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Saturday, August 21, 2010

Glenn Beck and Ann Coulter: the Credibility Gap


A true conservative wants to "conserve" what's good from the past and preserve it for future generations. The word derives from the Latin conservare meaning to guard, to preserve, to cherich, to treasure, to save. And yet two celebrity conservatives, Glenn Beck and Ann Coulter, recently came out legitimizing homosexuality. It puts their "conservative" credentials in serious jeopardy.

Frankly, I was shocked when Glenn Beck decided that the institution of marriage, which is almost as old as human civilization itself, just isn't worth defending. Beck even laughed when questioned about it on the O'Reilly factor. He responded to Bill O'Reilly's question, "Do you believe gay marriage is a threat to the country in any way?" saying, "A threat to the country? No I don't." Then he added with sarcasm, "Will the gays come and get us?" and quoted Thomas Jefferson, "If it neither breaks my leg nor picks my pocket, what difference is it to me?"

Interesting response. It could equally justify indifference toward slavery or abortion or, for that matter, rape or spouse abuse, or pornography or any number of other moral issues. Hey, whatever floats your boat! As long as it doesn't affect me personally, "what difference is it to me?"

The Ann Coulter controversy arose when she decided to keynote the HOMOCON conference in September sponsored by GoProud, a self-described group of conservative gays. It caused World Net Daily (WND) to disinvite Coulter as the keynoter for their Take Back America National Conference next month. Ann went ballistic calling Joseph Farah, head of WND, "a swine" and "a publicity whore" and labeled WND "fake Christians" only interested in driving folks to their website and making money. This from a woman who said of her speech for GoProud, "They hired me to give a speech, so I’m giving a speech. I do it all the time. I speak to a lot of groups and do not endorse them. Giving a speech is not an endorsement of every position held by the people I’m speaking to.”

So who exactly is the "whore" who will do her thing for anyone who comes up with the money even if it lends legitimacy to their evil agenda? She disingenuously compared her decision to speaking on liberal college campuses, a totally different situation. I find it hard to believe she really thinks they are the same thing, but it makes a good sound bite.

Farah responded to Coulter's sophistry saying, "GOProud is about infiltration of the conservative movement and dividing it from within with twisted and dangerous ideas way out of the mainstream of American public opinion. Ann Coulter is, I'm afraid, validating this effort for money. I support her speaking to people with whom she disagrees on college campuses. That's a good idea. I do it, too. But if you see the way GOProud is exploiting its coup in getting Ann Coulter to speak to its HOMOCON event, you begin to understand what a mistake this is for a conservative icon like Coulter."

Farah is right and Ann Coulter's attack on him shows exactly how prideful this woman is. Farah seems to me to be a consistently conscientious man who sees the battle for the culture much more clearly than Ann Coulter does. I've read Coulter's books and even given them as gifts, but I've always been uncomfortable with her crass rudeness and immodest clothing as well as her glibness. But for her to call her critics "fake Christians" for objecting to her legitimizing homosexuality is staggering. The homosexual movement is chortling over their coup in getting an icon of conservatism to give them credibility. But it totally undermines Ann Coulter's.

In view of what Coulter thinks of people like me, I'll never buy another of her books. She's made it clear that those of us who oppose legitimizing the gay lifestyle are "fake Christians." Although what exactly makes her a Christian, I'm not sure. After all she herself says her motivator is money. And the Bible says you can't serve both God and Money. So who is her god? The Bible also condemns homosexual activity in no uncertain terms as a sin that cries to heaven for vengeance. But Ann has decided that lending her name to homosexual "conservatives" (exactly what are they conserving?) is the way to go. You pays the money, you gets the girl. Sounds a lot like the same deal that goes down in the red light district every night.

I'm disappointed in Glenn Beck and Ann Coulter, but not really surprised. After all, the homosexual movement has a lot of money and influence and you pay a big price for bucking them. So why not fudge a little by cosying up to the fiscal conservatives in the gay movement? Just close your eyes to the fact that they also promote things like gay marriage, gay adoption, lowering the age of consent, undermining the military, and special rights for homosexuals paid for by American families.

Beck and Coulter apparently think the culture war is a game. They've created a credibility gap for themselves. Some things can only be conserved by consistently fighting for the truth. The Bible calls us to "do all that your duty requires and hold your ground." Those who claim to be Christians have a particular obligation to carry out that Biblical imperative. And holding ground on the essential laws of God, like the reality that marriage is a God-given institution between one man and one woman, is primary. Glenn Beck and Ann Coulter have freely given up ground to the enemy. When soldiers do that, it's treason. Is it any less a treason when the battle is spiritual?

6 comments:

  1. "crass rudeness and immodest clothing as well as her glibness"

    Well said; I've always wanted to like the conservative Ann Coulter but sensed something and couldn't put my finger on it. I have never bought or read one of her books and I thank you for clarifying my unease.

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  2. An excellent commentary on how celebrities masquerading as conservatives sell out...

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  3. I'm more concerned with Ann Coulter being willing to keynote an explicitly gay event than with Glenn Beck who's not a Catholic seeing "gay marriage" as no big deal. After all, much of Christianity doesn't seem to see marriage as any big deal. The divorce rate even among Catholics testifies to that.

    But Coulter knows we're in a culture war. She is a very bright lady although a lady of my acquaintance wants to know why she is not married and has no children? Good question?

    I'm currently on WND's side on this brouhaha and I think Ann has handled it badly. Maybe she'll think better of it. I think it is intemperate to use words like "whore" to describe what is going on.

    Secular society is not the same as the Catholic Church and you have to cut non-co-religionists some slack to be different, even to extend a palm leaf to repugnant forces such as the gay movement.

    But we should also put the gays in perspective. They are sinners as are we all. Their sin seems to me to be less than adultery, so perhaps before taking the plank out of their eye we might look at society at large and consider how wicked it has become and degraded and decadent.

    Stepping back from the fray I'm inclined to see this as a moment which holds out the prospect for clarification. So perhaps we should become more analytical than condemnatory?

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  4. I agree with you, Ray, with regard to Beck and Coulter, but I disagree about adultery. Yes, it's a serious sin, but sodomy is one of the four sins that cry to heaven for vengeance. (The others being, murder of the innocent,oppressing widows and orphans, and cheating the laborer of his just due.) We pretty much are batting 100 in this country on the deserving vengeance scale.

    I don't want to minimize adultery, but it does not attack the fabric of a culture to the same degree that the disordered and depraved acts of the sodomite.

    I am all for reaching out to sinners, but not in a way that legitimizes their sin. The only way Coulter should be speaking to this group is if she confronts them lovingly on their immoral lifestyle. If she doesn't do that, her appearance is ear-tickling.

    Frankly, I think its going to be a love fest which will totally undermine her credibility and conservativism. If all conservatives are interested in conserving is free enterprise capitalism, they're useless.

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  5. I'm talking about the sin and not the organized sinfulness when I rank gay behavior as less grievous than adultery. When it gets organized and is offered as a lifestyle to be accepted and promoted I think that's really a different and compounded sin.

    As for credibility, I agree. I think this kind of thoughtless action will tend to destroy their ability to make a moral statement.

    Free enterprise will not save us from immorality. It is a morally neutral way of organizing trade and economic activity, not a moral issue at all except insofar as some of the alternatives are immoral because they take away people's rights to the fruit of their own labor.

    We need some strong voices that speak from a sound moral foundation and are not afraid to make that clear. But to our secular society I think it has to be a moral foundation built on sound philosophical principles of objective natural law morality and not on specific religious or revelation based principles.

    There's nothing wrong with bringing revelation into it but we need a foundation that is rational that the secularists can't evade.

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