Sentinel has set the standard for 150 years

As a kid growing up in the 1960s in Orlando, I remember my father reading the newspaper every morning with his coffee. Back then, the only thing the paper meant to me was that on Sunday, when he was finished, I got the funnies.

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Then the Richard Speck murders in Chicago were on the front page. I was 10 years old, and I did not understand everything, but I understood enough. I was suddenly pushed into the adult world, and for the first time, I realized the newspaper mattered. It told people what was happening, even when news was terrible.

After that, I read the newspaper every day. A lot of it went over my head when I was young, but I kept reading. I wanted to know. I’ve kept a newspaper subscription all my life, and at one time I had four.

The Orlando Sentinel mattered to me in 1966 because it showed me a world outside my own. A good newspaper tells the truth, asks questions, and pays attention when people in power would rather no one was looking.

Children should understand that the news is important. Not because the world is always easy to look at, but because knowing what is happening empowers us to become part of the world, not just people living in it.

Reading the article about the newspaper (“Orlando Sentinel turns 150 years old. This is our story,” June 6) brought all that back. The Orlando Sentinel set the bar for me when I was 10 years old, and I have never forgotten it.

— Gloria Danvers, Orlando

Religious liberty at risk

The recent decision by the Department of Defense to reduce its list of recognized religious designations from more than 200 choices to just 31 should concern all Americans, regardless of their personal faith tradition.

At first glance, this may appear to be a simple administrative change. In reality, it raises important questions about religious liberty and the role of government in recognizing the diversity of beliefs held by those who serve our nation.

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The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Religious freedom is not reserved for the largest or most familiar faith groups. It belongs equally to every citizen and every service member.

For many military personnel, a religious designation is more than a box on a form. It helps identify spiritual needs, supports access to appropriate chaplaincy resources, and affirms an important part of personal identity. When faith traditions disappear from official recognition, those who follow them may reasonably wonder whether their beliefs are being treated as less worthy of acknowledgment.

America’s strength has always been found in its diversity. Our military reflects that diversity, bringing together people of different backgrounds, cultures, and faiths in service to a common purpose. Administrative efficiency should never come at the expense of religious inclusion.

The measure of religious liberty is not how well the majority is accommodated. It is whether those in the minority remain free to be fully themselves. In a nation founded on freedom of conscience, that principle deserves our continued protection.

— William R. Cavins, Orlando

William R. Cavins is bishop, Diocese of Our Lady, Queen of Martyrs Reformed Catholic Church in Orlando.

Not a tax cut, a tax shift

I’ll be voting “no” on the property tax elimination, and I hope you do too. In my opinion, this is not a tax reduction but rather a striking and destructive tax shift. I don’t think any of us will find it acceptable for one-third (or more) of our police and sheriff staff to be eliminated, a similar reduction in fire protection, the elimination of restaurant inspections, streets left in disrepair (because gas taxes are insufficient), libraries closed, few attorneys to prosecute crimes, and cuts in every other form of government services. Property taxes will be replaced with taxes and fees. Imagine sales tax at 16%, paramedics needing your credit card before administering CPR, and on and on. There are more thoughtful ways to provide tax relief than this poorly developed social experiment.

— Marc Fox, Winter Garden

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