One of the nicest things writer Peter
Brimelow ever said to me was that I reminded him of Barbara Amiel Black.
In the age of the shallow, shrill, right-wing harpy, the noted Canadian
writer has always been, and still is, in a class of her own.
Conservative, Ayn Randish, a Zionist, and a rugged individualist—that’s
how the CBC’s Larry Zolf’s summed up some of Amiel’s appeal.
You can be brilliant or
beautiful, but you won’t get away with being both. Consequently,
Amiel has always borne the brunt of sneering screeds. Now that her
husband, former press baron Conrad Black, has been wrongly convicted of
mail fraud and obstruction of justice, the cruelty toward the couple has
crescendoed. Mercy has yet to replace malice.
The obstruction-of-justice count (Martha
Stewart’s and Lewis Libby’s lot) is the prosecutorial equivalent of
Rumpelstiltskin’s rage: unable to make a substantive case, the
(invariably American) prosecutor, in this case "Überbloodhound
Patrick Fitzgerald,” pursues his victims for… irritating him.
Libertarian economist Pierre Lemieux has distilled the other charges,
entirely licit in natural law: “Mail and wire fraud are just
manufactured crimes by the Surveillance State—crimes that do not exist
in civilized countries.”
One dog of a commentator who has not hesitated to lift his epistolary
leg in protest of Amiel is a dreadful toad called Peter Newman. Who is
Peter Newman? He’s no John Galt, but a Canadian who writes door stopping
tomes, devoted to chronicling Canada's elite. The boorish Newman told
the press that Lady Black can be expected to pack her valise and vamoose
to the UK, leaving Lord Black to languish in jail. She “is not known for
sticking around.”
Before lobbing this unkind cut, Newman had published excerpts from his
latest
tattletale
in Maclean’s, a magazine he once edited. (The piece has since been
removed from the Internet). Incidentally, the beret-bedecked Newman
tells any and all how he gave Amiel her first column in that magazine.
Indeed, Barbara Amiel managed to pierce the mirthless monotone that was Maclean's under Newman. Her closely argued libertarian commentary was the
only reason I ever picked the thing up.
Yet while openly acknowledging her gifts, and taking pride in having
hired her to liven up his listless rag, Newman then devoted a few
thousand words to denigrating Amiel’s libertarian politics, sexual
persona, and professional standards: Amiel was “a whining pest over each
lost comma or adjective” (complaints I’ve endured too).
This “lefty” (Jewish) lout has also mocked Amiel as a “middle-class
ethnic girl,” which must be a reference to her Jewishness. Or his idea
of a scoop. Amiel, after all, has been a proud—if atheistic—Jew for 66
years. Likewise, when Newman wants to peddle rumors that Amiel augmented
her breasts, he quotes an anonymous source who attests that, when he met
Amiel, “she had no British accent and no breasts." Let a boob bang on
about breasts if he wishes, but as to the accent: Amiel is English. Why
would her accent be fake? To his credit, Newman is clearly more Groucho
than Karl.
Here’s a taste of Newman’s prolix prose:
“Why did Conrad marry Barbara? For several reasons, according to his
most intimate confidants: for one, she was his intellectual soulmate;
for another, she introduced him to the delights of oral sex. To watch
them together at the height of their renown was to witness a mesmerizing
ballet of sensuality and power. She moved inside Conrad's field of
force, trembling like a magnetic compass needle, her high spirits in
harmony with his. She had his number; with her, he was reborn.”
You’ll find no such salacious details in the writings of Amiel, the
object of Newman’s fantasies. Although I’ve tried in vain to complete
one of this
golem’s
bloated books (and by his abysmal rank on Amazon, I am not alone), I
devoured Amiel’s.
“Confessions” is an autobiography of an ambitious, talented lass, who
endured hardship, but prevailed. The author’s strong libertarian streak
and crystalline, pared-down prose stand out. Brutally candid about her
failings and the penumbral periods in her life, Amiel is careful to
credit those who’ve influenced her, and classy enough to speak well of
paramours. The white noise Newman has emitted will fade. The substance
of Barbara Amiel’s work will stand.
Peter Brimelow agrees: “Barbara is leagues above Newman, personally and
professionally.”
.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
June 20
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