heroes

A New York Hero: Hassan Askari

The odds were 10:3. A mob, one of whom had been involved with racist attacks on blacks in the past, attacked three Jews for having the NERVE to wish them "Happy Hanukkah" in response to "Merry Christmas." This occurred on the NYC subway, well within a part of the world considered more or less free of such stupid bigotry. But the ten bigots who mobbed the Jews for wishing them "Happy Hanukkah" included a woman who was the perfect illustration of the stupidity such bigots embrace when she referred to Hanukkah as the day Jews celebrate the killing of Christ.

Hanukkah, of course, pre-dated the birth of Christ by some 200 years, and represented the success of Jewish rebellion against the Syrian Greeks.

When the odds are 10:3, a hero jumps in to defend the 3. That is what Hassan Askari did. Hassan Askari was a gentleman from a Bangladeshi family who jumped in to defend the three Jews against the ten ignorant bigots who attacked them. He received a possible broken nose in the process, but is also being honored by New York City as a genuine good Samaritan.


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True American Heros SLAM Rudy Giuliani

Been writing about this for some time, but since I am on vacation, Bouldin beat me to the latest installment of Giuliani's 9/11 facade crumbling thanks to the efforts of firefighters, the REAL heroes of 9/11.

I will simply repost Bouldin's piece from Daily Gotham since there is not much I can add except a reminder that this is not the first time firefighters have been down on Rudy. From here this diary is Michael's:

It was on September 11th, 2001, that I first started hating George Bush. We watched the towers come down, three miles away, and the Decider was nowhere to be seen, delivering a scared little video message to the nation only hours later from some Air Force Base in some god-forsaken spot. Later, he gave an equally cringe-inducing little speech from the Oval Office; that speech must have left most of the country wondering how this crisis was going to be mastered with such a scared little man in charge. "Little" is the operative, descriptive word on so many things about the Bush era; on 9/11, little turned into too little, too late.

Into that vacuum stepped Rudy Giuliani, reassuring his grieving City, telling us what we needed to hear without sugar-coating, and with a tone of grace that was and remains admirable. Out of this, however, he has woven, with great skill, a modern myth of heroism, one potent enough to make him the front-runner for his party's nomination for President. Indispensable to that myth are the firefighters of the City of New York.

They aren't having any of it. Yesterday, the International Association of Firefighters released this video:


Here's a partial transcript (any errors are mine):


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