Appearing on Monday's NBC Today, Guardian columnist
Glenn Greenwald corrected co-host Savannah Guthrie on her framing of the
NSA phone and email surveillance controversy after she inaccurately ...
Secret-publishing editor Bill Keller and conservative critic Gabriel Schoenfeld have a surprisingly amicable discussion on where to draw the line on publishing state secrets in the Internet age.
While the broadcast networks have generally empathized with the distress of airline passengers over TSA's intrusive airport searches, they have not impugned the Obama administration as launching a ...
From Clay Waters' review of "Bush's Law": "Lichtblau is preoccupied with getting scooped. Check his response when it looked as if the Times wouldn't run the NSA story: 'Each tidbit that came ...
The Times uses Gonzales' resignation to pile on: "It was Vice President Dick Cheney and his top legal adviser, David S. Addington, who...pushed for a radical rewriting of American policies on such ...
The Times ventures where even the ACLU fears to tread: "Broad new surveillance powers approved by Congress this month could allow the Bush administration to conduct spy operations that go well ...
Executive Editor Bill Keller: "...the government has no particular interest in telling you if they're doing something that's illegal or abusive. That's why we exist."
Three times, the N.S.A.'s spying on international communications of suspected terrorists is called "domestic eavesdropping," as if they were monitoring all of our phone calls.
Was the anti-Bush surveillance ruling "a careful, thoroughly grounded opinion" or did it "use[d] circular reasoning" and "substitute passion for analysis"?