Feb
28
Early this afternoon the exhibit hall, the hotel lobby and all the other rooms were so quiet that you could hear a pin drops. That was because Ann Coulter was speaking to a packed ballroom and three other overflow ballrooms. Today she provided an analysis of Obama’s first month in the White House. In typical Coulter style she provided off the cuff commentary with no need to sugarcoat or hide her true feelings.
On the liberal Media, Ann talked about her favorite TV Station MSNBC. She noted how the MSNBC hosts have moved from watchdogs to lap dogs of the Obama Administration. She then asked. “”Is there any other station where you know all the hosts went to the Alternative Prom?”
Ann, in her recent columns, has talked about how the American People and the Media has taken to comparing to Obama to Jesus. She said that Jesus was not similar to President Obama because “As the leader of the 12 apostles, even Jesus had more executive experience than Barack Obama.”
She also talked about the comparisons being made between Abraham Lincoln and President Obama. She rejected this comparison for a few reasons
-“How many times did Lincoln Vote Present?”
-“The only time he wasn’t present was when Reverand Wright was giving his hateful sermons.”
-“Back in Illinois they are still talking about the fist bump that Abe gave Mary Todd when he won the nomination…it was the first time she was proud of her country.”
Coulter was optimistic about the future of the Republican Party and the conservative movement in the United States. She is convinced that Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and President Obama will drive the Democrat Party into the ground. She received an ovation when she said, “Plans to put Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid on Mount Rushmore should be put on hold for now.”
Ann ended the speech receiving an extended standing ovation when she said, “People might see Obama as the second coming, but his policies will ensure that there won’t be a second term coming.”
For me personally, Ann is off the cuff, direct and says what is on her mind. She has no aspirations to be a politician; she is a political commentator not a elected official or spokesperson for the party.





