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Ann Coulter: Laughing at the Left
Josey1
Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
Ann Coulter: Laughing at the Left
Richard Poe
Sept. 8, 2002
"Ridicule is man's most potent weapon," writes leftist agitator Saul Alinsky in "Rules for Radicals." ". it infuriates the opposition, who then react to your advantage."
Super-pundit Ann Coulter has turned the left's own tactics against them. Her new book, "Slander: Liberal Lies About the American Right" makes laughingstocks of the media. It is paralyzingly funny.
Predictably, the media have attacked like rabid wolverines - proving, with each snap of their drooling jaws, that they are every inch the totalitarian fiends Coulter says they are.
Even before the book was published, leftist editors tried to strangle it in its cradle.
When her editor died of cancer, HarperCollins deep-sixed the book. Coulter's agent shopped it around for two months, getting rejection after rejection.
"This book does not move the national dialogue forward," sniffed one Doubleday editor.
"That's funny," Coulter responded. "I thought book publishers made money on the basis of how many books they sold."
Crown Publishing finally picked it up. With over 400,000 copies sold, "Slander" has topped the New York Times hardcover nonfiction bestseller list for eight weeks straight.
"The American people like me; editors don't ." Coulter remarks to The New York Observer. "If I were Rupert Murdoch, I think I'd fire some of the people at HarperCollins for turning down the No. 1 best-selling book of the summer for purely ideological reasons."
When Coulter hit the talk show circuit, the talking hairstyles pulled their usual tricks. They fought with Coulter instead of interviewing her. Some forced her to share airtime with belligerent left-wing zealots who mocked, interrupted, misquoted and belittled her.
Yet Coulter's sales kept soaring - even as public disgust with the media grew.
"Why Do Many Readers Hate Us Again?" asks a plaintive headline in the influential trade journal Editor & Publisher. The question refers to a recent Pew Research poll showing that public contempt for the media - which had decreased after 9-11 - has now skyrocketed back to its usual stratospheric heights.
No mystery there. If the folks at Editor & Publisher want to know why middle America hates their profession, they need look no farther than their own pages.
On Sept. 1, a newspaper editor in a small Pennsylvania college town publicly "fired" Coulter in an open letter - accusing her of being a "hater" and likening her to the 9-11 terrorists. It was an obvious publicity stunt.
Nothing happened, so Bob Unger of the Centre Daily Times in State College, Pa., tried a different gambit. He claimed that an avalanche of reader e-mails supported his action.
Editor & Publisher leaped on this non-event as if it were news.
"Paper Backed After Canceling Coulter," trumpeted the headline in E&P's Sept. 3 online edition. "Editor Reports 97% Support."
According to E&P, "of the more than 500 e-mails that poured in, about 485 supported the paper's decision." That would leave only about 15 e-mails supporting Coulter.
Fifteen pro-Coulter e-mails in two days. Hmmm.
"Funny, since I and conservative friends of mine sent in way more than 15 on our own," commented "republicanman" on the conservative message board FreeRepublic.com.
In fact, FreeRepublic.com had posted Unger's open letter two days earlier, on Sept. 1 - with his e-mail address prominently displayed. Activity was intense, with 106 messages posted that day.
"Based on my experience with similar efforts on FreeRepublic.com, I would wager [Unger] received hundreds and hundreds of e-mails in support of Ann," comments Gene McDonald, President of the Florida Chapter of Free Republic.
By Sept. 5, the number would likely have been in the thousands. One pro-Coulter correspondent received the following auto-responder message from Unger that day:
"Executive Editor Bob Unger has received thousands of e-mail messages concerning his column about columnist Ann Coulter. He apologizes that he is unable to answer each."
Thousands.
Of course, conservatives are not the only people who employ e-mail campaigns. Islamic activists use them too. And Islamists hate Coulter for her stand against Muslim terror.
The radical Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has sent out an e-bulletin urging supporters to "Send a note of thanks to Bob Unger at runger@centredaily.com."
Interestingly, Unger told E&P that his 500 e-mails were "local, national, and international in origin."
Now, what sort of national and international readers would be sitting around watching a small-town news site in Pennsylvania, just waiting to zap e-mails to it?
If indeed Unger ever received as many as 485 anti-Coulter e-mails, I wonder how many came from Muslim activists. Editor & Publisher should investigate. It would make a perfect 9-11 anniversary story.
How about it, guys?
http://www.newsmax.com/commentarchive.shtml?a=2002/9/8/124937
"If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
Richard Poe
Sept. 8, 2002
"Ridicule is man's most potent weapon," writes leftist agitator Saul Alinsky in "Rules for Radicals." ". it infuriates the opposition, who then react to your advantage."
Super-pundit Ann Coulter has turned the left's own tactics against them. Her new book, "Slander: Liberal Lies About the American Right" makes laughingstocks of the media. It is paralyzingly funny.
Predictably, the media have attacked like rabid wolverines - proving, with each snap of their drooling jaws, that they are every inch the totalitarian fiends Coulter says they are.
Even before the book was published, leftist editors tried to strangle it in its cradle.
When her editor died of cancer, HarperCollins deep-sixed the book. Coulter's agent shopped it around for two months, getting rejection after rejection.
"This book does not move the national dialogue forward," sniffed one Doubleday editor.
"That's funny," Coulter responded. "I thought book publishers made money on the basis of how many books they sold."
Crown Publishing finally picked it up. With over 400,000 copies sold, "Slander" has topped the New York Times hardcover nonfiction bestseller list for eight weeks straight.
"The American people like me; editors don't ." Coulter remarks to The New York Observer. "If I were Rupert Murdoch, I think I'd fire some of the people at HarperCollins for turning down the No. 1 best-selling book of the summer for purely ideological reasons."
When Coulter hit the talk show circuit, the talking hairstyles pulled their usual tricks. They fought with Coulter instead of interviewing her. Some forced her to share airtime with belligerent left-wing zealots who mocked, interrupted, misquoted and belittled her.
Yet Coulter's sales kept soaring - even as public disgust with the media grew.
"Why Do Many Readers Hate Us Again?" asks a plaintive headline in the influential trade journal Editor & Publisher. The question refers to a recent Pew Research poll showing that public contempt for the media - which had decreased after 9-11 - has now skyrocketed back to its usual stratospheric heights.
No mystery there. If the folks at Editor & Publisher want to know why middle America hates their profession, they need look no farther than their own pages.
On Sept. 1, a newspaper editor in a small Pennsylvania college town publicly "fired" Coulter in an open letter - accusing her of being a "hater" and likening her to the 9-11 terrorists. It was an obvious publicity stunt.
Nothing happened, so Bob Unger of the Centre Daily Times in State College, Pa., tried a different gambit. He claimed that an avalanche of reader e-mails supported his action.
Editor & Publisher leaped on this non-event as if it were news.
"Paper Backed After Canceling Coulter," trumpeted the headline in E&P's Sept. 3 online edition. "Editor Reports 97% Support."
According to E&P, "of the more than 500 e-mails that poured in, about 485 supported the paper's decision." That would leave only about 15 e-mails supporting Coulter.
Fifteen pro-Coulter e-mails in two days. Hmmm.
"Funny, since I and conservative friends of mine sent in way more than 15 on our own," commented "republicanman" on the conservative message board FreeRepublic.com.
In fact, FreeRepublic.com had posted Unger's open letter two days earlier, on Sept. 1 - with his e-mail address prominently displayed. Activity was intense, with 106 messages posted that day.
"Based on my experience with similar efforts on FreeRepublic.com, I would wager [Unger] received hundreds and hundreds of e-mails in support of Ann," comments Gene McDonald, President of the Florida Chapter of Free Republic.
By Sept. 5, the number would likely have been in the thousands. One pro-Coulter correspondent received the following auto-responder message from Unger that day:
"Executive Editor Bob Unger has received thousands of e-mail messages concerning his column about columnist Ann Coulter. He apologizes that he is unable to answer each."
Thousands.
Of course, conservatives are not the only people who employ e-mail campaigns. Islamic activists use them too. And Islamists hate Coulter for her stand against Muslim terror.
The radical Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has sent out an e-bulletin urging supporters to "Send a note of thanks to Bob Unger at runger@centredaily.com."
Interestingly, Unger told E&P that his 500 e-mails were "local, national, and international in origin."
Now, what sort of national and international readers would be sitting around watching a small-town news site in Pennsylvania, just waiting to zap e-mails to it?
If indeed Unger ever received as many as 485 anti-Coulter e-mails, I wonder how many came from Muslim activists. Editor & Publisher should investigate. It would make a perfect 9-11 anniversary story.
How about it, guys?
http://www.newsmax.com/commentarchive.shtml?a=2002/9/8/124937
"If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
Comments
However, depending on local policy, you may not find it at your local library.
Especially California.
Boomer
"Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as it is by the obstacles which one has overcome while trying to succeed."NRA Life Member
"Sometimes the people have to give up some individual rights for the safety of society."
-Bill Clinton(MTV interview)