OPINION 6A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 Catholics lead on same-sex marriage Founded in 1873 STEPHEN A. FORRESTER, Editor & Publisher LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN, Production Manager DEBRA BLOOM, Business Manager HEATHER RAMSDELL, Circulation Manager 'RQ¶WPDUJLQDOL]HXV I Charter deal has potential to bring the world closer t’s not often a familiar “local” company makes as much national news as Charter Communications did this week by announcing its intention to buy larger rival Time Warner Cable. Cable television providers recently have found themselves in the broad category of information-sector busi- nesses seeking fresh new ways to sur- vive, compete and prosper. This task takes on increasing ur- gency as customers discover novel Internet-based ways to access en- tertainment — in addition to shop- ping, doing our banking, researching school projects and other activities of everyday life. On the supply side of this information pipeline, it is costing cable companies more to purchase rights to broadcast the popular sports, movies, programs and games that consumers demand. The travails of cable providers are unlikely to keep ordinary Americans awake at night. Along with satel- lite TV, cable companies are widely viewed as charging incrementally more each year for something that we somehow simultaneously value but ¿QGWULYLDO7KHIDFWWKDWWKH,QWHUQHW now allows consumers to bypass the cable or satellite dish is generating a great deal of excited discussion in corporate boardrooms. But beyond the challenges from program-streaming services — such DV 1HWÀL[$PD]RQ 3ULPH DQG +XOX — Charter and other traditional “hard- ZLUH´ ¿UPV KDYH DGGLWLRQDO UHDVRQV for striving to go wire-free, or at least cut costs. The technologies that have NLFNHGRIIWKLVVWUDWHJLFJDPHFKLHÀ\ Wi-Fi networks that tie into the nation’s cellular phone grid, have the ability to deliver content and interactive features to anyone with a smart phone. This opens up new ways to make money, but also threatens the relevance of companies that fail to keep up. 1HZVRUJDQL]DWLRQVOLNHThe Daily Astorian have been at the forefront of WKLV ZDYH UHDOL]LQJ WKDW FRQYHQLHQW and rapid access to content is a con- sumer demand that isn’t going away. When it comes to the Charter merg- er, what’s in it for local customers? This is a key question for regulators review- ing the plan. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler said the FCC will carefully look at whether it’s in the public interest. “An DEVHQFHRIKDUPLVQRWVXI¿FLHQW´KH said. The FCC “will look to see how $PHULFDQ FRQVXPHUV ZRXOG EHQH¿W´ from the deal. Our congressional delegation should monitor this process, making sure Charter’s moves do not further PDUJLQDOL]H UXUDO SODFHV OLNH &ODWVRS County and the Long Beach (Wash.) 3HQLQVXOD ,I )&& GRHV LWV MRE ULJKW and if technology continues advanc- ing, this merger can be a big step along the way to making our comparative isolation far less disadvantageous. 7KH EHQH¿W HYHQ LQ SODFHV OLNH Astoria, could be to shrink geography, making the choice to live and do busi- ness here even easier than it is today. Exciting idea to grow the agriculture market By FRANK BRUNI New York Times News Service T ake a look at this list of coun- tries: Belgium, Canada, 6SDLQ $UJHQWLQD 3RUWXJDO %UD]LO )UDQFH 8UXJXD\ Luxembourg and Ireland. Name two things that they have in common. They don’t share a continent, ob- viously. Or a language. But in all of them, the Roman Catholic Church has more adherents, at least nominally, than any other re- ligious denomination does. And all of them belong to the van- guard of 20 nations that have decided to make same-sex marriage legal. In fact, countries with a Catholic major- ity or plurality make up half of those where two men or two women can now wed or will soon be able to. Ireland, ob- Frank viously, is the Bruni freshest addi- tion to the list. It’s also, in some ways, the most re- PDUNDEOHRQH,W¶VWKH¿UVWFRXQWU\WR approve same-sex marriage by a pop- ular referendum. The margin wasn’t even close. About 62 percent of vot- ers embraced marriage equality. And they did so despite a past of great fealty to the Catholic Church’s RI¿FLDO WHDFKLQJV RQ IRU H[DPSOH contraception, which was outlawed in Ireland until 1980, and abortion, which remains illegal in most circumstances. Irish voters nonetheless rejected the church’s formal opposition to VDPHVH[PDUULDJH7KLVDFWRIGH¿- ance was described, accurately, as an illustration of church leaders’ loos- ening grip on the country. But in falling out of line with the Vatican, Irish people are actual- ly falling in line with their Catholic counterparts in other Western coun- WULHVLQFOXGLQJWKH8QLWHG6WDWHV They aren’t sloughing off their Ca- tholicism — not exactly, not entirely. An overwhelming majority of them still identify as Catholic. But they’re incorporating religion into their lives in a manner less rooted in Rome. We journalists too often use “the Catholic Church” as a synonym for the pope, the cardinals and teachings that have the Vatican’s stamp of approval. But in Europe and the Americas in particular, the church is much PRUHÀXLGWKDQWKDW,WKDUERUVVSLUL- AP Photo/Peter Morrison Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny, right, and Deputy Prime Minister Joan Burton celebrate at Dublin castle, Ireland, Saturday. Ireland has voted resoundingly to legalize gay marriage in the world’s first nation- al vote on the issue. tually inclined people paying prima- Baptists than among Catholics. ry obeisance to their own conscienc- That’s because “Catholics” in- es, their own senses of social justice. cludes not just worshippers who at- That impulse and tradition are as tend Mass weekly and perhaps tilt in a more conservative direction, Catholic as any others. &DWKROLFV LQ WKH 8QLWHG 6WDWHV but those who go less frequently and appear to be more, not less, progres- those for whom Catholicism is as sive about gay rights than Ameri- much an ethnic as a religious identity. For this large and diverse group cans in general are. In an especially ambitious survey conducted over LQWKH8QLWHG6WDWHVDQGRWKHU:HVW- WKHFRXUVHRIE\WKH3XEOLF5H- ern countries, same-sex marriage has ligion Research Institute, about 60 rapidly gained favor and Catholic leaders’ expressions of percent of Americans SURWHVW VXFK DV ¿ULQJ who called themselves employees who marry Catholic said that they Could same-sex partners or approved of same-sex marriage, versus about same-sex speak up for marriage equality, are becoming 30 percent who didn’t. marriage untenable. The spread among all &RJQL]DQW RI WKDW respondents was 54 to become Catholic bishops in 38, and the group that voted ear- clearly stood in the analogous Germany lier this month to re- way of same-sex mar- riage wasn’t Catho- to divorce? lax morality clauses in contracts with lay lics. It was evangelical workers so that those 3URWHVWDQWV And yet, interestingly, the qualms who remarry after a divorce or enter WKDWFHUWDLQSXEOLF¿JXUHVKDYHDERXW into same-sex civil unions (same- same-sex marriage are routinely ex- sex marriage isn’t yet legal there) plained — by the media, and some- needn’t fear losing their jobs. Is this a sign that in Europe and times by those people themselves — as ineluctable consequences of their the Americas, same-sex marriage could become analogous to divorce: Catholicism. “We need to be stalwart supporters something that Catholic leaders tech- of traditional marriage,” Jeb Bush, who nically frown upon but don’t bother converted to Catholicism as an adult, to inveigh against all that much? I wonder, especially in light of said during a recent TV interview. “It’s comments by Diarmuid Martin, the at the core of the Catholic faith.” Rick Santorum, Bobby Jindal, archbishop of Dublin, after the Irish Chris Christie and Marco Rubio, UHIHUHQGXP +H QRWHG ³D JURZLQJ among others, have cited their Cath- gap between the culture of Ireland” olic devotion as a barrier to embrac- and the church, which, he said, ing same-sex marriage. But seldom “needs to take a reality check.” +HPHDQWWKDWLWVOHDGHUVGRDQG does anyone point out that this ex- planation puts these men in the mi- they can turn not just to Ireland but nority, not majority, of Catholics in to many other densely Roman Cath- WKH8QLWHG6WDWHV7KHLUVWDQFHVZLQ olic countries to gauge the hearts and them more political favor among souls of Catholics today. Smoking, vaping and nicotine deed, one of the points he creating real potential for them to become a serious made was that the FDA smoking cessation device. was conducting a great But there are still many GHDO RI VFLHQWL¿F UHVHDUFK e need a national de- New effort gives ‘Ag of the Middle’ a boost questions about both their bate on nicotine,” said — more than 50 studies VDIHW\ DQG WKHLU HI¿FDF\ in all, he said — aimed at he Northwest is blessed with a now describe as ‘local values, whole- Mitch Zeller. For instance, are smokers generating the evidence diverse agriculture sector, both in sale volume,’” the report says. Zeller is the director of the Center needed to better under- using e-cigarettes to quit terms of the crops and livestock that It’s an interesting read. Though fo- cigarettes, or they using IRU7REDFFR 3URGXFWV D GLYLVLRQ RI stand where to place e-cig- are produced and the scale of the oper- cused on the needs of Oregon produc- them to get a nicotine hit arettes along what he calls the Food and Drug Administration ations that produce them. HUVLWDGYDQFHVLGHDVWKDWFRXOGVLJQL¿- at times when they can’t “the continuum of risk.” Joe created in 2009 when Congress Large, commercial-scale farms cantly increase the viability of these smoke cigarettes? And be- Zeller is a veteran of Nocera passed legislation giving the FDA the “tobacco wars” of the yond that there are import- generally feed sophisticated supply operations throughout the Northwest regulatory authority — at long last! 1990s, working alongside then-FDA ant questions about nicotine itself, chains with mature systems that take and expand the regional economy. — over cigarettes. Commissioner David Kessler, who and how it should be dealt with. their raw commodities, deliver them to The 250-page study describes a In addition, the center will soon had audaciously labeled cigarettes “When nicotine is attached to processors and turn them into numer- KDSKD]DUG V\VWHP LQ ZKLFK JURZHUV have regulatory authority over other a “drug-delivery device” (the drug smoke particles, it will kill,” said RXV¿QLVKHGSURGXFWVWKDWDUHPDUNHW- and other food producers spend too tobacco products, including elec- being nicotine) and had claimed Zeller. “But if you take that same ed and sent on to retailers. Their busi- much time on the supply chain instead tronic cigarettes, which have become regulatory authority. Zeller left the drug and put it in a patch, it is such FDA in 2000, af- a safe medicine that it doesn’t even ness depends on economy of scale. of developing their product. They must e n o r m o u s l y ter the Supreme require a doctor’s prescription.” The growing number of small-scale cobble together outlets, pick, pack and controversial even as they Court ruled against That paradox helps explain why he farmers, mostly part-timers, produce store things themselves and deliver have gained in ‘People smoke Kessler’s interpre- believes “there needs to be a rethink for retail consumers. They market to small amounts to multiple buyers. use. Through tation, and joined within society on nicotine.” WKH¿QDOXVHUWKURXJKDVLPSOHGLUHFW The report says Ag of the Middle s o m e t h i n g for the nicotine the American Leg- Within the FDA, Zeller has initi- ated discussions with “the other side acy Foundation, supply chain — farmers’ markets or producers often lack branding or mar- called a “deem- but die from of the house” — the part of the agen- ing rule,” the where he helped CSAs (community supported agricul- keting strategy and do without com- cy that regulates drugs — to come up center is in create its hard-hit- the tar.’ ture). Not very complicated, no need for munications and strategic planning. the process of ting, anti-tobacco with a comprehensive, agency-wide extensive infrastructure or sophisticated The result is a system that is “highly asserting that — Mitch Zeller “Truth campaign.” policy on nicotine. But the public marketing plans because the business fragmented, lacking consistent data and oversight over After a stint with health community — and the rest of director of the Center for D FRQVXOWLQJ ¿UP us — needs to have a debate as well. rests on one-on-one relationships. information, and dependent on personal e-cigarettes. Tobacco Products “One of the impediments to Opponents 3LQQH\ $VVRFLDWHV %XW ZKDW RI WKH PHGLXPVL]HG relationships,” according to the study. this debate,” Zeller said, is that the of electron- he returned to the farmer and the artisan producers? They Simply put, among the things pro- ic cigarettes, FDA in early 2013 e-cigarette opponents are focused may raise too much to sell on the farm- ducers need to do are establish shared which include many public health WR OHDG WKH HIIRUW WR ¿QDOO\ UHJXODWH RQDOOWKHÀDYRUVDYDLODEOHLQHFLJ- ers’ market circuit, too little or are too infrastructure — processing, storage, dis- RI¿FLDOV KRSH WKH FHQWHU ZLOO WUHDW the tobacco industry. arettes — many of which would VSHFLDOL]HGIRUWKHPDVVPDUNHW7KH\ tribution and marketing; promote inter- these new devices like it treats cig- “I am fond of quoting Michael seem aimed directly at teenagers need more distribution infrastructure dependencies between diverse producer arettes: taking steps to discourage Russell,” Zeller said, referring to an — as well as their marketing, which and marketing support than smaller sectors that could expand everyone’s teenagers from “vaping,” for in- important South African tobacco sci- is often a throwback to the bad-old operations, but lack the scale to par- business; and find ways to get or appear stance, and placing strict limits on entist who died in 2009. In the early days of Big Tobacco. “The debate the industry’s ability to market its V5XVVHOOZDVDPRQJWKH¿UVWWR has become about these issues and ticipate in established supply chains. bigger to take advantage of scale. products. UHFRJQL]HWKDWQLFRWLQHZDVWKHUHD- has just hardened both sides,” Zeller Some have their own brands and don’t 7RWKDWHQG(FRWUXVWLVUHWUR¿WWLQJ 3URSRQHQWV PHDQZKLOH KRSH WKH son people got addicted to cigarettes. told me. It’s not that Zeller believes nico- want to throw in with others in a re- D3RUWODQGLQGXVWULDOEXLOGLQJWREHD center will view e-cigarettes as a “re- ³+HXVHGWRVD\µ3HRSOHVPRNHIRU tine is perfectly safe (he doesn’t) or duced harm” product that can save the nicotine but die from the tar,’” gional or national effort. food development, storage and distri- that we should shrug our shoulders OLYHVE\RIIHULQJDQLFRWLQH¿[ZLWK- Zeller recalled. A study produced last month by bution hub that will put some of the out the carcinogens that are ingested This is also why Zeller found LI WHHQDJHUV WDNH XS YDSLQJ +H EH- Ecotrust explores the opportunities and ideas to the test. It will have 16,000 through a lit cigarette. In this scenar- e-cigarettes so “interesting,” as he lieves strongly that kids should be challenges of those producers — what square feet of development, incu- io, e-cigarette manufacturers would SXW LW ZKHQ WKH\ ¿UVW FDPH RQ WKH discouraged from using e-cigarettes. it calls the “Ag of the Middle.” bator or processing space for meat, be able to make health claims, and market. A cigarette gets nicotine to Rather, he thinks there should be adult smokers might even be encour- the brain in seven seconds, he said. a recognition that different ways of “In slightly abstracted terms, Ag grain and greens. of the Middle producers are those too This is one of the more exciting aged to switch from smoking to vap- Nicotine gum or patches can take delivering nicotine also come with small to compete in commodity mar- concepts we’ve seen to expand the ing as part of a reduced harm strategy. up to 60 minutes or longer, which is different risks. To acknowledge that, When I requested an interview far too slow for smokers who need and to grapple with its implications, kets, and too big to participate exclu- ag economy. We wish them well, with Zeller, I didn’t expect him to tip D QLFRWLQH ¿[ %XW HFLJDUHWWHV FDQ would be a step forward. sively in direct to consumer channels and hope a working example of the his hat on which direction he wanted replicate the speed of cigarettes in “This issue isn’t e-cigarettes,” the center to go, and he didn’t. In- delivering nicotine to the brain, thus said Mitch Zeller. “It’s nicotine.” such as farmers’ markets; what we concept will lead to imitation. T By JOE NOCERA New York Times News Service ‘W