Andrew Kirtzman, the author of a new biography of disgraced and unhinged Rudy "Toot Toot" Giuliani, writes in a column in the New York Times on the 21st anniversary of 9-11:
"Mr. Giuliani is virtually alone at this desperate hour. Supporters have abandoned him; once-friendly news organizations have banished him from their airwaves; and few have helped him fend off bankruptcy from numerous lawsuits and investigations. At 78 years old, the man who helped to lead New York City and the nation out of some of our most horrible days is a shadow of his old self.
Mr. Giuliani finds himself in this situation not in spite of his actions on Sept. 11 but rather because of them. The choices he made to leverage his fame from that period — and his efforts to hold on to it when it started to slip away — have led to his troubles today."
Those troubles include the Fulton County, GA, grand jury naming him as a target for his attempts to skew the election outcome in Georgia, being sued by Dominion Voting Systems for defamation, and suspension of his law license by New York state appellate court. Giuliani's downward trajectory is in direct relation to the time spent with the Malignant Loser, who so far hasn't thrown his "lawyer" Giuliani much if anything in the way of legal fees. Giuliani is another prime example of "everything Trump touches dies."