Sources can be credible and balanced, like _________, (hell if I know), or credible but biased, like ABC, FOX, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN, PBS, NPR, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Economist, National Review, The Daily Show, New York Times, Washington Post, Al Franken, Drudge, Guardian, BBC, etc., OR biased and not very credible at all, like Limbaugh, Hannity, O'Reilly, etc., OR extremely biased and completely not credible in the slightest, like NewsMax, Atlantis Rising, Michael Savage, etc.
Sure, this is my opinion, but most will agree with most of these, I think. Basically, my point is that in some cases, like Savage, you can attack the source with confidence. In most of the above cases, however, you have to judge each story on its own merit. It helps if multiple papers/channels/stations are reporting roughly the same thing.
Not really sure here but if this is what he was suggesting he had to explain why all of those UN resolutions did not constitute consensus etc.
I will tell you why: The penalty for not following the resolution 1441 was 'serious consequences'. Would you like to show me where a document exists spelling out what the consequences were, exactly, and signed by all the Council members? Or will you just admit that Bush decided what it meant himself?
He did say that he hoped to reduce troop strength within a year (not pull out as some would suggest) but how?
Why don't you ask Tony Blair, who reduced UK troop strength by ONE THIRD, for tips on how to do this?