PAGE 4, KEIZERTIMES, JANUARY 2, 2015 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM New hand on the gavel For a the fi rst time in 14 years a new hand will be holding the gavel at Keizer City Council meetings. By most measures Cathy Clark is the most prepared and most expe- rienced person to ever take the oath of that offi ce. Clark and three councilors will be sworn on Monday night’s meet- ing. Of those three new counilors Brandon Smith served once before and Roland Herrera worked for the city’s public works department for many years. Amy Ripp will bring her enthusiasm and years of com- munity volunteering to the council. The spotlight will be on May- or Clark. She takes the helm of the council after eight years as a member, which includes serving as council president. Two things will become apparent quickly for inter- ested and casual viewers—the new mayor is whip smart and she loves her community. Though Clark earned a masters degree at Kansas State University she says she is a life-long learner. She wants to know everything she can regardless of the topic. Her thirst for information and knowl- edge should not prolong council meetings, though. There is a time to seek infomration and at times quizzing a witness speaking before the council is not that time. Clark will be challenged maintaining her job at the Oregon Education In- vestment Board and being mayor. Keizerites expect to see their mayor at community events; they expect their mayor to be conversant in all things municpal. We have confi - dence Clark is up to the challenge and will attack it with gusto. We have every hope that the new mayor will be as successful as her predecessor to build coalitions, not only among the councilors but also with a variety of community groups and businesses. She can call on her eight years of serving on the council and 14 years of observing Lore Christopher deftly handling the job as guidance. No two mayors are alike. The Lore Christopher era is over and it is now time for the Cathy Clark era as she becomes the ctiy’s sixth mayor in 32 years. She’s experienced. She’s knowl- edable and she’s ready. We can’t ask much more from our mayor than that. —LAZ KNOW thanks Keizer news worthy situations, there you will fi nd this type of people whip- ping up frenzy by mostly frus- trated people but sometimes just hoodlums. I believe the blood of police offi cers who are killed by deranged people because of recent tragedies is on the hands of racial radicals. Not all protests are about race. Sometimes protests are about injus- tice like the actions of the fat cats bankers and Wall Street people who gain untold wealth by committing fraud. It appears the wealthy get away unpunished while police have to attempt to arrest someone who is selling cigarettes on a city street. Bill Quinn Keizer To the Editor: By now, the Christmas wrap- pings have been discarded. By now, almost 400 children in Keizer are enjoying the warmth of their new jackets, clothing and most impor- tantly, are playing with their new toys. Thank you Keizer community and swarms of volunteers who made this happen. The Keizer Net- work of Women (Keizer Chamber of Commerce and Foundation) are grateful for another year of the Gift Basket Program, and we couldn’t have done it without you. Thank you. Audrey Butler Keizer School thanks support for drive To the Editor: The France School of Dance would like to thank the community and students for donating over 900 pounds of food and more than $400 in donations. Our performance/food dreive was held in December at North Sa- lem High School. All the proceeds will benefi t the Keizer Community Food Bank. Our next performance and food drive will be in May. Linda France Martin Keizer Protests To the Editor: I am very much in favor of a protest provided it is non-violent. Protest is just a way of showing displeasure with certain actions by government, industry and individu- als. I certainly don’t support mobs that create damage to persons or property. Unfortunately, protests are sometimes conducted by people who ignore facts or have personal prejudice. Many times these prejudices are fl amed by racial radicals like Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson. When- ever there are cameras and national letters A hearty food bank salute To the Editor: On behalf of the Keizer Com- munity Food Bank, I would like to thank the many volunteers from our cooperative churches, (Keizer Clearlake UMC, Keizer Christian, St. Edward Catholic, John Knox Presbyterian and Faith Lutheran) that supply the hands and feet of our food ministry. Also to the many donors that help keep our pantry shelves viable and checking account worthy: Up- town Music, Tony’s Comics, Lew, France School of Dance, Lakepoint Community Church, Calvary Bap- tist Church, Keizer Elks, Keizer Lady Elks, Don Pancho’s, Marion Polk Food Share and the many in- dividual sustainers that regularly en- hance our pocket book. Special donations thank you to Albertson’s for 80-plus turkey din- ners over Thanksgiving and New Years. Because of the generosity of this community, KCFB was able to serve 2,385 families in 2014. Curt McCormack Keizer Share your opinion, Send a letter to the editor. Please limit to 300 words. Deadline for submissons is noon each Tuesday. E-mail to: publisher@keizertimes.com Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com NEWS EDITOR Craig Murphy editor@keizertimes.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR Eric A. Howald news@keizertimes.com ADVERTISING SUBSCRIPTIONS One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 Paula Moseley advertising@keizertimes.com POSTMASTER Send address changes to: PRODUCTION MANAGER Andrew Jackson graphics@keizertimes.com BUSINESS MANAGER EDITOR & PUBLISHER Lyndon A. Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com Laurie Painter billing@keizertimes.com LEGAL NOTICES Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon legals@keizertimes.com OFFICE INTERN Taylor Pfenning facebook.com/keizertimes twitter.com/keizertimes Permanent Armageddon By E.J. DIONNE JR. Meg Greenfi eld, the late Washing- ton Post editorial page editor, coun- seled against writing in “High C” all the time. By this she meant that an ed- itorialist or columnist who expressed equally noisy levels of indignation about everything would lack credibil- ity when something truly outrageous came along that merited a well-craft- ed high-pitched scream. We now seem to be living in the Age of High C, a period when every fi ght is Armageddon, every foe is a monster, and every issue is either the key to national survival or the door- way to ruin. This habit seems especially pro- nounced in the way President Obama’s adversaries treat him. It’s odd that so many continue to see Obama as a radical and a socialist even as the Dow hits record levels and the wealthy continue to do very nicely. If he is a socialist, he is surely the most incompetent practitioner in the his- tory of Marxism. The reaction to Obama is part of a larger diffi culty that involves pretend- ing we are philosophically far more divided than we are. In all of the well- off democracies, even people who actually call themselves socialists no longer claim to have an alternative to the market as the primary creator and distributor of goods and services. The boundaries on the left end of what’s permissible in the public debate have been pushed well toward the center. This makes the hysteria and hyperbole all the more incomprehensible. But let’s dream a little and as- sume that the American left signed on to the proposals put forward by Lane Kenworthy of the University of California-San Diego in his challenging (and, by the way, very pro-mar- ket) book Social Democratic Amer- ica, published earlier this year. Kenworthy’s argument is that we can “successfully embrace both fl exibility and security, both competition and so- cial justice.” His wish list is a straightforward set of progressive initiatives. A few of them: universal health insurance and early education, extensive new help on job searches and training, a year of paid parental leave, an increased mini- mum wage indexed to prices, expan- sions of efforts that supplement wages such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, and the government as an employer of last resort. His program, he says, would cost around 10 percent of our GDP. Now that’s a lot of money and the debate about whether we should spend it would be anything but phony. Yet would such a level of expenditure sig- nal the death of our constitutional sys- tem? Would it make us like, say, Cuba? No, and no. It might make us a little more like Germany, the Netherlands or the Scandinavian countries. We can argue if we want to do this, but these market democracies happen to share with us an affection for freedom and enterprise. And when it comes to High C, there’s nothing quite like our culture wars in which disagreements about social issues are seen as battles between libertines and bigots. When I look around, I see a lot of liberals who live other views quite traditional family lives and even go regularly to churches, synagogues and mosques. I see a lot of conserva- tives who are feminists when it comes to their daughters’ opportunities and oppose bigotry against gays and lesbi- ans. The ideological resolution I’d sug- gest for the new year is that all sides stop fi ghting and pool their energies to easing the marriage and family crisis that is engulfi ng working-class Americans. This would require liberals to ac- knowledge what the vast majority of them already practice in their own lives: that, all things being equal, kids are better off with two loving and en- gaged parents. It would require con- servatives to acknowledge that many of the pressures on families are eco- nomic and that the decline of well- paying blue-collar work is causing huge disruptions in family formation. I’d make a case that Kenworthy’s ideas for a more social democratic America would be good for families, but let’s argue it out in the spirit of a shared quest for remedies. Maybe it’s asking too much, but might social conservatives also con- sider my friend Jonathan Rauch’s idea that they abandon their campaign against gay marriage in favor of a new campaign on behalf of the value of committed relationships for all of us? Disagreement is one of the joys of freedom, so I am all for boisterous debate and tough political and philo- sophical competition. It’s how I make my living. But our democratic sys- tem would be healthier if it followed the Greenfi eld rule and reserved the harshest invective for things that are genuinely monstrous. (Washington Post Writers Group) Building the American dream from within Black-white race relations may improve by way of succeeding gen- erations of Americans but there ap- pears little hope that’ll soon hap- pen dramatically. The election of Barack Obama gave those who think positively about the prospect for im- provements some measure of encour- agement. However, events in Wash- ington, D.C. and wider, exampled by the presence of resolute naysayers from the Southern states who deny the president any support, have helped to slide race relations backwards. Meanwhile, there are conditions of life among blacks in America that could be vastly improved by their own efforts, should they organize around such relevant community objectives. Reference here is to the fact that blacks earn less money than whites, graduate from college in fewer cases and make up our prison population in disproportionately higher numbers. They are unemployed at rates over 11 percent, which is twice the national average, and more than twice that of the white population. It’s recognized that more and more blacks have been able to earn college degrees and improve their prospects but far too many blacks get left be- hind to lead lives of desperate deprav- ity. One of the central problems is that in too many black neighborhoods those folks living there are upward- bound deprived and lead economical- ly bankrupt existences. Mainly, their prospects may be most accurately de- scribed as slim and none. Now, then, how could things change for them? How about get- ting together in collective efforts and pulling together for the sake of every family and individual in the neighbor- hood? Pooling resources, however limited, but large when everyone par- ticipates, and investing in their best and brightest by requiring a pledge to re- turn as edu- cated persons to participate back in their home commu- nities as police offi cers, fi refi ghters, lawyers, doctors, teachers, engineers and in other city hall serving capaci- ties would predictably help to pull everyone up by their boot straps and make each life there more viable and livable. U.S. history demonstrates what every minority group has found to be true, that is, that success and the embrace of the American dream has not been handed to them. They have found that they must assert themselves through education, training and ex- perience at doing what needs to be done to achieve better circumstances and have had to do it for themselves without any government interven- tion. As it stands now, too many blacks who “make it,” like outstanding ath- letes, superlative musicians and the Harvard-educated “move on.” A critical factor in the reformation of the na- tion’s black neighbor- hoods is the gang mem- ber and the extent to which he is involved in drug deal- ing, drug addiction and illicit ac- tivity in gen- eral. Show- ing these youth before gene h. mcintyre they enter lives of crime that they can do good work in the neighborhood of their birth is a way that promises at- tractive change, life change that’s con- tagious and effective because that kind of change provides accomplish- ment’s good-feelings through the per- sonal pride and satisfaction generated by community recognition. A fi nal thought regarding this mat- ter is that we are often admonished by black activists and their white sympathizers to discuss race relations. However, personal experience points out that whenever a column addresses some aspect of race relations, unless it parallels and represents the prevailing opinion and conventional wisdom of black activists and their white sym- pathizers, he who ventures there is labeled a racist. As long as this kind of reaction is what greets whites who write on the subject, progress will never happen. Meeting on common ground through compromise and the sharing of viable ideas is more likely to make race relations progress than re- sorting to a dead-end by name-calling. (Gene H. McIntyre’s column ap- pears weekly in the Keizertimes.)