For someone who has a long history of screwing up his own marriages, you would think that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani would mind his own business when it comes to gay marriage. Heterosexuals have done a fine job of destroying families & making a mockery of the sanctity of marriage. If gay couples want to be as miserable as we all are, then let them get married and let's just stop the hate.
Giuliani's first wife Regina Peruggi is his second cousin and they had known each other since childhood. He cheated on his second wive Donna Hanover, publicly humiliated her during a 2000 press conference by announcing he was divorcing her, and neglected to tell her either of his decision to leave her or of the press conference. She first learned of his intentions when she was at home watching his press conference. He then started parading his mistress Judith Nathan in front of the world while still embracing "family values." They've now been married since 2003.
After Giuliani left his second wife, he moved in with his good friends Howard Koeppel and Mark Hsiao, a gay couple who've been together since 1991. The three were real close friends where Koeppel had even asked if Giuliani would perform their wedding ceremony. He told them he would once gay marriage became legal in New York. But once Giuliani had delusions of running for president, he distanced himself from Koeppel & Hsiao now stating that marriage is only between a man and a woman.
Though now against gay marriage, Rudy Giuliani does say that Republicans should move on from its opposition to gay marriage in an interview with Candy Crowley on CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday.
"I think that marriage should be between a man and woman," Giuliani said, "but I think that the Republican Party would be well advised to get the heck out of people's bedrooms and let these things get decided by states."
Giuliani said he thinks the decision by the New York state Senate to allow same-sex marriages was "wrong," but he said "there are other things that I think are wrong that get decided by democratic vote."
"And now," he said, "we should move on."
"I don't know what the heck the Republican Party wants to do getting involved in people's sexual lives and personal lives so much for," Giuliani continued. "Stay out of it. And I think we'd be a much more successful political party if we stuck to our economic, conservative roots and our idea of a strong, assertive America that is not embarrassed to be the leader of the world."