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United States News Title: Ann Coulter STANDS BY THE STATEMENT THAT THEY SHOULD OF Bombed the N.Y. Times as long as the reporters and editors were inside Ann Coulter, whose book, "Godless, The Church of Liberalism," has reached runaway best-seller status, wont back down on comments made about bombing the New York Times main office building in Manhattan. Coulters comments are reverberating around the journalism world. This weekend, Editor & Publisher magazine featured this story: "Coulter Affirms Prevous Statement About Bombing 'NYT' Office. [Editor's Note: Final chance: get Ann Coulter's book for just $4.99 -- Save $23 -- Go Here Now.] Coulter had stated that her "only regret with [Oklahoma City bomber] Timothy McVeigh is he did not go to the New York Times building." She added such a bombing would have been appropriate only if Times reporters and editors were inside. Editor & Publisher noted that recently Lee Salem, the head of Universal Syndicate, wrote to the publication explaining that Coulter was simply engaging in satire and did not seek violent harm to liberals. New Stock Market Report - Limited Time Offer! Silver Prices Must Go Up Due To The Shortage Of Silver! China Stocks to Buy and Sell - Free Report! Ugly Truth About Cholesterol But E&P says Coulter doesnt feel the same way. Asked if she would recant her "bomb the New York Times" remark by Alan Colmes during her appearance last Thursday night on Fox News, Coulter said she stood by her comment. "No, I think the Timothy McVeigh line was merely prescient after the New York Times has leapt beyond -- beyond nonsense straight into treason, last week," Coulter said. Coulter was referring to what she called "the latest of a long list of formerly top-secret government anti-terrorism operations that have been revealed by the Times," noting that "last week the paper printed the details of a government program tracking terrorists' financial transactions that has already led to the capture of major terrorists and their handmaidens in the U.S." An angry Colmes shot back with sarcasm: "This is great humor. This belongs on 'Saturday Night Live.' It belongs on 'The Daily Show.'" Despite their upset over violence talk, neither Colmes or E&P have yet to express outrage when left-leaning figures called for the killing of prominent Republicans, including: During the 2000 election, "The Late Show with Craig Kilborn" showed footage of George Bush while the words "Snipers Wanted" was superimposed. Actor Alec Baldwin appeared on "Late Night With Conan OBrien" and called for Republican Congressman Henry Hyde and his family to be murdered. Baldwin said: "Im thinking to myself if we were in other countries, we would all, right now, all of us together ... would go down to Washington and we would stone Henry Hyde to death! We would stone him to death! Wait! ... Shut up! No shut up! Im not finished. We would stone Henry Hyde to death, and we would go to their homes and wed kill their wives and their children. We would kill their families." Al Franken told Matt Lauer on NBCs "Today show that Karl Rove and Lewis Libby should be "executed." The comment drew a laugh from Lauer. Franken's comments drew no criticism from the major media, including NBC News
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