2 Wednesday, November 28, 2018 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon O P I N I O N Jonah Goldberg Letters to the Editor… The Nugget welcomes contributions from its readers, which must include the writer’s name, address and phone number. Let- ters to the Editor is an open forum for the community and contains unsolicited opinions not necessarily shared by the Editor. The Nugget reserves the right to edit, omit, respond or ask for a response to letters submitted to the Editor. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. Unpublished items are not acknowledged or returned. The deadline for all letters is noon Monday. To the Editor: Re: “The meaning of art in 2018,” The Nugget, November 7, page 14 This article is one of the finest summaries I have ever read. If only everyone in this coun- try could see, feel, and express as Chris Morin does, we would have a society to be proud of. Thank you, Nugget News. Jerold Chapman s s s To the Editor, I attended the Sisters Christmas parade on Saturday. I was surprised that there was no music. No marching band, no cheerleaders or dance team, and no sports teams representing our Sisters Outlaws. It was a noticeable missing. Angelena Bosco s s To the Editor: Regarding the Jim Anderson article on the unusual “four-eared” rabbit published November 2 issue of The Nugget, more infor- mation and clarification is needed on my part. Perhaps I was too brief in my description; I am providing a more detailed accounting of my experience with “Wabbit.” I did have one opportunity to get closer than 10 feet as Wabbit had hopped into nearby lilac bushes to “hide.” The shrubs have no foliage lower on the trunk which allowed me to get within three feet and was able to look down. I could see that the larger ears, although having an abnormal deformity, were in fact the “real ears” as I could see the ear canals. The two smaller “ears” in front of the ear canals were no more than ear-like growths resembling a smaller ear thereby giving the appearance of See LETTERS on page 9 s Sisters Weather Forecast Courtesy of the National Weather Service, Pendleton, Oregon Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday PM Showers Cloudy PM Light Snow Snow Showers AM Snow Showers Mostly Sunny 46/31 42/31 42/26 38/25 36/16 35/16 The Nugget Newspaper, LLC Website: www.nuggetnews.com 442 E. Main Ave., P.O. Box 698, Sisters, Oregon 97759 Tel: 541-549-9941 | Fax: 541-549-9940 | editor@nuggetnews.com Postmaster: Send address changes to The Nugget Newspaper, P.O. Box 698, Sisters, OR 97759. Third Class Postage Paid at Sisters, Oregon. Editor in Chief: Jim Cornelius Production Manager: Leith Easterling Graphic Design: Jess Draper Community Marketing Partners: Vicki Curlett & Patti Jo Beal Classifieds & Circulation: Lisa May Proofreader: Pete Rathbun Owner: J. Louis Mullen The Nugget is mailed to residents within the Sisters School District; subscriptions are available outside delivery area. Third-class postage: one year, $45; six months (or less), $25. First-class postage: one year, $85; six months, $55. Published Weekly. ©2018 The Nugget Newspaper, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. All advertising which appears in The Nugget is the property of The Nugget and may not be used without explicit permission. The Nugget Newspaper, Inc. assumes no liability or responsibility for information contained in advertisements, articles, stories, lists, calendar etc. within this publication. All submissions to The Nugget Newspaper will be treated as uncondition- ally assigned for publication and copyrighting purposes and subject to The Nugget Newspaper’s unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially, that all rights are currently available, and that the material in no way infringes upon the rights of any person. The publisher assumes no responsibility for return or safety of artwork, photos, or manuscripts. “America First!” — President Donald Trump, November 20, 2018 That’s how the president’s official statement giving the crown prince of Saudi Arabia a pass for authorizing the gruesome murder of journal- ist Jamal Khashoggi begins. The president goes on— with even more exclamation points. The very next sen- tence declares, “The world is a very dangerous place!” And so it is. This was the argument made by the original 1930s isolationist movement, a bipartisan campaign against getting entangled, again, in Europe’s wars. The isolationist idea, which came to be known as America First, has roots going back to Washington’s farewell address and his call to avoid entangling alliances. It was grounded in the idea that America was an excep- tional place that had turned its back on the bellicosity and ancient hatreds of the Old World. A “shining city upon a hill” should not descend into the muck of the world beyond its shores. As President Hoover put it, “It was a belief that some- where, somehow, there must be an abiding place for law and a sanctuary for civilization.” And that place would be America. Or, as Norman Thomas—head of the American Socialist Party and a founder of the America First Committee—argued, America needed to lead by example because “America lacked the wisdom and the power to play God to the world.” The America First move- ment, and isolationism generally, got uglier as the imperative to fight the Nazis grew more obvious for most Americans, but not those whose isolationism derived less from a lofty principle and more from a bias for the German cause. By the eve of World War II, isolationism had become a dirty word, and after Pearl Harbor and — later — after the Holocaust, a filthy one. President Trump adopted “America First” when a reporter used the term in an interview. Clearly ignorant of the historical baggage the label carried, he made it his own. Some of his advisers, clearly aware of the same baggage, encouraged him to do so anyway. I am no fan of the origi- nal America First Committee or the broader isolationist movement it represented. Nonetheless, I find it remark- able how Trump has man- aged to debase the term America First. President Trump’s state- ment is a mockery of the best sentiments of America First. His argument for why we should turn a blind eye to the Khashoggi murder, even as the Saudi regime plans to execute the men who car- ried out the crown prince’s orders, is that we are too entangled in our alliance with Saudi Arabia to care. They are a “great ally” because they have “agreed to spend and invest $450 billion in the United States.” He even goes on to list the defense contrac- tors who benefit from Saudi largesse. Nowhere in Trump’s statement does he offer any meaningful condemnation of Saudi behavior or sug- gest that there is a limit to the portion of the American soul Saudi petrodollars can buy. His defenders praise the president’s “frankness,” which is fine. But frankness means telling the truth, and that means the truth is that the president frankly doesn’t care much about anything but the Saudis’ wallet and their praise for him. A statement condemning their behavior could have been frank, too. Ronald Reagan often mod- eled such frankness. As Sen. Rand Paul, a man largely in the tradition of the original America First, put it, “I’m pretty sure this state- ment is Saudi Arabia First, not America First.” It’s fine to defend America’s economic inter- ests, but it’s ugly to suggest that American interests begin and end with arms sales and military alliances. America has an interest in standing up for more than a balance sheet. Progressive historian Charles Beard, an America Firster, argued that the U.S. government must “surrender forever the imbe- cilic belief that it was her duty to defend every dol- lar invested everywhere and every acquisitive merchant seeking his private interests everywhere.” That was America First. This is something different. Opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the writer and are not necessarily shared by the Editor or The Nugget Newspaper.