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Ann Coulter Fights Back; Our Readers Comment
By Aysha Hussain
March 06, 2007
What was intended to be a "joke"
about Hollywood celebrities being forced into
rehab for using offensive language is now water-cooler talk around the country,
and Ann Coulter is the latest perpetrator.
In her first official interview
since her controversial speech at the Conservative
Political Action Conference last week, Coulter, the right-wing political
commentator, is defending her comment in which she referred to presidential
candidate John Edwards as a "faggot."
"This is the same thing we go
through every six months. I say something, the same people become hysterical,
and that's the end of it. The lesson young right-wingers ought to draw from
this, it's really not that scary to attack liberals," said Coulter.
According to the same interview,
which aired on the FOX News Channel's "Hannity &
Colmes"
show, Coulter also may be at risk of losing her conservative supporters. An
e-mail read over
the
program said, "I am
a conservative, used to be a fan of hers. You are an embarrassment to
conservative beliefs, to the Republican Party, to anyone with a shred of
self-respect. Do us a favor, shun her."
CNN
recently reported the possibility of Coulter losing significant financial
backing. Since her inflammatory comment, at least three major companies have
requested their ads be pulled from her web site, AnnCoulter.com. After receiving
an outpouring of customer complaints, companies including Verizon, Sallie Mae
and the Georgia-based NetBank said they were not aware their ads were posted on
her web site until after they received the complaints. The companies have since
removed their ads. Verizon is No. 1 on The 2006 DiversityInc Top 50
Companies for Diversity® list.
Coulter
is a controversy veteran. Newsweek
reporter Michael Isikoff's book Uncovering Clinton: A Reporter's Story
unmasked Coulter as the one who leaked word of Clinton's "distinguishing
characteristic"—his reportedly bent penis that Paula Jones said she could
recognize and describe—to the news media. Her hope was to foster distrust
between the Clinton and Jones camps and forestall a settlement. Coulter told
Isikoff, "We were terrified that Jones would settle. It was contrary to our
purpose of bringing down the President."
What do our readers think of Ann
Coulter? This is what some DiversityInc readers had to
say:
Thank
you for publishing the latest in Ann Coulter's trash talk. I think it's
important to realize that she will say anything disparaging about anyone as long
as it will keep her in the news and sell whatever her latest ware is. It's not
about her false proclamations of Christian faith, it's about her trying to make
herself interesting as a pundit. She really isn't since she never discusses
issues, just insults. I'm sure she will next take on kittens or
puppies.
—Arthur
Korant
If
groups have to choose hate-filled people such as Coulter as a speaker at their
conservative events, they are obviously scraping the very bottom of the barrel.
The place where Coulter spoke is the same "Christian" church that espouses the
conversion of gays to straights. That's like changing a pickle back into a
cucumber. Impossible. They also invited Phyllis Schlafly to speak this past
weekend. These women are both hate-mongers of the first order. Pathetic, indeed.
Knee-jerk hatred is easy to spread. The dumbest people espouse hateful views.
What takes some brains and discernment are the acceptance and tolerance of those
whose lifestyles differ from our own.
—Pamela
Fisk
You
should understand that Ann Coulter is a professional performer ... one-trick
pony who entertains at conservative events by making deliberately obnoxious
statements. The more space you give her, the more you validate her act. The best
response to her is silence.
—George
Duncan
Ann
Coulter is an American, guaranteed freedom of speech by our Constitution. Don't
be a good Democrat or a good Republican, be a good American and support our
Constitution. That way you can continue to expose your ideas to total strangers
and good friends. We're Americans, and we need to stand together behind the
principles of freedom for everyone.
—Gale
Harold
I
watched the entire event and you are way off the mark on this. I did not get the
feeling she was using a slur against anyone; she was simply referring to the
Grey's Anatomy fiasco. The news must really be slow if this is front-page
worthy.
—Greg
Alexander
Ann
Coulter is a "gad-fly" who makes her living sucking blood from anyone who will
give her press. She has no positive commentary and is a "denigration
blood-sucker"; she is a "not" person. I listen to her and read her comments
because I know that America
is better, much, much better than she is. Apparently, though, she does not know
that. I listen to Coulter because she, along with Rush Limbaugh, provides me
with the best possible means to try to figure out where the country is "not"
going. She is a "fringe" who
apparently was in hibernation when the election occurred last November and has
had amnesia ever since. It is ironic to me that ... she routinely insults the
American people on a regular basis without caring. (I am sure that some of those
conservatives in her audience were also gay!) Ann,
America
is better than you.
—O.
Williams
People
with common sense should make a collective pact not to acknowledge her until
it's time to write or read her obituary. Let's get the ball rolling with this
message.
—Dawn
Anderson
Ann
Coulter is an attention seeker who has become famous for making cheap nasty
idiotic comments. What more is there to say?
—Christine
Mathieu
Jesus
Christ did not die for Ann, he died so that we would not become Ann.
—Miriam
Gonzalez
That
broad is nuts! She's about as Christian as Hitler.
—Sharon
Jefferson
Ann
Coulter doesn't deserve to have a show or speak in public. There should be a
court order to muzzle her. I normally encourage to hear peoples' views, but she
only speaks of ignorance. Go away, Ann.
—Jeanette
Pudas
Coulter's
disparaging use of the negative term to describe a gay man, and the subsequent
cheering of the crowd, speaks volumes on how the Republican Party is the party
of hatred and bigotry. Her speech was vile; her ease of use of the term would
lead me to believe that the use of the N-word cannot be far behind. I view this
as nothing less than a confirmation of a belief that I have ... that the
Republican Party is the futuristic version of the Nazi party and will ultimately
lead to the same conclusion as that party experienced in World War II. The KKK
couldn't have introduced hatred better than what has been spewed from Coulter's
mouth.
—Phillip
S. Roberts
What
offends me most is when people use religion as a cover-up for their prejudices.
It is not going to help America
or any society at all when people cannot engage in civil discussion and debate
issues based on their merit. I just hope that some people in the Republican
Party will rebuke her for creating such a poisonous environment for discussion
... Indeed, when she identifies herself as Christian, one wonders what
Christianity has become in America
today.
—Samuel
Zalanga
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