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Ann Coulter Broke My Heart – The Daily Beast

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09.21.151:00 AM ET

As a young conservative, she was one of my heroes. And then she went off the deep end.

Her comments, and continued justification of them, are a betrayal of the principles of not just conservatism, but America.

For many young female conservatives, Ann Coulter was our Conservative Supergirl. With a wit that seemed faster than a speeding bullet, her clever chatter buzzed as if she were an Aaron Sorkin character brought to life. Seeing the utterly fearless way she eviscerated the hypocrisy of the left was a thing of joy.

Better yet, she was cool. Not some stodgy, frumpy church lady like from Dana Carveys SNL skits, but stylish and sleek with her long blond hair and penchant for black leather skirts and sky-high heels. She was snarky and hysterical and fun, our Republican Barbie Warrior Princess, and I adored her.

And then she broke my heart.

First, some backstory. I registered as a Republican at age 18, but my own conservative beliefs did not fully develop until several years later. The experiences I had in college and law school, both at the University of Florida, challenged meas college ideally shouldto truly think about not just what I believed, but why. The College Republicans and Federalist Society introduced me to other students who had their own interpretations of conservatism, and provided my first significant exposure to libertarianism.

Far more important than meeting fellow conservatives, however, were the interactions I had with those on the other side of the ideological divide. It is no secret that most college campuses tend to be far more encouraging of ideas from the left than the right, and openly identifying yourself as a conservative in college meant setting yourself apart.

Being Christian and pro-life means you will never fully feel comfortable in the alcohol-fueled bacchanalia that infuses most college campuses, and the cultural view of liberalism as tolerant and open-minded creates a real pressure. When a friend on your dorm hall asks you why Republicans dont support womens rights, you can either give up being a Republican (at least openly) or figure out how to quickly articulate why you believe conservative policies actually provide more freedom and happiness for more women.

Classes were ideological obstacle courses. Many of my political science professors made little secret that they leaned left, and there was even one tenured professor with a giant poster of Lenin in his office behind his desk, glaring down at any student who came in for office hours. It is impossible to survive the modern college environment as a conservative without having your beliefs tested, constantly and vigorously. Graduating with your conservatism intact means you have had your beliefs forged by fire into steel.

This is where Ann Coulter comes in.

For me and many other young conservatives, Coulters books were a revelation. Backed up by painstakingly detailed research and what seemed like millions of footnotes, she took liberal tropes that had been presented in the mainstream media and my history books as facts, and completely shredded them, interweaving some vicious sarcasm along the way.

Reading Coulter was like studying a form of mental martial arts. Here were the specific reasons why the liberals were wrong, and better yet, a strategy for how to make the arguments. I devoured her writings, along with those by other conservative thought leaders like Andrew Breitbart, Friedrich Hayek, and Jonah Goldberg, in an effort to build my own intellectual arsenal.

Coulter was a smart, educated role model for those of us who felt lost in the wider culture. When we were being told we were wrong by the media, professors, friends, celebrities, and politicians (even Republicans), Coulter was one of the guideposts that we could follow, a steady and unblinking North Star who was a light unto our path.

Sadly, that guidepost seems to have lost her own way. Her raison dtre is no longer the bold articulation of conservative principles but rather an ugly and small-minded vision for America.

Coulters latest book, Adios America! The Lefts Plan to Turn Our Country Into a Third World Hellhole, drew criticism even from conservatives for the way her opposition to illegal immigration was so often expressed as opposition to the browning of America.

Then, when some pro-immigration protesters crashed one of her book events, she told reporters, You have to understand, screaming and defacing things is how Latin Americans express disagreement. At least as long as they were destroying books and screaming in a book store, they werent molesting any 4-year-olds.

Adios America! served as a prequel to the Donald Trump campaign, and his very similar accusations about Mexicans being criminals. When Mexico sends its people, theyre not sending their best, said Trump in his announcement speech back in June. Theyre sending people that have lots of problems, and theyre bringing those problems with us. Theyre bringing drugs. Theyre bringing crime. Theyre rapists.

Not unexpectedly, Coulter has been one of Trumps most vocal supporters on the right, adding her own inflammatory anti-immigrant rhetoric. A July column denounced Trumps opponents as being apologists for child rape, adding that this was part of the Mexican peasant culture and Latino rape culture.

She followed that up in August with a column, titled Donald Trump: Still Right About Mexican Rapists, in which she wrote that there was a cultural acceptance of child rape in Latino culture that doesn't exist in even the most dysfunctional American ghettoes.

And then theres the cherry on top of Coulters hateful little sundae. When the Republican debate wrapped up Wednesday evening, Coulter tweeted arguably the most offensive and divisive tweet of her life, asking How many f---ing Jews do these people think are in the United States? She complained that Sen. Marco Rubio, Sen. Ted Cruz, and former Gov. Mike Huckabee had all mentioned Israel in their answer about how they envisioned the future of America, plus other accusations of pandering.

The whole argument echoes a historic libel against Jews that they hold secret influence, wrote The Daily Beasts Tom Sykes, and Coulters tweets were met with an immediate roar of approval from anti-Semites on Twitter, who began posting under the hashtag #IStandWithAnn, which became a trending topic.

Coulter posted a furious string of backpedaling tweets, claiming that she was not anti-Semitic but was simply annoyed the candidates were spouting platitudes on issues where Republicans already agreed: support for Israel, opposition to abortion, adoration for Ronald Reagan. Its not about Jewish people; its about Republican panderers, she tweeted.

In an interview with The Daily Beast posted Thursday, Coulter told Jay Michaelson it was all a misunderstanding.

Im accusing Republicans of thinking the Jews have so much power, said Coulter. Theyre the ones who are comedically acting out this play where the Jews control everything.

Essentially, wrote Michaelson, Coulter is complaining that Republicans care too much about the f---ing Jews, describing her argument as the same unforgivably anti-Semitic trope that runs like a poison thread from Henry Ford to Mahmoud Ahmedinejad to the Hebrew-haters standing with Ann on Twitter: that the Jews have disproportionate power and influence in world affairs.

Lee Smith at the online Jewish magazine Tablet was willing to give Coulter the benefit of the doubt that she was not actually anti-Semitic, writing that she had made clear in the past that she admires Israel, but still said that her tweets displayed evidence of the degradation of American political discourse.

What Coulter fails to realize, or perhaps just refuses to admit, is that it is irrelevant whether she is anti-Semitic. With great power comes great responsibility, as Spider-Mans Uncle Ben Parker wisely said. Once you reach a certain level in our society, whether as an athlete or an actress or a journalist, you have influence and cannot disclaim all responsibility for your actions.

The firehose of hate streaming from the angriest bowels of the Internet has been too strong these past few days (and past few months in response to her immigration comments) for Coulter to have plausible deniability. Coulter may not hate the Jews or Mexicans or any other non-WASPs, but her tweets have encouraged and emboldened those who do.

Likewise for Trump: He may love the Mexicans as he claims, but his comments are being celebrated by people with swastikas and white supremacist slogans in their online profiles. Something he is saying is making these people believe he will stop the browning of America that Coulter complains about.

With many Americans still economically struggling and strong emotions on all sides of the immigration debate, the draw of tribalism and the impulse to blame others and outsiders present dangerous temptations. When Trump blames China and Mexico for Americas problems, and Coulter condemns candidates who pander to the f---ing Jews, they are acting as catalysts for this animosity, and are accomplices to the spread of these hateful and un-American ideas.

Coulter is too smart not to realize the danger she is courting. Her comments, and continued justification of them, are a betrayal of the principles of not just conservatism, but America.

Follow Sarah Rumpf on Twitter: @rumpfshaker

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Ann Coulter Broke My Heart - The Daily Beast

Ann Coulter blasted (and backed) for anti-Semitic tweet …

Ann Coulter is anti-Jew? Coulter, the conservative social and political commentator, trudged once again through a pile of ignominious fame by tweeting out an anti-Semitic take on the recent GOP debate. Coulter, a self-described polemicist who found a foothold bashing the Clinton administration in the 1990s, triggered swift condemnation with her tweets but also found some support from anti-Semites craving a pundit to give a sense of legitimacy to their prejudiced views, as reports The Daily Beast.

Writes Yahoo News on Sept. 17: Ann Coulter offered her typical blustery two cents about the GOP presidential debate on Thursday, going as far to call out candidates for playing to all the fu**ing Jews and generating an almost immediate social-media backlash.

Coulter trotted out some dog-whistling politics with her blustery commentary on the fact there was repeated discussion of support for Israel during the GOP debate.

How many f---ing Jews do these people think there are in the United States? Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) September 17, 2015

Israeli media condemned Coulters remarks. Haaretz, a left-leaning news source, dubbed Coulters tweets as arguably anti-Semitic.

Controversial conservative pundit Ann Coulter posted a series of arguably anti-Semitic tweets at the tail end of Wednesday nights Republican debate, accusing the candidates of pandering to Jewish voters, including one posing the hypothetical question of: How many fing Jews do these people think there are in the United States? the site reported.

The Jerusalem Post weighed in with the same. Regarding Coulters anti-Semitism, the site wrote: Ann Coulter, a controversial conservative political commentator, posted a series of what could be viewed as anti-Semitic tweets during the Republican presidential national debate on Wednesday night.

I like the Jews, I like fetuses, I like Reagan. Didn't need to hear applause lines about them all night, Coulter tweeted. Cruz, Huckabee Rubio all mentioned ISRAEL in their response to: What will AMERICA look like after you are president.

Coulter, who once tweeted that immigrants should be feared more than ISIS terrorists, has attempted to backtrack somewhat, explaining that her initial tweet was not meant to be targeted anti-Semitism but rather a critique on the GOP as a whole for its same pandering on Reagan & abortion, she tweeted.

Later, she tweeted: Boy were they wrong @ Jewish influence! I complained about pandering on Israel (Reagan & abortion) & haven't heard a thing about it!

Her remarks did find a number of anti-Semites flocking to her support. Her tweet had been upped thousands of times, and the hashtag #IstandWithAnn began trending.

Adds the NY Daily News: Ann Coulter is being blasted as a bigoted idiot after she shocked social media users late Wednesday with a tweet that many are calling anti-Semitic. The rightwing pundit went on a Twitter tirade during the Republican presidential candidate debate, accusing participants of kowtowing to special interest.

What are your thoughts on Ann Coulters tweets?

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Ann Coulter blasted (and backed) for anti-Semitic tweet ...

Ann Coulter rants about ‘Jews’ and Israel during GOP debate

Political commentator and author Ann Coulter arrives at the premiere of "Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!" at iPic Theaters on July 22.(Photo: Gregg DeGuire, WireImage)

The GOP debate on CNN was full of zingers,but some of the comments that caused the most controversy were from the sidelines.

Conservative syndicated columnist Ann Coulter posted a series of tweets during the GOP debate that many are calling 'anti-semitic." After several candidates addressed the need to strengthen the relationship between the U.S. and Israel, Coulter tweeted, 'How many (expletive) Jews do these people think there are in the United States?"

Coulter, who has over 600,000 followers on Twitter, said she was the responding to the plethora of GOP support for Israeli relations, during the second GOP debate held at the Ronald Reagan Library in California.

Her Twitter tirade began early in the debate and a string of tweets called out the candidates for what she later called "pandering" to Israel.

Coulter received a mixed response, with some offering support and others slamming the columnist as an "anti-semitic." Coulter tweeted in defense of the comments throughout the night.

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On Twitter Coulter responded to a tweet that said "shame on you," by explaining that she was calling out Republicans for their worn-out rhetoric. She tweeted, "All GOPs = prolife, pro-Reagan, pro-Israel. Pandering on all 3 tonight was EPIC."

On Twitter, the hashtag #IStandWithAnn was used by people voicing support for the columnist.

Others noted that the majority of those using the hashtag were voicing "anti-semitic" opinions.

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Ann Coulter rants about 'Jews' and Israel during GOP debate

Ann Coulter sparks outrage over anti-Semitic tweet – NY …

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Updated: Thursday, September 17, 2015, 11:46 AM

Ann Coulter is being blasted as a bigoted "idiot" after she shocked social media users late Wednesday with a tweet that many are calling anti-Semitic.

The rightwing pundit went on a Twitter tirade during the Republican presidential candidate debate, accusing participants of kowtowing to special interests when she wrote: "How many f---ing Jews do these people think there are in the United States?"

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The tweet, which was shared nearly 2,000 times, prompted criticism from hundreds of people, including actor and comedian Seth Rogen.

"You're a horrible f-----g idiot," Rogen wrote to the Coulter.

Coulter, 53, said her comment was "not about Jewish people."

The sharp-tongued commentator told her nearly 660,000 followers on Twitter that she was instead calling out the GOP "panderers" for repeatedly reiterating their support for Israel during the debate.

"I like the Jews, I like fetuses, I like Reagan. Didn't need to hear applause lines about them all night," she tweeted. "Cruz, Huckabee Rubio all mentioned ISRAEL in their response to: 'What will AMERICA look like after you are president.'"

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The candidates had just addressed the need to strengthen the relationship between the U.S. and Israel.

"Ugly & reprehensible anti-Semitic Tweet. @AnnCoulter, have you lost your mind?" author Joel Rosenberg wrote. "Such behavior is not conservative."

Coulter responded, saying she was a "huge Israel fan."

"I was attacking GOP for pandering on Israel (AND Reagan AND abortion)," she said.

Others didn't accept the explanation and called for her to apologize.

It's not the first time Coulter has drawn heat for her remarks.

In May, she said Americans should fear immigrants more than ISIS terrorists.

Coulter was unfazed by the onslaught of criticism she received in 2012 for calling President Obama a "retard."

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Ann Coulter & Tavis Smiley Have Heated Debate Over …

Donald Trump isn't aloneconservative commentator and author Ann Coulteris also speaking out against immigration, although she appeared to reach an impasse while arguing her case with PBS hostTavis Smiley.

After makingcontroversial comments about Mexican immigrants when he announced his presidential campaign earlier this year,Trumpvowed that if elected, he would installstricter limits on legal immigration andoverturn a law that grants citizenship toanyoneborn in the U.S. Coulter, a conservative commentator and New York Times best-selling author, is promoting hernew book titledAdios, America: The Left's Plan to Turn Our Country into a Third World Hellhole. So you can imagine her stance.

In her book and in an interview on Smiley's show this week,Coulterrepeated a known conservative argument that claims immigrants take low-level jobs away from non-immigrants, which Smiley called "absurd." Shetalked about how government resources are being spent on immigrants, who she says don't deserve it, and cited the hardships of the black community. Smiley, who is black, wasn't impressed.

READ:Ann Coulter says she has the "black perspective" on race relations

"Your argument suggests that if these other persons weren't here, that somehow we would be fairer and better by those who are already here," replied Smiley. "The evidence doesn't support that."

"I wish all of the resources that have been going to immigration had been going to the group we actually owe in this country," Coulter said. "The reason Americans are sensitive torace, the reason we have civil rights laws, the reason we have a 14th amendment is because of the black experience in America, it is because of slavery, it is because ofJim Crow and the idea that someone who arrived yesterday can just piggy-back onto that and claim the same rights...we're sensitive to this for one reason. But meanwhile, you know what, affirmative action, it goes to immigrants. Why is that? We don't owe you anything!"

READ: Kelly Osbourne to Donald Trump: If you kick all Latinos out of America, who is going to clean your toilets?

"I think a lot more effort would be spent on the black community and we'd be a lot farther along because we would only have this one thing to deal with," sheadded.

Smiley said the "problem of disrespecting black fellow citizens already existed" "long before we had a basic immigration problem" and cited how black Americans "are still getting shot in the streets by white cops all the time."

"And by Mexicans," Coulter added, citing Mexicanandblack gang violence in parts of Los Angeles.

"The black and brown issue is real, no doubt about that," Smiley said. "But when you consider...how closely black and brown live in certain parts of this city and in this state and for that matter, New York City, those incidents pale in comparison again the peace thatexists every day among neighbors who live in those tight environments."

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