Joseph Farah has long pretended that his duty as a journalist keeps him from dropping Ann Coulter from the roster of WorldNetDaily columnists. That’s a lie, and he’s still lying about it.
Farah turns in his latest bill of particulars against Coulter in his Feb. 23 column, complaining about how she favors “electing Republicans – any and all Republicans. It doesn’t matter where they stand on the issues. It doesn’t matter how effective they have been in office. It doesn’t matter if they have betrayed those who elected them or the Constitution.” But Coulter’s latest betrayal of right-wing principles is still not enough for Farah to drop her column, and he does hint at why:
When Coulter hurled those invectives my way in 2010, many WND viewers urged me to dump her column and stop offering her books for sale.
As anyone can see, her column still runs in WND every week, the place more people read it than anywhere else.
Some wonder why.
Because agreement with me is not a requirement for being a WND commentator. In fact, WND boasts the broadest spectrum of political opinion among its dozens and dozens of columnists. And I have a very thick skin.
By bragging about how WND is “the place more people read [Coulter’s column] than anywhere else,” Farah is essentially admitting that Coulter drives too much traffic to his website to even consider dropping her. And his claim of WND having “the broadest spectrum of political opinion” is largely window dressing; there are only two explicitly liberal columnists, Bill Press and Ellen Ratner, and the rest of the “dozens and dozens” are definitely on the right-wing tilt.
As we are well aware, Farah claim that he has “a very thick skin” is a complete lie. That’s not the only lie he tells here:
I started to see some warning signs that Coulter was losing her principled edge just three years later in 2009, when she led a vicious public assault against “birthers,” as liberals and Democrats dubbed those who asked very tough questions about Barack Obama’s constitutional eligibility for the White House – questions that have still never been answered, by the way.
Actully, those questions have been answered — Farah has simply chosen not to report those answers to his readers.