Godless: The Church of Liberalism
by Ann Coulter
(Crown Forum, 310 pages, $27.95)
What’s most amazing about Ann Coulter’s book, Godless: The
Church of Liberalism, is the amount of intellectual meat she
packs into 281 breezy, barb-filled pages. Among the topics the
blonde bomb-thrower discusses in some depth are the following:
liberal jurisprudence, privacy rights and abortion, Joe Wilson’s
modest career and inflated ego, and the solid record of failure in
American public schools. The topics of Intelligent Design and
Darwinism, to which the last eighty pages of text are devoted, are
analyzed in even greater detail.
As one would expect from an author with a legal background,
Supreme Court cases are high on Coulter’s hit-list — especially
the idea of a “living Constitution.” Citing various cases-in-point,
Coulter shows that this popular doctrine is nothing more than a
paralegal pretext for making the Constitution say whatever liberal
judges want it to say. Though such a philosophy grants to the
nation’s founding document all the integrity of a bound and gagged
assault victim, it at least has the virtue of mirroring liberals’
self-referential view of morality.
Another dogma that Coulter skewers is the liberal commandment,
“Thou Shalt Not Punish the Perp.” This counterintuitive principle
not only rejects the link between incarceration and lower crime
rates, it also permits benevolent judges (like Clinton federal
court nominee Frederica Massiah-Jackson) to shorten the sentence of
child rapists so that other innocent children can pay the price for
society’s sins.
An unexpected bonus in this chapter is the author’s extended
sidebar on Upton Sinclair, the muckraking author of
Boston, who, as his own correspondence shows, knew Sacco
and Vanzetti were guilty but chose, for ideological and financial
reasons, to portray them as innocent victims. In a related chapter,
“The Martyr: Willie Horton,” Coulter provides detailed information
about Horton’s crimes, Michael Dukakis’ furlough program, and the
precise nature of the Horton ads aired in the 1988 presidential
campaign
CONTINUING THE RELIGIOUS IMAGERY, Coulter asserts in chapter five
that abortion is the “holiest sacrament” of the “church of
liberalism.” For women this sacrament secures their “right to have
sex with men they don’t want to have children with.” A corollary of
this less-than-exalted principle is the right to suck the brains
out of partially born infants. How far liberal politicians
will go to safeguard this sacrament whose name must not be spoken
(euphemisms are “choice,” “reproductive freedom,” and “family
planning”) is shown by an amendment offered by Senator Chuck
Schumer that would exclude anti-abortion protestors from bankruptcy
protection. How low these same pols will go is illustrated
by the character assassination of Judge Charles Pickering — a man
honored by the brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers
but slimed by liberals at his confirmation hearing as racially
insensitive. Coulter notes that the unspoken reason for this
“Borking” of Pickering was the judge’s prior criticism of Roe
v. Wade.
The single chapter that Coulter’s critics have homed in on is
the one that exposes the liberal “Doctrine of Infallibility.” This
religiously resonant phrase applies to individuals who promote the
left’s partisan agenda while immunizing themselves from criticism
by touting their victim-status. In addition to the 9/11 “Jersey
Girls,” Coulter identifies Joe Wilson, Cindy Sheehan, Max Cleland,
and John Murtha as persons who possess, at least by Maureen Dowd’s
lights, “absolute moral authority.” Curiously, this exalted status
isn’t accorded victims who don’t push liberal agendas. Perhaps the
fact that Republican veterans outnumber their Democrat counterparts
in Congress, 87 to 62, has something to do with this
inconsistency.
Coulter’s next chapter, “The Liberal Priesthood: Spare the Rod,
Spoil the Teacher,” focuses on the partisanship, compensation, and
incompetence level of American teachers. A crucial statistic in
these pages concerns the “correlation [that exists] between poor
student achievement and time spent in U.S. public schools.” In this
regard, comments by Thomas Sowell and Al Shanker stand out. Sowell
notes that college students with low SAT and ACT scores are more
likely to major in education and that “teachers who have the lowest
scores are the most likely to remain in the profession.” From a
different perspective, the late president of the American
Federation of Teachers stated, with refreshing bluntness, “When
school children start paying union dues, that’s when I’ll start
representing the interests of school children.” The words of John
Dewey, a founder of America’s public education system, also fit
nicely into Coulter’s state-of-the-classroom address: “You can’t
make Socialists out of individualists — children who know how to
think for themselves spoil the harmony of the collective society
which is coming, where everyone is interdependent.” Coulter
responds, “You also can’t make socialists out of people who can
read, which is probably why Democrats think the public schools have
nearly achieved Aristotelian perfection.”
The last third of Godless focuses on matters
scientific. Chapter seven, “The Left’s War on Science,” serves as
an appetizer for Coulter’s evolutionary piece de resistance. Prior
to that main course, Coulter provides a litany of examples that
illustrate the left’s contempt for scientific data that doesn’t
comport with its worldview. Exhibits include the mendacious
marketing of AIDS as an equal opportunity disease, the hysterical
use of anecdotal evidence to ban silicon breast implants, and the
firestorm arising from Lawrence Summers’s heretical speculation
about male and female brain differences.
THE REMAINING CHAPTERS OF GODLESS all deal with Darwinism.
Nowhere else can one find a tart-tongued compendium of information
that not only presents a major argument for Intelligent Design but
also exposes the blatant dishonesty of “Darwiniacs” who continue to
employ evidence (such as the Miller-Urey experiment, Ernst
Haeckel’s embryo drawings, and the famous peppered moth experiment)
that they know is outdated or fraudulent.
Within this bracing analysis, Coulter employs the observations
of such biological and philosophical heavyweights as Stephen Gould,
Richard Dawkins, Michael Behe, and Karl Popper. The price of the
whole book is worth the information contained in these chapters
about the statistical improbability of random evolution, the
embarrassing absence of “transitional” fossils, and the
inquisitorial attitude that prevails among many scientists (and
most liberals) when discussing these matters. Unlike biologist
Richard Lewontin, who candidly admits that a prior commitment to
materialism informs his allegiance to evolution, most of his
colleagues (and certainly most of the liberal scribblers Coulter
sets on the road to extinction) won’t concede that Darwinism is a
corollary, rather than a premise, of their godlessness.
Coulter’s final chapter serves as a thought-provoking addendum
to her searing cross-examination of evolution’s star witnesses.
“The Aped Crusader” displays the devastating social consequences
that have thus far attended Darwinism. From German and American
eugenicists (including Planned Parenthood’s Margaret Sanger), to
Aryan racists, to the infanticidal musings of Princeton’s Peter
Singer, Darwinian evolution boasts a political and philosophical
heritage that could only be envied by the likes of Charles Manson.
Yet it is a history ignored by liberals for whom Darwin’s theory
provides what they want above all else — a creation myth that
sanctifies their sexual urges, sanctions abortion, and disposes of
God.
Coulter’s book is clearly not a systematic argument for the idea
that liberalism is a godless religion. Indeed, prior to the
material on evolution, the concept is treated more as a clever
theme for chapter headings than as a serious intellectual
proposition. In those final chapters, however, Coulter manages to
present a cogent, sustained argument that actually begins to link
modern liberalism (or more specifically, leftism) to an atheistic
perspective. At the very least Coulter succeeds in raising an
important issue — namely, that American courts currently ignore
the religious or quasi-religious character of a philosophy that
pervades public institutions and is propagated with public funds.
This fact, if honestly recognized, would render contemporary
church-state jurisprudence untenable. A court taking these
arguments seriously would have to recognize that all philosophies,
including “liberalism,” swim in the same intellectual current as
religion.
THUS FAR, THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA have focused almost all their
attention on Coulter’s take-no-prisoners rhetorical style — and
particularly on the “heartless” remarks about those 9/11 widows who
seem to be “enjoying their husbands’ deaths so much.” Clearly,
diplomatic language is not Coulter’s forte, as one would also
gather from this representative zinger: “I don’t particularly care
if liberals believe in God. In fact, I would be crestfallen to
discover any liberals in heaven.”
What undercuts the liberals’ case against Coulter on this score,
however, is their own (not always tacit) endorsement of vile
epithets that are regularly directed against President Bush and his
supporters by the likes of Cindy Sheehan, Michael Moore, and a
gaggle of celebrity politicos. Coulter employs the same linguistic
standard against liberals (with a touch of humor) that they
regularly use (with somber faces and dogmatic conviction) when they
accuse conservatives of being racist homophobes who gladly send
youngsters to war under false pretences to line the pockets of
Halliburton executives. Hate-speech of this stripe is old-hat for
leftists.
Until Air America, Helen Thomas, and most Democrat
constituencies alter their rhetoric, I see no reason for
conservatives to denounce Coulter for using, more truthfully, the
same harsh language that leftists have employed, with no regard for
accuracy, since the time of Lenin. When liberals denounce communist
tyrants as fervently as they do real Nazis, then it will be time
for Coulter to cool the rhetoric. Until that time her “verbal
reprisals” serve a useful function within an intellectual
marketplace that resembles a commodities pit more than a debating
society.
Richard Kirk is a freelance writer who lives in
Oceanside, California. He is a regular columnist for San
Diego’s North County Times. His book reviews have also
appeared in the American Enterprise Magazine, First
Things, and Touchstone.