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Government Shouldn't Fund Media Bias with Taxpayer Dollars (Christian News Wire)
January 6, 2009, 3:30 pm EST
WASHINGTON , Jan. 6 / Christian Newswire / -- Boycott The New York Times editor Don Feder said today that the idea of a government bailout for struggling newspapers, which has been floated recently by some legislators and journalists, is ...
Ann Coulter Cries Foul Over Today Cancellation (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
January 6, 2009, 3:00 pm EST
The "liberal media elite" is taking another bashing, and this time it's not from Sarah Palin.
RATE THIS ARTICLE (Crosswalk.com)
January 6, 2009, 11:29 am EST
In the lull before inauguration I’m taking today and Monday to say some things about the media. First – and I know as a columnist this may sound self-serving – newspapers must be saved.
RATE THIS ARTICLE (Crosswalk.com)
January 6, 2009, 11:28 am EST
On Friday, I made the case for helping your local newspaper survive, no matter how frustrated you might be with it. Today I want to tell you another survival story.
Today Kisses Coulter Goodbye (Richmond Times-Dispatch)
January 6, 2009, 10:42 am EST
http://images.eonline.com/resize/66/66/eol_images/Entire_Site/20090106/300.ad.AnnCoulter.010609.jpgThe liberal media elite has run afoul of Ann Coulter yet again. Well, that didn’t take long. The lightning-rod conservative pundit is crying ...
Today Kisses Coulter Goodbye (E! Online)
January 6, 2009, 10:21 am EST
The liberal media elite has run afoul of Ann Coulter yet again. Well, that didn't take long. The lightning-rod conservative pundit is crying conspiracy—liberal media elite...
Standing up to Bush (Las Vegas Sun)
January 5, 2009, 11:42 am EST
Recurring themes of the Bush administration — secrecy and low regard for science — are prevalent in two White House actions that are now stimulating considerable opposition.
Patrick Tyler's 'A World of Trouble': an opinionated look at the Middle East (Austin American-Statesman)
January 3, 2009, 12:09 pm EST
Patrick Tyler is a veteran foreign correspondent who has worked the Middle East and China beats since the mid '80s, first for The Washington Post and then for The New York Times.


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National Defense

3.7 .. . AND IN THE CONGRESS

Since the beginning of the Republic, few debates have been as hotly contested as the one over executive versus legislative powers. At the Constitutional Convention, the founders sought to create a strong executive but check its powers. They left those powers sufficiently ambiguous so that room was left for Congress and the president to struggle over the direction of the nation's security and foreign policies.

The most serious question has centered on whether or not the president needs congressional authorization to wage war. The current status of that debate seems to have settled into a recognition that a president can deploy military forces for small and limited operations, but needs at least congressional support if not explicit authorization for large and more open-ended military operations.

This calculus becomes important in this story as both President Clinton and President Bush chose not to seek a declaration of war on Bin Ladin after he had declared and begun to wage war on us, a declaration that they did not acknowledge publicly. Not until after 9/11 was a congressional authorization sought.

The most substantial change in national security oversight in Congress took place following World War II. The Congressional Reorganization Act of 1946 created the modern Armed Services committees that have become so powerful today. One especially noteworthy innovation was the creation of the Joint House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee, which is credited by many with the development of our nuclear deterrent capability and was also criticized for wielding too much power relative to the executive branch.

Ironically, this committee was eliminated in the 1970s as Congress was undertaking the next most important reform of oversight in response to the Church and Pike investigations into abuses of power. In 1977, the House and Senate created select committees to exercise oversight of the executive branch's conduct of intelligence operations.

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