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Brain Food (Amazingthing about Godless is the amount of intellectual meat Ann Coulter has packed...)
The American Prowler ^ | 6/30/2006 | Richard Kirk

Posted on 06/30/2006 12:42:04 AM PDT by nickcarraway

The most amazing thing about Godless is the amount of intellectual meat Ann Coulter has packed into its pages.

Godless: The Church of Liberalism
by Ann Coulter
(Crown Forum, 310 pages, $27.95)

What's most amazing about Ann Coulter's book, Godless: The Church of Liberalism, is the amount of intellectual meat she packs into 281 breezy, barb-filled pages. Among the topics the blonde bomb-thrower discusses in some depth are the following: liberal jurisprudence, privacy rights and abortion, Joe Wilson's modest career and inflated ego, and the solid record of failure in American public schools. The topics of Intelligent Design and Darwinism, to which the last eighty pages of text are devoted, are analyzed in even greater detail.

As one would expect from an author with a legal background, Supreme Court cases are high on Coulter's hit-list -- especially the idea of a "living Constitution." Citing various cases-in-point, Coulter shows that this popular doctrine is nothing more than a paralegal pretext for making the Constitution say whatever liberal judges want it to say. Though such a philosophy grants to the nation's founding document all the integrity of a bound and gagged assault victim, it at least has the virtue of mirroring liberals' self-referential view of morality.

Another dogma that Coulter skewers is the liberal commandment, "Thou Shalt Not Punish the Perp." This counterintuitive principle not only rejects the link between incarceration and lower crime rates, it also permits benevolent judges (like Clinton federal court nominee Frederica Massiah-Jackson) to shorten the sentence of child rapists so that other innocent children can pay the price for society's sins.

An unexpected bonus in this chapter is the author's extended sidebar on Upton Sinclair, the muckraking author of Boston who, as his own correspondence shows, knew Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty but chose, for ideological and financial reasons, to portray them as innocent victims. In a related chapter, "The Martyr: Willie Horton," Coulter provides detailed information about Horton's crimes, Michael Dukakis' furlough program, and the precise nature of the Horton ads aired in the 1988 presidential campaign

CONTINUING THE RELIGIOUS IMAGERY, Coulter asserts in chapter five that abortion is the "holiest sacrament" of the "church of liberalism." For women this sacrament secures their "right to have sex with men they don't want to have children with." A corollary of this less-than-exalted principle is the right to suck the brains out of partially born infants. How far liberal politicians will go to safeguard this sacrament whose name must not be spoken (euphemisms are "choice," "reproductive freedom," and "family planning") is shown by an amendment offered by Senator Chuck Schumer that would exclude anti-abortion protestors from bankruptcy protection. How low these same pols will go is illustrated by the character assassination of Judge Charles Pickering -- a man honored by the brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers but slimed by liberals at his confirmation hearing as racially insensitive. Coulter notes that the unspoken reason for this "Borking" of Pickering was the judge's prior criticism of Roe v. Wade.

The single chapter that Coulter's critics have honed in on is the one that exposes the liberal "Doctrine of Infallibility." This religiously resonant phrase applies to individuals who promote the Left's partisan agenda while immunizing themselves from criticism by touting their victim-status. In addition to the 9/11 "Jersey Girls," Coulter identifies Joe Wilson, Cindy Sheehan, Max Cleland, and John Murtha as persons who possess, at least by Maureen Dowd's lights, "absolute moral authority." Curiously, this exalted status isn't accorded victims who don't push liberal agendas. Perhaps the fact that Republican veterans outnumber their Democrat counterparts in Congress, 87 to 62, has something to do with this inconsistency.

Coulter's next chapter, "The Liberal Priesthood: Spare the Rod, Spoil the Teacher," focuses on the partisanship, compensation, and incompetence level of American teachers. A crucial statistic in these pages concerns the "correlation [that exists] between poor student achievement and time spent in U.S. public schools." In this regard, comments by Thomas Sowell and Al Shanker stand out. Sowell notes that college students with low SAT and ACT scores are more likely to major in education and that "teachers who have the lowest scores are the most likely to remain in the profession." From a different perspective, the late President of the American Federation of Teachers stated, with refreshing bluntness, "When school children start paying union dues, that's when I'll start representing the interests of school children." The words of John Dewey, a founder of America's public education system, also fit nicely into Coulter's state-of-the-classroom address: "You can't make Socialists out of individualists -- children who know how to think for themselves spoil the harmony of the collective society which is coming, where everyone is interdependent." Coulter responds, "You also can't make socialists out of people who can read, which is probably why Democrats think the public schools have nearly achieved Aristotelian perfection."

The last third of Godless focuses on matters scientific. Chapter seven, "The Left's War on Science," serves as an appetizer for Coulter's evolutionary piece de resistance. Prior to that main course, Coulter provides a litany of examples that illustrate the left's contempt for scientific data that doesn't comport with its worldview. Exhibits include the mendacious marketing of AIDS as an equal opportunity disease, the hysterical use of anecdotal evidence to ban silicon breast implants, and the firestorm arising from Lawrence Summers's heretical speculation about male and female brain differences.

THE REMAINING CHAPTERS OF GODLESS all deal with Darwinism. Nowhere else can one find a tart-tongued compendium of information that not only presents a major argument for Intelligent Design but also exposes the blatant dishonesty of "Darwiniacs" who continue to employ evidence (such as the Miller-Urey experiment, Ernst Haeckel's embryo drawings, and the famous peppered moth experiment) that they know is outdated or fraudulent.

Within this bracing analysis, Coulter employs the observations of such biological and philosophical heavyweights as Stephen Gould, Richard Dawkins, Michael Behe, and Karl Popper. The price of the whole book is worth the information contained in these chapters about the statistical improbability of random evolution, the embarrassing absence of "transitional" fossils, and the inquisitorial attitude that prevails among many scientists (and most liberals) when discussing these matters. Unlike biologist Richard Lewontin, who candidly admits that a prior commitment to materialism informs his allegiance to evolution, most of his colleagues (and certainly most of the liberal scribblers Coulter sets on the road to extinction) won't concede that Darwinism is a corollary, rather than a premise, of their godlessness.

Coulter's final chapter serves as a thought-provoking addendum to her searing cross-examination of evolution's star witnesses. "The Aped Crusader" displays the devastating social consequences that have thus far attended Darwinism. From German and American eugenicists (including Planned Parenthood's Margaret Sanger), to Aryan racists, to the infanticidal musings of Princeton's Peter Singer, Darwinian evolution boasts a political and philosophical heritage that could only be envied by the likes of Charles Manson. Yet it is a history ignored by liberals for whom Darwin's theory provides what they want above all else -- a creation myth that sanctifies their sexual urges, sanctions abortion, and disposes of God.

Coulter's book is clearly not a systematic argument for the idea that liberalism is a godless religion. Indeed, prior to the material on evolution, the concept is treated more as a clever theme for chapter headings than as a serious intellectual proposition. In those final chapters, however, Coulter manages to present a cogent, sustained argument that actually begins to link modern liberalism (or more specifically, leftism) to an atheistic perspective. At the very least Coulter succeeds in raising an important issue -- namely, that American courts currently ignore the religious or quasi-religious character of a philosophy that pervades public institutions and is propagated with public funds. This fact, if honestly recognized, would render contemporary church-state jurisprudence untenable. A Court taking these arguments seriously would have to recognize that all philosophies, including "liberalism," swim in the same intellectual current as religion.

THUS FAR, THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA have focused almost all their attention on Coulter's take-no-prisoners rhetorical style -- and particularly on the "heartless" remarks about those 9/11 widows who seem to be "enjoying their husbands' deaths so much." Clearly, diplomatic language is not Coulter's forte, as one would also gather from this representative zinger: "I don't particularly care if liberals believe in God. In fact, I would be crestfallen to discover any liberals in heaven."

What undercuts the liberals' case against Coulter on this score, however, is their own (not always tacit) endorsement of vile epithets that are regularly directed against President Bush and his supporters by the likes of Cindy Sheehan, Michael Moore, and a gaggle of celebrity politicos. Coulter employs the same linguistic standard against liberals (with a touch of humor) that they regularly use (with somber faces and dogmatic conviction) when they accuse conservatives of being racist homophobes who gladly send youngsters to war under false pretences to line the pockets of Halliburton executives. Hate-speech of this stripe is old-hat for leftists.

Until Air America, Helen Thomas, and most Democrat constituencies alter their rhetoric, I see no reason for conservatives to denounce Coulter for using, more truthfully, the same harsh language that leftists have employed, with no regard for accuracy, since the time of Lenin. When liberals denounce communist tyrants as fervently as they do real Nazis, then it will be time for Coulter to cool the rhetoric. Until that time her "verbal reprisals" serve a useful function within an intellectual marketplace that resembles a commodities pit more than a debating society.

Richard Kirk is a freelance writer who lives in Oceanside, California. He is a regular columnist for San Diego's North County Times. His book reviews have also appeared in the American Enterprise Magazine, First Things, and Touchstone.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: anncoulter; bookreview; coulter; crevolist; godless; idjunkscience; junkscience; pavlovian; pavlovianevos; pseudoscience; richardkirk
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To: b_sharp

>>Please explain how the tissue was soft and what it implies for Evolution, if you would be so kind.<<

Has anyone done that yet? BTW, when you used the word "how" did you really mean "why"?


521 posted on 07/03/2006 8:16:48 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: UltraKonservativen
The engineering errors could have been avoided in the design but the Russian engineers caved in to the bureaucrats and cut corners in their fire protection.

No amount of change in the fire protection system could have prevented the disaster or its results.

522 posted on 07/03/2006 8:17:08 AM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: UltraKonservativen
It was a serious fire accident in a nuclear

I am sure that Ann mentioned that it was a core meltdown, right?

523 posted on 07/03/2006 8:19:23 AM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: stands2reason

yes.


524 posted on 07/03/2006 8:20:14 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: RobRoy

I think he said what he meant. Answer the question. Thank you.


525 posted on 07/03/2006 8:20:19 AM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: jennyp
>>do the parents have the right to kill their child?<<
Yes, God gave them the right to make that choice. Otherwise, they would find themselves incapable of doing so. In fact, if you read the old testament you may find Gods instruction on what to do with an incorrigible child rather interesting.

Naturally our government will not allow the parents to kill their child but, of course, the state is not God.
526 posted on 07/03/2006 8:25:16 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: OmahaFields

I don't.


527 posted on 07/03/2006 8:32:18 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: OmahaFields

To save myself some time, I'll let you read the answer yourself, whatever he meant: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=soft+tissue+t-rex+

You're welcome.


528 posted on 07/03/2006 8:33:40 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: RobRoy
"They" still don't really know what to change because of the T-Rex soft tissue.

Maybe nothing. There was nothing in the find that changes evolutionary theory. I will bet that after more study, this find makes evolution a stronger theory. This probably plugs one of those 'gaps'.

529 posted on 07/03/2006 8:50:23 AM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: Junior

"We, on the other hand, revel in our opponents' ignorance and gain much joy in pointing it out for all to see. "

- You were doing fine up to this point, but don't you realize that with this one sentence you suddenly revealed yourself to be just another elitist who looks down on others who don't share your views?
In fact, when "We..revel in our opponents ignorance and gain much joy in pointing it out.." then aren't you doing exactly what you accuse Ann of doing in her book?
In fact, I would say that you and Ann are of a kind. Maybe you reject her because you see so much of her in yourself.
Perhaps it's just the old liberal curse of self loathing expressed through transference.
Hmmmmm.



530 posted on 07/03/2006 8:52:59 AM PDT by finnigan2
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To: Mom MD
"How about ontongeny recapitulates phylogeny for a big one.

Could you point that out in the SToE?

"If you don't buy evolution, there are other theories - intelligent design, special creation, theistic evolution ....

Theistic evolution is just evolution, there is no change to the theory (SToE). Special creation is not a theory - it makes no testable predictions and it is not falsifiable. ID is not a theory - it makes no testable predictions and is not falsifiable.

Depending on your age, most of us will know with utter clarity in less than 50 yrs or so what the correct answer is. Until then, you have your conviction and I have mine -- but that makes neither one of us more or less intelligent.

I don't believe I have ever questioned your intelligence.

"If you want to call all creationists Luddites of flat earth types, how about my husband who graduated first in his class from MIT - he's neither dumb or ingnorant."

When have I ever called you a Luddite? Or your husband?

"My biggest problem with the evolutionary debates is that if you don't agree with the evolutionists on the board, you are a knuckle dragging neanderthal with the sophistication of a 3 yr old. Simply not true.

I do not doubt the intelligence of Creationists, I doubt their desire to critically assess their beliefs about the SToE. Most are quite satisfied to accumulate the strawman creations of a few anti-evolutionists which they treat as 'truth'. This reliance on misinformation guarantees they will have little or no understanding of the current state of the SToE and the evidence.

"And by the way -- I believe I have remained civil, not called any one names, etc, which is more than I can say for the way I've been treated in the last few hours.

At what point did I ever treat you poorly? All I did was ask for clarification.

531 posted on 07/03/2006 9:01:45 AM PDT by b_sharp (There is always one more mess to clean up.)
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To: finnigan2
"We..revel in our opponents ignorance and gain much joy in pointing it out.." then aren't you doing exactly what you accuse Ann of doing in her book? In fact, I would say that you and Ann are of a kind.

Some do it for principle, Ann does it for the money!

532 posted on 07/03/2006 9:08:27 AM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: b_sharp
I do not doubt the intelligence of Creationists, I doubt their desire to critically assess their beliefs about the SToE.

Intelligence == The ability to process information.

533 posted on 07/03/2006 9:09:53 AM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: RobRoy
"Has anyone done that yet? BTW, when you used the word "how" did you really mean "why"?"

No. I was asking for your take on the condition of the soft tissue when it was discovered. Was it mineralized, partially mineralized, or not mineralized?

Considering that dating of strata is done by radiometrics, the condition of fossils impacts the SToE in what way?

534 posted on 07/03/2006 9:12:02 AM PDT by b_sharp (There is always one more mess to clean up.)
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To: RobRoy
I presume to judge God by the same standards by which I presume to judge men. If God can't be above the pettiness inherent in humankind, what makes Him all that special?

My belief is that 90 percent of what we presume to "know" about God was actually made up by men, hence the Almighty's rather petty tendencies and His craving for our attentions.

535 posted on 07/03/2006 9:21:07 AM PDT by Junior (Identical fecal matter, alternate diurnal period)
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To: finnigan2
...but don't you realize that with this one sentence you suddenly revealed yourself to be just another elitist who looks down on others who don't share your views?

I am elite, and I reserve the right to look down on those who revel in their ignorance.

Only under communism are all men forced to be equal.

536 posted on 07/03/2006 9:22:37 AM PDT by Junior (Identical fecal matter, alternate diurnal period)
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To: OmahaFields

>>I will bet that after more study, this find makes evolution a stronger theory. <<

And therin lies much of the problem. So many of the "evolutionists" I spar with here are so impressed with the recent discoveries of man that they hang their hat on what they believe we WILL discover as opposed to what we HAVE discovered.

Nothing wrong with that - if applied as a possibility and not a fact.


537 posted on 07/03/2006 9:23:06 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: RobRoy

The story of the woman caught in adultry does not appear in the earliest extent versions of the Gospel and appears to have been added sometime around the 4th century.


538 posted on 07/03/2006 9:25:53 AM PDT by Junior (Identical fecal matter, alternate diurnal period)
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To: b_sharp

My take on the condition is what I read and what I read only. One thing needs to be addressed: Is there any existing explanation that would support the condition of the tissue if it is actually as old as claimed, or are new hypotheses required?


539 posted on 07/03/2006 9:27:05 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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To: b_sharp

I just reread my post. When I said I only know what I read I forgot to add the relevant link. Here it is: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4379577.stm

It talks about the mineralization, or lack thereof, in not only the soft tissue, but the bone as well.


540 posted on 07/03/2006 9:32:40 AM PDT by RobRoy (The Internet is about to do to Evolution what it did to Dan Rather. Information is power.)
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