Footage captured by dash and security cameras and the terrorists themselves make the horror clear.
Peggy Noonan
Opinion Columnist, Declarations, The Wall Street Journal
Peggy Noonan is an opinion columnist at the Wall Street Journal where her column, "Declarations," has run since 2000.
She was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 2017. A political analyst for NBC News, she is the author of nine books on American politics, history and culture, from her most recent, “The Time of Our Lives,” to her first, “What I Saw at the Revolution.” She is one of ten historians and writers who contributed essays on the American presidency for the book, “Character Above All.” Noonan was a special assistant and speechwriter for President Ronald Reagan. In 2010 she was given the Award for Media Excellence by the living recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor; the following year she was chosen as Columnist of the Year by The Week. She has been a fellow at Harvard University’s Institute of Politics, and has taught in the history department at Yale University.
Before entering the Reagan White House, Noonan was a producer and writer at CBS News in New York, and an adjunct professor of Journalism at New York University. She was born in Brooklyn, New York and grew up there, in Massapequa Park, Long Island, and in Rutherford, New Jersey. She is a graduate of Fairleigh Dickinson University in Rutherford. She lives in New York City. In November, 2016 she was named one of the city's Literary Lions by the New York Public Library.
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It was attacked because it was vulnerable, and its next steps could place it in even greater peril.
It was savagery as strategy, and surely calculated to elicit a particular response.
His chief antagonist, Matt Gaetz, is a cartoon villain, a man so small he makes decadence look banal.
Voters don’t miss Trump, but they miss 2019, and they worry about crime, immigration and inflation.
We want to be respected but no longer think we need to be respectable.
He alone can remove himself from the 2024 presidential race. There’s every sign he’ll hang on.
They’re cinematic, as befits a politician who came of age during Hollywood’s golden era.
This year I finally resolved to read “War and Peace.” To think I might have died without having read it.
Meanwhile, Hunter Biden’s legal problems become newly substantial to voters in the American middle.
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