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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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Editorial: Freedom to Blow the Whistle

Editorial: Freedom to Blow the Whistle

Editorial

Who better to defend the right of free speech than the Press? So, when a citizen criticizes a government action or a powerful corporation endangers the public, the citizen is often attacked by the offending party. And, he is vigorously defended by the news media. The Press balances the power that incumbent politicians have over individuals.


Forty years ago President Richard Nixon used the full force of the Justice Department against Daniel Elsberg, a defense analyst, for releasing the Pentagon Papers in protest to government action in Viet Nam war. The New York Times and other new sources defended Elsberg`s whistle blowing.


A careful reader of this editorial may have noticed the adjective "incumbent" before politician.

We in the United States of America seldom need to go into the streets in protest. Whistle-blowers and an alert and righteous press can unseat entrenched incumbents! Richard Nixon resigned the Presidency of the United States in 1974, thanks to two reporters and the Washington Post.

In 1777, just a year after the Declaration of Independence, ten sailors in the U.S. Revolutionary Navy protested torture of captured British sailors by their commanding officer. Their subsequent arrest was predictable. The protesting sailors were acquitted, no doubt in part due to their case being well publicized. Congress paid for their defense. Public awareness of the sailors` moral courage was important.


The Press can defend itself. A wise man said, "Never pick a fight with someone who buys ink by the barrel." We defend whistle-blowers, because they have freedom of speech under the First Amendment of the Constitution, just as we do.

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