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Editorials
The Editors
Barack Obama's election affords our country a chance to reverse its dismal standing in the world.
Current Comment
The Editors
Recruiting Chaplains, Mad Men's Catholic Sensibility
Editorials
The Editors

It is one of the most vivid and reassuring images in the Scriptures: the Word of God compared to the rain and snow that give life to the earth:

For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven,

Editorials
The Editors
The task before the country is to sustain the citizen interest evident during the 2008 election.
Current Comment
The Editors
Bishops and the USCCB, Do Rocks Have Rights?
Current Comment
The Editors
Encourage Savings, Gekko & Aquinas
Editorials
The Editors
Too many people seeking asylum are turned away
Editorials
The Editors
Conscientious voters have a momentous decision before them.
Editorials
The Editors
Our national obsession with sports reflects both the best and the worst aspects of our culture.
The Editors

As the poet Robert Burns once reminded us, the best laid plans are simply those: plans. In politics, plans are always changing to accommodate a political reality that in the information age can shift directions faster than a wildfire. This was certainly true on Sept. 26 during the first presidential debate of the 2008 general election. The forum was supposed to have been focused on foreign policy, but the first third or more of the meeting necessarily focused on the worsening news from America’s financial sector and what Washington should or could do to fix its problems.

The red-hot news cycle means that there is even more reason to make sure that in the remaining debates voters have some opportunity to see not only the candidates’ responses to the press of events, but also their personal philosophies, the underlying political principles that will guide their decisions as president. To that end, America’s editors recently presented ten sets of questions on foreign policy for the consideration of the moderators and candidates. Below are ten similar sets of questions focused on domestic concerns. The next meeting between the candidates on October 7 will be conducted in a “town hall” format, the topics chosen at random by the citizen-questioners. The final debate on October 15 will be a moderated forum with questions from journalists on domestic policy. At least, that is the current plan.

1.    Both of you have spoken of greed as one cause of the current financial crisis. In your judgment what is the difference between greed and a morally legitimate pursuit of profits in a capitalist system?