DECEMBER 28, 2018, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A5 Opinion Turning tho pago By LYNDON ZAITZ For all intents and purposes 2018 is fi nished. All that is left to do is to declare our resolutions and ring in the new year. Some would say that 2018 was a less than stel- lar year, both nationally and internationally. But 2018 was a great year for those who married, be- came parents, graduated from school, received a huge promotion and raise or moved into a new house. There is nothing so promising as a new year, A clean slate awaits us to write our plans, dreams and wishes upon. The gloom of winter really can’t compare to the opti- mism we can bring with each new day. Though some animals hibernate during winter, we humans can’t stay in a warm, cozy bed for two or three months. Whether we like it or not, life comes at us every morning. Ob- ligations, duties and responsibilities await us. Many animals hibernate in winter, but we humans cannot stay in a warm, cozy bed for two or three months and wait for warm spring days. I have found changing one’s nest is a very good cure-all for winter blues. When I need a change, a rear- ranging of furniture and a purging of storage goes a long way to give me a new perspective. When we fi nd ourselves in a day to day routine that seems more ardu- ous because of the gray, cold winter weather, a change will do the pysche good. It’s too wet and cold to do any major gardening this time of year. Look in- ward. Make changes just for sake of change—rear- range the photos on your walls, switch the sofa around, move the televi- sion to a different room. The best thing? You don’t need anyone’s permission to do that. If your home, however, is practi- cally perfect in every way, there may be other changes during winter. For those with the means to get a taste of the tropics during winter, good for you. For those without the means, there are volunteer opportunities abounding in the community. Barring a change of scene, the winter months are prime time for improvement. Simple chores such as washing all the interior windows will pay off when spring’s fi rst rays of sun start streaming through. Or, go into the den and update your re- sume, go through fi les and discard what is not needed. Spring is a new of renewal but getting the process started early in mid-winter is very cathartic. And you’ll face 2019 with courage and optimism. After all, the future be- longs to those who plan for it. on my mind (Lyndon Zaitz is pubLishor of tho Koizortimos) If convictions equal success By LARRY ELDER President Donald Trump-haters salivated over special counsel Robert Mueller’s recent fi lings on ex-Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort and Trump former lawyer/”fi xer” Michael Cohen. In both cases, Mueller recommends lengthy sentences, having accused them of committing crimes, including, in the case of Cohen, that Trump directed him to violate campaign fi nance laws in paying off porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal. If true, is an impeachable offense? In 2013, the Federal Election Commission leveled a $375,000 fi ne against President Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign for failing to properly report almost $2 million in 2008 campaign contributions, along with other violations. No criminal prosecutions. Nobody went to jail. In the case of President Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, who pled guilty to lying to the FBI, the special counsel recommends no jail time. Flynn, according to the fi ling, gave the probe “substantial assistance.” The fi ling described Flynn as “one of the few people with long-term and fi rsthand insight” into Mueller’s investigation. But did Flynn give evidence of a Trump “collusion” or conspiracy with Russia to win the election—the purpose the Mueller investigation? So far, the investigation has resulted in the convictions of several Trump associates. Not one of the convictions, however, has had anything to do with a Trump-Russian “collusion.” If the defi nition of a successful special counsel or special prosecutor is the number of convictions he or she obtains, then the Whitewater investigation into an allegedly crooked Arkansas real-estate deal and a crooked Little Rock bank was an unmitigated success. True, that probe’s big targets, Bill and Hillary Clinton, were not charged, but the investigation resulted in 14 convictions, including the then- governor of Arkansas. Webster Hubbell, Hillary Clinton’s former law partner at Little Rock’s Rose Law Firm, was convicted. Hubbell, at the beginning of the probe, held the No. 3 position in the Justice Department. He admitted to stealing from clients and partners of his law fi rm and pled guilty to mail fraud and tax evasion. He was sentenced to 21 months in prison. He was later indicted on an additional 18 charges after resigning from the DOJ. The New York Times reported: “Some money Hubbell received in 1994, for which the prosecutor said he did ‘little or no work,’ might have been given to guost coLumn ‘Drained’ federal agencies are swampier than ever Throughout his campaign for president, Donald J. Trump promised time and again that he would drain the “swamp.” The swamp Trump referenced was the imagined one in Washington, D.C., where all the old freeloaders and deadbeats lived off the public purse but produced nothing but large guts and bad ideas. Trump said he’d do something about the ma- lingers by appointing re- ally good people to his administration’s cabinet posts and other senior positions. So, they were one by one given the top jobs in the White House but soon enough were recognized as not only among the poor examples they replaced from previous admin- istrations but were found to be even worse than their predecessors from as far back as any living Americans could remember. Two of the worst violators and among those early-on to be pointed to the nearest exit were Health and Human Service Secretary Tom Price and Environmental Protection Agen- cy Chief Scott Pruitt. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has remained in his job but will soon fol- low his former associates. Zinke, a former Montana congressman, has borne a remarkable resemblance to Pruitt in his approach to established policy stan- dards: fi t for them to break. Zinke has become notorious in a mere two years at accumulating about a dozen inquiries into his manipulation of public resources for private use. By dismantling rules that have protected the nation’s wilderness and wildlife, he had led the gono h. mcintyro way for others who seek to rape by his guidance and encouragement all that environmentalists and naturalists have worked for the past 100 years to establish and protect. According to the Center for Western Priorities, there have been many investigations by the Interior Department’s inspector general and other environmental groups. Several of Zinke’s GOP predecessors, who sought to privatize through personal business interests the country’s many wildlife refuges, parks, monuments, and public lands, never came anywhere near the list of Zinke’s achieved turnovers. Recently, the inspector general opened another investigation into Zinke’s role in a Montana land deal involving the chairman of Halliburton. The oil services company also stands to benefi t from such policies as what have been Zinke’s apparent disregard for state interests in preservation through his efforts to expand offshore drilling, including Oregon’s border to the Pacifi c Ocean. He has dismissed the recreational value of protected lands and done was he could to exploit them for his wealthy pals. Examples include logging in the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument on the California-Oregon border. Then, too, Zinke has worked to terminate endangered species protections. Zinke has labored to turn over public lands and formerly protected areas to use by mining, golf course, hunting, oil and gas exploration interests and any other way persons of wealth and corporations can take down trees, fi ll the lakes and streams by leveling the surrounding hills and mountains, and kill the wildlife. Wish it were possible for this writer to report faith in the replacements for Price, Pruitt and Zinke bringing security to the many features of America we appreciate. Likely unsettling to some Americans, “rescues” may have a chance only with new leadership at the top and a real draining of the “swamp.” (Gono H. McIntyro sharos his opinion froquontLy in tho Koizortimos) KEIZERTIMES.COM Web Poll Results What do you think was the biggest Keizer news story of the year? In-N-Out burgor rostaurant pLans Koizor storo: 34% Waromart by WinCo Foods opons in Koizor: 21% Wost SaLom shooting rango/buLLots hit Koizor homo: 10% SchooL district invokos ominont domain on church proporty: 9% Six othor storios: 26% Vote in a new poll every Thursday! GO TO KEIZERTIMES.COM Keizertimes WhoatLand PubLishing Corp. • 142 Chomawa Road N. • Koizor, Orogon 97303 phono: 503.390.1051 • wob: www.koizortimos.com • omaiL: kt@koizortimos.com Lyndon A. Zaitz, Editor & Publisher SUBSCRIPTIONS Ono yoar: $25 in Marion County, $33 outsido Marion County, $45 outsido Orogon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY PubLication No: USPS 679-430 POSTMASTER Sond addross changos to: Koizortimos CircuLation 142 Chomawa Road N. Koizor, OR 97303 PoriodicaL postago paid at SaLom, Orogon discourage him from being more candid with investigators. ... Much of the income Hubbell received in 1994 came from contracts arranged by close friends and supporters of the Clintons, suggesting to investigators that Hubbell may have been given money to discourage him from cooperating with the Whitewater independent counsel’s offi ce.” James McDougal, Clinton friend and Whitewater business partner, operated Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan, the bank under investigation. Madison failed in 1989, costing taxpayers $60 million. McDougal was convicted of 18 felony counts related to bad loans made by his bank. After his conviction, McDougal agreed to cooperate with the special prosecutor. Susan McDougal, James McDougal’s former wife, was a partner in the Whitewater land deal and in Madison Guaranty. She was convicted of four felony fraud counts, but refused to cooperate with the Whitewater prosecutors. McDougal was sentenced to 18 months in jail on a civil contempt charge, but still has refused to answer questions before a grand jury. She was later charged with criminal contempt and obstruction of justice. President Clinton gave her a full pardon in the fi nal hours of his presidency. Hillary Clinton called her husband a victim of a “vast right- wing conspiracy.” Bill Clinton adviser Paul Begala called independent counsel Ken Starr “corrupt” and his investigation a “witch hunt” and “a scuzzy investigation” based on “leaks and lies and manufactured evidence.” Clinton senior strategist Rahm Emanuel complained of the “partisan pursuit of the president.” The difference is that the Whitewater convictions, as opposed to the Mueller probe convictions at this point, specifi cally related to the purpose of the probe. Clearly, some Trump associates broke laws, and real-estate developer Trump perhaps made misleading statements about a proposed deal for a real-estate project in Russia. But since virtually every political pundit predicted Trump’s landslide defeat in 2016, why the surprise that Trump was simultaneously working on his next act? As for the accusation that Trump directed Cohen to make payments to prevent his relationships with Daniels and McDougal from coming to light during the campaign, what happened to the Bill Clinton defense —“Everybody lies about sex”? Trump critics simultaneously called him an idiot and the conductor of a scheme intended to break campaign fi nance laws by using his own money to pay off mistresses. The Department of Justice’s Offi ce of Legal Counsel, in 2000, wrote, “The indictment or criminal prosecution of a sitting President would unconstitutionally undermine the capacity of the executive branch to perform its constitutionally assigned functions.” The recourse is impeachment and then removal from offi ce, following a trial in the Senate. Unless the Mueller report contains a lot more than what we know, so far, neither is likely. (Croators Syndicato) 2019 Legislature convenes in 3 weeks Well Happy New Year! I hope ed to serve on this committee so your holidays have been full of that I can better advocate for my peace and harmony. I’m taking the agriculture friends. Seven members time to enjoy the season and em- have been assigned to this commit- tee, four Democrats and brace a little quiet before three Republicans. It the new year comes. The really should be a fun 2019 legislative session group and I trust we starts on January 14. This will do good work for is the earliest the legis- rural communities. As lature has ever begun as you know, House Dis- the new constitution- trict 25 (Keizer to St. al end of session date is Paul to Newberg) is June 30. This is a nice very much a heavy ag- and welcome change so ricultural district with that members can enjoy between and Independence Day with from tho farms around each of those their families. communities. From my Even with being in capitoL fi rst term to now I have the super-minority, I’m By BILL POST always promised to look looking forward to serv- out for and defend our ing in the 80th legisla- farmers as they are un- ture as I just found out I will be serving on the House der more and more pressures that Committee on Judiciary and the can signifi cantly change their live- House Committee on Agricul- lihoods and eventually change how ture and Land Use as vice chair. All we as citizens live and thrive in Or- committee assignments are made by egon. I am very much anticipating Speaker of the House Tina Kotek. much good will be done via this The Committee on Agriculture committee for the farmers, ranchers and Land Use is a new committee and dairies in our district. This will be my third term serv- formed by the Speaker. I’m excit- ing on the House Committee on Judiciary. This is one of the toughest committees to sit on as the majority of the bills goes through this com- mittee and issues are very complex. I thoroughly enjoy being on this committee as I ask the simple ques- tions in the room that no one else wants to ask, but everyone is think- ing. Basically, I make sure every- one who is watching knows what is actually being discussed. Eleven members have been assigned to this committee, seven democrats and four republicans. It should be an interesting session, as many contro- versial topics are expected to come to the Judiciary Committee. I hope to be your voice on that committee, expressing the values that House District 25 believes in and the rea- son why you elected me to repre- sent you. As always, please feel free to stop by my offi ce during session any time. I love welcoming constituents to the Capitol. Have a great rest of your holiday season! (BiLL Post roprosonts Houso Dis- trict 25. Ho can bo roachod at 503- 986-1425 or via omaiL at rop. biL- post@ orogonLogisLaturo.gov.)