6 CapitalPress.com Editorials are written by or approved by members of the Capital Press Editorial Board. Friday, September 17, 2021 All other commentary pieces are the opinions of the authors but not necessarily this newspaper. Opinion Editor & Publisher Managing Editor Joe Beach Carl Sampson opinions@capitalpress.com | CapitalPress.com/opinion Our View New name needed for laboratory meat T he USDA has a tough job ahead. It needs to come up with a moniker for meat that is grown in a laboratory. For want of a better word, the agency is calling it “cultured” meat, but it’s looking for suggestions from the public for a better name. Unprompted, some of our Facebook friends offered their own suggestions: “Crap.” “Yuck.” “Disgusting.” “Lab-raised meat” was another more diplomatic suggestion. Judging from these responses, find- ing a new name will not be easy. Lab meat didn’t even exist a few years ago. It is produced by taking muscle cells from a cow — or hog or chicken — and placing them in a petri dish or other container and feeding them. As the cells multiply, they grow in chains. Add some red coloring — lab meat tends to be gray — and grind it up and you have the makings of a hamburger. Other than donating a few mus- cle cells, no animals are involved. The cells are fed in much the same way a scientist would grow a culture of bacteria. It took two years and nearly $300,000 to produce the first lab “burger,” according to Mark Post, a Dutch scientist who led the effort. In an interview, he estimated it would take 10 more years to get lab meat to market. Other companies, including meat processors Tyson and Cargill, have also joined the quest to bring lab meat to market. Some consultants believe that by 2040 most of the meat consumed will come from laboratories and not ranches or farms. We’ll see about that. You’ll note that the one thing that doesn’t come up in these conversations is the price con- sumers will pay. Producers of plant- based fake “meat” have already faced some resistance to their prices. That’s why USDA is trying to come up with a name for the laborato- ry-based meat. The new name needs to clearly indicate to consumers and oth- ers that this “meat” is entirely different from typical beef, pork or chicken. That’s where some other products have stumbled, and confused consum- ers in the process. For example, the dust-up over calling beverages made Our View When the state faces its own mandates W e have from the start advised those Oregon State Police. Several news outlets reported that Oregon old enough and medically able to be OSHA received at least a dozen complaints that vaccinated against the COVID-19 mask rules were not enforced on the grounds. virus. We have also pressed employers to take Photos posted on social media indicate wide- reasonable steps to protect their employees, and spread flouting of the governor’s rules. that everyone take whatever steps they believe “We are adding steps. Over the weekend, we necessary to protect themselves. talked with Oregon OSHA, and they will be vis- We are firmly in the anti-COVID camp. iting the fair on their time frame,” Oregon State We have been critical of many government Fair spokesperson Dave Thompson told KOIN. regulatory actions related to the “They will be looking specifi- pandemic, particularly those cally at the vendors and staff and borne of sweeping emergency the people we do have some con- executive orders that have trol over and make sure they’re escaped legislative review. wearing masks. Vendors could be Almost from the start, the state governors imposed strict fined thousands of dollars.” rules on businesses and employ- OSHA was sent to hold ven- ers, and sent out regulators to dors to the rules, but not to make force compliance. the fair enforce the rules on its The state of Oregon found patrons. Ejecting uncompliant out recently how hard it is to fairgoers would have been hard, enforce its own mandates. unpopular and not much fun. After a one-year hiatus, the Ag employers can empathize. Oregon State Fair returned this They have, in effect, been turned year with the theme “Fun makes into agents of the state. If they a comeback.” Maybe a little fail to comply with the rules, or too much fun, at least for some are thwarted by uncooperative patrons. Mask mandates also made a come- employees or customers, they Late last month, Gov. Kate back at this year’s Oregon State can be heavily fined by the state. Brown mandated that masks be Fair. In an ideal world, the experi- worn in public settings, indoors ences of an actual agent of the state with enforc- and outdoors, at large gatherings such as the fair ing state diktats would inform regulators to the and the Pendleton Round-Up. The fair, a pub- practical problems of compliance and ameliorate lic corporation, is a government entity that oper- their attitudes toward good faith efforts put forth ates under the authority of state statute. The fair- by the regulated. grounds and the facilities located on the grounds Alas, the world is far from ideal. are owned by the state. The fair is patrolled by the READERS’ VIEW Carbon fees harm economy “Wink, wink. Nudge, nudge.” It ain’t so. A recent op-ed piece praising car- bon fees and credits shows that the author really does not believe what she writes. At best, carbon fees “nudge” producers, harming the economy while having little or no effect on “cli- mate change.” This is politics at its worst, mere show, positions unsupported by evi- dence, which don’t begin to solve the false problems they purport to address while allowing advocates to display “virtue” and look morally superior. Her logic and evidence are likewise defective. The new UN Report’s “code red” assertions outrun and are contrary to its evidence, which is that climate change is less likely (than the last UN Report). Read, by a real expert, Steven Koo- nin’s 2021 “Unsettled: What climate science tells us, what it doesn’t, and why it matters.” Likewise, the writer’s insinuation that climate change is causing extreme weather events, is not supported by the evidence, including the UN Report. Three hot days in Oregon does not prove climate change. One swallow does not make a summer. It is also economically illiterate to suggest to assert that such policies will be costless to poor and middle-class Americans. Taxes and fees are inevita- bly passed on to consumers. Government, to enforce them, inev- itably grows and grows (and costs). Indeed, as government grows, the administrative state imposes undemo- cratically ever more regulations, disin- centives and costs. Sadly, the writer is correct on one thing: much of this madness is bipartisan. Moderns lack respect for the golden goose of free market capitalism. The Capital Press, issue after issue, case after case, shows the animus of the administrative state against produc- ers: farmers, ranchers, miners, energy producers. The federal and state gov- ernments and agencies are engaged in warfare (lawfare) against produc- ers. Ever-accumulating regulations kill business, especially farmers on short margins. Unfortunately, uninformed vot- ers elect, as in Portland, utopian pol- iticians who believe that food comes from supermarkets, and energy from plugs, who don’t recognize that the energy revolution has transformed the world, and saved billions from pov- erty, starvation, war and slavery. While still enjoying the benefits, they want to shut down farms, ranches, extractive industries and remove/ prohibit dams, pipelines, transmis- sion lines, refineries and all sources of energy (oil, gas, nuclear, hydro, coal). A major American problem is the cancerous growth of the administra- tive state, of “experts” who rule in place of the people and their repre- sentatives, who tyrannically combine (against which Montesquieu warned) the three powers (legislative, execu- tive, judiciary). Their “solutions” to “climate change” are “watermelon” solutions (green on the outside, red on the inside), which increasingly socialize and harm America and the West, while allowing China, India and other countries “their turn to pollute.” Alan L. Gallagher Canby, Ore. from soybeans or nuts “milk” could have been avoided if those companies had given some thought to a new name and not appropriated the dairy indus- try’s standard-bearer. We’ve got an idea. Instead of trying to parade this new product as a facsim- ile of real beef, why not come up with an entirely new name? How about Labster? Or LaBurger? Or unBurger? Or the Substance Formerly Known as Meat? Whatever the good people at USDA decide, the new name should not include beef, pork or chicken. They come from an entirely different place, and it’s not a laboratory. The fight for Oregon’s future is here — please join us! his last week, the Oregon Legislature released their propos- als for redistricting in the state, and the stakes have never been higher. This redistricting process follows on the heels of the 2020 census and will be com- pleted in a special session later this month. While Oregon agricul- ture has strong friends in the Legislature on both sides of the aisle, the past several years of rule under the Democrat super major- ity has taken its toll on our farm and ranch fam- ilies. Without the proper checks in the system, doz- ens of policies have passed that have increased costs for Oregon’s producers, with policies that benefit produc- ers becoming increasingly more rare in Salem. As a non-partisan organization, the Oregon Farm Bureau works with both parties in Salem to achieve the best policy outcomes we can for Oregon producers. The 2021 redistricting process has the potential to make that job exponentially harder. Rural voices were already diluted in the 2010 redistricting process. We cannot afford to allow par- tisanship to further reduce our voice in the Legislature. Countless farm and ranch families are barely hanging on. Adopting new districts that will disenfranchise farm- ers and ranchers and further encourage policies that only harm rural communities will be the last straw for many ag and rural families. Each party has released its own proposals for redis- tricting. To put it plainly, the proposals put forward by the Democrat majority represent gerrymandering by every metric. Across the state, the Democrat proposal seeks to cement their super major- ity by ensuring that many rural parts of the state are likely to be represented by urban Democrats, diluting the voice of rural Oregon in shaping policy. The Legislature is under a court-ordered deadline to complete redistricting by Sept. 27, or the task will fall to Secretary of State Shemia Fagan. The 2020 census data has shown Oregon is entitled to a 6th Congressional seat, and Oregon’s House and T GUEST VIEW Angela Bailey Senate boundaries will also need to be adjusted as Ore- gon’s population has shifted. The stakes have never been higher. Oregonians across the state expect maps to be drawn fairly and in a com- pact manner, with communi- ties of common interest like school districts and neigh- borhoods left intact. We must ensure that farm and ranch families are kept in districts where their voices are collectively strong and represented, not more dis- persed by drawing them into districts with higher popu- lation density and different needs and perspectives. The Oregon Farm Bureau was part of a broad coali- tion to run a ballot measure last year to ensure the Ore- gon had a truly independent redistricting commission. With COVID restrictions, that measure did not make it on the ballot, but we will continue to push for mean- ingful reform of Oregon’s redistricting process. In the meantime, we need rural Oregon to show up and make your voice heard! There is still a chance to influence the process, and a strong turnout will both show the Legislature that rural Oregon is not going to be disenfranchised with- out a fight and increase the chances of successfully fighting indefensible bound- aries in court. There are hearings taking place over the next two weeks, and you can write in before Sept. 21. Who represents you in Salem has never been more important for the future of agriculture in Oregon. If you do anything this week, please find a way to make your voice heard and stand up for the rights of rural Oregon. Visit OregonFB. org/advocacy to take action on redistricting today! Angela Bailey is pres- ident of the Oregon Farm Bureau and a fourth-gen- eration farmer operating a nursery in Gresham that specializes in Japanese maples. 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