The newest collection of George Will's writings is divided into two related parts. The first celebrates the success of "the American idea" around the world, and includes all of Will's memorable commentary on recent events in Berlin, Eastern Europe, China, and the U.S.S.R. Then, in the second part, he turns to the democratic udea at home in America, describing the fumblings of the President and offering concern for our nation.
George Frederick Will is an American newspaper columnist, journalist, and author. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winner best known for his conservative commentary on politics. By the mid 1980s the Wall Street Journal reported he was "perhaps the most powerful journalist in America," in a league with Walter Lippmann (1899–1975).
Will served as an editor for National Review from 1972 to 1978. He joined the Washington Post Writers Group in 1974, writing a syndicated biweekly column, which became widely circulated among newspapers across the country and continues today. His column is syndicated to 450 newspapers. In 1976 he became a contributing editor for Newsweek, writing a biweekly backpage column until 2011.
Will won a Pulitzer Prize for Commentary for "distinguished commentary on a variety of topics" in 1977.[6] Often combining factual reporting with conservative commentary, Will's columns are known for their erudite vocabulary, allusions to political philosophers, and frequent references to baseball.
Will has also written two bestselling books on the game of baseball, three books on political philosophy, and has published eleven compilations of his columns for the Washington Post and Newsweek and of various book reviews and lectures.
Will was also a news analyst for ABC since the early 1980s and was a founding member on the panel of ABC's This Week with David Brinkley in 1981, now titled This Week with George Stephanopoulos. Will was also a regular panelist on television's Agronsky & Company from 1977 through 1984 and on NBC's Meet the Press in the mid-to-late 1970s. He left ABC to join Fox News in early October 2013.
This collection of the author's NEWSWEEK columns from the late 1980s takes its title from the sudden end of communism in Eastern Europe in 1989, which Will declared, without irony, "the most important year EVER." The anthology also includes the author's harrowing essay "Mothers Who Don't Know How," part of a popular neo-conservative genre of articles on the theme "Everything I Don't Like about Black People Is Lyndon Johnson's Fault." Rumors that this book provided the inspiration for the TV series SUDDENLY SUSAN are mostly unfounded.
Will damns GHWB with feint praise, though he would later hold up the Bush Dynasty as his beau ideal of the Presidency in order to damn Trump. Get lost you wussy.