Paul Burgess (speechwriter)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is orphaned as few or no other articles link to it. Please help introduce links in articles on related topics. (February 2008) |
Paul D. Burgess (born June 6, 1960) is a conservative American writer. Burgess is a former legislative staffer on Capitol Hill, a former director of foreign-policy speechwriting at the White House, and has written essays for Virginia newspapers.
Contents |
[edit] Personal
At the time of his 1999 writing for the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star, Burgess was identified by the newspaper as a resident of Fredericksburg, Virginia. By 2006, the newspaper identified Burgess as a resident of Spotsylvania County, Virginia. He grew up in Maui before moving to Cheyenne, Wyoming, where he graduated from Central High in 1978 and attended the University of Wyoming. He served in the Marines and traveled with guerillas in Afghanistan.
[edit] Career
Burgess was director of foreign-policy speechwriting at the White House from October 2003 to July 2005. He previously worked for Senators Alan Simpson (R) and Mike Enzi (R) of Wyoming, at the Defense Intelligence Agency after 9/11, and as a speechwriter at the Pentagon for two years.[1]
[edit] Controversies
[edit] Clinton military policies
In 1999, Burgess wrote of what he saw as the harm done by Bill Clinton to the United States military:
- This past decade has seen the evolution of policies first implemented before President Clinton but embraced by him with frenzied enthusiasm that have all but wiped out what is now nostalgically referred to as the warrior culture.[2]
[edit] Hatred of the Left
In October 2006, Burgess returned to what he believed to be the harm done by leftists to American culture, in an essay entitled "Friends, Neighbors, and Countrymen Of the Left: I Hate Your Lying Guts." Despite his past talk of the "frenzied enthusiasm" of people such as President Clinton, Burgess stated that he had previously not hated the left:
- I now find that I am infected with a hatred for the very quarter that inspired the (rule against presidents lowering themselves to respond to criticism)--the deranged, lying left.[3]
[edit] References
- ^ Michelle Dynes, "Central High Grad writes speeches for White House" Wyoming Tribune-Eagle
- ^ Paul Burgess, "General Charles Krulak, CMC, Retires", March 13, 1999, Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star.
- ^ Paul Burgess, "Friends, Neighbors, and Countrymen Of the Left: I Hate Your Lying Guts", October 28, 2006, Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star.