Debra Saunders

Debra J. Saunders is an American syndicated columnist and journalist. She is the White House correspondent for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, and her column is syndicated by Creators Syndicate and is carried by newspapers in the United States.

Debra Saunders
CitizenshipAmerican
OccupationWriter, journalist
EmployerLas Vegas Review-Journal
Spouse(s)Wesley J. Smith

Early life and education

Saunders graduated in 1980 from the University of Massachusetts at Boston. She majored in Greek and Latin.[1]

Career

In 1992, she became an opinion-page columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, also syndicated by Creators. She later augmented her thrice-weekly columns with the Token Conservative blog,[2] before leaving the paper in 2016.

Between 1987 and 1992, Saunders was a columnist and editorial writer for the Los Angeles Daily News. She has previously worked for conservative advocacy groups and for a Republican leader of the California State Assembly.

In addition to her columns, Saunders has written for The Wall Street Journal, National Review, and Reader's Digest. She is the author of one book, The World According to Gore (ISBN 1-893554-14-7).

Saunders is married to Wesley J. Smith.[3]

Views

In 2006 Saunders wrote articles opposing the War on Drugs.[4][5] She campaigned in her column for President Bush to issue more pardons and sentence commutations.

Saunders voted against Proposition 22 in 2000.[6] In 2004, Saunders wrote in support of same-sex marriage.[7] She was critical of the California Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage.[6]

In 2007, she wrote an article that criticized the imprisoned freelance journalist Josh Wolf, although she opposed his imprisonment.[8]

In 2007 Saunders described herself as a climate change skeptic.[9]

In 2011, she wrote about the comic character Foreskin Man, which was being used to promote a ballot initiative to ban circumcision in San Francisco.[10]

gollark: So just take the image feature outputs and run them through a classifier thing?
gollark: Mine mostly don't share templates, actually, but that's a reasonable idea anyway. I'll look into it.
gollark: I wouldn't expect it to be able to understand hugely abstract things or whatever but just approximately match my tastes.
gollark: I want to make something to automatically classify memes as worth adding to my meme collection or not. I have several thousand already in there which are in it and so "good", and could probably crawl tons from Reddit which are probably "bad". Is this practical?
gollark: Is few *really* an adjective?

References

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