Chicago Sun-Times

No media sideshow is complete without Ann Coulter biting the head off a chicken

- NEIL STEINBERG nsteinberg@suntimes.com | @NeilSteinb­erg

The word “Geek” has developed cachet. It’s practicall­y a compliment. No longer paired with “computer” — the tech aspect is assumed — it refers to someone proficient in all things digital. Fashion- challenged and socially awkward, yes, but that’ll change once the stock options get cashed. Geek is good. There’s a Canadian web design company called “Geek Power.”

Yet “geek” originally had a very different meaning. My trusty Dictionary of American Slang explains:

geek n. 1 . A carnival or circus performer, considered a freak, who performs sensationa­lly disgusting acts that a normal person would not, e. g., eating or swallowing live animals … A ‘ half man, half animal’ sideshow performer of gory, cannibalis­tic feats such as eating live snakes, biting off the heads of chickens…

Sideshows are gone. Or rather, they’ve gone electronic. As the nation recoiled in revulsion this week at children of refugees being torn from their parents, up popped Ann Coulter to put the distressin­g images into context. She told Fox News:

“These child actors weeping and crying on all the other networks, 24/ 7, right now. … These kids are being coached; they’re given scripts to read by liberals.”

Sensationa­lly disgusting indeed. You see why I immediatel­y thought of bored townsfolk lining up outside a greasy, tattered tent, the barker funneling them in as they hand over their nickels. The stooped geek shuffles onto a tiny stage, clutching a struggling bird tightly by the neck. Some kind of introducti­on, to build suspense. Then the fowl’s head goes into the snaggle- toothed mouth. The jaws come down. The crowd gasps and recoils.

At least in a circus, you know it’s an act. I wish I could say the same regarding Coulter. When challenged, she insists she believes what she says, no matter how patently false. Maybe she likes to stay in character. Maybe she’s that far gone. If so, she has good company. Malicious hallucinat­ion is so popular nowadays, I’m expecting to see it on postage stamps, the “American Conspiracy Theory” series.

And why not? The money rolls in: Coulter penned a dozen bestsellin­g books. Nobody ever went broke underestim­ating the intelligen­ce of the American people.

The immediate question: Why respond to her at all? Why pay attention? That’s easy. Because her untruths aren’t random. She doesn’t just fling out any lie she can imagine, but a particular lie that scratches her audience’s special itch, that tickles the central bias behind the election of Donald Trump: that immigratio­n is bad, that immigrants are bad people and their arrival hurts our country.

How do Republican­s maintain that fiction? In the same way Southerner­s managed slavery, by denying the personhood of those involved. Slaves, being black, couldn’t be full people. Barack Obama, being black, couldn’t be a real American, but some Kenyan impostor. These immigrant children can’t be what they seem: weeping children, torn from their parents by cruel Trump administra­tion policy. A situation, needless to say, that Trump’s executive order will not correct, though we hoped it might for a giddy moment midweek, falling for his ruse once again, Charlie Brown rushing at Lucy’s football.

Like Trump, Coulter is a bigot. She is invited on TV not just because her disgusting remarks are so extreme they have entertainm­ent value, but because she’s peddling what the Right wants to hear. Coulter isn’t alone, but joined — and increasing­ly eclipsed — by an army of younger clones like Tomi Lahren and Laura Ingraham, who said the detention centers for refugee children “are just like summer camp.”

Talk about actors. They have to be sincere, right? They can’t feign the mendacious malice spewed nightly. They have a platform because Fox viewers like what they have to say. It makes sense to them. Not children. But thespians. Not chain- link cages. But summer camp. A conspiracy that will explain away an unpleasant reality that otherwise might force her audience to think.

If nothing else, it’s worth contemplat­ing a freak like Coulter to remember the connection between lies and bigotry. Lies are mandatory, because the truth is that immigrants help our economy and are no more criminal than nativeborn citizens — they are, in fact, more law- abiding.

Those pining to remove Trump, as if that will stem our moral decline, must remember Coulter and the infrastruc­ture of deception and realize: Trump didn’t create the problem; the problem created him, and will remain long after he goes away.

THE IMMEDIATE QUESTION: WHY RESPOND TO HER AT ALL? WHY PAY ATTENTION? THAT’S EASY. BECAUSE HER UNTRUTHS AREN’T RANDOM.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Ann Coulter told Fox News, “These kids are being coached; they’re given scripts to read by liberals.”
AP FILE PHOTO Ann Coulter told Fox News, “These kids are being coached; they’re given scripts to read by liberals.”
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