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暗网爆料app Magazine Learning from Past Presidents

暗网爆料app鈥檚 Annual President鈥檚 Breakfast with Guest Speaker Peggy Noonan

Peggy Noonan鈥檚 quick, humorous wit and gracious reflections on encounters with world leaders kept an early-morning crowd engaged and appreciative. The 2019 President鈥檚 Breakfast speaker told the sold-out audience that working for Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush changed her life for the better. Noonan, a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for the Wall Street Journal and former presidential speechwriter, identified important lessons each of the last six U.S. presidents could have learned from his predecessor.

Describing Reagan as 鈥渢he last great gentleman of American politics,鈥 she lamented that his 鈥渙ld-school courtesy鈥 no longer characterizes political leaders and media stars. A master of political and public intimacy, Reagan knew how to engage an audience and wore his heart on his sleeve. But in his personal life, he was more detached and distant, preferring private pursuits.

Bush mastered personal intimacy and relished relationships with his family and friends. But in the political realm, 鈥渟ome tentative part of his nature took hold,鈥 she said. The day the Berlin Wall fell, he only made a public statement after his advisers urged him to call in the press. He didn鈥檛 want to further humiliate Soviet leaders as their system collapsed.

鈥淏ush鈥檚 imagination failed him,鈥 Noonan said. 鈥淩eagan would have spoken about the meaning, the historical鈥攅ven existential鈥攎eaning of the event. He would have talked about what we learned and the new reality. He would have thanked all the heroes who helped this outcome reach its fruition鈥攁nd he would have done it in a way that didn鈥檛 rub it in but that celebrated and credited the great turn in Russia by Russians.鈥

Bush could have learned a greater vision of the larger arc of history from Reagan. 鈥淪ee it, name it, define it, move on,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 great political leader has more in common with an artist than an economist. Artists see the sweep of things. They have a sense of what is essential and must be seen and stated. An economist can afford to be more narrowly focused, drill deeper but more narrowly.鈥

Noonan described President Bill Clinton as a riveting character who made a greater visual impression than a verbal one. He had grown up with Republicans and Conservatives and understood them and had some affection and respect for them. 鈥淏ut Clinton was too clever by half,鈥 she said. Noonan thought he could have learned the 鈥渋ntegrity and probity of the old political class鈥 from the elder Bush. 鈥淎 little rectitude goes far,鈥 she said.

Unlike Clinton, President George W. Bush was often at a loss for words. But he made good decisions and stuck to them. He worked hard, but he tried to do too much, tackling big issues such as Social Security and immigration. 鈥淏ush took on more than one person could handle,鈥 Noonan said. 鈥淗e failed to learn modesty of ambition and to think small. He could have learned this from Clinton, who played a lot of small ball.鈥

President Barack Obama modeled parenthood to a generation whose own parents were focusing much of their attention on their phones. Noonan praised him as a good husband who respected his wife and a doting father who ate dinner with his family every night, an unusual occurrence in Washington, D.C. 鈥淏ut Obama didn鈥檛 show much sign of liking the other side,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e didn鈥檛 understand Republicans and Conservatives. He could have learned from George W. Bush, who showed warmth and respect for the other team. That could have helped Obama with his big, messy healthcare plan.鈥

Noonan won the Pulitzer Prize for her coverage of the 2016 presidential election and said she has traveled more extensively since Donald Trump declared his candidacy in the summer of 2015. 鈥淚鈥檓 always trying to understand that election,鈥 she said.

After reading several of her nine books, three students, Sam Szpor 鈥19, Lucas Vieira 鈥19 and Megan Whitney 鈥21, asked Noonan questions during Convocation on campus after the breakfast. In response, she told engaging stories about writing President Reagan鈥檚 speech the day the Challenger exploded and the life of Pope John Paul II.

A young speechwriter in the White House, she realized immediately that the president needed to speak to the country the day of the space shuttle disaster even though he was scheduled to deliver his second State of the Union address that night鈥攚hich he postponed. Noonan used notes about Reagan鈥檚 reaction when he first heard the news to craft the talk and ended with quotes from the inspiring poem 鈥淗igh Flight鈥 written by John G. Magee in 1941: 鈥淲e will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for their journey and waved goodbye and 鈥榮lipped the surly bonds of earth鈥 to 鈥榯ouch the face of God.鈥欌 Noonan kept in mind a variety of audiences, seeking to affirm the value of space travel and put the incident in context for world leaders, Americans, and schoolchildren and their parents, who had watched Christa McAullife, the first teacher in space, board the shuttle. The address drew widespread praise and ranks as one of the greatest American speeches ever.

Noonan also talked about John Paul II meeting with and forgiving the man who shot him, which she called a 鈥済reat moment of the 20th century.鈥 The Polish pope returned to his homeland during the Cold War and spoke to the largest crowd in European history in Warsaw in 1979. 鈥淭he Polish trade union movement started with John Paul,鈥 she said.

暗网爆料app holds the President鈥檚 Breakfast every year in February or March. The event always sells out, and ticket sales begin about a month before the event at westmont. edu/breakfast.