Saturday, November 14, 2015

Photos of Ann from the Freedom Summit 2015

    Here are some photos of Ann people tweeted out on Saturday, November 14, 2015, the day of the 2015 Freedom Summit (where Ann was at).







Friday, November 13, 2015

@rabidcon Tweets Photo of Ann

    @rabidcon tweeted a photo of Ann (supposedly in Scottsdale, Arizona):

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Writer Claims Ann Cannot Be "Native American"

    On Sunday, November 8, 2015, Christie Poitra wrote a piece about why Ann is wrong to claim the status of a Native American.

    First off, Ann, for the past year or two, has been speaking primarily on the topic of immigration (and this is what Ann is discussing when she makes the claim she is Native American). Here is a question for Poitra: "While discussing immigration, we call immigrants 'immgrants.' What should we call non-immigrant Americans?" The easiest thing to say is "Native American" (which happens to be a grammatically correct designation.) Ann has been saying she's a "Native American" for months and using the term to mean "non-immigrant American." It's pretty simple to comprehend.

    Poitra destroys her own argument when she quotes the interview:
"Padma Lakshmi: “That’s not a Native American...”

Ann Coulter: "No, if you mean Indian...""
    That settles it.


    Now let's continue with a nonsensical quote of Poitra:
"The core of Coulter’s argument against immigration... is that there exists two classifications of immigrants, (1) the early settlers that predate the United States, and (2) everyone else."
    Ann never said that and in no way means or implies that she thinks that.


    By the way, Dictionary.com says that "native" means:
"...1. being the place or environment in which a person was born or a thing came into being: one's native land."
...and...
"6. born in a particular place or country..."

    Perhaps there are "Native Americans" and "native Americans."

Monday, November 2, 2015

Gary Jacobs Speculates about What a GOP-Approved Debate Would Look Like

    On Monday, November 2, 2015, at 11:13am, the LA Times published Gary Jacobs' fake transcript about how the next Republican debate might look like if the GOP could make all of the decisions. It almost perfectly represents the stereotypical moderator questions and candidate answers. Ann is one of the moderators.

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Students at the University of Florida Disagree If Ann Should Visit

    On Sunday, November 1, 2015, at 10:43pm, Michael Beato encouraged Ann to speak at the University of Florida. Beato said:
"I want to make my intentions perfectly clear: I want Ann Coulter, the conservative firebrand and provocateur, to speak at UF. In fact, the event should be required for everyone to attend. If a student values his or her education, listening to Coulter speak is a must."
"To be fair, I do not support all of the ideas Coulter mentions in her book and I do not necessarily agree with her pugnacious approach to issues. But I do appreciate the fact that such a talented individual gave such a full-throated, passionate and unapologetic account of an extremely divisive stance on an extremely divisive issue. Such an account takes bravery, especially when our culture and media are so willing to haphazardly throw words like "nativist" and "racist" around."
"We need this voice on campus. We need this teachable moment. We need Ann Coulter to speak on campus. Our education depends on it."

    Just a few days later (on Thursday, November 5, 2015, at 12:11am) Kevin Foster explained why Ann should not be allowed to speak. Foster lists three examples of Ann's "racism": the Jew tweet (not racist), the soccer article (not racist), and Ann recently saying that the increase in the mortality rate of poor white people was because of immigrants (not racist). Here is a quote:
"This is someone who does not need to be anywhere close to our campus. This is someone who profits on divisiveness and hate..."