Since the day Donald Trump announced his presidential campaign, the left has waged a demented war against him.
Liberals used to pride themselves on their ultra-hipness, but Trump has turned them into weeping little girls in pink party dresses. The very people who once mocked right-wingers for (allegedly) overreacting to every little thing are now the ones hyperventilating and hatching insane conspiracy theories.
During the campaign, and even more so after his victory, the left went nuts. Everything Trump does sends them into a moral panic. Everything is a constitutional crisis.
Members of the self-proclaimed “Resistance” — journalists, politicians, professors, judges, comedians, movie stars, Twitter pundits, even Oprah and Lindsey Vonn! — are literally shaking because Trump is literally Hitler!
Now Ann Coulter skewers the various elements of “The Resistance” — the pussy-hat brigade, the Russian-collusion witch hunters, the media alarmists, the campus hysterics, and more. They talk about Russia? They’re the ones meddling with our democracy by trying to overturn the results of the election with their relentless attacks.
The biggest result of the Trump era may be our cultural institutions’ total loss of credibility.
About the Author
Ann Coulter is the author of twelve previous books, all of them New York Times bestsellers, including most recently In Trump We Trust. She lectures around the country, writes a nationally syndicated weekly column, and has more than two million fans on Twitter and Facebook.
Ann is an American conservative social and political commentator, writer, syndicated columnist, and lawyer. She frequently appears on television, radio, and as a speaker at public and private events.
Coulter rose to prominence in the 1990s as an outspoken critic of the Clinton administration. Her first book concerned the Bill Clinton impeachment, and sprang from her experience writing legal briefs for Paula Jones’s attorneys, as well as columns she wrote about the cases. Coulter has described herself as a polemicist who likes to “”stir up the pot””, and does not “”pretend to be impartial or balanced, as broadcasters do””, drawing criticism from the left, and sometimes from the right.
Coulter’s syndicated column for Universal Press Syndicate began appearing in newspapers, and was featured on major conservative websites.