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Addition or subtraction?: Ann Coulter and the conservative crossroads
Townhall.com ^ | March 7, 2007 | Michael Medved

Posted on 03/07/2007 6:28:29 AM PST by MadIvan

In the run-up to the fateful election of 2008, conservatives face a clear-cut choice: we can rebuild our movement as a broad-ranging, mainstream coalition and restore our governing majority, or else settle for a semi-permanent role as angry, doom-speaking complainers on the fringes of American politics and culture.

We can either invite doubters and moderates to join with us in new efforts to affirm American values, or we can push them away because they fail to measure up to our own standards of indignation and ideological purity.

In short, we must choose between addition and subtraction: either building our cause by adding to our numbers or destroying it by discouraging all but the fiercest ideologues.

No political party or faction has ever thrived based on purges and insults and internal warfare, but too many activists on the right seem determined to reduce the conservative cause to self-righteous irrelevance.

The most recent outrage involving Ann Coulter provides a revealing example of the self-destructive tendencies of some dedicated partisans on the right. Addressing the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, D.C., the best-selling author and glamorous Time magazine cover girl declared: “I was going to have a few comments about the other Democratic candidate for President, John Edwards, but it turns out you have to go into rehab if you use the word ‘faggot’ so I’m kind of at an impasse. I can’t really talk about Edwards.”

Some members of the audience gasped as she deployed the forbidden slur, but many others laughed and applauded. Naturally, Democratic Chair Howard Dean and many others pounced on the incident as another example of conservative viciousness and bigotry, demanding that all Republican Presidential candidates dissociate themselves from Coulter’s comments.

This challenge creates a miserable dilemma for every GOP contender. If the candidate ignores the controversy, he looks gutless and paralyzed in the face of obviously inappropriate and over-the-top insults. If he condemns Coulter, he looks like he’s wimping out to the liberal establishment and offends right-wing true believers who feel instinctively protective of Ann the Outrageous. Any comment by a presidential candidate also refocuses the national conversation on the absurd and unacceptable suggestion that John Edwards is secretly gay.

To paraphrase the old line attributed to Talleyrand: this smear amounts to worse than a crime, it is a blunder. John Edwards deserves contempt and derision on many counts, and I go after him (regularly) on my radio show for his extreme left wing positions on foreign policy and health care, his shameless opportunism, even his long history as a fabulously wealthy and floridly hypocritical ambulance-chasing attorney. Ann Coulter could have found plenty to say about the former North Carolina Senator without invoking the dreaded f-word (all right, the other dreaded f-word).

In fact, Edwards has been a visibly loyal husband to Elizabeth, his wife of more than 29 years, who’s currently battling breast cancer. Together, they’ve brought five children into the world, including a son who died in a tragic traffic accident at age 16. Drawing attention to Edwards’ personal life and away from his policies only helps Edwards and harms conservatives.

In other words, the lame attempt to question the Senator’s sexual orientation is precisely the wrong attack, and Coulter herself is most certainly the wrong attacker. If this issue continues to attract attention, indignant liberals will no doubt point out that the devoted family man from North Carolina exemplifies traditional values far more notably than the mini-skirted, never-married provocateur from the right.

Personally, I like and admire Ann Coulter, and I’ve always defended her in the past – even when liberals gleefully quoted out-of-context from her recent bestseller “Godless” to make it sound as if she suggested that 9/11 widows wanted their own husbands to die and celebrated their fiery deaths. Her caustic humor often upstages her serious and substantive political points, as did the notorious headline “They Shot the Wrong Lincoln” appended to her column attacking her fellow Republican, Rhode Island Senator Lincoln Chafee. That one opinion piece didn’t doom Chafee’s re-election bid, but movement conservatives like Coulter and many others expressed the desire for his defeat—a loss that insured the Democrats’ one-vote margin in the Senate.

Reasonable people can disagree about the wisdom of concentrating fire on a fellow Republican (even a liberal GOP’er like Linc Chafee) but there can be no argument about the purely destructive impact of Coulter’s sneering slur against Edwards. How could such a nasty shot possibly assist the conservative cause? Which potential Republican supporters would feel motivated or mobilized by her casual use of the term “faggot”? How could a smart woman expect anything other than a disgusted and negative response for her implication that a long-married father of five deserved outing as a homosexual?

The Coulter commentary (and the subsequent applause) reinforced the public image of conservatives as unreasonably hostile to gay people in general, not just opposed to the dubious particulars of the so-called “gay rights” agenda. In fact, exit polls showed that self-identified gay people made up 4% of the total electorate in the incomparably close election of 2000, and nearly one third of those homosexual voters cast their ballots for George W. Bush. In other words, more than a million gay citizens voted for Bush-Cheney, in a race that ultimately turned on a mere 527 votes in Florida, and a national margin in the popular vote of just 537,000 for Gore.

What sense does it make for a featured speaker at a conservative conference to deliver gratuitous insult and offense to that stalwart minority of homosexuals who still choose to cast their lot with Republicans, despite the party’s impassioned (and appropriate) opposition to gay marriage?

By the same token, how does it help for one of the nation’s highest profile conservative talk hosts to use his broadcast on the Martin Luther King holiday to insult the fallen hero as unworthy of federal commemoration? Yes, the overwhelming majority of African-Americans votes incurably Democratic, but in 2004, Bush still drew well over a million-and-a-half black votes. It doesn’t help these courageous dissenters from politically correct orthodoxy if loud voices on the right make them wonder whether Jesse Jackson and Howard Dean are right about the racism of Republicans.

Finally, the most serious challenge of all involves the rapidly growing and increasingly prosperous Latino communities. Were it not for his competitive showing among Hispanics (with some 35% of their votes in 2000, and above 40% in 2004), Bush wouldn’t even have come close to victory, either time.

Meanwhile, elements of the President’s party seem perversely determined to make sure that no future Republican repeats this success with the nation’s fastest growing minority group. Imagine how naturalized Hispanic citizens, or even native-born Latinos might feel, at the suggestion that their cousins amount to an “invading army” bent on destroying America, or the common equation of terrorists (who have all been legal U.S. entrants by the way) and those who enter the country to care for our children and mow our lawns. Anti-immigrant rhetoric (which increasingly dispenses with any distinction between legal and illegal arrivals) provoked a disastrous shift of Latino voters away from the GOP in 2006. If Republicans continue to draw just 20% of Hispanic votes they will never regain control of Congress and stand scant chance of retaining the White House. Nativist posturing (like Congressman Tom Tancredo’s obnoxious slogan, “America Is Full”) may play well with some elements of the conservative base but it could easily doom Republicans to permanent minority status.

Obviously, the future of the conservative movement and of the Republic itself requires GOP recruitment of more Latinos, Blacks and gays, and anything that stands in the way of such participation fatally undermines the party’s future.

The situation hardly requires retreat and retrenchment on key issues of principle in the vague hope of winning more minority support.

Republicans don’t need to drop our implacable opposition to gay marriage in order reach out to gays.

We don’t need to reverse our criticism of race-based quotas in order to bring more black involvement in the party.

And we certainly don’t need to endorse automatic amnesty or “open borders” as a way to connect with Latino voters – but we might want to avoid widespread public advertising for games like “Find the Illegal Immigrant” (devised by a College Republicans chapter in New York City) or giving undeserved respect to crackpot fringe groups like the scandal-tainted “Minute Man Civil Defense Corps.”.

On all the important issues, it’s not substance that needs to change, it’s style.

Republicans need to return to the open, expansive conservatism of Ronald Reagan: more concerned with bringing in newcomers than driving out dissenters, more committed to winning elections than to scoring points in arguments, more determined to steer the government in the right direction than to sit at the sidelines carping about inevitable decline. We should make skeptics feel welcome as Republicans and urge them to fight the issues inside the party where they can have the most impact.

Every major event, every potential speaker, every resolution, every specific approach, deserves evaluation in terms of effectiveness in party building—winning new adherents to the cause.

We should ask a crucial question before we speak or act: will this draw people to conservative ideas and ideals, or will it serve to turn them off and push them away?

It’s not a matter of pandering; it’s an expression of practical politics. At this crucial juncture, conservatives need to recall the obvious point that you strengthen your cause most effectively when you’re appealing, not appalling.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: anncoulter; conservatism; medved
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To: SoothingDave

See post 155. This oughta be good.


161 posted on 03/07/2007 8:45:57 AM PST by Mr. Silverback ("Logic" is as meaningless to a liberal as "desert" is to a fish.--Freeper IronJack)
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Comment #162 Removed by Moderator

To: PSYCHO-FREEP

>>You forgot the part where you dig yourself a bunker and shoot anyone you don't know, who comes near it.<<

That is in the "it's ok to shoot the bast**ds phase. ;)


163 posted on 03/07/2007 8:47:38 AM PST by RobRoy (Islam is a greater threat to the world today than Nazism was in 1938.)
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To: LibertarianInExile
Sometimes, speed reading to keep up on a fair volume thread has it's risks. If I misread what you said, I firmly apologize. And, I was not attacking you. I was merely keeping up the discussion.

We all share due respect here.
164 posted on 03/07/2007 8:48:06 AM PST by PSYCHO-FREEP
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To: highball
Her right to say it is in no way infringed by, nor does it preclude, our right to say that she's a self-inflated moron who does the conservative agenda more harm than good by behaving like a left-wing stereotype of a knuckle-dragging conservative bigot.

Yet you, with your so-called intellectualism and smugness, see no irony in that statememt. Kind of funny actually.

165 posted on 03/07/2007 8:48:25 AM PST by subterfuge (Today, Tolerance =greatest virtue;Hypocrisy=worst character defect; Discrimination =worst atrocity)
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To: MadIvan
The American Conservative Union and the Conservative Political Action Conference today issued the following statement:

The just completed 2007 Conservative Political Action Conference on March 1 – 3, 2007, was the largest in the 34 year history of the event, featuring 33 panels on a variety of public policy issues, 24 stand alone speakers including public officials, writers, student activists, media personalities and comedians. ACU, the event’s primary sponsor and CPAC strive to provide a platform and forum for a variety of differing views and personalities. ACU and CPAC do not condone or endorse every speaker or their comments at the conference. As such, ACU and CPAC leave it to our audience to determine whether comments are appropriate or not. “Ann Coulter is known for comments that can be both provocative and outrageous. That was certainly the case in her 2007 CPAC appearance and previous ones as well. But as a point of clarification, let me make it clear that ACU and CPAC do not condone or endorse the use of hate speech,” said David A. Keene, ACU Chairman.

I can live with that.

166 posted on 03/07/2007 8:48:43 AM PST by kabar
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To: MadIvan

I say let Ann be Ann- I bet far more people laughed at her comment then those who disliked it. (except for democraps)


167 posted on 03/07/2007 8:48:44 AM PST by Mr. K (Some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help)
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To: wolf24

Don't worry...I suspect a house cleaning is coming.


168 posted on 03/07/2007 8:49:49 AM PST by Mr. Silverback ("Logic" is as meaningless to a liberal as "desert" is to a fish.--Freeper IronJack)
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To: highball; aviator; MadIvan
[Ann]'s a self-inflated moron who does the conservative agenda more harm than good by behaving like a left-wing stereotype of a knuckle-dragging conservative bigot.

Right. A single word, and under-the-bus you go....at least for Republicans.

Ann Coulter - "faggot." -- ????

George Allen - "Makakka." -- FIRED.

Trent Lott - "Strom Thurmond." -- FIRED.

Newt Gingrich - "Gingriched." -- Remember that term?

Dan Quayle - "Murphy Brown." -- FIRED.

OTOH-------

Jessie Jackson - "Hymietown." -- Black Leader.

etc.etc.

169 posted on 03/07/2007 8:49:54 AM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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To: kabar
That's a perfectly reasonable response.

Regards, Ivan

170 posted on 03/07/2007 8:49:56 AM PST by MadIvan (I aim to misbehave.)
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To: Mr. Silverback
In all seriousnes, do you not see how you're contradicting yourself? You say we "can't allow [the] enemy to fight by his rules while [we] fight with mittens on and expect to win" (post 53) but then you say that she is not using the same tactics as the enemy, and in fact it is outrageous that I've said she is. Well, which is it, should we fight like the enemy, or should we be like Ann who (accoriding to you) would do no such thing? I know it's probably hard to read your computer screen from up on your high moral horse, but pick a position, wouldyaplease?

I think you miss the point. The rule is, the Left has no rules and the Right must follow some strict code of conduct that is constantly changing. The Left gets to define, on the fly, what the Right can and can not say. Too many on the Right accept this game and these rules and they will never, ever win that way.

171 posted on 03/07/2007 8:50:17 AM PST by PajamaTruthMafia
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To: PajamaTruthMafia
So. in your book calling somebody a homosexual is a slur then? How about being a homosexual is that a bad thing too?

It's not a slur. If they're a faggot, then they're a faggot. They chose their behavior, remember? Faggot is a valid word to describe their behavior.

Homosexual behavior is a bad thing. Love the sinner, but hate the sin.
I object to their over use of antibiotics from ingesting bile and using strange, foreign instruments in their bodies( My sister in law is a nurse, and you wouldn't believe some of the stuff the hospitals pull out of these people).

I object to their incurable plagues. My kids have to grow up in this world, and homosexual behavior is like a walking petri dish, with more plagues yet to come.
When you play in the sewer too long, you get sick. You can also spread that sickness to the innocent people around you.

Yes, I object to their behavior because of the health issues associated with it. AIDs is a mutating disease. No one knows how it will eventually end - if it ever does. A simple change of behavior could eradicate the disease overnight, but no one wants to discuss that idea. Instead, they pay billions to find a cure.

What has homosexuality ever done that was good? We've seen the damage the behavior has done over and over, but what good has ever resulted from it? Why should I just look the other way and call it "normal?"

172 posted on 03/07/2007 8:50:57 AM PST by concerned about politics ("Get thee behind me, Liberal")
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bump


173 posted on 03/07/2007 8:52:14 AM PST by Non-Sequitur (Proud owner, 10K & 20K posts on the 'Anna Nicole Smith Has Died' thread.)
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To: subterfuge; highball

So let me get this straight...you think it's intellectualism and smugness to say it doesn't do the conservative movement any good to go around calling a faithful husband a faggot?


174 posted on 03/07/2007 8:52:15 AM PST by Mr. Silverback ("Logic" is as meaningless to a liberal as "desert" is to a fish.--Freeper IronJack)
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To: Ramcat

May I refer you to a dictionary?


175 posted on 03/07/2007 8:53:00 AM PST by SoothingDave (Eugene Gurkin was a janitor, cleaning toilets for The Man)
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To: PSYCHO-FREEP

And the other side doesn't understand the mind-set. We've tried the RINO approach, it didn't work. We're getting close to the "water the tree of liberty" stage.


176 posted on 03/07/2007 8:53:38 AM PST by El Laton Caliente (NRA Member & www.Gunsnet.net Moderator)
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To: PajamaTruthMafia

No, I didn't miss tha point. Answer the other two questions in the post, please. I suspect you left them out because honest answers to them will directly contradict your stated position.


177 posted on 03/07/2007 8:54:33 AM PST by Mr. Silverback ("Logic" is as meaningless to a liberal as "desert" is to a fish.--Freeper IronJack)
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To: PSYCHO-FREEP

A quote:

"...I have never come across anything that resembles what you just demagogued to this forum about Michael Medved."

'Demagogued' is a pretty harsh word to use about someone with whom you're 'sharing due respect.' I'm demagoguing nothing, nor is the prior poster to whom I responded.


178 posted on 03/07/2007 8:55:17 AM PST by LibertarianInExile ("Kid, thanks to your gay little song, there's not gonna BE a San Francisco." - SP, 'Smug Alert!')
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To: SoothingDave
I'm sure if we all teach our children to use the dictionary to look up swear words and encourage them to use them

C'mon. I don't allow my kids to swear. Faggot is a normal word. It's just an un-politically correct word forbidden by the left wing , but I'm not brainwashed into being politically correct, so I don't worry about it.

179 posted on 03/07/2007 8:56:08 AM PST by concerned about politics ("Get thee behind me, Liberal")
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To: wolf24
It seems to me that lately you don't have to leave this very website in order to experience the type of name-calling and inflammatory speech that typical of DU.

It's an unmistakable sign of weakness. The Reagan Revolution was won with ideas, not invective. If we're really this bankrupt of ideas that hurling insults somehow improves our game, then we're a party in decline. You know, it's very interesting - Edwards' campaign appeared so grossly incompetent (if not malignant) in supporting its feminazi, papist-hating bloggers, and calling him a "faggot" makes him look like the victim now.

180 posted on 03/07/2007 8:56:29 AM PST by Rutles4Ever (Ubi Petrus, ibi ecclesia, et ubi ecclesia vita eterna)
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