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Editorial: Independence Day
July 2nd, 2006

Editorial: Once Again...
June 25th, 2006

Editorial: Home Ownership
June 24th, 2006

Editorial: Mosquito Control in Cedar Key
May 11th, 2006

Editorial: Will Gas Prices Go Up?
April 30th, 2006

Editorial: Tree Ordinance Violations
April 26th, 2006

Editorial: Why Worry about Global Warming?
April 21st, 2006

Editorial: The Purpose of Government?
March 23rd, 2006

Editorial: Air Boat Regatta, Guests or Pests?
January 29th, 2006

Editorial: The East-West Management Plan
December 21st, 2005

Editorial: Water, Water, Water
December 13th, 2005

Editorial: Bad News for Print News, Good for Online
November 14th, 2005

Editorial: A Bad Tradition
November 10th, 2005

Editorial: For the Birds
October 17th, 2005

Editorial: If It Killed the River....
October 4th, 2005

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Is the Sky Falling?

Is the Sky Falling?

Editorial

In just five weeks American voters will elect a President in what may be the most important election since 1932. In 1932, our country was three years into the worst economic crisis of the twentieth century. Furthermore, the tide of fascism that brought World War II was sweeping out of Germany, Italy and Japan.

In 2008 we face an energy crisis, global warming, fundamentalist religious terrorists and instability of our financial giants. Will we choose a President on the basis of a potential First Lady's wardrobe or who used "putting lipstick on a pig" first?

We have bridges, levees and banks failing. We no longer have international cooperation such as seen during the Gulf War of 1991. Although it may not be a giant conspiracy, there is a clear relationship between expanding energy use, global warming and sending more and more money into the Middle East, for oil and nation building in Iraq and Afghanistan. The sky is not falling. However, we will need an administration that can distinguish between needs and wants.

American voters must look for leadership that will find solutions to problems rather than seeking someone to blame. (Current candidates will blame problems on either George Bush, Congress, lobbyists or, as a last resort, Bill Clinton.) Look for a candidate who offers specific plans to solve domestic and international problems.

It would be nice if there were one crucial issue, but there are many. Every voter should ask, "Am I voting based on one gut issue, or which candidate best can deal with many issues?"

In the five years that Cedar Key News has served our readers we have never endorsed a candidate. That no doubt is because our Board of Directors has agreed to endorse only if the Board is unanimously in support of one candidate. Don't expect that to happen! But we are unanimous in the view that voters should examine the candidates very carefully.

We recommend that our readers attend candidate forums and watch the debates on television with a critical eye. Think it all over and vote for the best candidate.

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