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By Bernard Goldberg, HarperCollins, July 2005
The number one New York Times bestselling author of Bias delivers another bombshell -- this time aimed at ...
100 People Who Are Screwing Up America
No preaching. No pontificating. Just some uncommon sense about the
things that have made this country great -- and the culprits who are
screwing it up. (Book Description)
The winner of eight Emmy Awards for his work as a news correspondent
takes to task 100 people who he believes are muddying the integrity and
morality of American society. While his voice is better suited for the
newsroom, he makes his case with vocal agility and verbal cleverness.
Goldberg takes pokes at celebrities like Michael Jackson and Michael
Moore, politicians like Ted Kennedy and Howard Dean, activists,
intellectuals, and television "Schlockmeisters." He also takes aim at
former Louisiana State Rep and KKK leader David Duke, as well as Judge
Roy Moore, who refused to remove the Ten Commandments from his Alabama
courthouse. In all, this program is as thought provoking as it is
rousing and entertaining. (Audiofile)
Download eBook Excerpt (Pdf, 1.5MB)
100 People Lists:
(Note: Goldberg marks some people as Pioneers. Pioneers primarily screwed up America in the past and have influenced others to follow. Philip Dhingra, August 8th 2005)
1. Michael Moore (director of the Bush-bashing Fahrenheit 9/11)
Goldberg just includes this, "'They are possibly the dumbest people on
the planet. . . .', Michael Moore, speaking of his fellow Americans."
Michael Moore's popular films and supporters are too hateful of America
that he doesn't deserve to be talked about.
2. Arthur Sulzberger (publisher of The New York Times)
The New York Times is the ultimate symbol of liberal media bias,
with articles slanted to favor Democrats, racial preferences, gay
marriages, and feminism. Goldberg blames Arthur's personal agenda for
the Times's bias, as he quotes Arthur: "If white men were not
complaining, it would be an indication we weren't succeeding and making
the inroads that we are."
3. Ted Kennedy (Democrat Senator from Mass., JFK's youngest brother)
Ted
Kennedy has gained the reputation for being the "conscience" of the
Democratic Party, and yet how can he have a conscience if he was
against the Iraq War? Also, Ted Kennedy is known for strong, booming
displays of moral indignation, which are hypocritical given his
personal indiscretions (see Chappaquiddick). He and other Democrats abuse a veil of conscience.
4. Rev. Jesse Jackson (African-Amercian leader, orator, civil rights activist)
The civil rights movement once was noble and had leaders such as Martin
Luther King who spoke with decency. The movement has now transitioned
into a tool for blaming others for the ills of African-Americans, and
Jesse Jackson is at the head of that movement. While he is a great
orator, his focus is on provocation. Pioneer.
5. Anthony Romero (Executive Director ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union))
Since 9/11, ACLU has been principled about things like preventing the
government from reading our library check-out records or in voicing
complaints that airport security checks may unfairly target Muslims.
Goldberg believes the ACLU should not be so absolutist given the
current climate. Also, the ACLU, while normally a good organization,
has in recent times fought for petty causes: banning the practice in
public schools of holding a moment of silence because of its religious
connotations; suing the Boy Scouts for holding meetings in a city park
on the grounds that it is a religious organization; urging Los Angeles
to remove a cross from its seal; arguing that doctors shouldn't tell
wives that their husbands have AIDS; and arguing on behalf of the
National Man-Boy Love Association (NAMBLA) despite a case where someone
read materials on NAMBLA's website and then kidnapped, sexually
assaulted, and finally killed a ten-year-old boy.
6. Jimmy Carter (US Pres. 1976-1980)
Jimmy
Carter, who had a lackluster presidency, is getting improper credit for
being a champion of human rights. Carter has praised the Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat, North Korea's Kim Il Sung, and other leaders who
have had bad records on human rights. He was also in Venezuela,
supposedly monitoring its elections, but when discrepancies arose and
protests were formed, Carter left the country and said everything was
good. He then claimed that Florida's election practices were not sound.
7. Margaret Marshall (Chief Justice of the Mass. Supreme Court)
American
opinion polls show a majority not in favor of marriage between
homosexuals, and yet Marshall decided to author a 4-3 decision in favor
of legalizing it in Massachusetts. This overturns an age-old tradition
of marriage being an exclusive sacrament between males and females. The
decision has consequences for the rest of America as marriages in
Massachusetts may have to be recognized when gay couples visit other
states. Marshall is an example of an activist judge, and she has
displayed her bias in public by speaking to the Massachusetts Gay and
Lesbian Bar Association giving them legal tips.
8. Paul Krugman (economist, columnist for NY Times)
Goldberg
is unable to find a quote of Krugman's that is hysterical or extreme,
so Krugman's flaw is that he consistently argues against Bush's
policies without sounding foolish.
9. Jonathan Kozol (nonfiction writer)
Kozol
has lectured for decades on public education standards, specifically
promoting the idea that children should become critics of America. He
views the education system as brainwashing, and that children should be
counter-brainwashed by being skeptical of authority. Ironically, Kozol
draws much of his inspiration from the educational systems of Cuba and
China. Pioneer.
10. Ralph Neas (President and CEO of People for the American Way)
Neas tries to demonize the Boy Scouts because of their supposed
conservative agenda. He also has worked against the nomination of
Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. One particularly
troubling case, according to Goldberg, is his attack on judge Charles
Pickering. Pickering has adjudicated fairly on a couple of civil rights
case, yet Neas has slammed him on civil rights. In addition, other
Democrat party members repeat Neas's talking points and respect him.
11. Noam Chomsky (MIT professor of linguistics)
While he is the most-cited living author, or the "most important intellectual" according to the New York Times,
Chomsky hates America. He describes the Cold War as the United States's
continuation of the Nazi agenda, and he frequently points to more
extreme cases of terrorism done by the US than what happened on 9/11.
Chomsky is the epitome of the anti-American intellectual.
12. Dan Rather (former anchor for CBS Evening News)
Dan
Rather anchored a story claiming that Bush's National Guard service
during the Vietnam War wasn't fulfilled in full, yet in the previous
month, Dan Rather claimed that it doesn't matter what John Kerry did
during Vietnam. It was also later revealed that Rather's evidence
against Bush was forged. Dan Rather wanted to believe the evidence so
he could slam Bush. He has bias, and either he doesn't know it or he
won't admit it.
13. Andrew Heyward (Pres. of CBS News)
Heyward,
with whom Goldberg had worked for at CBS, is not owning up to the phony
Bush story (see next), and instead of resigning, his nearby
subordinates have all had to leave.
14. Mary Mapes (former producer for CBS's 60 minutes)
Mapes
aired a story based on phony documentation that George W. Bush dodged
National Guard service. When doubts were revealed about the evidence,
Mapes was insistent about its authenticity. Those close to Mapes say
she went into journalism with an activist's mindset. Supposedly she has
worked on the Bush story for five years, revealing her fanatical
obsession against Bush.
15. Ted Rall (cartoonist)
Rall's
cartoons appear in 140 newspapers, but are extremely cruel in their
commentary. When Pat Tillman, the NFL pro who joined the Army, was
killed and then treated like a hero, Rall printed in a cartoon
depicting Tillman as saying, "Never mind the fine print, Will I get to
kill Arabs?" Rall's public comments also describe the United States as
a modern-day Third Reich or Stalinist Russia.
16. John Edwards (former Senator from North Carolina, John Kerry's running mate, trial lawyer)
John
Edwards first made big bucks winning a case that used more emotion than
science against a doctor who waited too long to perform a cesarean,
leaving a baby with cerebral palsy. Edwards told the jury that the
child "speaks to you through me. And I have to tell you right now—I
didn't plan to talk about this—right now I feel her. I feel her
presence. She's inside me, and she's talking to you." John Edwards and
trial lawyers pursue malpractice lawsuits like a treasure hunt, and it
creates an environment of fear for doctors. He also said that people
like Christopher Reeve would be able to walk if America had elected
John Kerry.
17. Al Sharpton (African-Amercian leader, orator, civil rights activist)
Sharpton
is inconsistent in his support for civil rights, for example by
praising and standing on the same stage as Khalid Muhammad, best known
for "gay-bashing, Jew-hating, anti-Catholic tirades." Sharpton didn't
apologize for supporting a black woman's fake gang rape charge (Tawana
Brawley). He also excited racial tensions over an eviction dispute
between a black-owned record store and its Jewish landlord. What first
followed were protests, but then afterwards eight people were killed in
a shooting and burning of the store (Freddy's).
18. Al Gore (Vice-president 1992-2000)
Al
Gore is as unprincipled and pandering a Democrat politician as any. He
spoke passionately about how his sister died from smoking, but a few
years before that he was throwing praise on tobacco. Also, when asked
if it would be okay to execute a pregnant woman, he didn't give a
straight answer, showing how he tries too hard to appease his
pro-abortion constituency. He is now a loud and scary Bush-hater.
19. George Soros (billionaire speculator on currencies)
Because
he is rich and an important financier for Democrats, people listen to
Soro's comparisons of Bush to Nazis. Soros claims that being from
Hungary during Nazi and Soviet rule has sensitized him to Nazi-like and
Soviet-like practices.
20. Howard Dean (Chairman of Democratic National Committee)
Throughout
his campaign for the Democrat presidential nomination, and now during
his chairmanship, Dean has maintained a rambunctious and angry attitude
toward Republicans. In spite of his anger, Democrats rally around him,
furthering divisiveness in politics.
21. Judge Roy Moore (former Alabama Chief Justice)
Moore
was removed as a justice for disobeying an order to remove a Ten
Commandments monument from the Alabama Supreme Court building. His
defiance tarnishes the reputation of conservatives who have maintained
that judges should not partake in activism or loose interpretations of
the law.
22. Michael Newdow (atheism activist)
Newdow
got a court to make it illegal to say the words "under God" in the
Pledge of Allegiance. Newdow—and other aggrieved minorities—get
over-offended by minor insults and then push the rest of the country to
change. The whole spectacle only weakened the movement for tolerance as
it put their pettiness on display.
23. The Unknown American Terrorist
Members of the Earth Liberation Front
have torched luxury homes, SUVs, and a ski resort, costing Americans
millions of dollars in damages. Their goal is to protect the
environment through destroying property. Their activities are similar
to that of terrorists, as they operate like a loose-network of cells.
24. Lee Bollinger (Pres. Columbia University in NYC)
When
he was president of the University of Michigan, Bollinger went to court
defending their practice of admitting less-qualified applicants because
they were minorities. According to Goldberg, Bollinger is fighting the
wrong battle; instead he should be giving children from poorer
backgrounds a boost.
25. James Kopp (convict)
Kopp
justifies murdering an abortion practitioner in the context that he
saved the lives of countless unaborted children. He should not play
God.
26. Dr. Martin Haskell (physician who pioneered "partial-birth" abortions)
Haskell's
"dilation and extraction" procedure involves the use of scissors and
the crushing of fetal skulls in order to perform abortions. He has
personally performed this reviling procedure thousands of times, and he
is a stand-in for all of his supporters. Pioneer.
27. Paul Begala (political commentator for CNN, adviser to Bill Clinton)
Begala has frequently smeared Republicans, in one poignant case by
listing out extreme examples of bigotry and violence done by residents
of Republican-voting states. Examples include the Oklahoma City
bombings, the lynching of African-American James Byrd, and the killing
of homosexual Matthew Shepard.
28. Julian Bond (Chairman of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People))
Julian
Bond, the leader of what was once a respectable civil rights group, is
now an extremist, using his organization to damage Republicans. In one
case, Julian Bond referred to Republicans and their love for the
"Confederate swastika."
29. John Green (angry basketball fan)
Green
started a fight at a basketball game by throwing a beer can at an NBA
player. Not only that, Green went around like a victim complaining when
his season tickets were revoked. Green represents people who feel
entitled to get mad and cuss at sport events, including at Little
League games.
30. Latrell Sprewell (basketball player for Minnesota Timberwolves)
Sprewell's
arrogant comments in public show just how spoiled some professional
athletes have become. When referring to his basketball team, the
Timberwolves, he said, "Why would I want to help them win a title?
They're not doing anything for me."
31. Maury Povich (TV Talk show host)
Maury,
with his self-titled show, creates segments that glorify and
sensationalize trashy American behavior. Examples include "mothers who
have sex with their daughter's boyfriends" or a show about mothers who
let their infants become really fat.
32. Jerry Springer (TV Talk show host)
Springer helped pioneer the nasty television talk show genre. He and Povich are rottening American culture. Pioneer.
33. Bob Shrum (political consultant, speechwriter)
Shrum
has been behind six losing Democrat presidential campaigns. His
trademark is in getting candidates to pit the "middle class" against
the "rich" while trying to get the benefits of being a "populist." He
also accuses his opponents of racism.
34. Bill Moyers (journalist and commentator for PBS)
His
public comments claim that conservatives want to rape the United States
and that they hate poor people because they're black.
35. Jeff Danziger (political cartoonist)
Danzinger
made a cartoon depicting Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice as a
ignorant black maid for helping the Administration make its case for
the Iraq War. Danzinger and other liberals are unfairly allowed to use
racist imagery as long as its aimed against conservatives.
36. Nancy Hopkins (MIT biologist)
Larry
Summers, the president of Harvard, proposed at a conference that there
might be innate differences between the sexes and their abilities to do
math. Upon hearing this, Nancy Hopkins stalked out. Subsequently many
papers ran columns criticizing Summers and eventually Harvard's Faculty
of Arts and Sciences passed a resolution stating their lack of
confidence in Summers's leadership. Nancy Hopkins and other feminists
are too sensitive to minor suggestions about differences between the
sexes.
37. Al Franken (comedian and political commentator)
Al
Franken goes under the guise of "satire" in order to make random and
childish accusations. In an interview Goldberg had with Franken,
Franken sounds like an idiot by randomly yelling the word "Liar."
38. Jim McDermott (Democrat Representative from Washington)
While
he was in Iraq right before the start of the Iraq War, McDermott
claimed that the United States cannot be trusted, but that Saddam
Hussein's claims to the United Nations should be taken at face value.
39. Peter Singer (Princeton philosopher of bioethics)
Singer
holds the view that "killing a disabled infant is not morally
equivalent to killing a person. Very often it is not wrong at all." In
addition, his views permit euthanasia in some cases. What makes Singer
dangerous is that he is one of the most influential and respected
philosophers of our time.
40. Scott Harshbarger (Mass. Attorney General)
Harshbarger
built a child-abuse case against a day-care center's owners using
solely testimony from forty children. Upon investigation by the show 20/20,
the testimonies appear forced by Harshbarger. Harshbarger was
relentless in keeping the accused behind bars, and he remains as a
force in the general climate of child-abuse hysteria.
41. Susan Beresford (Pres. of Ford Foundation)
The
Ford Foundation (once-related to the Ford Motor Company) doles out
roughly one billion dollars a year to groups including anti-war,
anti-Israel, and pro-Mexican immigration groups. Universities that
apply to the Foundation for grants are required to include a "diversity
table" with lists of nonwhites and women members.
42. Gloria Steinem (feminist, journalist, founder of Ms. magazine)
As a founder for the National Women's Political Caucus and Ms.
magazine, Steinmem has done much to help women from being overrun by
powerful men. However, she is a hypocrite for excusing Bill Clinton's
sexual harassment of Paula Jones and Kathleen Wiley. Pioneer.
43. Paul Eibeler (CEO of Take-Two Interactive Software)
Eibeler's company produces the bestselling Grand Theft Auto,
a video game that simulates the killing of gays, cops, blacks, and
hookers. His company is being sued for inspiring an eighteen-year old
to killing three people (two of which were police officers). Goldberg
doesn't believe in censorship, but he is sick of capitalists who will
willingly ruin our culture to make money.
44. Dennis Kozlowski (former CEO of Tyco)
Dennis
represents two major vices of corporate execs: greed and lack of shame.
His company is a conglomerate that acquires little companies and
streamlines them by shutting down plants and firing employees. In the
meantime, Dennis has been abusing company funds for personal expenses
and free loans to friends. In one poignant case, Dennis threw an
erotic, multimillion dollar birthday party in the Mediterranean Sea
that he billed partially as a "business expense." He is currently on
trial for stealing money from Tyco.
45. Ken Lay (former CEO of Enron)
Enron's
executives played with their accounting books in order to fraudulently
generate millions of dollars from 1996 to 2001. Company executives got
bonuses throughout the boom, but when they got caught, Ken Lay
pretended to be unaware of all the actions of his subordinates.
Twenty-thousand employees have lost their jobs and have had their
pension plans in limbo ever since.
46. Barbara Walters (media personality, former news anchor)
While
Walters has interviewed some of the biggest movers and shakers in the
world for decades, she is doing more harm to journalism by also
interviewing celebrities and asking dumb questions. i.e. She once asked
Katherine Hepburn, "If you were a tree, what kind of tree would you
be?" Pioneer.
47. Maxine Waters (Democrat representative from Los Angeles)
Waters, an influential Democrat, is obsessed with race. She once
referred to the Los Angeles Rodney King riots as a "rebellion . . . a
spontaneous reaction to a lot of injustice and a lot of alienation and
frustration." She has also accused the CIA of promoting drugs in
inner-cities.
48. Robert Byrd (West Virginia Democrat Senator, oratorical master)
Robert
Byrd, a former recruiter for the Ku Klux Klan, has been given powerful
positions in the Democrat party such as Majority leader. The Democrats
are supposed to be the party for civil rights, and yet Byrd has fought
against civil rights legislations, against the appointments of Clarence
Thomas and Thurgood Marshall (two black supreme court justices), and
against George W. Bush's appointment of some black judicial and cabinet
nominees.
49. Ingrid Newkirk (co-founder and president of PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals))
Newkirk
is a radical leader for animals rights, at one point comparing the
killing of animals to the Holocaust. PETA also pushed a company to stop
donations for the March of Dimes (a charity for children's health research) because it does some animal experimentation.
50. John Vasconcellos (Calif. State Senator)
Vasconcellos worked with California schools to pioneer the doctrine of
"self-esteem," wherein underperforming children should still receive
praise. Children are also encouraged to make self-affirming statements
such as "I am beautiful" or "I am ______" (fill in any positive
adjective). This doctrine makes Goldberg uneasy because of its New Age
rhetoric. Plus, while self-esteem indoctrination has spread to the rest
of the country, education in America hasn't improved. Pioneer.
51. Ann Pelo (teacher, writer)
Pelo once told children that the Blue Angels stunt jet fighters are
normally evil bombers, and that they are now just doing fancy tricks
because they have nothing to do. She then encouraged children to
express their hate of the Blue Angels in drawings. Pelo's book, That's Not Fair!: A Teacher's Guide to Activism with Young Children, has become popular among educators.
52. Markos Moulitsas (blogger)
Markos's dailyKos
is possibly the busiest political site on the Internet, but it's also a
center for pessimism and defeatism toward the United States. The site
purports all bad news as proof that Bush's presidency is not working,
and it spins any good news into bad news. Markos is also crude, as he
expressed his lack of sympathies for four American contractors who were
shot, dragged, and hanged in the Iraq War: "They are there to wage war
for profit. Screw them."
53. Anna Nicole Smith (model, TV personality)
She
is now famous for her self-titled, tacky "reality TV" show, which takes
the personal trash of her daily life and turns it into programming. She
is part of a movement that Goldberg calls the "Vulgarization of the
Personal."
54. Neal Shapiro (president of NBC News)
Neal Shapiro is selling out journalism by using the news show Dateline to promote background material for NBC's entertainment shows such as The Apprentice, Fraiser, and Friends.
55. David Westin (ABC News President)
He
is partly responsible for blurring the lines between entertainment and
news by putting fake journalists on air (see next entry).
56. Diane Sawyer (co-anchor of ABC's Good Morning America, journalist)
How
can Diane Sawyer claim the title of journalist, when she does a shallow
interview with Britney Spears? Sawyer doesn't even pressure Spears hard
enough about one of her songs that involves masturbation.
57. Ted Field (billionaire media mogul)
By
funding Interscope—a record company with such acts as Eminem, Tupac
Shakur, and Snoop Dogg—Ted Field has helped spread rap music. Goldberg
believes that rap music is cultural pollution for its advocacy of
anti-social behavior and violence. Pioneer.
58. Eminem (rapper, actor)
It is sad that Eminem is an icon for millions, especially young people, since his lyrics advocate violence against women.
59. Shirley Franklin (Democrat mayor of Atlanta)
She made an official proclamation honoring rapper Ludacris for donating
to charities. Goldberg thinks that Shirley and the black establishment
should not be lenient on rappers.
60. Ludacris (rapper)
Like all rappers, Ludacris popularizes ignorance and anti-social behavior.
61. Michael Savage (radio talk show host)
Michael
has given conservatives a bad name by making cruel personal attacks. In
an incident that got him fired from MSNBC, he told a caller, "Oh,
you're one of those sodomites. You should only get AIDS and die, you
pig. How's that?"
62. Howard Stern (radio talk show host)
Howard
Stern's popular radio show makes fun of retarded people. His show also
involves pornographic scenes that are usually performed on the Stern
set and are then recounted live on public radio. He has also become a
representative for First Amendment rights, but not because of any
provocative political commentary. Rather, Stern is fighting for the
right to make auditory pollution.
63. Amy Richards (feminist)
Amy Richards wrote a column in the New York Times magazine
belaboring the details of her special abortion. When she discovered she
was going to have triplets, she requested the twins be killed so as not
to interrupt her busy schedule.
64. James Wolcott (columnist for Vanity Fair, blogger)
Wolcott hates America because it re-elected Bush in 2004.
65. Oliver Stone (film director)
Stone twisted facts in JFK (1991) to imply that the CIA, FBI, and Armed Forces conspired to assassinate Kennedy. Another one of Stone's films Nixon
(1995) puts words into historical figures' mouths in order to demonize
the United States government. His anti-American films unfortunately get
misconstrued as truths by the public.
66. David Duke (former leader of the Ku Klux Klan)
David
Duke claims the Holocaust is blown out of proportion and that 9/11 was
retribution against American Jews who've supported the advancement of
Israel. He was also a former Louisiana State representative and has run
for US President twice.
67. Randall Robinson (African-American political leader)
Randall
is a major proponent of slavery reparations, saying the United States
owes compensation to the descendants of African-American slaves.
Randall's argument is that Holocaust victims and interned
Japanese-Americans received compensation. Goldberg wants Randall and
black America to abandon victimization, especially since slavery was a
long time ago.
68. Katherine Hanson (English professor at North Michigan University)
Katherine
led the Women's Educational Equity Act Publishing Center, using
tax-payer money to urge teachers to ask boys to discuss their feelings
before engaging in games such as tag. She is also a hysterical
feminist, as she has published these statistics: "1) Every year nearly
4 million women are beaten to death in the United States. 2) Violence
is the leading cause of death among women." (heart disease causes 100
times more deaths)
69. Matt Kunitz (executive director of FOX's Fear Factor)
His Fear Factor program is ruining culture by entertaining millions of Americans with scenes of humans eating insects and cow intestines.
70. Jimmy Swaggart (Christian preacher, television evangelist)
Swaggart
goes too far in his criticism of homosexuality by mentioning in a
sermon that he would kill gay men. These kind of statements weaken the
support for moderate criticism on homosexuality.
71. Phil Donahue (TV talk show host)
Donahue
"Launched TV's first modern television talk show in 1967" by
characteristically dashing into the audience to grab commentary from
ordinary people. Donahue has had too much of an influence on TV to be
forgiven for his relativist comparisons of the US to Communist Russia,
and for his support of radical feminism and gay activism. Pioneer.
72. Ward Churchill (professor of ethnic studies in the University of Colorado at Boulder)
He wrote that Americans got what they deserved during 9/11, going so far as to call the World Trade Center victims "little Eichmanns,"
a reference to an architect of the Nazi Holocaust. The concern is not
so much his incendiary comments, but rather the academic community that
gives extremists like him tenure.
73. Barbara Kingsolver (novelist)
In
an op-ed she re-tells how she reluctantly let her daughter wear
red-white-and-blue after 9/11 because, "the American flag stands for
intimidation, censorship, violence, bigotry, sexism, homophobia . . .
Who are we calling terrorists here?"
74. Katha Politt (feminist, columnist for The Nation)
Katha's
crime is hating America by telling her daughter not to fly the flag
after 9/11 as it stands for "jingoism and vengeance and war."
75. Eric Foner (History professor at Columbia University in NYC, former president of the American Historical Association)
Foner
and other history-writers should not be so politically biased or
extreme. A quote of Foner reveals his radicalism: "I'm not sure which
is more frightening: the horror that engulfed New York City or the
apocalyptic rhetoric emanating daily from the White House."
76. Barbara Foley (English professor, Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey)
After
the 9/11 attacks, she posted a message on the Internet for her students
proposing a theory that 9/11 was the result of American fascism.
Barbara, according to Goldberg, is indicative of a larger group of
teachers pushing a liberal spin on students, claiming that 9/11 was
somehow our fault.
77. Linda Hirshman (feminist, philosopher)
On CBS's 60 Minutes,
Linda Hirshman criticizes young, well-educated women who leave
prestigious jobs to raise children as leading worse lives. She also
bolsters her criticism by mentioning that she is a philosopher—proof of
just how arrogant feminism is.
78. Norman Mailer (writer)
The
influential writer Norman Mailer, should be ashamed for lobbying to
release murderer-turned-writer Jack Henry Abbott. After Henry Abbott
was paroled, he went out and killed once more, to which Norman Mailer
was still lenient. According to Norman Mailer, Henry Abbott is a writer
first, murderer second.
79. Harry Belafonte (entertainer, human rights activist, made "Day-O" song famous)
Belafonte
criticized African-American former Secretary of State Colin Powell as
kissing-up to Bush and the white establishment. Why can't blacks be
conservative?
80. Kitty Kelley (investigative journalist, author)
Kelley
has made millions turning political gossip into bestsellers, first
alleging that First Lady Nancy Reagan cheated on her husband, then
claiming that First Lady Laura Bush dealt marijuana in college. Her
innuendos gained initial credence in the media and still carry some
popularity despite being falsified.
81. Tim Robbins (actor)
Robbins
is a vocal anti-war protester, and he has made claims that al Qaeda
fundamentalism is similar to fundamentalism in the US government. He
also says he's about peace, but he's also mean to people.
82. Laurie David (Hollywood environmentalist, wife of Larry David)
Laurie,
like a lot of other rich Hollywood types, gets in people's faces about
driving gas-guzzling SUVs, but then she indulges in
environmentally-damaging lavishness. In Laurie's case, she flies
private Gulfstream jets and lives in a energetically-expensive mansion.
83. The Dumb and Vicious Celebrity (ex: Linda Ronstadt, Martin Sheen, David Clennon, Janeane Garofolo)
Celebrities draw undue attention to stupid things they say, such as Garofolo saying, "a gay naked man or woman burning the flag [gives me] pride."
84. The Vicious Celebrity (ex: Alec Baldwin, Wallace Shawn, Sean Penn, Janeane Garofolo)
Celebrities get away with extreme statements such as Sean Penn saying that President Reagan's Alzheimer's is karma.
85. The Dumb Celebrity (ex: Cameron Diaz, Fred Durst, Kate Hudson, Janeane Garofolo)
Celebrities
get attention for their political statements because they are famous,
not because they have anything useful to say, which in most cases, they
don't.
86. Chris Ofili (painter)
Ofili
adorned a painting of the Virgin Mary with real-life elephant poop and
called it art. The art community agreed and placed him and other shock
artists in the 1999 show Sensations at New York's Brooklyn Museum. Goldberg's gripe is with the avant-garde's rejection of traditional notions of beauty.
87. Sheldon Hackney (former University of Pennsylvania President)
A student yelled at a group of rowdy black females calling them "water
buffalo," and he was then charged with "racial harassment." Despite the
case's basis on weak or non-existent racial connotations, Hackney let
the case drag on. Hackney and academia are overly sensitive in favor of
minorities. Pioneer.
88. Aaron McGruder (cartoonist)
His Boondocks
comics, which feature an indignant black kid, appear in over 250 papers
daily. All of McGruder's attention is unfair given his corrosive
comments in public, such as referring to Condoleeza Rice and Colin
Powell (both black conservatives) as murderers.
89. Jane Smiley (novelist)
She wrote a redneck hate-article in Slate subtitled "The unteachable ignorance of the red states".
This is an excerpt: "Listen to what the red state citizens say about
themselves, the songs they write, and the sermons they flock to. They
know who they are梩hey are full of original sin and they have a taste
for violence."
90. Michael Jackson (singer)
Goldberg
doesn't elaborate on this inclusion, but Jackson probably made the list
for being such a public clown, and therefore an embarrassment to all
Americans.
91. Barbara Streisand (singer, actress)
How can such a beautiful and talented singer have the heart to bash Bush?
92. Kerri Dunn (Los Angeles psychology professor)
This
diversity advocate discovered her car vandalized with hate slogans. In
response, classes were closed and students staged demonstrations. A few
days later, police discovered that Dunn vandalized the car herself.
Instead of condemning Dunn, University officials framed the protests in
a positive light as still having meaning given the context.
93. Richard Timmons (convict)
After stabbing and beheading
his family, Timmons then tried to sue New York City for $80 million for
police brutality. The case dragged on, showing just how litigious our
society has become.
94. Guy Velella (former Republican New York state senator)
Velella
is a hypocrite for being tough on crime but then crying like a baby
when being sent to jail for accepting bribes. What's worse is that he
pulled some strings to get set free early, all the while receiving some
sympathetic press.
95. Courtney Love (singer, guitarist, widow of rockstar Kurt Cobain)
Author
reserves only the word "Ho" for his criticism. My guess is that while
Courtney Love is a role model for young women, she has been arrested
multiple times, in one case for throwing a microphone stand and hitting
a man on the head, in other cases for drug-related charges.
96. Eve Ensler (author of the play The Vagina Monologues)
Her
play is silly for its over-use of vagina-related content, and it is
offensive for excessive anti-male content. What's worse is that she is
backed by prominent females such as Oprah Winfrey and Brooke Shields,
making Goldberg feel un-hip for not liking the play or its message.
97. Todd Goldman (cartoonist)
Goldman
is making a living with boy-bashing T-shirts such as "Lobotomy: How to
Train Boys" or "Boys Are Smelly ... Kick them in the Belly." Author is
frustrated that condemning boys is acceptable, while as condemning
other groups and minorities, such as blacks and Jews, is a hate-crime.
98. Sheila Jackson Lee (Houston Democrat Representative)
She
requested that hurricanes also be given African-American names.
Goldberg finds it stupid to request affirmative action in the naming
rights for a weather phenomena that is loathed.
99. Matthew Lesko (infomercial personality)
He promotes dubious methods on how to milk the government for "free money." He is a symbol for self-centered free-riders.
100. Rick and Kathy Hilton (heirs to Hilton Hotel chain, and parents of Paris Hilton)
They deserve blame for raising Paris Hilton to be a empty-headed socialite who became famous for starring in a home sex video
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