Walter Williams: Wackonomics

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For the U.S. Congress, news media, pundits and much of the American public, a lot of economic phenomena can be explained by what people want, human greed and what seems plausible. I’m going to name this branch of economic “science” wackonomics and apply it to some of today’s observations and issues.

Father David Epps: Trinity has a football team!

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In the early part of 1994, Regina Garrett and Vicki Smith made an appointment and came to my office. At the time, I was the pastor of Trinity Fellowship, an Assemblies of God congregation in Sharpsburg. They proposed that we begin a Christian school at Trinity and they were willing to do the leg work necessary to try to make it happen.

William Murchison: The great national dice-roll

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I can’t at this point think of anything new to say about the election. Here’s something old, in that case: McCain’s the one, and not just because, when it comes to “old,” he qualifies.

Rick Ryckeley: Scariest thing in the world

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Eight years is a long time to wait for anything, but soon the wait will finally be over. Halloween has once again fallen on a Friday night.

Thomas Sowell: A perfect storm

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Some elections are routine, some are important and some are historic. If Senator John McCain wins this election, it will probably go down in history as routine. But if Senator Barack Obama wins, it is more likely to be historic — and catastrophic.

Terry Garlock: Obama the socialist, and what that means

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Maybe I’m a dinosaur. Not because I turned 60 in August, but because I believe in our system of capitalism and I have not forgotten the utter failure of socialism and communism wherever it has been tried.

Steve Brown: School board wants to get us hooked on SPLOST addiction

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In most cases, government runs astray until we run headlong into a crisis.

When the federal government failed to shepherd the market because of special interest enticements and a lack of aggressive enforcement of regulations, the crisis forces a revision of oversight controls and restores order at taxpayer expense.

Ronda Rich: Fried green tomatoes

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There is an art to making fried green tomatoes. Unfortunately, too many restaurant cooks are artless. They think they can when they can’t.

Sallie Satterthwaite: The Year of the Dog Bite

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Except for the dog bite and the Friday night rainstorm, it was the loveliest lakeside camping weekend we’ve ever had in the half-dozen or so years we’ve been doing this. We started with just a couple of families, then twice a year, in April and October, the prettiest times in southern Georgia.

Dr. David L. Chancey: Sunday alcohol sales in Fayetteville? Give it a rest

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My mom grew up on the farm in Upson County with farm chores galore: fields to work, animals to feed, eggs to gather. They worked hard, but when Sunday came, they ceased work. Sunday was a day of worship and rest. Of course, chickens were fed and cows were milked, but Sunday was God’s day.

Father David Epps: Seconds from death

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A local 16-year-old owes his life to a Fayetteville, Ga., police officer. According to published newspaper reports, on Aug. 30, Officer Todd Chitwood encountered two College Park young men who were apparently acting suspicious.

Rick Ryckeley: Coupon Avenger to the rescue!

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Desperate times call for desperate measures, and with one look at our bank account and stock portfolio statements, it seems like yours truly and company are sure enough at the bottom of this economic downturn.

Thomas Sowell: Believers in Obama

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Telling a friend that the love of his life is a phony and dangerous is not likely to get him to change his mind. But it may cost you a friend.

Cal Thomas: Government can’t do it all (or even most of it)

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People who put faith in government to solve national or even individual problems are headed for deep disappointment, if it hasn’t already arrived. Still, that doesn’t stop politicians from attempting to sell political snake oil to the gullible. No one ever lost money betting on the ignorance of the uninformed masses.

Walter Williams: Affordable health care

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One of the campaign themes this election cycle is “affordable” health care. Shouldn’t we ask ourselves whether we want the politicians who brought us the “affordable” housing, that created the current financial debacle, to now deliver us affordable health care? Shouldn’t we also ask how things turned out in countries where there is socialized medicine?

Steve Brown: BoE’s Smith fails test of openness on business, land connections

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Whenever a governmental entity is given large amounts of cash through bonds, SPLOST or any other means, it is vitally important that public scrutiny be encouraged as a method of insuring financial accountability. Financial accountability and sound decision-making have been deficient at times at the Fayette County Board of Education.

Claude Paquin: One good way to decide on SPLOST

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Here’s what I believe might be a smart way to decide whether to vote for or against increasing the sales tax to 7 percent to help out the Fayette County School System.

Ronda Rich: The man from N.J.

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Not too long ago, I met a nice guy, a renewing of an old friendship actually, and I tried to fall in love with him. I tried, but I couldn’t.

Sallie Satterthwaite: Autumn Blues

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Until recently, I found autumn to be the most depressing time of the year, colorful leaves and wildflowers notwithstanding.

Sally Oakes: Domestic violence

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October is Domestic Violence Awareness month. The website, www.domesticviolence.org. offers this definition: “Domestic violence and emotional abuse are behaviors used by one person in a relationship to control the other.”

Father David Epps: The most important issue

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There are key issues that, for me, stand in importance above all others. Certainly, especially in the last several weeks, the economy is an issue. How and when peace will be brought to Iraq and Afghanistan are important issues. Energy dependence on foreign sources, how immigrants are to be treated, relations with Russia and other nations are issues to be considered. The security of the nation ranks near the top of the issues. But, for me, there is an issue that I simply cannot ignore.

Rick Ryckeley: DSL dilemma and rock communication

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It was once said by someone much smarter than me, “If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make any noise?”

The Citizen: The fundamental role of government

By state Sen. Mitch Seabaugh (R-Sharpsburg)

The current economic situation has energized a renewed focus on the fundamental role of government in the daily lives of its citizens. Government should be able to demonstrate to taxpayers that their tax dollars are justified and that they are spent wisely and effectively.

Thomas Sowell: Negative advertising

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One of the oldest phenomena of American elections — criticism of one’s opponent — has in recent times been stigmatized by much of the media as “negative advertising.”

Walter Williams: Political monopoly power

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The Federalist Papers, written by James Madison, John Jay and Alexander Hamilton, is the document most frequently referred to when trying to get a feel for the original intent of the framers of the Constitution.

Warren Throckmorton: Spreading the wealth: Obama, Joe, and the Democratic Socialists

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By now, almost everybody knows “Joe the plumber.” Mentioned about 15 times in Wednesday’s presidential debate, Joe Wurzelbacher, a plumber from Toledo, questioned Barack Obama at an Ohio campaign stop earlier in the week. Joe wanted to know if Obama’s tax plan would raise his taxes.

Spreading the wealth: Obama, Joe, and the Democratic Socialists

By now, almost everybody knows “Joe the plumber.” Mentioned about 15 times in Wednesday’s presidential debate, Joe Wurzelbacher, a plumber from Toledo, questioned Barack Obama at an Ohio campaign stop earlier in the week. Joe wanted to know if Obama’s tax plan would raise his taxes.

Sallie Satterthwaite: Farmer Pope now rests in peace

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They laid him to rest in the earth he loved so well, the earth he tilled and planted, the earth in which his ancestors lie, the quiet earth beside the church he loved.

John Munford: E-SPLOST an investment in our home values

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Judging by the smaller crowds I’ve seen in local restaurants lately, it’s safe to say my family is not the only one feeling the financial pinch here in Fayette County.

Scott Bradshaw: Ethics fine a black eye for Realtors

I am a proud member of the Georgia Association of Realtors (GAR). Members are bound by the Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice set forth by the National Association of Realtors. We are required to take an ethics course and pass a written test on the code every four years. This requirement protects the public and helps maintain the collective integrity of Realtors.

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