME
TO THINK of it now. With the pandemic of crises devastating the land, is it
just me seeing Rusted Rudy all-too-easily segueing to Randy Rody?
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