Word: link
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...involved in the nomination tells TIME. "But like any nominee to the court, you're not going to see him predict any cases or make any commitments to the committee." As for that two-decade-old memo, it was a domestic matter that has "no nexus, no connection, no link" to the current debate, says Steve Schmidt, a White House aide helping shepherd Alito through the confirmation process...
...captors. According to Risen's source, Tenet told Bush that Abu Zubaydah, badly wounded during his capture, was too groggy from painkillers to talk coherently. In response, Bush asked, "Who authorized putting him on pain medication?" Risen makes the leap that the Bush episode may represent the "most direct link yet between Bush and the harsh treatment of prisoners by both the CIA and the U.S. military"--but deflates that claim by acknowledging that some former senior Tenet lieutenants don't believe the story is true...
...that it was intended to override specific federal laws governing electronic surveillance. If Bush succeeds in establishing this as a precedent, he will have accomplished a breathtaking expansion of unilateral Executive power that could be easily applied to virtually any other area of domestic activity as long as a link to national security is asserted...
...White House insists that the NSA is looking into only the communications of people who have known links to al-Qaeda. A former senior intelligence official told TIME the program was used to develop a "spiderweb" of links between any person connected to al-Qaeda who communicated from abroad and someone in the U.S. That in turn would lead investigators to whomever the U.S.-based person might communicate with later. The people under surveillance, he says, "always had an established link to al-Qaeda people." Or, as Cheney said recently, "if you're calling Aunt Sadie in Paris...
...newcomer, Rutherford stood at the periphery of SCLC's most private drama. He saw the swirling, teasing flirtations of its inner circle, and he discouraged prurient speculation about the link between Coretta's regal suffering and King's pursuits elsewhere. Rutherford could only guess about what he called a "double life," marveling at burdens King must carry beyond the superhuman pressures and expectations of the movement. King's formidable armor wore down in midlife, draining assurance from his glib mantra as a young scholar that many great men of religion had been obsessed with sex--St. Augustine, St. Paul, Martin...