Awards & Winners

George Will

Date of Birth 04-May-1941
Place of Birth Champaign
(Champaign County, Illinois, United States of America)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as George F. Will, George Frederick Will
Profession Journalist, Commentator, Writer, Author
Quotes
  • Today more Americans are imprisoned for drug offenses than for property crimes
  • The nice part about being a pessimist is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised.
  • Modern man's capacity for destruction is quixotic evidence of humanity's capacity for reconstruction. The powerful technological agents we have unleashed against the environment include many of the agents we require for its reconstruction.
  • The gap between ideals and actualities, between dreams and achievements, the gap that can spur strong men to increased exertions, but can break the spirit of others -- this gap is the most conspicuous, continuous land mark in American history. It is conspicuous and continuous not because Americans achieve little, but because they dream grandly. The gap is a standing reproach to Americans; but it marks them off as a special and singularly admirable community among the world's peoples.
  • Pessimism is as American as apple pie. Frozen apple pie with a slice of processed cheese.
  • I say statecraft is soulcraft. Just as all education is moral education because learning conditions conduct, most legislation is moral legislations because it conditions the action and the thought of the nation in broad and important spheres in life.
  • If your job is to leaven ordinary lives with elevating spectacle, be elevating or be gone.
  • The pursuit of perfection often impedes improvement.
  • Football combines the two worst features of American life. It is violence punctuated by committee meetings.
  • Actually, there is only one first question of government, and it is How should we live? or What kind of people do we want our citizens to be?
  • As advertising blather becomes the nation's normal idiom, language becomes printed noise.
  • She is so totally absorbed in a vocation -- both a gift and a mastering passion -- that she has no time to be absorbed with the self's worries about itself. And that is the moral of the story: You can pursue happiness by wearing a torn jersey. You can catch it by being good at something you love.
  • Voters don't decide issues, they decide who will decide issues.
  • Ronald Reagan has held the two most demeaning jobs in the country; President of the United States and radio broadcaster for the Chicago Cubs.
  • All politics takes place on a slippery slope. The most important four words in politics are up to a point.
  • Long before Einstein told us that matter is energy, Machiavelli and Hobbes and other modern political philosophers defined man as a lump of matter whose most politically relevant attribute is a form of energy called self-interestedness. This was not a
  • Politics should share one purpose with religion: the steady emancipation of the individual through the education of his passions.
  • It is no longer enough to be lusty. One must be a sexual gourmet.
  • A politician's words reveal less about what he thinks about his subject than what he thinks about his audience.
  • It is said that God gave us memory so we could have roses in winter. But it is also true that without memory we could not have self in any season. The more memories you have, the more you have. That is why, as Swift said, No wise man ever wished to be younger.
  • We are given children to test us and make us more spiritual.
  • Americans are overreaching; overreaching is the most admirable and most American of the many American excesses.
  • World War II was the last government program that really worked.
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. In 1986, the Wall Street Journal called him "perhaps the most powerful journalist in America", in a league with Walter Lippmann.

Awards by George Will

Check all the awards nominated and won by George Will.

1977


Pulitzer Prize for Commentary
(For distinguished commentary on a variety of topics.)

Nominations 1977 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Pulitzer Prize for Commentary
For distinguished commentary on a variety of topics.