American politician
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Wir springen in dieser Folge ins Jahr 1942. Vor einigen Monaten ist nun auch die USA in den Krieg eingetreten, und in Deutschland wird jetzt ein Plan ausgeheckt, die USA von innen zu schwächen: mit einer groß angelegten Sabotageaktion! Benannt nach dem Initiator der im 17. Jahrhundert gegründeten Siedlung Germantown, sollen im Zuge dieser Aktion acht Männer mit Anschlägen auf Industrie und Transportnetz die US-Bevölkerung demoralisieren und die Kriegsindustrie der USA schwächen. Wir sprechen darüber, wie dieser Plan umgesetzt wurde und welche Auswirkungen die Folgen der Aktion auch noch bis in die frühen 2000er Jahre hatten. // Literatur Dobbs, Michael. Saboteurs · the Nazi Raid on America. Vintage, 2004. Louis Fisher. Nazi Saboteurs on Trial: A Military Tribunal and American Law. University Press of Kansas, 2005. Pierce O'Donnell. In Time of War: Hitler's Terrorist Attack on America. New Press, 2005. // Erwähnte Folgen GAG339: Der Vocoder – https://gadg.fm/339 GAG156: Charles Lindbergh, Alexis Carrel und die Mensch-Maschine – https://gadg.fm/156 GAG448: Die Phenol-Verschwörung – https://gadg.fm/448 Das Episodenbild zeigt einen der acht Männer, George John Dasch. //Aus unserer Werbung Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/GeschichtenausderGeschichte //Wir haben auch ein Buch geschrieben: Wer es erwerben will, es ist überall im Handel, aber auch direkt über den Verlag zu erwerben: https://www.piper.de/buecher/geschichten-aus-der-geschichte-isbn-978-3-492-06363-0 Wer Becher, T-Shirts oder Hoodies erwerben will: Die gibt's unter https://geschichte.shop Wer unsere Folgen lieber ohne Werbung anhören will, kann das über eine kleine Unterstützung auf Steady oder ein Abo des GeschichteFM-Plus Kanals auf Apple Podcasts tun. Wir freuen uns, wenn ihr den Podcast bei Apple Podcasts oder wo auch immer dies möglich ist rezensiert oder bewertet. Wir freuen uns auch immer, wenn ihr euren Freundinnen und Freunden, Kolleginnen und Kollegen oder sogar Nachbarinnen und Nachbarn von uns erzählt!
Alan, Simon & Tom catch up with Louis Fisher about Chelmsford City.
Alan & Simon talk to ClaretsXtra's Louis Fisher and TorquayTalk's Thomas Kelly about all things Torquay United, Chelmsford City and the NLS
DAY 15 Intro- In plain site/ NOT IN THE DEEP SHADOWS Hosea 4:6 My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. 13 Therefore My people go into captivity because they have no knowledge; and their honorable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst. 14 Therefore Sheol has enlarged itself and opened its mouth without measure; so their glory, and their multitude, and their pomp, and he who rejoices shall descend into it. 15 The common man shall be brought down, and the great man shall be humbled, and the eyes of the lofty shall be humbled. Isa 5 Your country is desolate, your cities are burned with fire; strangers devour your land in your presence; and it is desolate, as overthrown by strangers. Isa. 1 THE RAGGED EDGE RADIO LIVE NOTES BY RUSS DIZDAR © WITH 31 DAYS ABLAZE PRAYER – ACTION 11 I was then tested greatly, and found that God would come through. During this time, one my daughters (Hoji) chose to leave the group as well, in large part due to my testimony for Christ. She remembers (as I do, as well) being there when I was tortured for my faith in Christ, and that I whispered “I forgive you” to her and the others present (leaders of this organization). With this I want to add: “I want you to get free” to each of my loved ones who are still in the group. It really is possible to get free, and this book is my testimony to this fact. May it help and bless those who read its pages. svali Speaks, svali. It's Not Impossible: Healing from Ritual Abuse and Mind Control (p. 3). Kindle Edition. Tyranny of Secrecy “The very word 'secrecy' is repugnant in a free and open society; and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths, and to secret proceedings.” —John F. Kennedy . “For too long, judges have allowed the government to hide its mistakes behind claims of national security.” —Barry Siegel . “Secrecy does not assure either security or success. Executive lies and deception inflict severe and long-lasting damage to the nation.” - Louis Fisher . Secrecy, when used in the context of the Constitution, is an important safeguard for our nation’s interests. It defends America from the theft of national security information by foreign enemies bent on the destruction of our form of government. It protects the lives of our service men and women who serve on the front lines of war. It guards the lives of intelligence assets who have chosen to assist our country in the defense of democracy. But, secrecy is a powerful weapon and must be under the appropriate controls. Because secrecy contains, in itself, an inherent power, there must be checks on when it is used, and it must continually be under vigilant oversight by those who properly represent the American Shipp, Kevin. From the Company of Shadows . Ascent Publishing, LLC. Kindle Edition. A full-blown program activation is usually the result of a handler, controller, or programmer (these are part of the Illuminati mind control hierarchy) purposely triggering you to bring forward an ‘alter’ or alternate personality to perform a specific function. There are innumerable variables that can come into play. Yuri said that I was involved in the Montauk Project. Discussing anything related with someone who was also connected to it could assist with memory retrieval but also ran the risk of having a triggering effect. Blood Ritual Monarch. Blood Ritual Monarch: Tales of Demon Conjuring, Mind Control and Madness (p. 135). bloodritualmonarch.com. Kindle Edition. THE RAGGED EDGE RADIO LIVE NOTES BY RUSS DIZDAR © WITH 31 DAYS ABLAZE PRAYER – ACTION 12 A. KNOW THE EXTENT OF THE ATROCITY • The subjugated victims • The cry has been heard • Is anyone listening B. KNOW WHAT YOU NEED TO CONFRONT IT • Where there is smoke • Nehemiah wanted to know • Nehemiah asked questions • You need to ….. allow yourself to be burdened • All in the presence of God OUTRAGE? C. KNOW & ACQUIRE THE INFORMATION /FACTS • Know the victims • Research the issue • Researching evil … the need to separate • Know the what • Know the who • Know the powers… • Ask ….. the Lord D. START THE PRAYERS /THE NEHEMIAH FACTOR Ch. 1 • Nehemiah prays https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=SONG+HOLLOW+EYES&view=detail&mid=7617EB1B0DD79EEA3A947617EB1B0DD79EEA3A94&FORM=VIRE0&ru=%2fsearch%3fq%3dSONG%2bHOLLOW%2bEYES%26form%3dANNTH1%26refig%3d034e879e9dd34f1b9c916e3a81d9ee23%26sp%3d-1%26ghc%3d1%26pq%3dsong%2bhollow%2beye%26sc%3d8-15%26qs%3dn%26sk%3d%26cvid%3d034e879e9dd34f1b9c916e3a81d9ee23
On the show this week, Chris Hedges talks to constitutional scholar Bruce Fein about the death of our US Constitution. Ralph Nader, with constitutional scholars Louis Fisher and Bruce Fein, wrote to the speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, on November 22 urging her to focus on 12 Articles of Impeachment President Donald Trump had allegedly violated during his administration. Among them: flouting the emoluments clause, expanding presidential wars, and spending billions of dollars on projects not appropriated by the US Congress.
This episode of Liberty Law Talk is a conversation with congressional scholar Louis Fisher on his recent book, Congress: Protecting Individual Rights. Fisher argues that contrary to popular belief, Congress, not the Court, has been the foremost champion in protecting the rights of racial minorities, children, Native Americans, and religious liberties.
Today, a conversation with Louis Fisher on the 1973 War Powers Act, designed to limit the U.S. president's ability to initiate or escalate military actions abroad. Louis Fisher is a scholar at The Constitution Project. Then, Mitch Jeserich talks to arms specialist William Hartung about the economics and who makes money during a war. He is the director of the Arms and Security Project at Center for International Policy and author Prophets of War: Lockheed Martin and the Making of the Military-Industrial Complex. The post The War Powers Act and The Making Money on War appeared first on KPFA.
Julian and Garrick sit down with SVN Accelerated Sales experts David Gilmore, CCIM, CAI, AARE and Louis Fisher III, CAI. David Gilmore serves as national auctioneer and MD for SVN | Gilmore Auction & Realty Company, SVN Auction Services, and the SVN Asset Recovery Team. With more than 35 years of accelerated marketing experience, Gilmore has sold more than 15,000 properties at public auction throughout the United States. In 2007, Gilmore was inducted into the Louisiana Auctioneers Association Hall of Fame. Louis Fisher joined SVN as National Auctioneer in October 2001, prior to that he was the CEO of Fisher Auction Co., Inc. At SVN, Louis is responsible for business development, client relationship management and strategic alliances. Louis’s direct presentation and sales efforts have resulted in more than $1 billion in sales revenues over his career. He was featured in the Wall Street Journal in 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007 as a leader in the industry.
Voir Dire: Conversations from the Criminal Justice Policy Program at Harvard Law School
This is the second episode in which we feature student scholarship coming out of HLS. We interview Andrew Hanna about a recent Third Circuit case that could change the landscape of putting people with mental illness in solitary confinement. Then, we talk to Louis Fisher about cause lawyers who might engage in civil disobedience against legal ethics codes.
Nieema was out of town this week so I hold it down with my homegirls Bianca (@yo.bianca) & first timer on the show Yaz (@notoriousyaz). We discuss season two of Insecure, whether we're #teamIssa or #teamlawrence, whether Tammy is a bird, if Molly needs therapy & our show predictions. Next up we discuss the success of Cardi B's "Bodak Yellow", Rick Ross' comments on why he won't hire female talent, Amber Rose's comments on Everyday Struggle & Drink Champs, Drake "retiring" strippers, Bernice Burgos on The Breakfast Club, whether certain celebrity females are false prophets, life post Jay Z 4:44 album & more... Hosted by Steven, Yaz & Bianca Executive Produced by Steven, Nieema Simone & Bianca Bey Engineered by Louis Fisher "Sophisticated Ignorance (Intro/Outro)" by @Crillum Email: askus@sophisticated-ignorance.net Instagram: Mr.Thesier, NotoriousYaz & Yo.Bianca www.sophisticated-ignorance.net
Louis Fisher is the guy that is loved by everyone. He wears a lot of professional hats including vegan chef, artist, and a journalistic photographer with over a decade of experience. He was brought out to Standing Rock to take photography and help create video content for the Dakota Access Pipeline protests and lived there for nearly 3 months. In this episode we dive deep into his time at Standing Rock, the political climate, and the non-existence of millennials.
What was the founders' conception of the role of Congress? Was that conception clearly understood? To what degree was that conception followed during our nation's early years and to what degree did early Congresses follow the Constitution? To what degree were members of Congress representing their districts and to what degree were they representing national interests? In what ways did the Senate and the House originally operate differently? Originally, the prevailing view was that “the laws that free men live under are the laws that have been hauled up." In other words, we are ruled by the laws that we and our neighbors made. Was this ever true? -- This panel was presented at the 2015 National Lawyers Convention on Thursday, November 12, 2015, at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC. -- Featuring: Prof. Akhil R. Amar, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale University; Dr. Louis Fisher, Scholar in Residence, the Constitution Project; Prof. Tara J. Helfman, Associate Professor of Law, Syracuse University College of Law; and Dr. Gordon Lloyd, Robert and Katheryn Dockson Professor of Public Policy, Pepperdine University School of Public Policy. Moderator: Hon. James L. Buckley, U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C. Circuit (ret.) and former U.S. Senator.
The National Constitution Center's Jeffrey Rosen is joined by constitutional experts Bruce Ackerman and Louis Fisher to discuss a hot topic: the roles of the President and Congress in conducting America’s foreign policy.
The National Constitution Center's Jeffrey Rosen is joined by constitutional experts Bruce Ackerman and Louis Fisher to discuss a hot topic: the roles of the President and Congress in conducting America’s foreign policy.
Louis Fisher from the Constitution Project and Chris Edelson from American University analyze President Obama’s speech and executive orders about immigration, in an in-depth conversation with the National Constitution Center’s Jeffrey Rosen.
Louis Fisher from the Constitution Project and Chris Edelson from American University analyze President Obama’s speech and executive orders about immigration, in an in-depth conversation with the National Constitution Center’s Jeffrey Rosen.
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law
This conference seeks to examine these critical questions in an expansive way, drawing together scholars from a number of different subfields in political science as well By bringing together former government officials, leading legal scholars and political scientists with a range of backgrounds and perspectives, this conference hopes to present a systematic, balanced analysis of the proper place of the president in the political system. The conference itself will examine what role the courts, Congress, and the public have played in checking presidential actions historically, and what role they should play in the Iraq War and beyond in a world where the opponent in a military conflict may not be a sovereign state. We plan to move the debate over presidential power well beyond the conventional discussion of whether we have an "imperial presidency." This conference will include: Three panels, luncheon speaker, and keynote panel. Featured Speakers: Jon Cohen, Director of Polling, Washington Post; John Podesta, CEO, Center for American Progress & former White House Chief of Staff (1998-2001); Ken Mehlman, Managing Director & Head of Global Public Affairs, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and former White House Director of Public Affairs, 2001-04 Speakers: Matthew Baum, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government; Adam Berinsky, MIT; John Mueller, Ohio State University; Louis Fisher, Law Library of the Library of Congress; Jack Rakove, Stanford University; John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law; Philip C. Bobbitt, Columbia Law School; William Howell, University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy; Stephen Krasner, Stanford University; Stephen Skowronek, Yale University; Christopher Edley, Dean, UC Berkeley School of Law Panelist/Discussants: Gary Jacobson, UC San Diego; Gordon Silverstein, UC Berkeley Chair: Terri Bimes, UC Berkeley Chair: Jesse Choper, UC Berkeley School of Law Chair: Daniel Farber, UC Berkeley School of Law