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Editorial: What Have We Learned?
September 3rd, 2005

Editorial: Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace
August 17th, 2005

Editorial: What Is a Consultant to Do?
July 5th, 2005

Editorial: Six Land Use Petitions in Play
June 25th, 2005

Editorial: Poaching & Plagiarism
June 13th, 2005

Editorial: Upward and Onward in 2005
May 24th, 2005

Editorial: Farewell Maureen
May 17th, 2005

Editorial: Speaking About Speak Out
May 10th, 2005

Editorial: Informed Voters Wanted
March 26th, 2005

Editorial: Health Needs Survey Well Received
February 12th, 2005

Editorial: Fire Protection, Fire Insurance and Tax Justice
January 25th, 2005

Editorial: Cedar Key Health Service Survey
January 14th, 2005

Editorial: New Year`s Resolution
December 31st, 2004

Editorial: Do We Need Better Healthcare in Cedar Key?
December 16th, 2004

Editorial: Help Defend Us
October 29th, 2004

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A View of China from Cedar Key

A View of China from Cedar Key

Editorial

More than twenty years ago a Chinese scientist visiting the U.S. was asked," Will China ever have free elections?" He replied that there are six parties in China, with candidates on the ballots. When asked what would happen if one of the non-Communist parties won he replied, "Nothing would happen because only the Communist Party has an army."

June 4, 1989, a few years after the visiting scientist's edifying answer, Chinese government tanks and troops with rifles killed an estimated 2600 men and women assembled in Beijing's Tiananmen Square asking for a democratic government.

Protests in China and around the world over the Chinese government's oppression of religious, ethnic and political minorities have intensified in recent months. Government promises that news censorship would not occur during the 2008 Olympics have been forgotten.

Censorship has continued. But, just as pollution has not been controlled, reports of pollution and protests have slipped out. Global news is truly global.

Economic reform has swept China since the Tiananmen Square massacre. But the Chinese government, in preparation for and execution of the Olympics, has shown the heavy hand of dictatorship.

We in Cedar Key, so far from China, might try to ignore China. However, events in China should remind us of our freedoms to assemble without fear of tanks, to criticize officials without fear of prison and to vote for an array of candidates. We must not acquiesce to limits of our freedoms of speech and assembly. Finally, we must remember that events like the Tiananmen Square massacre can happen when there is too much political power at the top.

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