The Authorities
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Inheriting a world reshaped by total war, nuclear brinkmanship, and nonstop mobilization demanded more than managerial skill. As the U.S. slid into the Cold War, presidents acted less like careful stewards of process and more like final judges of what counted as necessary, legitimate, and urgent. They waged wars without declarations, kept secrets without oversight, and shaped markets, morals, and memory by sheer force of office (and occasional charisma). The imperial presidency fused commander-in-chief, moral advocate, and national sovereign into a single role, pulling power ever closer to the Oval Office even as the bureaucracy beneath it swelled. Authority flowed downward, justified by crisis, sustained by fear, and made routine through repetition. Harry Truman through Ronald Reagan: these are the Authorities.