PAGE A4, KEIZERTIMES, DECEMBER 2, 2016 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Local election is over It ain’t over ‘til it’s over. And now it’s over. Laura Reid was offi - cially declared the winner in her race for Keizer City Council Position 1 over Allen Barker this week by the Marion County elec- tions divison. She won by 109 votes out of a total of more than 12,300 cast. There’s a lesson here for everybody: every vote counts. The race between Reid and Bark- er was not acrimonious, it was hardly even in the public eye. It was a race between two people who care about the place they call home and wanted to do their part to keep it the livable city it is. The city of Keizer is a winner here, too. As we said in this space before, by electing Reid we get a new voice on the coun- cil and Barker’s business expertise remains on the budget committee. If only all elec- tions had a benefi cial outcome like this one. We expect good things from Councilor-elect Reid. There will be important issues she will have to be- come familiar with. And fast. —LAZ editorial What kind of Christmas? By LYNDON ZAITZ People celebrate Christ- mas in many ways and for different reasons. Some celebrate the birth of Christ, some celebrate children, some celebrate Santa Claus. Others mark the season with a mix of reasons. It can be argued that the Christ- mas season is the favorite time of year for most, even with the frus- trations, disappointments and feuds that arise when family gets together. The need to buy a present for ab- solutely everyone—immediate, ex- tended and blended families, not to mention friends and co-workers. Money—out-of-pocket cash or credit—is always a sticking point during the holidays. That’s why I cherish the Christ- mases I spent with friends when none of us had much disposable in- come. I guess it is akin to those who remember fondly the holidays they marked in the depths of the Great Depression in the 1930s when peo- ple had to use their imagination and being with family was more impor- tant than a present. My circle of friends and I lived in Seattle, which was a pretty good setting for Christmas. It didn’t cost a cent to see the window and in-store displays at The Bon Marche, and the fl agship Nordstrom and Frederick & Nelson stores. In those days visual merchandising was still a big thing and one couldn’t but help be in the holiday mood. It is interesting how creative a group of people can be when the lack of money is common among them. But, like our Great Depres- sion brethren, we didn’t mope, or get depressed. We embraced the season and the fact that we were all in the same boat. We all had restau- rant jobs—it seemed all our friends worked in the food industry in one way or the other. The rental house my friends shared was Christmas Central; it was the gathering place for all the ‘or- phans’ we knew who did not have family near by. There were many years I did not have a tree; the one at Christmas Central worked for me. What do young people do when Christmas rolls around and they want to give gifts? They use their talents. At the time I was intensely into color pencil art, I cranked out art piece after art piece, trying to perfect my shading and perspective. I put that skill to use and went to work. Starting with a large blank, white sheet of art paper, I started what has become my mas- terpiece: a sullen har- lequin jester sitting in a chair with his scepter carelessly tossed aside. I was proud of the way I fi gured out how to draw and shade fabric folds and details of the chair’s upholstery. I knew I had fi nally nailed it. This gift for my best friend deserved a frame that matched the subject. Luckily, I found a baroque style frame for a few dollars and it fi t my art perfectly. On Christmas morning I wait- ed with anticipation as my friend opened that gift. The reaction was as I hoped it would be; he was dumb- founded. He loved it. It was prob- ably the best gift I ever gave and it made feel good that my hands cre- ated something that brought joy to someone else. Christmas mornings during those slight years are memorable because we didn’t rely on expensive gadgets to show our love for one another. One of us was an amazing cook and prepared Rockwellian brunches and holiday dinners that we enjoyed with many of our friends who grav- itated to Christmas Central. At other times in my young- er adult years, when money and I were not well known to each other, friends would receive an original Lyndon Zaitz poem or short story. One year I wrote my sister a sci-fi story that I packaged with my own handcrafted book cover. That story is long lost to history, but I do re- member it wasn’t very good. My sis- ter was good sport about it, though. With time circumstances changed. I and other friends moved out of Seattle to different parts of the globe; better jobs and careers brought economic security for my circle. The tight group of friends who marked the holidays at Christ- mas Central have not been together since those glory days of camara- derie, delicious meals, cheap deco- rations and heartfelt gifts. It was a time and a place that one can never go back to, nor should we want to. To a person, each of us, always look forward to what the future may bring. We hope for the future but treasure the past. Sometimes memories are the best Christmas present of all. on my mind (Lyndon Zaitz is publisher of the Keizertimes.) Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com Lyndon A. Zaitz, Editor & Publisher POSTMASTER Send address changes to: SUBSCRIPTIONS One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon The Third Reich isn’t on the way By BERNARD GOLDBERG Perhaps you’ve noticed that some of the most illiberal people in Amer- ica these days ... are liberals. Liberals are the ones who pride themselves on being open-minded. But who are the ones on college campuses stifl ing speech they don’t like? It’s not conservative students. In 1944, college-age men were storming the beach at Normandy. Today, more than a few liberal cupcakes on cam- pus are demanding “safe spaces” and “cry rooms” to protect them from the bogeyman we just elected presi- dent—and from any ideas that don’t conform to their own. And hasn’t it been liberals who say they don’t want to be lectured about morality, especially if it’s by a bunch of smug conservatives? But it was smug liberals who rudely lec- tured the vice president-elect from a Broadway stage recently about how he and Donald Trump should behave when they take offi ce. And it was liberals who warned us that undemocratic right-wingers would never accept the election re- sults if Trump lost. But it’s undemo- cratic left-wingers who took to the streets to protest Trump’s election, sometimes violently. And it’s desper- ate liberals who are trying to over- turn the election results by demand- ing useless recounts in several states Trump won. And it’s liberals who are trying to convince Electoral Col- lege electors to reject Trump—even if that’s who voters in their states picked—and vote for Hillary Clinton instead. They’re willing to do any- thing, including reportedly issuing death threats against electors, to deny him the presidency. Liberals claim to abhor anything even vaguely resembling a viola- tion of human rights. But it’s liberals this week, not all, of course, but more than a few prominent ones, who are shedding tears over the death of that great man, Fidel Castro, who, like all dictators, didn’t tolerate free- dom of speech or the press, whose autocratic regime wouldn’t allow even peaceful protests, and who tor- tured and murdered many of those who wouldn’t fall into line. “In many ways, after 1959 (when Castro took power), the oppressed the world over joined Castro’s cause of fi ghting for freedom and libera- tion—he changed the world, RIP.” Thank you, Jesse Jackson. At least that wasn’t as bad as the liberal prime minister of Canada, Jus- tin Trudeau, who said he had “deep sorrow” for “the loss of this remark- able leader ... who served his people for almost half a century.” The real problem with liberal elites is that they don’t think America is good enough—for them. I recent- ly spoke to a liberal news reporter who, I got the impression, couldn’t so much as conceive of the idea that millions of good, decent people vot- ed for Donald Trump. This journalist wanted to talk about all the bigots Trump had in his corner. He certainly had some, I acknowl- edged, but I wanted to know what percentage of Trump’s vote did he think came from “deplorables”—was it more or less than Clinton’s 50 per- cent? He wouldn’t commit to a num- ber, but I got the impression it was more, a lot more. other views He was also appalled that Trump supporters wanted the president- elect to fulfi ll his campaign promise to build a wall along the Mexican border. I told him the reason was both simple and benign: They were against illegal immigrants sneaking into this country. He had a different theory: Trump supporters didn’t want people here who don’t look (white) like them. It’s interesting that liberals are the ones who tell us they care about the little guy. But a lot of little guys in Ohio and Pennsylvania and Michigan chose Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton. Don’t those little guys count as far as the sophisticated liberal elite is concerned? The problem is that too many lib- erals have forgotten how to be lib- eral, the essence of which is to keep an open mind, to consider what the other side is saying before you cava- lierly label them as bigots. Instead, they’re too busy warning us that the Third Reich is coming. William F. Buckley got it right most of the time, including when he said, “Liberals claim to want to give a hearing to other views, but then are shocked and offended to discover that there are other views.” A little humility wouldn’t hurt right about now. I was never a fan of Donald Trump (or Hillary Clinton), but I’m willing to see what kind of president he will be. Illiberal liberals might want to take a break from their nonstop disgust with the president- elect, and from their holier-than- thou umbrage that never seems to end, and instead close their mouths, open their ears and try to understand why he won. (Creators Syndicate) Why virtual in a land of amazing beauty? Oregon provides the most lovely settings and beautiful landscapes for enjoying life in the whole natural world. Most of America is a feast for the eyes of those fortunate enough to live here. What causes me considerable wonder is why so many Oregonians, and other Americans throughout our land, fi nd it necessary to alter their consciousness through use of drugs, some legal like alcohol and marijuana, and others still illegal, like cocaine and heroin. Most Americans got along very well without those drugs in former times and, without them, were not risking their health and very own lives, and the lives of others who “get in their way,” because reality’s too much or not enough for them. One concludes that the ability to cope with life’s ups and downs, its disappointments from time to time, appears to have encouraged a loss of courage to face trials and er- rors among so many of us. Why do they not dig in to the free public education available to them, grades one through 12? What is it that along the way stops them from seek- ing work of most any kind, includ- ing volunteer work to get started by trying this and that, so that they can learn how to work and thereby acquire a measure of self-respect and self-confi dence: conditions of mind growth and development to serve them through the hard times rather than mind-warping drugs followed by thievery, homelessness or prison confi nement, loss of self-respect, hope and the throwing away of life’s possibilities. Another means of avoid- ing reality —and the true beauty of that which abounds around us—is the ever more availability of augmented-reality devices. Since the evolution of our species, human- kind has looked about his and her environment in wonder and awe, the earliest of our species blessed by a beautiful planet. More and more now, Americans fi nd it necessary to strap on a helmet with viewing glasses to see things that are not there but can be seen by the eye-to- brain to believe they are real, provid- ing what’s fi ction as though fact. It’s hard to fathom that my fellow humans want a machine to drive their car or truck! The freedom of the open road and the thrill of driving a car that a human can con- trol has been among the most rewarding of life experi- ences for me. It comes across as so mindless that someone would want to give up negotiating a machine with a steering wheel and the abil- ity to maneuver it when sober. Instead, they’d rather just sit gene h. mcintyre there and most likely play games in- cessantly with their cell phone, iPad, etc., for the purpose of mindless sat- isfactions without enduring value or reward Obviously, Americans in large numbers send their brains nowa- days into dizzy daydreaming by drugs while surrendering their lives and the real world around them to a space of pretend life. Instead of doing things with their hands and whole bodies that keep them physically fi t and men- tally healthy, they choose instead the latest drug or technological de- vice ultimately delivering members of our species to empty vessels. Go out in public anywhere now and view an anesthetized world: A col- lection of wires, plug-ins and plastic hand-held devices devoid of hu- manity. (Gene H. McIntyre’s column ap- pears weekly in the Keizertimes.)