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Soulless: Ann Coulter and the Right-Wing Church of Hate [Secure eReader (recommended)]
eBook by Susan Estrich
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eBook Category: Politics/Government/General Nonfiction
eBook Description: “A word to those of you out there who have yet to be offended by something I have written or said: Please be patient. I am working as fast as I can.” --Ann Coulter, 2006 Is she ever! Ever since the publication of her Clinton--bashing debut, High Crimes and Misdemeanors, right--wing fire--brand Ann Coulter has made herself one of the most talked--about figures in contemporary American life—and has done so by issuing a near--continuous barrage of insult and invective, which has been described as “shameless,” “cruel,” “shrill, bombastic, and mean--spirited,” “grossly inappropriate,” “hate speech.” She has called the 9/11 widows “witches” and “harpies,” referred to Muslims as “ragheads,” called Al Gore a “total fag,” and said that both New York Times editor Bill Keller and antiwar congressman Jack Murtha deserved to die. Yet with each new statement—and each new book launch—Coulter somehow manages to co--opt the media as a megaphone for her attacks, while emerging from the backlash miraculously unscathed. Until now. With Soulless, political commentator Susan Estrich takes on Ann and the “Coulter culture” she has created, exposing how the pundit provocatrice has downgraded our political discourse with her irresponsible rhetoric, personal attacks, and slanderous asides. Trawling through Coulter’s history of often--violent public statements, Estrich asks which are more cynical: the pundit and her headline--grabbing drive--by character assassinations, or the networks who happily bring her back for more. Soulless also casts a light on “the Anns,” wannabes like Michelle Malkin and Glenn Beck, whose imitation Coulterisms coarsen our culture with every passing news cycle. And, most important, she challenges us—the readers, the voters—to remember that behind the huckster’s rhetoric lurks a dangerous reactionary whose real agenda is wildly out of step with the American public. As Estrich says, “She knows exactly what she is doing. And she is scary as hell because of it.”
eBook Publisher: Harper Collins, Inc.
Fictionwise Release Date: January 2007
Available eBook Formats [Secure eReader (recommended) - What's this?]: SECURE EREADER (RECOMMENDED) FORMAT [223 KB]
All formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
eReader ISBN: 0061353604

1. GODLESSNESS My book makes a stark assertion: Liberalism is a godless religion. Hello! Anyone there? I've leapt beyond calling you traitors and I am now calling you GODLESS. Apparently, everybody's cool with that. The fact that liberals are godless is not even a controversial point anymore. —Ann Coulter Welcome to Ann's world. And what a mean and nasty world it is. Here she is taking all the decent impulses that make Americans compassionate, hopeful, and generous—real Liberalism—and, with a total disregard for history and humanity, twisting them into the opposite of what they are. How does she do it? An ounce of sophistry, a touch of misrepresentation, lit up with invective and some sly wit. But she doesn't do it alone. Not even close. She does it by using a media that's obsessed with entertainment. For them, long, blond, svelte Ann is the cutely packaged girl next door (if next door is Darien, Connecticut) who can impress the college boys by being able to talk dirty and nasty with the best of them. Venom is what she spills. And why does she do it? To amuse herself? So she claims: "Most of what I say I say to amuse myself and amuse my friends. I don't spend a lot of time thinking about anything beyond that." It goes beyond amusement, of course. Well beyond. Ann is not harmless, an amusing conversationalist. Far from it. What she succeeds in doing is dividing us against each other, polarizing us whether we want to be polarized or not (and often we do not), playing to the lowest common denominator, and not only moving the ideological line to the right, but moving it downward in the process. Social scientists argue, using polling data, that there is no culture war. Ann needs to create one in order to destroy the possibility that a decent progressive majority might ever triumph over the forces of hate. The book Godless is Ann's latest call to arms for her hordes of true believers. What makes it different than the rest of her rants is that it plays the religion card. In politics, that's a big card to play. Welcome to Ann's new worldview: A politicization of God. Look at the opposition. They have no God. Look at us. We do. God is on our side. It's classic stuff. When all else fails, they bring in God. Remember what Lincoln said: "Sir, my concern is not whether God is on our side; my greatest concern is to be on God's side, for God is always right." Ann's view is not Lincoln's. What's clear to everyone except Ann is that the president has failed. The war in Iraq has failed. So what do we have in Ann's world? We have God taking sides, with certain religions preferred over others. Want to guess which ones? You might not be right. And it was just Republicans and Democrats in politics last time I checked; now you have Ann putting God in the mix. Ironic, wouldn't you say? Here we are, facing religious zealots in the Middle East, and what is the answer? We're arguing about who has God on their side—the Right or Liberals? Do we learn nothing? First she said liberals were biased. Then she said we really were traitors. Now she says we're Godless. Copyright © 2006 by Susan Estrich
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