With half his
brain tied behind his back
Ann Coulter (back to
web version) | Send
October 16, 2003
So liberals have finally found a drug addict they don't like. And unlike the
Lackawanna Six – those high-spirited young lads innocently seeking adventure in
an al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan – liberals could find no excuses for
Rush Limbaugh.
After years of the mainstream media assuring us that Rush was a has-been, a
nobody, yesterday's news – the Rush painkiller story was front-page news last
week. (Would anyone care if Howell Raines committed murder?) The airwaves and
print media were on red alert with Rush's admission that, after an unsuccessful
spinal operation a few years ago, he became addicted to powerful prescription
painkillers.
Rush Limbaugh's misfortune is apparently a bigger story than his nearly $300
million radio contract signed two years ago. That was the biggest radio contract
in broadcasting history. Yet there are only 12 documents on LexisNexis that
reported it. The New York Times didn't take notice of Rush's $300 million radio
contract, but a few weeks later, put Bill Clinton's comparatively measly $10
million book contract on its front page. Meanwhile, in the past week alone,
LexisNexis has accumulated more than 50 documents with the words "Rush Limbaugh
and hypocrisy." That should make up for the 12 documents on his $300 million
radio contract.
The reason any conservative's failing is always major news is that it allows
liberals to engage in their very favorite taunt: Hypocrisy! Hypocrisy is the
only sin that really inflames them. Inasmuch as liberals have no morals, they
can sit back and criticize other people for failing to meet the standards that
liberals simply renounce. It's an intriguing strategy. By openly admitting to
being philanderers, draft dodgers, liars, weasels and cowards, liberals avoid
ever being hypocrites.
At least Rush wasn't walking into church carrying a 10-pound Bible before
rushing back to the Oval Office for sodomy with Monica Lewinsky. He wasn't
enforcing absurd sexual harassment guidelines while dropping his pants in front
of a half-dozen subordinates. (Evidently, Clinton wasn't a hypocrite because no
one was supposed to take seriously the notion that he respected women or
believed in God.)
Rush has hardly been the anti-drug crusader liberals suggest. Indeed, Rush
hasn't had much to say about drugs at all since that spinal operation. The Rush
Limbaugh quote that has been endlessly recited in the last week to prove Rush's
rank "hypocrisy" is this, made eight years ago: "Drug use, some might say, is
destroying this country. And we have laws against selling drugs, pushing drugs,
using drugs, importing drugs. ... And so if people are violating the law by
doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they
ought to be sent up."
What precisely are liberals proposing that Rush should have said to avoid
their indignant squeals of "hypocrisy"? Announce his support for the wide and
legal availability of a prescription painkiller that may have caused him to go
deaf and nearly ruined his career and wrecked his life? I believe that would
have been both evil and hypocritical.
Or is it simply that Rush should not have become addicted to painkillers in
the first place? Well, no, I suppose not. You've caught us: Rush has a flaw. And
yet, the wily hypocrite does not support flaws!
When a conservative can be the biggest thing in talk radio, earning $30
million a year and attracting 20 million devoted listeners every week – all
while addicted to drugs – I'll admit liberals have reason to believe that
conservatives are some sort of super-race, incorruptible by original sin. But
the only perfect man hasn't walked the Earth for 2,000 years. In liberals'
worldview, any conservative who is not Jesus Christ is ipso facto a "hypocrite"
for not publicly embracing dissolute behavior the way liberals do.
In fact, Rush's behavior was not all that dissolute. There is a fundamental
difference between taking any drug – legal, illegal, prescription, protected by
the 21st Amendment or banned by Michael Bloomberg – for kicks and taking a
painkiller for pain.
There is a difference morally and a difference legally. While slamming Rush,
Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz recently told Wolf Blitzer, "Generally,
people who illegally buy prescription drugs are not prosecuted, whereas people
who illegally buy cocaine and heroin are prosecuted." What would the point be?
Just say no to back surgery?
I haven't checked with any Harvard Law professors, but I'm pretty sure that,
generally, adulterous drunks who drive off bridges and kill girls are
prosecuted. Ah, but Teddy Kennedy supports adultery and public drunkenness – so
at least you can't call him a hypocrite! That must provide great consolation to
Mary Jo Kopechne's parents.
I have a rule about not feeling sorry for people worth $300 million, but I'm
feeling sentimental. Evan Thomas wrote a cover story on Rush for Newsweek this
week that was so vicious it read like conservative satire. Thomas called Rush a
"schlub," "socially ill at ease," an Elmer Gantry, an actor whose "act has won
over, or fooled, a lot of people." He compared Rush to the phony TV evangelist
Jim Bakker and recommended that Rush start to "make a virtue out of honesty."
(Liberals can lie under oath in legal proceedings and it's a "personal matter."
Conservatives must scream their every failing from the rooftops or they are
"liars.")
As is standard procedure for profiles of conservatives, Newsweek gathered
quotes on Rush from liberals, ex-wives and dumped dates. Covering himself,
Thomas ruefully remarked that "it's hard to find many people who really know
him." Well, there was me, Evan! But I guess Newsweek didn't have room for the
quotes I promptly sent back to the Newsweek researchers. I could have even
corrected Newsweek's absurd account of how Rush met his current wife. (It's kind
of cute, too: She was a fan who began arguing with him about something he said
on air.)
Thomas also made the astute observation that "Rush Limbaugh has always had
far more followers than friends." Needless to say, this floored those of us who
were shocked to discover that Rush does not have 20 million friends.
So the guy I really feel sorry for is Evan Thomas. How would little Evan fare
in any competitive media? Any followers? Any fans? Any readers at all? And he's
not even addicted to painkillers! This week, Rush proved his motto: He really
can beat liberals with half his brain tied behind his back.
Ann Coulter is host of AnnCoulter.org, a TownHall.com member group.
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