Did Ann Coulter Say "Bag it?"
By J. Matt Barber (03/08/07)
Lefty word-watchdogs and their allies in the mainstream media have hurt feelings ... again. As per usual, liberals are frothing at the mouth in a fit of very selective, self-righteous indignation over provocative comments made by Ann Coulter and are hunting the conservative firebrand with pitchforks, torches and rope in hand.
While addressing an audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) last Friday, Coulter joked in her trademark fashion that, âI was going to have a few comments on the other Democratic presidential candidate, John Edwards, but it turns out you have to go into rehab if you use the word âfaggot,â so I â so kind of an impasse, canât really talk about Edwards.â
And the proverbial fan was thusly and most directly hit.
Admittedly, Coulter employed unusually abrasive and bombastic language â even for her â to make a point; but ironically, the reaction sheâs getting from the left (and from some on the right) would seem to quite precisely demonstrate the apparent thrust of her prickly comments. Perhaps that was part of her intention.
Never mind that those in the âgay communityâ throw the word âfaggotâ around as a term of endearment for one another as frequently as Hillary Clinton changes her accent and in much the same manner as black âgangsta-rappersâ break out the âN-word.â And never mind that the left constantly redefines that which is or is not a âpermissibleâ moniker for those engaged in the homosexual lifestyle (one day âqueerâ is bad, and the next day âqueerâ is good. In fact, the latest from the PC police is that itâs now âhatefulâ to call a homosexual a âhomosexualâ â go-figure. They prefer that innocuous, cutsie and happy-go-fluffy little term âgayâ if you please.)
Itâs the left defining the terms, mind you. And itâs the left that further identifies who has permission to use those terms. Therefore, itâs only reasonable for them to apply that famous âprogressiveâ double standard to Coulter. After all, she is a âhatefulâ conservative.
Now, donât misunderstand; Coulterâs comments lacked civility to be sure and were entirely inappropriate. Some compare her use of the word âfaggotâ to use of the âN-word.â
However, it would seem that African-Americans, who have truly experienced grave and systematic injustice over the years while struggling to obtain certain civil rights to which they were denied, might rightfully be offended by such a spurious comparison.
Most African-Americans are a little more than annoyed by the fact that the militant homosexual lobby has so artfully hijacked the rhetoric of genuine civil rights. That rhetoric has been cynically misapplied to the homosexual agenda, which includes mandated moral relativism, social androgyny and not just full acceptance, but celebration of a pleasure-based, sexually deviant lifestyle.
Equating the black communityâs struggle for civil rights to homosexual activistsâ struggle for special rights is a disingenuous parallel. By comparison, homosexuality is rooted in disordered, unhealthy and changeable behaviors that have â prior to the onset of social post-modernism â been considered both immoral and repulsive. Being black is rooted in, well, being black.
Rather than equating the word âfaggotâ to the âN-word,â perhaps a more accurate correlation lies between the word âfaggotâ and other behaviorally derived derogatory terms such as âslutâ or âwhore.â In referencing an adulterer as a âslutâ or a âwhoreâ for that personâs lifestyle choices, one voices disagreement with certain behaviors (infidelity or promiscuity) historically frowned upon by society.
But in either case, use of such disparaging words is coarse, unnecessary and counterproductive. One can express legitimate disagreement with lifestyle choices, which run counter to traditional norms and mores of society, without reverting to the use of such nasty language.
As for Coulterâs specific comments, she apparently intended a dual connotation. She seemed to either suggest that Edwards is in fact a homosexual (not likely) or that he is somewhat effeminate and/or âwimpyâ in terms of his positions on public policy issues â that he politically embodies certain stereotypes associated with homosexuality (probably more likely).
Additionally, Coulter was making a clear reference to the recent uproar which ultimately resulted in Greyâs Anatomy star Isaiah Washington giving into PC pressure to check into âhomophobia rehabâ after calling his homosexual co-star T.R. Knight a âfaggot.â
But to hear the left talk about it, youâd think Coulter had gone so far as to pine for the assassination of the Vice President of United States or something (and, of course, thatâs exactly what liberal activist Bill Maher actually did on the same day Coulter made her unfortunate comments. And it should come as little surprise that weâve heard only the deafening and ever-so-telling clamor of silence from the left on that one. Gotta love that double standard!)
So, while making her inflammatory comments, perhaps Coulter â in her own less than glorious way â intended not only to question John Edwardsâ political machismo but to suggest that Americaâs self-appointed thought police stop trying to force those who dare to violate their politically correct word-code into Orwellian, re-education ârehabâ camps. When Coulter spoke last Friday, everyone heard the word âfaggot.â But if you take her words â abrasive as they were â in their full context, she was apparently just telling the left to back off and âbag it.â
Matt Barber is one of the "like-minded men" with Concerned Women for America. He is an attorney concentrating in constitutional law and serves as CWA's policy director for cultural issues. http://cwfa.org/
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