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Thursday, September 06, 2007
Lisa De Pasquale :: Townhall.com Columnist
Are Red States Well-Read?
by Lisa De Pasquale
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Like many Americans, I’ve tried to tune out Elizabeth Edwards’ constant stream of Drudge-worthy gaffes to supposedly elect her husband president.  It’s clear that even the Left is tired of it.  This week, Susan Estrich wrote, “I’m the last person to recognize even a kernel of truth in Ann Coulter’s repeated attacks on the use of victims to say what others can’t, but Elizabeth Edwards is making the number one ranter of the right actually look like she’s onto something.”  Estrich is the author of Soulless: Ann Coulter and the Right-Wing Church of Hate, currently ranked #595,166 on Amazon.  Apparently, the anti-conservative publishing industry ain’t what it used to be.
 
Several weeks ago, former Congresswoman Pat Schroeder cited an AP/Ipsos poll stating that generally liberals read more than conservatives.  Schroeder concluded, “The Karl Roves of the world have built a generation that just wants a couple slogans: ‘No, don't raise my taxes, no new taxes.’  It's pretty hard to write a book saying, ‘No new taxes, no new taxes, no new taxes’ on every page.”  I love that a liberal is finally admitting how disgusted she is by the prospect of “no new taxes.”  Schroeder went on to say that liberal readers tend to be interested in policy discussions that “can’t say anything in less than paragraphs. We really want the whole picture, want to peel the onion.” 
 
To the contrary, one of the Left’s most notorious bestsellers can be summed up in three words – “Because I could.”  Interestingly, many of their bestsellers come from well-known heavy-hitters like Bill and Hillary Clinton, Al Gore and Al Franken of SNL fame (you know, back when he was sort of funny).  Many conservative bestselling authors were unknown to mainstream America prior to their first time on the New York Times Best Sellers list.  This includes John O’Neill, Mark Steyn, Gary Aldrich, Bill Gertz, Robert Spencer, and, though it’s hard to believe now, Ann Coulter, a total unknown when her first book, High Crimes and Misdemeanors, became a bestseller.
 
Schroeder, who is now president of the American Association of Publishers, is relying on her friends in the media to take the AP/Ipsos poll at face value and not “peel the onion.”  The poll concludes that of those who have read at least one book in the last year, liberals read an average of nine books a year while conservatives read an average of eight books a year.  News reports on the poll make no distinction between fiction and non-fiction books by political identity.  For all we know, liberals are under the covers with nine bodice-ripping romance novels while conservatives are absorbing eight books by Thomas Sowell and Phyllis Schlafly. 
 
The Bible and other religious books were cited by more than two-thirds of those who read more than one book a year.  CNN haughtily notes, “Those likeliest to read religious books included older and married women, lower earners, minorities, lesser educated people, Southerners, rural residents, Republicans and conservatives.”   CNN seems to be astounded that these people even know how to read.
 
Another distinction that was ignored in reporting is the age and political ideology of those that read non-fiction books.  Each year at CPAC, there are thousands of students with armfuls of conservative books from well-known authors like Newt Gingrich and David Horowitz, and those that should be required college reading like Frederick Bastiat and Milton Friedman.  (Click here for more recommended reading for students.)
 
At the Young America’s Foundation’s National Conservative Student Conference this summer I met one young woman that should scare liberals everywhere.  Her name is Toni Woods and she’s a senior at Amherst County High School in Virginia.  She counts Ann Coulter, Ronald Reagan, Milton Friedman, Margaret Thatcher and Phyllis Schlafly as just a few of her idols.  Among her favorite books are Myth of the Robber Barons, Godless, Welcome to the Ivory Tower of Babel, and A Choice, Not an Echo.  Young conservatives like Toni aren’t just reading these books, they’re taking those ideas back to their campuses.  Conservative students are more well-read than their teachers.
 
You’ll find many up-and-coming young conservative writers here on Townhall.  Rest assured they are waiting in the wings with best-selling manuscripts that will humiliate whatever Al Franken and his “researchers” string together.
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About The Author

Lisa De Pasquale is CPAC Director at the American Conservative Union. The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) is the nation’s largest annual gathering of conservatives. For more information, visit www.cpac.org. To read Lisa's blog, visit www.thelotusblog.com

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Subject: Recommended authors
Madelaine L'Engle died today at the age of 88. Most people think of her as a children's author (A Wrinkle In Time) but she never wrote down to children. Her themes of moral struggle, sin and repentence (without using those words) were timeless. She made her readers think about such issues without sounding preachy. She wrote a great many books for adults. "The Severed Wasp" is especially worthwhile fiction, but much of her non-fiction is astounding.

C.S. Lewis and Francis Shaeffer were especially good philosophical writers who dealt squarely with subjects of reason and logic. To me, it is always amazing to reconcile that C.S. Lewis with the one who wrote Chronicals of Narnia or the Space Trilogy. All are good, but I would recommend Screwtape Letters about any others. If you're not familiar with Shaeffer, consider starting with "How Then Shall We Live?" He traces the history of art through the Christian era and draws some very powerful and well-reasoned conclusions. Makes Dan Brown's farce of a novel look like exactly what it was -- a poorly researched farce.

My teenage daughter read Huckberry Finn this summer. That still ranks as THE great American novel. My son is learning to read by reading Treasure Island. You can't beat the classics for depth of vocabulary and wealth of description.

By the way, this conservative read 14 books last year, not including the Bible, the daily newspaper, and whatever else comes in front of me. Alaska is a conservative state and I'll bet the average Alaska reads more than 10 books a year. So, I don't really trust this alleged survey.

And the point is???
The "survey," or "poll," was done by an organization famous for its skewed perceptions of truth & reality.
Beyond that, who cares what these people think? Their opinions have provided us with a government bent on overtaking our lives to tell us to go to government doctors, eat only what "they" approve of, allow anyone in the world to vote in our elections, and approve of the idea that under a UN lead one world government, we would all be happy and live in that utopian world where no one wants. No one that is, who is of a like mind & who happens to be a member of the power elite!
Lets focus on electing leaders who actually lead & not spend time spending taxes on protecting property for the rich in Beverly Hills because they don't want the view ruined.
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