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by Bush Admirer
Thursday, Jul. 03, 2003 at 6:01 PM
From Ann Coulter: a blistering expose of liberal treachery against America -- from the Cold War to the War on Terrorism
As usual, Ann Coulter gets right to the point. "Liberals have a preternatural gift for striking a position on the side of treason," she begins this book. "You could be talking about Scrabble and they would instantly leap to the anti-American position. Everyone says liberals love America, too. No they don't. Whenever the nation is under attack, from within or without, liberals side with the enemy. This is their essence."
Now, in this stunning follow-up to her #1 NY Times bestseller, Slander, Coulter contends that liberals have stood with the enemies of American interests in every major crisis from the fight against Communism to today's war on terrorism. Re-examining the 60-year history of the Cold War and beyond -- including the career of Sen. Joseph McCarthy, the Hiss-Chambers affair, Ronald Reagan's face-off with Mikhail Gorbachev, the Gulf War, the Clinton impeachment, and Operation Iraqi Freedom -- Coulter reveals the Left's shameful record of blindness to, and active cooperation with, the forces of totalitarianism and terror.
"Whether they are defending the Soviet Union or bleating for Saddam Hussein, liberals are always against America," writes Coulter. "They are either traitors or idiots, and on the matter of America's self-preservation, the difference is irrelevant. Fifty years of treason hasn't slowed them down." Some highlights of her trenchant, witty analysis:
How liberals invented the myth of McCarthyism -- "the greatest Orwellian fraud of our time" -- to prevent questions about their own patriotism
Why the much-maligned Joseph McCarthy was "indispensable" in the fight against Communism. Why conservatives who concede that he "went too far" are misguided dupes of left-wing propaganda
Why the primary victim of outrageous persecution during the McCarthy era was . . . McCarthy himself. How liberals hid their traitorous conduct by making him the issue -- and by doing to him everything they falsely accused him of doing to them
Why the idea of a bowed and terrified liberal minority during McCarthy's "Reign of Terror" is plain poppycock. Proof that, then as now, all elite opinion was against him
"Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last?" The incredible facts behind this rebuke of McCarthy by attorney Joseph Welch -- and how it proves only the liberals' lack of honesty
How the media's savaging of McCarthy -- which literally drove him to an early death -- foreshadowed their later treatment of liberal enemies like Ken Starr and Linda Tripp
Defining patriotism down: how liberals have twisted it to mean little more than the "right to dissent" against any action taken by your own country
Alger Hiss, Liberal Darling: How, despite massive evidence of his guilt, the entire liberal establishment ferociously defended him against charges of treason -- and tried to destroy the true patriots who tried to expose him
Why, for the left, no amount of evidence proving anyone was a Soviet spy could ever be enough. How they treated blindingly obvious spies as innocent liberals victimized by the right
Soviet spies in the Roosevelt and Truman administrations: what we now know for sure, thanks to KGB archives
Proof that McCarthy nemesis I.F. Stone, so-called "conscience of investigative journalism," was a paid Soviet agent
The rewards of "victimization": how, for all their endless bellyaching, exposed Communists fared pretty well -- not a few going on to fame and fortune because of their "blacklisting"
Vietnam: How liberals use the one war America lost -- thanks to them -- to obstruct and undermine each and every exercise of our military power abroad, no matter how obviously necessary
The real lessons of Vietnam: a textbook case of how Democratic equivocation about using power leads to catastrophe
Why the Democrats are on the precipice of securing their reputation as "the Neville Chamberlains of our time"
Hobnobbing with the enemy: a Rogues' Gallery of top Democrats who are always popping up in countries hostile to the U.S.
The media in wartime: How they feign objectivity while trying to demoralize the country with their endless naysaying
Refuted: the laughable new myth that Harry Truman was an "aggressive anti-Communist" who won the Cold War -- and how liberals use it to deny credit to Ronald Reagan
A study in leadership: How Ronald Reagan's invincible faith in God and freedom ignited the will of the American people to defeat Soviet totalitarianism
How do liberal claims that the Soviet Union "self-destructed" square with what they said while it was still around ?
Why, thanks to liberalism, there is still no serious stigma attached to the label "Communist"
From Hiss to Clinton: How, at every critical moment for the Democratic Party for the last 50 years, liberals would wage monstrous campaigns of disinformation and liberal agitprop
North Korea: a perfect illustration of the inconsistency and incoherence of the Democrats' approach to national security
Member Book Reviews
Like most of her writing, this book by Coulter is revisionist, full of factual errors and intended only to incite. This is not a good book by any standard of history.
Michael Ann, You have penned yet another excellent book. I am amazed at the accuracy of your facts and the honesty of your convictions. I admire your willingness to stand firm even in the midst of adversity. Thank you for your commitment to the truth and to those of us in America who care to hear it. You are truly an amazing woman. God Bless You, Ann.
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by x
Thursday, Jul. 03, 2003 at 6:54 PM
It's bad enough that you have to embarrass yourself with this Ann worship drivel, but you make it so darn obvious that it's you smearing Nessie.
Can't you pick a conservative that's actually intelligent? I mean, Ann is a total nutcase. Reducing those that disagree with the "conservative" view to treasonous bastards (her basic argument) is not American, *and it's not conservative*. It's reactionary. It's as far on the radical extreme of the right as those anarchists and commies you hate.
Good lord, one of these days maybe you'll get a grip and stop being such a polemic. Be a conservative. That's fine. But don't be an idiot. Ann's arguments are stupid. Period.
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by Diogenes
Thursday, Jul. 03, 2003 at 7:24 PM
A pithy, pungent, point well stated.
Once I thought her witty. Now, like Gary Trudeau, she is merely strident.
Of course, in her defense, there really is no "witty" way to express unreasoned hatred.
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by Brendan Nyhan (repost)
Thursday, Jul. 03, 2003 at 9:20 PM
To the right-wingers here, notice that the author of this
analysis slams Michael Moore in the last paragraph. Therefore, before you
go concluding that the following is "liberal" shit, open your mind and
look at the raw facts. Understanding that the phenomena of Ann Coulter is
bad for our political culture regardless of "right" and
"left" is something even honest Conservatives can
understand.
-----------------------------------------------
Screed: With Treason, Ann Coulter once again defines a new low in
America's political debate
By Brendan Nyhan
June 30, 2003
With her new book Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War
on Terrorism, syndicated pundit Ann Coulter has driven the national
discourse to a new low. No longer content to merely smear liberals and the media
with sweeping
generalizations and fraudulent
evidence, she has now upped the ante, accusing the entire Democratic Party
as well as liberals and leftists nationwide of treason, a crime of disloyalty
against the United States. But, as in her syndicated columns (many of which are
adapted in the book) and her previous book Slander: Liberal Lies Against the
American Right, Coulter's case relies in large part on irrational rhetoric
and pervasive factual errors and deceptions. Regardless of your opinions about
Democrats, liberals or the left, her work should not be taken at face value.
Context: The syndicated column and Slander
As we documented
back in July 2001, Coulter's writing is not just inflammatory but blatantly
irrational. For years, she has infused her syndicated columns with cheap shots
and asides directed at targets like President Bill Clinton, the American Civil
Liberties Union and Hustler publisher Larry Flynt (among many others). Liberals
are indiscriminately denounced as a group as "terrorists" or a
"cult" who "hate democracy." Slander, her bestseller
from last year, quickly became notorious for its errors and distortions of the
facts, which we detailed in our examination
of the book. From deceptive footnotes to mischaracterized quotes to outright
lies, Coulter broke all standards of reasonable political debate in her quest to
paint a picture of a media that is unambiguously hostile to conservatives.
Jargon: How Coulter blurs distinctions in her rhetoric
In Treason, similar techniques are employed with aplomb. Consider her
use of language. The accusation of treason is, of course, one of the most grave
that can be made against a citizen of any country. Article III of the United
States Constitution specifies
that "Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war
against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and
comfort."
In latching onto a powerful word with a specific legal meaning and casually
leveling the charge as a blanket accusation against a wide array of people (as
she did with slander, which is a defamatory verbal statement), Coulter is
attempting to smear virtually anyone who disagrees with her views on foreign
policy as treasonous. "Liberals have a preternatural gift for striking a
position on the side of treason," she writes on the first page of the book.
"Whenever the nation is under attack, from within or without, liberals side
with the enemy. This is their essence." (p. 1)
At times, Coulter portrays liberals and the left as engaged in a grand
conspiracy to destroy the United States:
While undermining victory in the Cold War, liberals dedicated themselves to
mainstreaming Communist ideals at home... Betraying the manifest national
defense objectives of the country is only part of the left's treasonous
scheme. They aim to destroy America from the inside with their relentless
attacks on morality and the truth. (p. 289)
At others, she instead insinuates that disagreeing with her about US policy
toward various hostile foreign countries or taking any action that could be
construed as favorable to those countries' interests is equivalent to treasonous
support for those countries. Here are two classic examples of this
tactic:
As a rule of thumb, Democrats opposed anything opposed by their cherished
Soviet Union. The Soviet Union did not like the idea of a militarily strong
America. Neither did the Democrats! (p. 171)
Democrats always had mysterious objections and secret "better" ways,
which they would never tell us. Then they would vote whichever way would best
advance Communist interests. (p. 177)
In the end, Coulter doesn't care about such distinctions, and goes so far as
to specifically reject any distinction based on motive in judging her standard
of treason:
Whether they are defending the Soviet Union or bleating for Saddam Hussein,
liberals are always against America. They are either traitors or idiots, and
on the matter of America's self-preservation, the difference is irrelevant.
Fifty years of treason hasn't slowed them down. (p. 16)
Of course, Coulter must engage in a complicated set of rhetorical tricks to
accuse liberals of "fifty years of treason" (in a
2001 column, it was only "[t]wenty years of treason" - did
inflation set in?). The book is primarily focused on the controversy over real
and alleged Soviet espionage in the post-World War II era. We can certainly
stipulate that Soviet agents who worked covertly inside the United States
government did commit treason. But Coulter broadens the term to include
virtually every liberal, leftist, Democrat or member of the media, in each case
obscuring distinctions between individuals and stereotyping the entire group.
To do this, she condemns the left and liberals for defending the proven (and
alleged) Soviet spies at the time and the Democratic Party officials for not
taking the threat seriously enough. Many have offered serious critiques of the
actions of individuals in this era. But Coulter implies that nearly every person
left of center is culpable for failing to take action to prevent a small group
of Soviet agents and their willful collaborators from infiltrating the US
government (a conclusion based in part on evidence that did not come out for
years, including decrypted Soviet cables released in 1995). She frequently
implies that liberal attacks on Senator Joseph McCarthy and the alleged hysteria
of McCarthyism were nothing more than an attempt to cover up this widespread
treachery:
Springing naturally to their traitorous positions, the adversary press
vilified HUAC [the House Un-American Activities Committee] for persecuting the
charming State Department official. [Alger Hiss] (p. 20)
By screaming about "McCarthyism," liberals would force the nation to
"move on" from the subject of their own treachery. (p. 30)
McCarthy's fundamental thesis was absolutely correct: The Democratic Party had
fallen to the allures of totalitarianism. It was as if the Republicans had
been caught in bed with Hitler. (p. 71)
Stalinist spies were passing secret government files to Soviet agents, and the
Treason Party sprang to action by vigorously investigating the precise words
McCarthy had used in a speech to a women's Republican club in West Virginia.
(p. 103)
The primary victim of outrageous persecution during the McCarthy era was
McCarthy. Liberals hid their traitorous conduct by making McCarthy the issue.
They did to McCarthy everything they falsely accused him of doing to them. (p.
104)
Adding insult to injury, Nixon had the audacity to make a campaign issue of
the Democrats' treasonous stupidity. (p. 196)
In the above quotes, the press is labeled as "traitorous" for
treating HUAC unfairly, the Democrats are called the "Treason Party"
and their alleged stupidity (which does not imply malevolent intent) is
condemned as "treasonous." These cartoonish ad hominem attacks obscure
key distinctions between individuals, particularly with regard to their
involvement in these debates and the differences in motives that guided their
actions. Put simply, being wrong about the scope and severity of the Soviet
threat does not make one a traitor.
Coulter also salts the chapters she devotes to the post-war spy scandals with
frequent and gratuitous references to President Clinton in an attempt to
associate his scandals with those of Hiss and other accused or actual spies. For
instance, she writes that Owen Lattimore, an alleged Soviet spy and the White
House liaison to the State Department, "was the original Clinton. He
stonewalled the truth, and liberals would never apologize." (p. 90) Later,
she states that "The tactics used to prop up Soviet spies were later
deployed to save a cheap flimflam artist [Clinton]." (p. 201)
After a long examination of this so-called "McCarthy era," Coulter
jumps to Vietnam and the period since, and tries to lump liberals of this era in
with those of the past due to their supposed sympathy for the enemy and attempts
to undermine and weaken US foreign policy. Yet in contrast to the
well-documented presence of Soviet spies in the US government, she provides no
evidence that any liberals have taken actions intended to aid foreign enemies in
the periods since (with a couple of possible exceptions). Instead, she attempts
to leverage the McCarthy era to tar contemporary liberals and Democrats using
guilt by association and innuendo.
First, she says Democratic foreign policy is essentially treasonous.
"Democrats' gutless pusillanimity has emboldened America's enemies and
terrified its allies." (p. 127) During Vietnam, she says liberals
"[rolled] out all the usual arguments for treason ... The traitor lobby was
ascendant and very loud. The media did its part, too, sowing fear and trying to
undermine patriotism." (p. 129) In her opinion, Democrats in Congress
undermined the war by forcing Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford to cease
bombing of North Vietnam and aid to the South Vietnamese in the 1973-1975
period. This is described as "the Democrats' traitorous execution of the
Vietnam War." (p. 151)
After a history of the Reagan presidency and the US victory in the Cold War,
she moves on to the post-9/11 era, writing, "Liberals spent most of the war
on terrorism in a funk because they didn't have enough grist for the anti-war
mill. They nearly went stark raving mad at having to mouth patriotic platitudes
while burning with a desire to aid the enemy." (p. 14) Liberals
"clamored for America to be defeated, caterwauling about the ferocious
Afghan fighters and proclaiming Afghanistan a Vietnam-style 'quagmire.'"
(p. 133) She even implies that Democrats secretly support the terrorists who
attacked America. "Unable to root for al-Qaeda openly, Democrats lodged
surly objections to the Bureau of Prisons for listening to the conversations of
prison inmates suspected of plotting terrorist attacks." (p. 267)
Liberal syndicated columnist Molly Ivins is described as coming "[f]rom
the traitor lobby's women's auxiliary." (p. 134) Mark Danner, a professor
and journalist, is described as having written an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times
"[h]oping to erode the nation's resolve." (p. 136) Notice the logic
here - criticizing the US or US policy is equivalent to hoping for its defeat.
In the Iraq war, she accuses Democrats of engaging in "treasonous
calculations" by insincerely voting for the resolution to authorize the use
of force in Iraq:
When the Democrats' bluff was called in a roll call vote in Congress, many
voted for war with Iraq. Inadvertently performing a great service, New York
Times columnist Maureen Dowd revealed the Democrats' treasonous calculations.
She explained that Democrats would be forced to fake enthusiasm for the war on
terror or lose the American people forever. Democrats, she said, "fear
that if they approach" Iraq the same way they did during the Gulf War in
1991, "they will be portrayed as McGovernite wimps." Consequently,
liberals would lie and pretend to support America. With their votes duly
recorded, they went right back to attacking the war. (p. 14-15)
Those celebrities who opposed the war are labeled "an instant sedition
lobby" (p. 245).
So desperate is Coulter to call liberals of the contemporary era traitors
that she suggests that President Jimmy Carter's acceptance of the Nobel Peace
Prize constitutes treason under the definition in the Constitution. When Carter
was given the award, the chairman of the Nobel committee said it "should be
interpreted as a criticism of the line that the current [Bush] administration
has taken. It's a kick in the leg to all that follow the same line as the United
States." This is Coulter's analysis of Carter's acceptance of the prize:
Carter would travel to Norway to accept the award in December 2002 - two
months after Congress had authorized war against Iraq. Article III's
definition of treason is narrow. But after Congress's action authorizing war,
for any American to accept this award on the ground offered does sound
terribly like "adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and
comfort." (p. 257)
During an appearance last Wednesday on the Fox News Channel's "Hannity
& Colmes," Coulter went even further, insinuating that liberals today
are collaborating with Saddam Hussein and saying their behavior is equivalent to
collusion with Osama Bin Laden and Saddam in an exchange with co-host Alan
Colmes:
COLMES: And who that is alive today would you accuse of treason?
COULTER: Look, I wrote the book, let me answer the question. I understand what
the question is. I'm sorry, we're going to have to wait to get the cables from
Saddam Hussein to, you know, the traitors today.
What we have now is the evidence from Stalin's agents in the United States --
evidence that was not released until 1995 and which Democrats sheltered,
defended, ferociously attacked anyone who went after Soviet spies, agents of
Stalin, a regime as evil as the Nazis. They were defended by the Democratic
Party. It would be as if Republicans were caught in bed with Hitler.
COLMES: Ann, I'm asking you if there's anybody today you'll accuse of treason?
Apparently, you don't want to make that accusation against anyone in
particular, liberal or Democrat.
COULTER: You're consistently missing the point of this book. OK, I'm going
have to wait for the Venona Project on today's traitors. But my question to
you is how would liberals behave differently if they were in Saddam Hussein's
pay? How would they behave differently if they were in Osama bin Laden's pay?
Answer that question.
COLMES: If you're going to say treason, which is a very serious charge...
COULTER: Would they be screaming about a civil liberties crisis every time
Ashcroft talks to a Muslim? What is the point of that?
Ironically, Coulter approvingly cites a quote from the historian Paul Johnson
saying that "Those who treasure the meaning of words will treasure truth,
and those who bend words to their purposes are very likely in pursuit of
anti-social ones." (p. 292) If only she recognized how right he was.
Facts: An array of falsehoods and mischaracterizations
As stated above, Coulter presents a detailed historical argument regarding
the McCarthy era and how it is portrayed in the media. She appears to make a
credible case against the caricature that is often portrayed, but any statement
beyond this is outside the scope of this column. The specifics of her analysis
require close scrutiny by an expert conversant in the wide range of scholarship
that is now publicly available about the era. But those factual claims that can
easily be checked, particularly those that pertain to contemporary politics, are
extremely suspect. An investigation of a relatively small number of suspect
references from among the hundreds of sourced and unsourced factual claims
presented in Treason revealed numerous factual errors and distortions,
the worst of which are detailed below.
Misleading quotation and sourcing of claims
Coulter engages in a series of deceptive practices in quoting people and
sourcing her claims. Most commonly, she distorts the authorship of articles
she's citing. Throughout the book, she attributes outside book reviews, magazine
profiles and op-eds to media outlets as if they were staff-written news reports,
feeding the perception of bias on the part of these institutions. These include
a New York Times Week in Review article by historian Richard Gid Powers cited as
"According to the Times..." (p. 6); a Washington Post book review by
Patricia Aufderheide described as "the Washington Post said..." (p.
97) and "The Washington Post called..." (p. 98); and a New York Times
Magazine article by reporter Leslie Gelb cited as "the New York Times
reported..." (p. 171). At one point, she cites a single Washington Post
magazine article by journalist Orville Schell four separate ways (implying
multiple stories to the casual reader), in one case calling it "a two-part,
four-billion-column-inch Washington Post story" in which "the Post
said..." (p. 92).
Coulter also repeatedly cites quotations out of context from the original
source material, implying that reporters reached conclusions that were actually
presented by sources quoted in the piece. In one particularly dishonest case,
she claims that the New York Times "reminded readers that Reagan was a
'cowboy, ready to shoot at the drop of a hat'" after the invasion of
Grenada (p. 179). However, the "cowboy" quote is actually from a
Reagan administration official quoted in a Week in Review story who said,
''I suppose our biggest minus from the operation is that there now is a
resurgence of the caricature of Ronald Reagan, the cowboy, ready to shoot at the
drop of a hat.''
Coulter goes on to denounce the New York Times for putting terms like
"evil empire" in quotes, which she claims "expressed contempt for
the idea of winning the Cold War." However, the article she cites as proof
of the use of quotation marks is actually directly quoting Reagan saying the
term. (p. 158) Later, she condemns the Times for its response to Reagan's
invasion of Grenada. "The Times rages that Reagan was 'Making the World
"Safe" for Hypocrisy,'" she writes, not mentioning that the quote
is the headline on an op-ed by a Times columnist, not an editorial. (p. 179)
She also denounces a New York Times obituary of Joel Barr for saying he was
"suspected of passing secret information" to the Soviets, writing that
"Dozens of Soviet cables had identified Barr as a Soviet spy" as
though this information was not provided to Times readers. (p. 53) But the
obituary actually states that "John Haynes, the co-author with Harvey Klehr
of a forthcoming Soviet history to be published by Yale, said that the
intelligence reports show that Mr. Barr and Mr. Sarant 'were among the K.G.B.'s
most valuable technical spies'" -- the same experts she cites in the
footnote backing up her claim!
And in a passage focused on contemporary politics, Coulter misrepresents a
personal attack against her as one on all "people who support ethnic
profiling of airline passengers" (p. 261), saying Senator Richard Durbin,
D-IL, called such people "troglodytes 'crawling on [their] bell[ies] in the
mud at a right-wing militia training camp in Idaho." (brackets hers) In
fact, Durbin wrote the following in a letter to a Springfield, Illinois
newspaper (notice how Coulter pluralized his wording with brackets to obscure
the reference):
I often wonder whether Ann Coulter's political views are just a pose.
Having seen her on television, she is bright, witty and appears to be the
product of a good education and good grooming. There is nothing about her
which suggests she has spent any time crawling on her belly in the mud at a
right-wing militia training camp in Idaho.
But when she opens her mouth or logs on her computer, Dr. Coulter is
transformed into a political creature that could take Pat Buchanan's breath
away.
Durbin goes on to denounce her views on ethnic profiling, but to suggest that
his crack represents his view of everyone who supports her stance on the issue
is patently false.
Utter falsehoods and egregious factual misrepresentations
Coulter makes at least five factual claims that are indisputably false.
First, she writes "When the United States made an alliance with mad mullahs
in Afghanistan against the USSR, no sensible American would go sign up with the
Taliban." (p. 51) However, the Taliban did not form a militia until 1994,
several years after the Soviet Union's withdrawal from Afghanistan (1989) and
its subsequent collapse (1991).
Later, she denounces Congressmen Jim McDermott, D-WA, David Bonior, D-MI, and
Mike Thompson, D-CA, for their trip to Iraq in late September 2002, asking,
"Weren't any Democrats the tiniest bit irritated that members of Congress
were meeting with a tyrant as the U.S. prepared to attack him?" (p. 225)
The group did not meet with Saddam, who is obviously the tyrant in question,
though they did meet with Iraqi officials.
Coulter also offers this supposed quotation from Clinton: "Bill Clinton,
the man who deployed the best fighting force on the globe to build urinals in
Bosnia, actually said of Muslim terrorists, 'They have good reason to hate us
... after all, we sent the Crusaders to try and conquer them.'" (p. 229)
Clinton never said this according to searches of Google and the Nexis news
database, nor do any sources repeat this quotation. The only clue to its source
is its slight resemblance to a passage in a
November 2001 speech at Georgetown University in which Clinton discusses a
story from the Crusades and its enduring relevance today in far more nuanced
terms. Given that the speech has been widely
distorted in the media, it would not be surprising if this is Coulter's
supposed source (she provides no footnote for the quote).< p>
In one bizarre case, she misrepresents the reasons for Carter's Nobel Prize,
stating that it was awarded "for his masterful negotiation of the 1994 deal
[the Agreed Framework with North Korea], though, in candor, he got the prize for
North Korea only because the committee couldn't formally award a prize for
Bush-bashing, which was the stated reason." (p. 233) But the Nobel
committee's award
announcement cites the award as recognizing Carter's "decades of
untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to
advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social
development," of which North Korea was only a part. In the
presentation speech at the Nobel ceremony, his work on the North Korea issue
was not even mentioned.
Lastly, she claims that Ramsey Clark, the former Attorney General under
President Johnson, "argued that Iran should be able to 'determine its own
fate'" after returning from a meeting with the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran
in 1979. "[D]etermine its own fate" is presented as a direct quote,
but it turns out to be a quote from an abstract of a New York Times article, not
a quote from Clark. In fact, it is an abstract paraphrase of the reporter's
summary of Clark's statement summarizing the views of the Ayatollah! (The quote
"determine its own fate" does not appear in any article in the Nexis
news database along with Clark's name and Iran.)
In several other cases, Coulter thoroughly twists and misrepresents her
source material to support her ideological agenda. Most of these are related to
her claims that the media engages in "total suppression" of the
religion of Muslim terrorists who kill people. (p. 279) She criticizes the New
York Times for a March 5, 1993 headline about the first World Trade Center
bombing, which read "Jersey City Man Is Charged in Bombing of Trade
Center," saying the Times was "[e]merging as al-Qaeda's leading
spokesman in America." (p. 279) However, the first paragraph of the article
states that the man was "described by the authorities as an Islamic
fundamentalist." In addition, on the same day, the Times ran an 1100 word
article titled "Suspect in Bombing Is Linked To Sect With a Violent
Voice" detailing how Mohammed A. Salameh "is said by law-enforcement
officials to be a follower of a blind Muslim cleric who preaches a violent
message of Islamic fundamentalism from a walk-up mosque in Jersey City."
She also condemns the Times for its reporting on an Egyptian immigrant named
Hesham Hadayet who went on a shooting rampage at an El Al terminal in Los
Angeles. "In the past," she writes, "Hadayet had complained about
his neighbors flying a U.S. flag, he had a 'Read the Koran' sticker on his front
door, and he had expressed virulent hatred for Jews. The Times reported straight
that his motive for the shooting may have been 'some dispute over a fare.'"
(p. 279-280) In fact, all three of those facts about Hadayet came from the
initial Times story on him, which straightforwardly presented two possible
motives for his actions as a hate crime against Jews or a terrorist attack (El
Al is the Israeli national airline). The quote "some dispute over a
fare" came in a separate story that day based on an interview with
Hadayet's uncle, who, the reporter summarized, "said his normally
well-mannered nephew was always prickly about being taken for a fool by
customers, and so he expected that some dispute over a fare had erupted at the
El Al counter." This is clearly not written as though it is the reporter's
opinion that it is true. It is pure conjecture and described as such (the uncle
"expected" that it was a dispute).
In addition, Coulter denounces coverage of the sniper case, saying "you
need a New York Times decoder ring" to find out "John Allen Muhammad
was a Muslim. The only clue as to the sniper's religion was the Times's repeated
insistence that Islam had absolutely nothing to do with the shootings." (p.
281) But on the same day that the suspects' capture was first reported, another
"clue" might have been two separate stories that prominently described
Muhammad as a Muslim. Two days later, the Times ran an entire story about the
role of religion in the shootings, though it framed the issue mostly in
psychiatric terms and did not speculate about the potential influence of
extremist Islamic beliefs. In all four of these cases, it simply was not clear
what the suspects' motives were from the facts available to the reporters
writing in the earliest possible moments of the investigation. Would Coulter
have them simply presume to know, as she claims to, that the the suspects'
actions were driven by their religious beliefs?
And finally, in a similar accusation, Coulter claims the Times "barely
mentioned" the release of decrypted Soviet cables (the Venona Project),
saying "[i]t might have detracted from stories of proud and unbowed victims
of 'McCarthyism.'" The Times actually ran a 1000 word story on the
declassification of the Venona cables. It did not run on the front page, but
neither did the stories in the Washington Post, USA Today, Newsday or the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer (among others). Among major newspapers, only the Los
Angeles Times put the story on its front page.
In short, Ann Coulter has once again revealed herself as one of the most
destructive forces in American politics, repeatedly making outrageously
irrational arguments and demonstrably false claims. Treason is the
culmination of a dismaying trend toward factually misleading and inflammatory
books from pundits such as Michael
Moore, Sean
Hannity and Michael
Savage (Salon Premium subscription or viewing of ad required for Savage
column). These authors may delight partisans and make their publishers rich, but
their work impoverishes our political discourse.
Related links:
-Savage
with the truth (Ben Fritz, 2/19/03)
-New
York Sun suggests treason prosecution for free speech (Brendan Nyhan,
2/7/03)
-The blowhard next
door (Ben Fritz and Bryan Keefer, 8/26/02)
-Throwing the book at
her (Bryan Keefer, 7/13/02)
-One Moore stupid
white man (Ben Fritz, 4/3/02)
-Bully brigade
(Brendan Nyhan, 3/4/02)
- Clinton Speaks,
Pundits Spin: The Washington Times and the Spread of a Media Myth (Bryan
Keefer, 11/19/01)
-"Patriotism"
and "Treason": A New Trend in Irresponsible Wartime Rhetoric (Ben
Fritz, 10/29/01)
-Ann Coulter: The
Jargon Vanguard (Brendan Nyhan, 7/16/01)
-Spinsanity on Ann Coulter
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by Cheech
Thursday, Jul. 03, 2003 at 9:48 PM
Since my cat refuses to use Ann Coulter's pamphlet as litter, I'll use the pages to roll joints in them.
Can't believe trees have been cut for that piece of shit; even have second thoughts about putting it in the recyclables bin.
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by Bush Admirer
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 2:42 AM
Liberals hate Ann because she has their number and tells it like it is. It's the same with Sean Hannity.
If you want to talk about false and misleading you should tune into Pacifica Radio where you'll be getting a steading stream of false and misleading information.
Ann Coulter rocks!
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by krankyman
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 7:02 AM
This book should be put in "Fiction" section of every bargain table in the country. More Right Brain thinking with lies and distortions that could fill another book. If she ever starts thinking with her whole brain(the left side) maybe she could return to being a whole human being. As it is more lock step right wing-nut thinking. With all the misinformation in this book , it makes you wonder about her law credentials and why she became a babbling talking head instead of still pursuing a law career.
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by Meyer London
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 7:21 AM
In the 1960's and even the 1970's someone like Ann would appear only as a cartoon figure in Mad Magazine or, maybe in a male version, in All in the Family. The fact that she is now prominent in the flesh (and apparantly part of her schtick is showing a lot of it) is an indication of just how low political discourse in this country has sunk.
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by x
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 12:24 PM
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by da pimp
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 3:15 PM
She always look so tight-lipped in her pictures. She must have buck teeth to hide after decades of conservative c..k sucking.
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by Bush Admirer
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 3:25 PM
Ann Coulter is widely respected. She's an attractive, intelligent, and successful woman who is much admired.
Ann sets the standard for what a woman can become in our society if she works hard, has ability, and applies herself. She's the role model of choice for young girls everywhere.
She's also the counterbalance for losers like Hillary Clinton, Amy Goodman, and Katie Couric.
Her books and her commentary leave liberals no place to hide. She exposes them for the losers that they are. It's pretty basic really. She's on target with her excellent journalism.
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by Scottie
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 3:29 PM
"Ann Coulter is widely respected." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"She's an attractive, intelligent, and successful woman who is much admired." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"Ann sets the standard for what a woman can become in our society if she works hard, has ability, and applies herself." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"She's the role model of choice for young girls everywhere." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"She's also the counterbalance for losers like Hillary Clinton, Amy Goodman, and Katie Couric." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"Her books and her commentary leave liberals no place to hide." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"She's on target with her excellent journalism." Unsubstantiated Allegation
For more on logic at your level, try reading "Logic for Dummies."
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by x to B.A.
Friday, Jul. 04, 2003 at 4:54 PM
Can't you pick a conservative that's actually intelligent? I mean, Ann is a total nutcase. Reducing those that disagree with the "conservative" view to treasonous bastards (her basic argument) is not American, *and it's not conservative*. It's reactionary. It's as far on the radical extreme of the right as those anarchists and commies you hate.
Good lord, one of these days maybe you'll get a grip and stop being such a polemic. Be a conservative. That's fine. But don't be an idiot. Ann's arguments are stupid. Period.
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by cuzin it
Saturday, Jul. 05, 2003 at 1:18 PM
limbaaahs satin sheet
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by Scottie
Sunday, Jul. 06, 2003 at 6:38 AM
"Ann is brilliant and most of her observations resonate." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"If it's stupid arguments you're looking for then I'd suggest you read Noam Chomsky or Gore Vidal. That's where you're going to find really really dumb and stupid arguments." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"Ann Coulter rocks!" Unsubstantiated Allegation
For more on logic at your level, try reading "Logic for Dummies."
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by Bush Admirer
Sunday, Jul. 06, 2003 at 6:43 PM
If you can't make a case against Ann's well presented argument then why not just toss out an insult like you've done here Scottie?
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by Wavemaster
Sunday, Jul. 06, 2003 at 7:13 PM
Why do the Neocons think that they can decide who or what America is. You know it was real Americans who fought against the Limbaugh's and Coulter's of their day durring the first gilded age in the early nineteenth century. These true patriots fought for things like the 40 hour work week. She's gone a bit too far with this attack, and it must be because the true Americans of today are fighting back against the ultra Rich and Corporate media. We must be having an impact even against their giant meda monopoly. Also people know something is wrong when their retirement accounts are being robbed by corporate swindlers. This book is class war against anybody who speaks out against those like Grover Norquist who are tearing down the last bit of new deal services the Governent provided and making sure their version of America only serves the Ulra Rich and powerfull.
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by Scottie
Sunday, Jul. 06, 2003 at 7:37 PM
"fake scottie" that is.
Since I dont adress points like that unless i have somthing meaningful to say.
I havent read Anne's book and talking about all democrats as traitors (if that is what she did) sounds a little over the top but with people on the left saying basically the same thing about the republicans its hard to get too upset over it.
And as it happens this one here is a VERY WELL SUBSTANTIATED ALLEGATION.
"If it's stupid arguments you're looking for then I'd suggest you read Noam Chomsky or Gore Vidal. That's where you're going to find really really dumb and stupid arguments."
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by Ted Thompson
Tuesday, Jul. 08, 2003 at 4:49 AM
""fake scottie" that is." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"And as it happens this one here is a VERY WELL SUBSTANTIATED ALLEGATION." Unsubstantiated Allegation
"If it's stupid arguments you're looking for then I'd suggest you read Noam Chomsky or Gore Vidal. That's where you're going to find really really dumb and stupid arguments." Unsubstantiated Allegation
For more on logic at your level, try reading "Logic for Dummies."
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by Scottie
Tuesday, Jul. 08, 2003 at 9:49 PM
"Unsubstantiated Allegation" Unsubstantiated Allegation
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by Philosophy prof.
Wednesday, Jul. 09, 2003 at 7:29 AM
For more on logic at your level, try reading "Logic for Dummies."
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