Amen. Ann Coulter's comments over a year ago are a non-issue. You don't have to like her or read her books and colunms as a matter of personal taste, but to think she is the enemy of the Jewish people is trivial, if not dangerously absurd.
Personally, I considered Coulter's comments poorly worded, but never intentionally malicious. Mostly because she was accurate in a historical context of replacement theology.Early Christians did considered themselves the new "chosen people" , completing the covenant made to the Israleites. Many of the early Christian theologians saw Roman Catholic Church and the Vatican as a replacement of Israel. And one does not have to be reminded of the centuries of discrimination and persecution Jews endured in medieval Europe as a reminder of their transgressions, such as the Wandering Jew in early christian folklore.
In recent months muslim protesters throughout the country, let alone throughout the world, have been calling for genocide against the Jewish people on western streets, with despicable signs saying "Hitler didn't finish his job," "Jews are the real Nazis," and "Jews go back to the ovens." When we squabble over these sort of issues, it demonstrates we don't have our priorities straight.