You may not need to allow direct HTML editing, if you use something like Markdown or Textile -- users will always work with the plain text representation of the content, while on-demand one-way plain-text-to-html conversion will be possible for nicer looks in HTML pages.
There are a number of Ruby Gems to help you in implementing both Markdown and Textile plain-text-to-html conversion, if need be. There are also some nice editors for markdown (as the one which SO uses).
In my opinion, plain-text editing (in Markdown, Textile or similar) is sufficient and a better choice in most circumstances. It's definitely a very lightweight and standards-compliant method for creating rich content and although Markdown, Textile and the like do not cover all possible formatting options, the plain text path deserves a serious consideration.
You can also see here on StackOverflow—which uses Markdown for questions and answers—that it is a decent one. I strongly support the need to be able to see the "formatting tags", because WYSIWYG almost always leads to misplaced/unneeded tags. Also, using plain text formats allows you to have 100% control on the resulting HTML.
If you must use WYSIWYG, my experience with TinyMCE has been decent enough to recommend it.