PAGE A4, KEIZERTIMES, APRIL 28, 2017 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Eclipse can be good for Keizer There has been news from across Oregon about how communities are preparing for this summer’s total so- lar eclipse on Aug. 21. Reports have included news about hotels cancelling reservations (some made years ago) and re- booking rooms at many times their current rates. A thousand extra camping spaces are be- ing made available after every site in the eclipse’s path be- tween the Oregon coast and the Snake River had been reserved months in advance. There is a gigantic festival slated for Madras—Oregon Solarfest, just a few miles from another festi- val—Moonshadow. All around Keizer communities and organizations have been plan- ning and seen their hotels and camp- grounds get completely booked. Those who planned ahead were able to secure a spot at the coast, in the mountains, on a lake or a river. Eclipse-viewing fans who did not plan ahead will be able to experience the solar event here in Keizer. A handful of volunteers and civic leaders are working feverishly to prepare Keizer for the expected onslaught of visitors who can’t fi nd space anywhere else along the eclipse path. We don’t mind if Keizer is not the fi rst choice for visitors from outside the area, but as the choices become lim- ited Keizer can take full advantage of the situation. More than 150 RV and tent camping sites will be prepared for the event. The city, the Keizer Parks Foundation and KRA—which op- erates the Keizer Rotary Amphithe- atre—are planning events and con- certs for visitors to enjoy. Keizer’s business community— especially those that sell food and daily needs items—should also be planning on how they will attract a captive audience. Organizers of Keizer’s solar eclipse event will bring them here, it’s up to the rest of us to turn it into a positive for our bottom lines. —LAZ Regarding Rep. Post criticism language, using one’s offi ce to make mon- ey, has resulted in ever more disquiet among the American citizen- ry quite like that re- ported to have been the prevailing French senti- ments before they took action. Unfortunate for most Ameri- cans, any criticism of 45 is greeted by his typical reply: “I’m president and you’re not.” Gene H. McIntyre Keizer our opinion letters To the Editor: I highly recommend that if Mr. McCall or any- one in this district has concerns re- garding Representative Post, there are plenty of ways to reach out to him (his phone and email are printed in this paper once a month) and address whatever questions they may have directly with him. I fi rmly believe, however, that most voters in HD 25 would echo the sentiment that Rep. Post is doing a fi ne job and encourage him to keep up the fi ght for small government in a Capitol where the prevailing philosophy seems to be ‘the bigger the better.’ David Cheney Keizer Costs for our traveling president To the Editor: No one alive today can verify or deny that French King Louis XVI’s wife, Marie Antoinette, said “Let them eat cake.” This alleged com- ment of hers was inspired by the belief that she and her royal family cared not at all what happened to starving Parisians. In the U.S. these days, we know for a fact that millions among us do not have enough to eat and are without safe shelter. The problem is further compounded and dis- tress-causing by the huge number of American children going hungry and homeless. Meanwhile, our “royal” fam- ily lives as though they care not at all what happens to American adults and children who fi nd life to be a daily challenge by the absence of food and housing. Apparently paying little heed to these needs, President Trump and family travel at taxpayer expense to his Florida golf club, Mar-a-Lago, almost every weekend at taxpayer expense, closing in on his fi rst 100 days at a whopping cost of $50 mil- lion. This information about the way Trump, in what’s viewed as busi- ness-as-usual-form, is conducting his presidency, including alleged violations of the U,S. Constitution’s Emoluments Clause or, in layman Harder for school board position To the Editor: I have known Dr. Kathleen Harder and her family for many years. She’s down-to-earth, easy to talk to, and genuinely concerned with those around her. Her com- passion is matched only by her will- ingness to work hard. That makes her a great doctor, and it will also make her a very effective member of the Salem-Keizer School Board. Kathleen is a dedicated mom who, alongside her husband Rob, has raised a bright and talented young man who graduated from the Salem-Keizer public school system and is headed off to college. She is passionate about our pub- lic school system. I know she will work hard to ensure our students, teachers, and administrators have everything they need to be success- ful. I’m proud to endorse Kathleen, and I join more than 50 other en- dorsements, including the Salem- Keizer Education Association, Stand for Children, and many oth- ers throughout our community. Please join me in voting for Dr. Kathleen Harder for Salem-Keizer School Board. Randall Sutton Salem Share your opinion Email a guest opinion (550 words) or a letter to the editor (300 words) by noon Tuesday. Email 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 SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGING EDITOR Eric A. Howald editor@keizertimes.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR Derek Wiley news@keizertimes.com One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY ADVERTISING Publication No: USPS 679-430 Paula Moseley advertising@keizertimes.com POSTMASTER Send address changes to: PRODUCTION MANAGER Andrew Jackson Keizertimes Circulation graphics@keizertimes.com 142 Chemawa Road N. LEGAL NOTICES Keizer, OR 97303 legals@keizertimes.com EDITOR & PUBLISHER Lyndon Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com BUSINESS MANAGER Laurie Painter billing@keizertimes.com Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon RECEPTION Lori Beyeler facebook.com/keizertimes twitter.com/keizertimes Can our political bubbles be popped? By MICHAEL GERSON In the category of argument by irresistible anecdote, David Wasser- man of The Cook Political Report tells of meeting with a group of young Democrats in wealthy, suburban northern Virginia. In the course of his presentation, he made reference to “Cracker Bar- rel voters”—those in coun- ties with Cracker Barrel restaurants (Donald Trump won about 75 percent of such coun- ties). “Excuse me,” interrupted one of the young liberals. “Do you mean Crate and Barrel?” This is an extreme form of a cultur- al bubble—a life arranged by fate and choice so that other ways of life are unimaginable. Technology makes such isolation easier, through fl ows of infor- mation we shape and algorithms that shape news to us. It is possible to con- sume news and entertainment in such a way that our backgrounds and biases are never challenged. And a variety of media outlets, particularly cable news channels and internet sites, seek profi t in the incitement of bias rather than through the provision of information. Assuming that a democracy benefi ts from commonly recognized facts and mutual sympathy among citizens, how are these bubbles popped? Even the way this question is posed contains a bias of sorts. Most Ameri- cans do not live in ideological bubbles, because they take little interest in poli- tics at all. According to polling by the Pew Research Center, only about 13 percent of Americans say they talk about politics daily, making me and most people reading this column a minority smaller (much smaller) than gun owners. Americans at the ends of the political spectrum on left and right —about 20 percent total—are more engaged politically than those in the center, at least when it comes to making donations and determining the out- come of primaries. The dedicated 10th on both sides have a vastly disproportionate infl u- ence on the public affairs of a great nation. And here is where media bubbles matter most. Pew found that Fox News dominates on the right —cited by 47 percent of conservatives as their main source of information. (Many must feel adrift as the Fox model buckles.) Liberals con- sume more diverse news sources, but are more likely to de-friend someone on social media for political reasons. The reputation of all news media sources has taken a beating. Every time that two or more journalists are gath- ered, they should recall: In 1997, 53 percent of Americans expressed trust in the media. Now it is 32 percent, and down to 14 percent among Re- publicans. Conservatives tend to view all non-conservative sources as sus- pect, putting The Washington Post and the Huffi ngton Post, for example, in the same category of untrustworthiness (by any serious standard an absurdity). At the seedy crossroads of politi- cal polarization and declining trust in media is where fake news loiters. Without a belief in professional, vet- ted, reliable sources of truth, truth may be determined by loyalty to an ideo- logical team. In a 2006 survey, a ma- jority of Democrats agreed that it was likely or somewhat likely that George W. Bush was complicit in the 9/11 michael gerson attacks. A 2015 poll found that 43 percent of Republicans believed that Barack Obama was a Muslim. One gets the impression, in both cases, that partisans would have agreed with any polling description perceived as nega- tive—that Bush was a closet thespian or Obama a notorious masticator. Call it the “any stick” epistemology. It was Donald Trump who saw the golden potential in this trend, not just presenting a vision, but creating a world in which Trump is always the answer, the highest and best. But the inhabitants of Crate and Barrel Amer- ica can be just as isolated in their sym- pathies. What is the answer? It is obviously complicated to rebuild ties of institu- tional trust and individual empathy. But one response must be: a journal- ism of rebuilt standing. A journalism that enforces the highest standards of accuracy and professional conduct. A journalism that refuses the tempta- tion to join the ideological battle as a combatant. A journalism that describes worlds that are not our own, and in- vites us to enter them. Without this, there is no common basis of fact to inform public decisions, and no invita- tion to empathy. This cause is not hopeless because the power of words to shape the hu- man spirit is undeniable. These can be words that belittle, diminish and de- ceive. Or they can ring down the ages about human dignity. They can also allow us, for a moment, to enter the experiences of others and widen, just a bit, the aperture of our understanding. On the success of this calling much else depends. (Washington Post Writers Group) Moving bills is a lesson in politics During one of my committee This has been a crazy week here in the Oregon legislature. Two thousand- meetings on the deadline day, the seven hundred eighty four bills have committee hearing was interrupted been introduced so far this session, multiple times. The door would crack and April 18 was one of the biggest open and a hand would poke through, deadlines. To remain viable, all bills beckoning to the chair/vice chair. (besides those in the Rules and Ways They would stop the committee, go out into the hall and meet and Means committees) had with the staff of the ma- to have a work session and be jority party caucus. They moved out to the House (or would then come back Senate) Floor. in and either kill the bill Most of my bills didn’t or work it, depending on make it out of committee and how they were instructed. are thus “dead.” I do have a This is only my third ses- few still kicking in Ways and sion so I don’t have a lot to Means, which I am excited compare to, but I’ve asked about. House Bill 2570 and some of the senior mem- House Bill 2961 are both bills to try and help solve the from the bers and they’ve never seen housing affordability crisis we capitol anything quite like this. This is the kind of thing are in. Rep. BILL POST that the average voter has This month I’ve had sev- no idea actually happens. eral groups of constituents come and meet with me. From busi- Instead of the 11 people on that com- ness leaders to citizens to St. Paul school kids, no matter who, I love in- troducing people to their Capitol. One of the questions that these visitors of- ten as is “How does a bill die?” So let me explain: As mentioned above, to survive this last deadline, the bill had to be “worked” or moved out of the com- mittee to the chamber fl oor for a vote. The person who appears to make that decision is the committee chairperson. They are the ones who schedule the bills in the committees. Sometimes though, the chair of a committee will refuse to work a bill that the leadership wants to move—so that chair might be removed from the committee for the day, or removed from the chairman- ship altogether. That is a big threat that can be used against the chair. If they like the position more than they care about the policy that is passed, that can be a real threat. mittee discussing the issue, listening to testimony and coming to a decision, a few people in a back room make the decision and run the proceedings. I don’t want to sound like I am blaming a particular party here—ei- ther party is capable of bending the rules and hijacking the true delibera- tive process we were sent to the capi- tol to conduct. In the Oregon House, 60 representatives are each elected by about the same number of Orego- nians. Should one of those represen- tatives squelch the voice of the other 59? This is why elections are so im- portant—again, not to elect a specifi c party, but to elect people who have solid principles and are committed to letting every voice be heard in the democratic process. ( Bill Post represents House Dis- trict 25. He can be reached at 503- 986-1425 or via email at rep.bill- post@state.or.us.)