Ann Coulter

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The year of the sucker punch The year of the sucker punch
Bush's reelection was a body blow to liberals, but right-wingers hit below the belt from the start. From O'Reilly to Limbaugh to Lott, a look at 2004's lowlights from the right.
Conservative calendar girls Conservative calendar girls
We've got the perfect holiday gift idea for all the Condi-worshiping, feminist-hating, gun-toting females on your list!
"All my heroes were dope fiends" "All my heroes were dope fiends"
Jerry Stahl, the cult author of "Permanent Midnight" and "I, Fatty," faces sudden respectability, and ponders the drug rumors swirling around Ann Coulter and George W. Bush.
The race to the bottom The race to the bottom
According to the Times' ombudsman, hateful rhetoric from the left this political season is more "vile" than from the right. Maybe that's true of his in box -- but it isn't of America at large.
Man bites lap dogs! Man bites lap dogs!
Vanity Fair critic and new blogger James Wolcott sinks his fangs into the plush hindquarters of Fox, CNN and the media elite.
USA Today kills ludicrous Ann Coulter story!
But why did it hire the unhinged buffoon to cover Boston in the first place?
Citizen Flynt Citizen Flynt
The hustler's new book accuses the president of paying for an illegal abortion, the press of lying down on the job and Ann Coulter of being a "fag hag."
Right Hook Right Hook
Steyn and Noonan celebrate Reagan as a man who saw the world more clearly than the political elite; Coulter trashes Gore as a fat white guy with no political rhythm. Plus: Bradbury rips Michael Moore.
Right Hook Right Hook
Al Gore gives a fiery speech and conservatives brand him "insane" -- again. Plus: Coulter defends Rush ... against O'Reilly!
The mighty windbags The mighty windbags
Thirty years ago, conservatives embarked on a plan to subvert journalism and skew America to the right. They succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.
Shooting the messenger
Conservatives should hail former counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke, but instead they're smearing him.
Joe Conason Joe Conason
Even worse than Ann Coulter's smearing of decorated war veteran Max Cleland last week are the fawning right-wingers now trumpeting her lies.
Right Hook Right Hook
Limbaugh says Americans don't care about Bush's National Guard problem because they love him; Lowry says Kerry smeared Vietnam vets, Coulter shrieks that he stalks lonely heiresses. Plus: Dissenting thoughts on same-sex marriage.
Right Hook Right Hook
David Frum says Bush "surrendered to the radicals" by hiding behind security in London; Gen. Franks predicts another terror attack could dissolve U.S. Constitution; Coulter bashes "pandering" Dems who just discovered their Jewishness.
Right Hook Right Hook
Coulter says Bush didn't need an Iraq plan; O'Reilly blasts the liberal Reagan trashers at CBS; the Weekly Standard gloats at the impotent rage of the "urban and urbane, with-it, refined" Bush haters.
Letter to a pregnant friend Letter to a pregnant friend
What advice do I have for new parents? Assemble a pit crew, don't expect to take showers, and beware of noxious orange poop.
Right Hook Right Hook
New York Post's Ralph Peters tags Wesley Clark a softy on terror, while Coulter sees a devious Hillary plot.
Joe Conason's Journal Joe Conason's Journal
More notes from a media book tour: What it's like to be ducked by Ann Coulter and avoided by Fox.
Limousine liberals and corporate-jet conservatives Limousine liberals and corporate-jet conservatives
George W. Bush, Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter bash elitist lefties, but their faux populism masks a slavish devotion to the interests and indulgences of the wealthy. Part 2 of "Big Lies."
Big lies Big lies
How the right-wing propaganda machine demonizes liberals and distorts the common-sense politics of America: First in a week of excerpts from Joe Conason's new book.
The right wing's summer of hate The right wing's summer of hate
Sure, Michael Savage lost his MSNBC show for going too far, but Limbaugh, O'Reilly and Coulter show bullying and humiliation are still a big business.
Ann Coulter, woman Ann Coulter, woman
The right's she-devil talks about why she loves the Grateful Dead, what Tolstoy and Dostoevsky taught her about life, and how she meets men.
Letters
Readers respond to Joe Conason's review of "Treason" by Ann Coulter.
Has she no shame? Has she no shame?
Of course not, and now we know why: In her new book "Treason," Ann Coulter reveals that her role model is Joe McCarthy. And her grasp of facts is even worse than her judgment.
The Fix The Fix
Students say Bush not inspirational, McCartney kids say stepmom not their cup of tea, and Mariah Carey says golf should be sexy! Plus: Hot summer recipes from the New Yorker.
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