Honestly, I don't go out of my way to find stories bashing Guiliani.  They just keep falling into my lap.  I have a feeling that if I actively tried to avoid them, they would sneak up and whack me in the butt to get my attention.  I don't know how anyone with conservative or libertarian leanings could even think about supporting him.  He is neither conservative nor libertarian, and like most members of America's elite ruling class, he's a crook.
Rudy Giuliani's much-publicized but misleading put-down of Ron Paul during Tuesday night's Republican presidential debate should have been tempered by a report that Saudi Arabia, the country that spawned most of the 9/11 hijackers, has been one of Giuliani's lucrative foreign clients. However, Fox News questioners Chris Wallace and Wendell Goler did not bring it up.

Perhaps this can be explained by the fact that the same Associated Press story that named Saudi Arabia as a Giuliani client listed News Corporation, the parent company of Fox News, as another Giuliani client. This AP story, which was not disputed by Giuliani or News Corporation, was carried on the Fox News website.

This writer had raised questions about Fox News' co-sponsorship of the debate, based on the fact that the company had a relationship with Giuliani when he was mayor of New York City. But now we know that the relationship has continued into the period of time that Giuliani has been planning a presidential run. It is an obvious conflict of interest.

[...]

The exchange with Paul over 9/11 might have been seen in a different light if Hannity had asked Giuliani about why, according to the AP report, his firm represented Saudi Arabia. But that was a taboo topic.

Equally important, it turns out that Paul's point-that the 9/11 attacks were linked to U.S. involvement in Iraq and the Middle East-was factually correct. Osama bin Laden's 1996 "Declaration of War against the Americans Occupying the Land of the Two Holy Places" specifically mentioned the situation in Iraq, blaming the U.S. for the impact of economic sanctions on the Saddam Hussein regime. Bin Laden accused the U.S. of "aggression" against Iraq and the record shows that his anti-Americanism was motivated, at least in part, by the U.S. military presence in Saudi Arabia.

Yet, Giuliani claimed "I don't think I've heard that before," in reference to Paul's citation of some of these facts. One would think that "America's Mayor" and "Mr. 9/11" would understand the genesis of the attacks that took almost 3,000 American lives.
But since he is one of the Chosen as anointed by the holy media nothing he says or does can be wrong.

Via The Agitator.

ADDENDUM:  Ah, Michelle!  Remember the old days, before you became part of the MSM?

ADDENDA #2:  Welcome to Blogonomicon, your friendly neighborhood libertarian fever swamp!  So Paul is some kind of looney because:  "...I never automatically trust anything the government does when they do an investigation because too often I think there's an area that the government covered up, whether it's the Kennedy assassination or whatever."  I suppose this means we must automatically trust everything the government does or we'll be lumped in with 9/11 Truthers.  Such a masterful "I was incorrect, but he was incorrecter" worthy of the NYT or WaPo.  Oh well, Michelle, it was fun while it lasted.