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Guilty: Liberal "Victims" and Their Assault on America

Why Ann Coulter’s Guilty is Innocent


By Guest Column Ben-Peter Terpstra——--February 18, 2009

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- Intellectualconservative Serious sociologists don't deny the links between fatherless families and crime rates. So, why is this view controversial? A review of Guilty: Liberal "Victims" and Their Assault on America.

Guilty: Liberal "Victims" and Their Assault on America by Ann Coulter published by Crown Forum (January 6, 2009) Hdbk., 320 pgs. ISBN-10: 030735346X ISBN-13: 978-0307353467 Ann Coulter is back. In Guilty: Liberal "Victims" And Their Assault On America, the conservative movement's rose advances the view that pretend victims are breeding like rodents. We see them on soulless talk shows. We see them with grey ponytails in Starbucks, eating spinach croissants. In fact, some of them are even Nazi-collaborators with big pockets. The media loves them. Or, to paraphrase, Dennis Prager: Only the truth is controversial on television. Undoubtedly, some critics will claim that Coulter is just preaching to the choir (again). I heartily disagree. In my experience, Coulter's books are good at challenging my assumptions, and setting me right on key issues. I've seen the light (and double-checked her footnotes and endnotes). Of course, this is not to suggest that "the choir" doesn't have the right to enjoy Coulter's books. To the contrary, I'm sure Baptists will love Guilty. And critics are missing a larger point: she isn't preaching to the choir – she's recharging the choir. Consider these points: Page 45: Hollywood movers and shakers are as rich as any oil company CEO, but the role they love to play the most is the victim. P. 55: The Los Angeles Times quoted another single mother by artificial insemination, who said, "You're paying for it, so you kind of want the best of the best." Call me old-fashioned, but when someone is promoting eugenics like that I prefer it in the original German. P. 179: Pro-lifers can't stand on a public sidewalk within 36 feet of an abortion clinic, but liberals think they have a divine right to disrupt speeches at the Republican National Convention. P. 229: There are books, operas, and songs about Jacqueline Kennedy's style for her singular accomplishment of looking like a Republican while being married to a Democrat. P. 232: While a stylish Democrat sends the media into swooning fits, a stylish Republican sends them into sans-culottes denunciations of the rich. P. 244: Plutocrat George Soros has compared Bush to the Nazis – which raises the question: If Bush is like the Nazis, why isn't Soros collaborating with him? In essence, crybabies like to play the victim card, and Coulter likes to laugh at their acts. Also, consider Coulter's "controversial" views on single motherhood, and ask yourself, "Are her comments controversial?" Serious liberal and conservative sociologists alike (with exception to Whoopi Goldberg), don't deny the links between fatherless families and crime rates. So, why is this view controversial? Is it because Coulter is giving meaty sociological facts to mainstream America, in a readable and digestive format? In The Case for Marriage by Linda J. Waite and Maggie Gallagher, we find that (p. 130): For children, just as for adults, married homes are healthier homes. Children living in female-headed homes are more likely to be hospitalized, to have chronic health conditions such as asthma, heart ailments, or convulsions than are children in two-parent homes. . . . The health advantage of married homes for children remains sizable, even after taking into account the lower average education and income of female-headed families. . . . For babies, marriage can make the difference between life and death. White babies born to unmarried moms are 70 percent more likely to die in the first year of life, while black infants born out of wedlock are 40 percent more likely to die before their first birthday. So, who are the under-reported victims? There are, to be sure, some big exceptions to every rule. And, Coulter recognizes this. Alas, not all women in the hood can find a big-bucks job on The View, spouting illiterate talking points to clapping seals. So, their children are less likely to see their first birthday candle. And, their children's cries are less likely to be heard on The View because . . . ? "But, at least Coulter's enemies aren't judgmental," I hear liberals say. Or are they? Perhaps this is just a red herring or a form of projection too. Think: Who judges Coulter for making right judgments? Who judges working class couples, and treats them like cap-and-trade servants? Who demands that we all "get along" and blindly praise "rainbow families" while thousands of children are condemned to ordinary (and or dangerous) lives? Who continually hides the many links between poverty and family choices, because they prefer to compare Republicans to Nazis? Who? The rich "non-judgmental" liberal, that's who. And, who – who – really loves swimming in left-wing tears? In my Protestant view, we know that Jesus never told us not to judge. He told us not to make hypocritical judgments. There is a difference. And, just as importantly, He praised people for making right and controversial judgments. Thankfully, in her "controversial" book, Coulter treats statistics like children. Thus, in my religion, Guilty is innocent. And, so was John the Baptist. Guilty: Liberal "Victims" and Their Assault on America is available on Amazon.com. Ben-Peter Terpstra, an Australian-European satirist, is a contributor to a number of websites, from On Line Opinion (Australia’s e-journal of social and political debate) to American Thinker. His pieces are also posted on his blog, Pizza Trays and Beer Bottles Ben-Peter can be reached at: Letters@canadafreepress.com

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