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PCIntern

(28,744 posts)
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 11:39 AM 9 hrs ago

An essay about another American autocrat: Frank Rizzo

This man was elevated from police commissioner to Mayor of the City of Philadelphia. I knew him very casually and peripherally after his heyday but while was again running for mayor after a hiatus.

Rizzo was a product of white South Philadelphia, with the concomitant street smarts, shrewdness, lack of formal education, and bigotry. He spoke like a cinematic mobster and was never without a strong opinion on any matter. Many progressives thought he was an idiot, barely literate, racist.

He was many things, but no idiot. He once said to a very influential acquaintance of mine, “I love it when people think I’m stupid.” He was anything but: he knew exactly how everything functioned and what the knee-jerk reactions to his statements and policies would be. He remembered everyone he ever met: I have a personal story about that and it has been said that Nixon had the same talent. He could be utterly ruthless and there were many deaths whose causation were never solved. It is said by some that these were individuals who either did not heed direct warnings or refused to acknowledge that there was a “system” in place. He was a tinhorn Mussolini. When he died -on a toilet in a building across the street from my office - he was given a State funeral with a cortège and hundreds of cars following.

Unlike Orangina, he was not grotesquely greedy or self-involved. He had wonderful relationships with his acolytes and never put up with people fawning over him in that slimy fashion practiced by our present Cabinet members. He was pragmatic, down to earth, and did not rely on spinmeisters or spokespeople.

He divided this city terribly: it was more racially polarized than it had ever been and things were bad and dangerous for everyone. He single-handedly ruined the Bicentennial by publicly stating that he expected protests and rioters and was going to request regular Army troops from then-President Nixon, years before the event. (The funny part there is that he wanted the troops to carry sidearms rather than rifles with or without fixed bayonets and did not know that there was no issue of sidearms for the infantry. Every veteran in the region laughed at him). It was a turbulent time.

Now the point that I’m trying to make through this wordy introduction is that the name for individuals who voted for him was Rizzocrats. He was a party of one. He didn’t care about any other elected officials in the virtually completely Democratic City Council. These egocentric individuals have no interest in anyone but themselves. Witness what Trump did to Senator Cornyn. There is no question that Rizzo had the police surveillance files on many of the elected officials and threatened them in much the same way that some believe that Republicans are threatened by this Administration.

How do I know this? Grace Kelly, later Princess Grace of Monaco had a brother John Kelly, Jr. he was a member of the Philadelphia aristocracy: Olympic champion rower from the Vesper Boat Club, City Councilman at-large for many years and man about town. He was considering running for mayor against Rizzo so Rizzo himself called Kelly’s mother and told her that if her son Jack declared his candidacy, he would release the file containing very very personal matters which would have destroyed his candidacy immediately. You all know what I’m talking about.

It was common knowledge that this had occurred. It was Rizzo politics at its core. But you know, when he died there was no party, no honking of horns. People who despised him would grudgingly admit that he was an effective, powerful, ruthless politician who was a Philadelphia fixture. The fact that the statue of him many years later was hidden away is never discussed in public anymore.

I look forward to the juxtaposition with Orangina’s departure from the mortal coil. It will be unimaginable in scope.

P.S. Jack Kelly died in a very mysterious fashion. One Sunday morning he went out for a jog and did not return home. Many hours later he was identified in the morgue where he had been transported as a John Doe . Weirdly, his ex-brother-in-law died at the same time of “natural causes”. Another “funny thing” is that there wasn’t a single mature adult in Philadelphia who wouldn’t recognize this man. The odds of even a few individuals who handled the body not knowing who he was are low. But…who knows?? If I continue in this vein, I will be branded a conspiracy theorist. God forbid.

I thank you for your attention in this matter. 😳

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
An essay about another American autocrat: Frank Rizzo (Original Post) PCIntern 9 hrs ago OP
Dead people do often look different than their "live" selves. harumph 9 hrs ago #1
Frank Rizzo was a massive force in the city. S/V Loner 8 hrs ago #2
May I ask your cousin's name? PCIntern 8 hrs ago #3
A very polarizing person Freddie 8 hrs ago #4
He recognized that loyalty is a two-way street. mtairyguy 8 hrs ago #5
Was your pop a member of The Guardian Civic League? PCIntern 7 hrs ago #6
I don't think pop was a member. mtairyguy 2 hrs ago #7

harumph

(3,488 posts)
1. Dead people do often look different than their "live" selves.
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 12:06 PM
9 hrs ago

So much so that it can be difficult for family to recognize them. Tho in Trump's case, whether dead or alive, he will look much the same.

S/V Loner

(9,567 posts)
2. Frank Rizzo was a massive force in the city.
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 12:41 PM
8 hrs ago

I met him at my cousins (a Dentist) funeral. It was one of those moments you do not forget.

PCIntern

(28,744 posts)
3. May I ask your cousin's name?
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 12:55 PM
8 hrs ago

You can PM me if u wish.

My story with him was one of the most remarkable incident of my life. I was walking down Walnut Street in the morning and I saw him speaking with two gentlemen about 30 feet in front of me. As I walked past, he looked up and I said “Good morning Mr. Mayor.” he reached out his hand to shake mine and while he was shaking, he said to me “aren’t you Jimmy the Barber’s Dentist?” I smiled and replied that I certainly was.

I had met Rizzo at least 15 years before for 30 seconds in a barbershop on Sansom Street. From that meeting all those years ago, he remembered exactly who I was. It was almost frightening.

I treated many of his right-hand men over the years including one of his enforcers, who was Possibly the scariest man I’ve ever met.

Freddie

(10,177 posts)
4. A very polarizing person
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 12:58 PM
8 hrs ago

You loved him or hated him. Racists, of course, loved him. I can see the comparison with Trump for sure - a kingdom onto himself, answering to no one, it was dangerous to stand in his way. I was a Temple student during Rizzo’s reign and remember him well.

mtairyguy

(51 posts)
5. He recognized that loyalty is a two-way street.
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 01:16 PM
8 hrs ago

My pop was a Black cop in Philly during the 60’s. He was a motorcycle cop and a detective. In the 70’s, he also still was a Rizzo supporter, having felt himself to have received the benefit of Rizzo’s loyalty.

I had many arguments with pop and his Black, ex-Marine, ex-cop crew as a teenager during the early 70’s about the often lethal interactions between the PPD and the Black community. Thankfully pop changed his point of view later in life!

Oddly enough, my brother is a Philly cop captain.

Rizzo did inspire loyalty, though.

PCIntern

(28,744 posts)
6. Was your pop a member of The Guardian Civic League?
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 02:18 PM
7 hrs ago

I treated a whole legion of cops in center city who belonged.

Did you know a detective named Oscar Jones?

mtairyguy

(51 posts)
7. I don't think pop was a member.
Tue Jun 16, 2026, 07:29 PM
2 hrs ago

He supported Rizzo; I’m pretty sure that they did not.

The name Oscar jones sounds familiar but I’m not sure. I’ll ask my brother.

It was a turbulent but hopeful time when America was trying to live up to its ideals. Sadly, the inauguration of Regan brought the attempt to a halt.

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