The SpokeSman • TueSday, november 29, 2022 A7 REDMOND SPOKESMAN Write to us: news@redmondspokesman.com OUR VIEW Oregon’s best lottery jackpot is booze I BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman ’m a sucker for a lottery, but not enough of a sucker to fall prey to the Powerball. Even when that nationwide jackpot crept over $2 billion — more than the annual GDP of Belize or the down payment for a two bedroom home in Central Oregon — I held firm. I know a sucker’s bet when I see one. The Las Vegas Review-Journal com- piled a list of things more likely to hap- pen to you than cashing a winning Pow- erball ticket. Their list included: being killed by a meteorite, canonized as a saint by the Catholic Church or giving birth to conjoined twins. Leave it to a Las Vegas newspaper to remind us what Trainor a bad gamble is. The article didn’t spell it out exactly, but the odds of winning the Powerball may be roughly the same as being born as a conjoined twin, THEN being canonized a saint AND THEN being killed by a meteor- ite. Definitely a longshot trifecta that would make for a great comic book. Despite the insanely low odds, I understand why folks play the Powerball. More than half of Americans play the lottery every year, and one-in-eight play it every week. I do think it’s possible to get your $2 of pleasure before the numbers are even chosen by daydreaming the night away and thinking about what you’ll do with the money. There’s plenty of joy in thinking about the places you’ll go and the things you’ll build, the good deeds you’ll do and the problems that will be solved by a couple billion in gold bullion. And don’t believe the rumor that lottery winners often find their way back to being broke and miserable — that their lives fall apart under the strain of unimaginable wealth. Sure, it happens. And when it does, juicy books are written about the mayhem that ensues. But a number of recent studies have shown the chances are no higher for lottery winners than those in any other socio-eco- nomic strata — and that nearly 90 percent of lottery win- ners rate themselves “happier” decades after their wind- fall than they were before. Still, we must never forget the hiphop credo: “More money, more problems.” And there’s something there. A nest egg of that size does bring with it some additional pressures. Those pressures and possibilities mean lot- tery players can find something to be thankful for, win or lose. But I have found a better option. An Oregon lottery that costs nothing, has a fair chance of cashing in and gives you the chance to enjoy something beyond your means. Every year, the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission holds a lottery for a chance to win limited release products — often hard-to-find, aged whiskeys that go for big bucks on the black market. Often, those sought-after bottles get immediately scooped up by resellers and price gougers, who buy out a state liquor store’s inventory and sell them online at big markups. That prices out winter evening sippers like me, who doesn’t have a bottomless wallet but enjoys the fla- vor of something that has been seeping in an oak barrel since I was a toddler. Last week, the OLCC held their 2022 chance-to-pur- chase lottery. The top prize was a 17-year bottle of Old Fitzgerald, available for its retail price of $199. A quick google shows bottles of that same stuff selling for more than $1,500 online. There were a number of other bottles up for grabs in the lottery, ranging in price from $149 down to $39. The lottery is free to enter, though you have to be of legal drinking age and an Oregon resident. If your name is drawn you win the opportunity, not the obligation, to purchase the bottle in question. It is then shipped to your local liquor store and the purchase is made. Each winner must enjoy the product themselves, not turn around and resell it on the black market, which would defeat the pur- pose of the lottery. It’s not a billion dollars, but I’d be pretty pleased to see my name pulled out of a hat and given the chance to buy that Old Fitzgerald. And I’d be sure to enjoy it in moderation — would hate for the lottery winner’s curse to find me. █ YOUR VIEWS Find unity with neighbors this holiday season This holiday season, I ask those to show mercy, true forgiveness, to those who are hurting and have been treated poorly by others around them. Instead of having so much hate against Grocery monopolies bad for shoppers BY REBECCA WOLF A merican families are heading into the end- of-year holidays facing sticker shock in the grocery aisles. Prices have jumped 13% over the past year, with even larger increases for sta- ples like eggs, chicken and pork. Although inflation de- creased slightly in October, it remains a top concern in pub- lic opinion polls for a reason: High prices are hurting peo- ple, and they need help. Meanwhile, second- and fourth-largest grocers in the country have hatched a plan that would actually make things worse for consumers. Kro- ger and Albertsons — which together already own chains like Ralphs, Food 4 Less, Fred Meyer, Safeway, Acme, Pick ‘N Save and Vons — announced plans to merge, potentially cre- ating an industry behemoth second only to Walmart. We know the pattern well: Big companies keep getting big- ger, their competitors disappear and prices keep going up. Re- cent research from Food & Wa- ter Watch found that in 2019, just four companies took in nearly 70% of all grocery sales in the country. And while the power and profit of the grocery giants has grown, the number of stores has shrunk by roughly 30% between 1994 and 2019. This has hit some communi- ties very hard; according to the Department of Agriculture, 17% of Americans now live in low-income areas with reduced food access. To hear the grocery goliaths tell it, bigger is better: They save money by controlling more of the market, and those savings are passed on to you and me. But evidence shows that when they have the power to jack up prices, they do. In 2011, an Agriculture De- partment economist found that prices tend to rise as concen- tration increases; the following year, a Federal Trade Commis- sion paper noted that “those mergers generating the largest price increases [for consumers] take place in the most concen- trated markets.” As inflation hammers family budgets, gro- cery chain CEOs — including Kroger boss Rodney McMul- len — occasionally admit that this is the perfect environment to raise prices and rake in re- cord profits. After all, everyone needs to eat. A new mega-merger would negatively impact everything from food safety and farming How to submit: • email is preferred: news@redmondspokesman.com • or mail to: 361 SW Sixth Street, redmond or 97756 practices to wages for grocery workers. Farmers face pressures from both processors and re- tailers; the highly-consolidated processing industry sets the prices for products like meat, poultry, milk and eggs. In the end, farmers earn only about 14 cents for every dollar spent at the grocery store. Similarly, workers often struggle to make ends meet. More Perfect Union reports that an internal company pre- sentation acknowledged that at least one in five Kroger employ- ees received government assis- tance — which is sadly typical across the industry. Merger mania in this indus- try is nothing new. Kroger and Albertsons have been buying up competition and bullying consumers for decades. These deals have been given the thumbs-up by federal reg- ulators that no longer use anti- trust laws to challenge corpo- rate consolidation. Instead of focusing on consumer choice and competition, agencies now favor “efficiency.” This suits the profit-margin needs of mega corporations and Wall Street, at the expense of the rest of us. But when it comes to chal- lenging corporate power, there may be hope: The Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission have pushed to block several big mergers this year, a sign that regulators may be ready to upend the corpo- rate-friendly status quo. Sev- eral lawmakers wrote a letter to Federal Trade Commission chair Lina Khan saying that this deal “could exacerbate existing antitrust, labor, and price-goug- ing issues in the grocery sector.” And Sens. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and Jon Tester, D-Mont., and Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wisc., have introduced legislation to stop these kinds of mega merg- ers. A Kroger-Albertsons merger would only deepen the power of grocery retailers to control our food system and profit off the basic needs of everyday Americans. Prices are already too high and choices too few for consumers; workers are stuck with stagnant wages; and the farmers that produce our food are losing out at every turn. By stopping this deal, regu- lators would send a powerful message that puts the needs of everyday people over corporate profits. █ Rebecca Wolf is the Food Policy Analyst at the national advocacy group Food & Water Watch. Thankful for fat, tasty turkey WRITE TO US Guest columns: your submissions should be between 600 and 800 words and must include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those submitted elsewhere. cally hurt. It would be enough to solve the issue of racism. Many will see no reason to mistreat others or wrong them at all. We must choose not be influenced by violence against anyone. Guy Smith Redmond GUEST COLUMNS Tim Trainor is editor of the Redmond Spokesman. Reach him at ttrainor@ redmondspokesman.com or call 541-548-3203. Letters policy: We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 300 words and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of the Spokesman. them, you hold the key to greater peace between all. Think of the consequence of division instead of unity. We should work to not have a misun- derstanding against those not having the same race or color of skin. As they were the bad ones. We should work to put at ease the fear many have of being physi- T hanksgiving is always one of my favorite days, but I couldn’t tell you why … exactly. Oh, it’s time to get the clan together around the table and compliment Grandma on how yummy the world’s dumbest bird is this year, like always. The complete stupidity of the turkey is legendary. Of course, they have been do- mesticated since Miles Standish was in Pampers, and domestication gave them large breasts but didn’t help the thinking process much. You know, like some ac- tresses we could name. And of course, there is the family enter- tainment. We get to check out the elderly uncle to see if he’ll tell the same stories as last year and if he can keep cranberry sauce off his white shirt. It’s always fun to tease old folks, of course, because since I happen to BE the old folks these days, it sometimes hits close to home. Some Native American tribes referred to November as the “hunger moon.” Sure has seemed to be that way for a lot of the people I know. Folks who don’t have a nine-to-five like smart people have. Out- door-type folks just have to tolerate No- vember until Thanksgiving, because then it’s okay to consider the remainder of No- vember to be “almost December.” Did you know that domesticated tur- keys can’t reproduce without help? Yep. The tom turkey is now so heavy if he tried the traditional method on a hen he’d break her legs. Turkeys have to be bred artifi- cially. But fat or stupid or not, the turkey de- serves our respect for one thing at least. There have been some changes over the past 250 years. There are today more tur- keys in America than there are Pilgrims. █ Slim Randles is a nationally syndicated columnist.