Word: stengel
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This past week Fox News celebrated its 10th anniversary on the air. To mark the occasion, Rupert Murdoch--the 75-year-old Fox News founder, News Corp. chairman and CEO and one of the last of the media titans--spoke to TIME managing editor Richard Stengel about bias in the news, what MySpace means to the future of his business, and his most trusted sources of daily information...
...Saturday, Fox News will celebrate its 10th anniversary on the air. To mark the occasion Rupert Murdoch - Fox News founder, NewsCorp managing director and last of the media titans - spoke to TIME Managing Editor Richard Stengel about bias in the news, what MySpace means to the future of his business and his most trusted sources of daily information...
...TIME's managing editor, Richard Stengel, was right-Americans should give more thought to foreign policy. Furthermore, it is not good enough for the U.S., the self-appointed world's policeman, to reflect on what constitutes its own values and interests. The policeman should either reflect on the values and interests of the policed world-not necessarily the same as his-or stop being the policeman nobody has asked him to be. The polar opposites of isolationism and interventionism are not the only options. There is also the option of participating in world politics on an equal footing with other...
...Americans in the World Compliments to TIME's managing editor Richard Stengel for his editorial, "One Thing We Need To Do" [Sept. 11]. Unlike the other articles in TIME on the aftermath of 9/11, his was the only one that raised some fundamental questions. When violence is countered by violence, regression is fighting regression. It is a double step backward. The question is not what we are willing to kill for but, as Gandhi said, what we are willing to die for. Nineteen young men answered that question in a terrible manner on 9/11; the passengers of Flight 93 answered...
...Americans in the World Re "One thing we need to do" [sept. 11]: Time's managing editor, Richard Stengel, was right - Americans should give more thought to foreign policy. Furthermore, it is not good enough for the U.S., the self-appointed world's policeman, to reflect on what constitutes its own values and interests. The policeman should either reflect on the values and interests of the policed world - not necessarily the same as his - or stop being the policeman nobody has asked him to be. The polar opposites of isolationism and interventionism are not the only options. There is also...