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C.R. Mudgeon Answers Ann Coulter, Author of
"How To Talk To A Liberal (If You Must)"
What Coulter
and Rush Don't Want Americans To Know About Liberals
Ann Coulter begins with this sentence,
"Historically, the best way to convert liberals is to have them
move out of their parent's home, get a job, and start paying
taxes."
Coulter uses the word "historically," but it's clear that
she needs a history lesson about who liberals really are and
what they have done.
Coulter, like Rush
Limbaugh and other far-right preachers, tear into liberals as if they are a
foreign plague.
When they can't win
an argument on the merits of their argument, they resort to
labeling. And when desperate, they roll out the really big weapon--the
dreaded L word.
Let's see just how
dangerous liberals are.
For starters, liberals
fought for America's independence, freed the slaves, and gave
women the right to vote.
The Mt. Rushmore Presidents--Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Roosevelt--were
each considered radical liberals in their day.
I'm not sure Coulter
would recognize a true liberal. If she doesn't know
who liberals are, how could she possibly know what to say to
them, or teach anyone else how to talk to them?
If you really want to
talk to a liberal, and not a caricature of one, there's no
better way to begin than to learn who they are and what liberals
have done for America--historically
Below are major
American achievements that liberals fought for, and conservatives
opposed:
- Independence from
Great Britain. Conservatives, who then were called
Tories, were against the War of Independence.
- Separation of
church and state. This great achievement was eventually
embodied in the First Amendment of the Constitution's Bill of
Rights. It was opposed by conservatives who wanted to
preserve the special status of established churches in
Virginia (the Episcopal Church) and Massachusetts (the
Congregational Church).
- Freedom of the
press. Conservatives distrusted a free press.
This provision, which was fought for by liberals, also made its way
into the Constitution's Bill of Rights.
- The Abolition of
Slavery. At the outset of the Civil War, abolitionists
were regarded by conservatives as dangerous extremists.
Most were persecuted and many were killed. Some
religious denominations split over the issue.
Today's Southern Baptist Convention owes its origin to
conservative Southern ministers who believed that the Bible
approves of slavery. The Republican Party--which for
decades was run by liberals--was formed to prevent the spread of
slavery into the western territories and states.
- The Pure Food and
Drug Act. A liberal extremist by the name of Upton
Sinclair wrote a book called The Jungle which described
slaughterhouse practices so vividly that a reluctant,
conservative Congress was shamed into creating a federal
agency with the responsibility to test all foods
and drugs destined for human consumption.
- Women's Suffrage.
Generations of women lectured, wrote, lobbied, marched, and
practiced civil disobedience in order to get the right to
vote. They were called liberal extremists, and worse.
Only a few early liberals lived to see final victory in 1920.
- Equal Rights For
Women. The Equal Rights Amendment, which has been
introduced in every session of Congress since 1923, was passed
by Congress in 1972 but failed to be ratified by the necessary
number of states. Conservatives successfully kept it
from becoming law. The dangerous wording of the Amendment is
as follows: "Equality of Rights under the law shall not be
denied or abridged by the United States or any state on
account of sex."
- Birth Control.
In the 1870s conservatives in Congress passed the Comstock Law
which made it illegal to disseminate information about birth
control practices. In 1938, in a case involving liberal
extremist Margaret Sanger, Justice August Hand lifted the
federal ban on birth control.
- Child Labor.
Liberal extremists called "muckrakers" exposed horrible abuses
of hundreds of thousands of child laborers. In 1916 Woodrow
Wilson pushed the Keating-Owen Act through Congress which
banned articles made by children from interstate commerce.
The Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional. Not until
the Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938 did any meaningful child
labor legislation succeed.
- The Repeal of
Prohibition The 18th Amendment, which prohibited the
sale and use of alcoholic
beverages, was opposed by liberals. It was repealed in 1933.
- Social Security.
Before FDR introduced Social Security in 1934, most elderly
Americans lived in poverty, yet it was fought by conservatives
as a socialistic scheme. Without it today, most elderly
Americans would still live in poverty.
- The Tennessee
Valley Authority. This creation of the Roosevelt era
brought cheap electric power to rural areas of the
economically devastated Depression-era South. Private
firms had passed on doing it themselves because it was too big
and not lucrative enough, but TVA was branded as Communistic.
- The United
Nations. The UN is a favorite whipping boy of
conservatives. Conservatives in another generation
killed the League of Nations, which if properly implemented,
might have prevented WWII. Undoubtedly the UN is flawed
and often ineffectual, but the world would be a more dangerous
place if there were no forum for all the nations of earth,
rich and poor, dangerous and peaceful, to
talk, talk, talk before they fight, fight, fight.
- Desegregation of
the America's armed forces. President Harry S. Truman, by
executive order, ended Jim Crow practices in the U.S.
military. His civil rights initiatives split the
Democratic Party. Strom Thurmond, a staunch Southern
conservative who later became a Republican Senator from South Carolina, ran
for President as a Dixicrat, and carried four Southern states.
- Civil Rights.
Over the fierce opposition of conservatives, the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 was passed which made racial discrimination in
public places such as restaurants, hotels, and theaters
illegal, and guaranteed voting rights. President Lyndon
Johnson, who had supported segregation while he was a Texas
Senator, was branded as a traitor by conservatives.
- The Environmental
Movement. John Muir, Benjamin Harrison, and Teddy Roosevelt led in the
creation of national parks and the preservation of wilderness
areas over the opposition of conservative forces led by mining
and timber
companies and developers.
To be fair, it is true
that conservatives have
founded and generously supported hospitals, orphanages, museums,
schools and colleges, historic preservation, and a wide range of
philanthropies. They have created parks and
beautified cities.
But conservatives have
been on the wrong side of shockingly long list of major
developments that have made American a better place to live--as
the above list should make clear. (There are
hundreds more that can be added.)
This is because, historically,
conservatives generally have been naysayers, defenders of the
status quo.
Sometimes conservatives
do get it right. But that shouldn't surprise anyone.
If you say No to everything, you're bound to be right every once
in a while.
The next time you hear
someone saying that liberals are a threat to America, tell them
to take a history lesson.
Harry Truman used to
say, "The only new thing in the world is the history you don't
know."
Order your copy of
White Papers On American Society: What Matters Most To
Americans
Who is C.R.
Mudgeon?
C.R. Mudgeon
is a reclusive free-lance writer and folk
philosopher who resides in a Frank Lloyd Wright house
perched on the edge of a high cliff in the beautiful
Perspicacity Mountains. Andrew, who's
in his early 60s, has a great view of the Plains of
Conformity, which he sometimes visits. On clear days
Andrew claims he can see the Ocean of Tranquility.
He is known in his community as a liberal and a
non-conformist. Some call him a crank.
When the spirit moves him, Andrew submits articles to
www.theamericans.us
which we usually publish. Andrew's conservative
counterpart is Elmo Frank. We also publish
Elmo's articles.
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