Posted on 10/02/2001 9:14:04 AM PDT by truthandlife
Conservative columnist Ann Coulter, fired from her contributing editor perch at the National Review Online, blames it on free-speech hysteria in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. In a recent online column, Coulter opined that the United States should respond forcefully to the terrorist attacks: "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders, and convert them to Christianity," she said. The comment provoked an uproar, and the National Review Online subsequently refused to run another Coulter piece in which she referred to "swarthy males." When Coulter complained, she was fired. Tuesday's Washington Post quotes Coulter as saying she doesn't need friends like that. "Every once in awhile they'll throw one of their people to the wolves to get good press in left-wing publications," she told the newspaper. National Review Online Editor Jonah Goldberg told the Post, "We didn't feel we wanted to be associated with the comments expressed in those two columns." Coulter told the Washington Post she's getting great publicity as a result of the flap.
Where is that suggested? I see this stated again and again by posters, but I don't see it in the text. As I assume Miss Coulter has a Christian aversion to coerced conversion, I see no reason to insinuate such an idea.
There seems to be some confusion as to the meaning of free speech. It does not include the provision of a forum by a private organisation, or a government forum for that matter. It means you can say what you wish and you take the consequences that result.
Goldberg is a jew (I think) and the logical conclusion of her proposal if implemented would be to force jews among others to be converted to Christianity. It was a bizzare remark and he chose to fire her for it. His call.
Dejavu all over again.
No, he doesn't understand enough about the Gospel to disagree with it; his fear has prevented him from studying it. - This thread is a perfect textbook example.
Force is clearly implied by the fact that it immediately follows, "Invade their countries" and "kill their leaders". I somehow don't get the impression that she's inviting them to a Promise Keeper's rally and hoping they'll see the light.
Unfortunately, the progressives, who didn't care much for Barbara when she was alive, promptly started an attack. That was when the editors probably re-read the column. To their credit, they ignored the flak. But the second column was still over the top. They made the justifiable call not to run it. I have seen the column in question.
I speak as a columnist for my college paper (Cornell College in Mt. Vernon, Iowa), who had one column pulled shortly after the 1994 elctions over an item that had to the potential to unintentionally offend people. I asked why it had been pulled, they told me, and I kept that in mind for future columns. This was much milder than what Ann's column, written in the heat of anger.
Had Ann not mouthed off (on Politically Incorrect of all shows), she'd not have been fired. And we'd not be in this fight amongst ourselves. Both sides have som fault in this, and I will continue to read both Ann Coulter's columns AND National Review Online and OnDeadTree. Both have their place among our just and noble cause. And I hope they can patch things up later on.
Now that is a fair criticism.
I know that some here will bring up the crusades and other christian blunders, but those were not justified by christian biblical teaching. They were men acting apart from the leading of The Holy Spirit.
We must not be ashamed to embrace our christian heritage as Americans. Because of that heritage, the world has greatly benefited.
What is wrong with you people?!?! 50 posts with NO pictures and then 100 more without any other pictures?!?!
FreeRepublic is going downhill.
:)
Gee, sounds like the comments of several million of the Moslem faith describing Osama's gang and the Taliban in general... BTW, when do we start referring to the IRA as "Christian terrorists", just as we attach the tagline "Moslem" terrorist to describe the thugs who do such things?
Yes.
I saw Ann Coulter's words about "killing their leaders and converting them to Christianity" in that now-famous column as sheer hyperbole and not inconsistent with her usual writing style, in which she often uses irony as a vehicle to make a point. I was amazed at the negative reaction she received for it, but I also noted that many - including here on FR - were not fans of Coulter to begin with.
Just as with Jerry Falwell, this statement was mis-used by her detractors as a weapon to diminish Coulter and make her less credible. Doesn't work with me, but I can see how it was an irresistible opportunity for Ann-haters and fake conservatives to knock her down a peg and look righteous and fair-minded in the process. I find the ensuing religious arguments on this topic thread absurd, and simply using this one column of Ann's to launch the old religious arguments we see all the time on FR.
I'm very pleased by the way Ann has handled this silly controversy. No apology, no back-tracking, no 'explaining' and her comments regarding her column being dropped by Nation Review Online don't cry 'censorship' (she wasn't censored - the column ran) and Ann makes lemonade out a lemon by mentioning how NR attempts to appease the left-wing press (I agree) and that she's gotten great publicity from the incident. Good for Ann! She impresses me with the way she performs under critical assault and I expect she'll emerge from this overblown flap as stronger and even more popular.
You idiot.
Instead, how about the response to "Kill them all for Allah?"
"No you won't!"
You might not have noticed, but we didn't destroy the two towers in Riyahd...
In that case, it would be easy for her to say, "come on, you all don't think I was being serious, do you?" But this is what she hasn't done, which is doubly surprising because the public's ability to recognize humor is clearly and understandably at an all-time low right now.
It's probably true that Goldberg does not have the intellectual candlepower of many of the print version's heavyweight contributors, but I would suspect most of you have never read the print version. After all, it costs money and the writing is college-level, which would turn away many of you losers who seemingly can't even spell.
But what is really a laugh is seeing some of you nincompoops criticize what is simply the most intelligent and reliably conservative magazine in the country simply for having standards. Absolutely no one with any brain in their head would call NR "Neo-Marxist." That's akin to calling black white. It's nonsense.
Unlike this site, NR is not a place where just any old right-wing screed is welcome. I've enjoyed Coulter's writing from time to time too, but I'm not going to defend the idiotic things she wrote just because she's good-looking.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.