JUNE 28, 2019, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A5 Opinion One party rule How one responds to the Re- publican state senators hightailing it out of the capital to deny a quorum during the debate and vote for the cap and trade bill likely depends on one’s ideological bent. The right cheered on the ma- neuver; the left disparaged the move. To deny ruling Dem- ocrats the opportunity to steam roll their cap and trade legislation into real- ity, the Republicans took a page from other states and Oregon Democratic legislators themselves by skipping town. Without the minimum number of legislators in attendance, the cap and trade bill could not move forward. Earlier this week Senate President Peter Courtney admitted that even his own caucus did not have the necessary votes to pass the bill. Some say that the Republicans should have returned to Salem and do the job they were elected to do—even if it means being on the losing side of a vote. Others say that the Republicans were only doing what they had to do to stave off what some call a disaster for the state. The political stand-off resulted in the no-show Republicans being fi ned $500 a day for staying away. Those fi nes can be paid for out of the legislator’s campaign coffers. Most of the Republican senators were in Idaho, out of reach of the Oregon State Police, who have been tasked with rounding up the errant legislators. There are about 100 pending bills in the state legislature that will die for lack of action due to the walkout. That is one repercussion. This is not the last time this will happen, by either party. We are see- ing in real time the dangers of the legislature held by su- permajorities. There are lessons here that need to be heeded. If the Republi- cans want to have a big say in governing they need to chip away at the Democratic major- ities by running candi- dates more palatable to independent voters in the state’s more progressive areas. The Democrats must learn that just because you can pass some leg- islation doesn’t mean you should. It has been shown that real work for the people gets done when one or both houses of a state legislature is evenly divided between the two parties. True compromise is required to pass any bills. It is understandable why the Republican senators did what they did—they didn’t have much of a choice. There is no guarantee that a passed cap and trade bill could be revoked via the ballot in 2020. The GOP has shown they have as much determination as the Dem- ocrats. Politics is the art of compro- mise. Let’s see more compromise and a lot less drama. —LAZ our opinion School’s out! Or is it? Some of the best learning is done when we don’t think we’re learn- ing. Kids think that all education must cease for the summer—June through August is for fun and frol- icking. Experienced parents know the truth. When a human is in their teenage years, every day is a time for learn- ing something. A camping trip is crammed with learning moments— how to safely build and extinguish a fi re; how to clean a freshly-caught trout; the best way to fold that large tent to fi t into that itty bitty bag it came in. Closer to home kids may learn how long it does take to weed out the garden or how to compost the cuttings from their lawn mow job. An ambitious parent may teach their young how to make jam from the valley’s bounty of summer ber- ries. Close to home next week there will be a fun event that is a won- derful learning tool: the civil war reenactment at Heritage Powerland Park in Brooks (formerly Antique Powerland). Adults, kids, teenagers, history buffs and war buffs will fi nd something to engage them. The grounds of Heritage Pow- erland Park are fi lled with both Union and Confederate encamp- ments. The reenactors live as if it was the 1860s, no modern conve- niences, using only what was used 150 years ago. Food is cooked over a campfi re. That same fi re heats wa- ter for bathing. The reenactors wear what was worn in that period. Members of the Northwest Civil War Council are serious about their hobby. They invite questions about the lifestyle on Civil War-era battle- fi elds. Everyone involved is knowl- edgeable and can answer any ques- tion about that period. The highlights of the four-day event are the two-a-day battles re- enactments. Spies creep, looking for the enemy. Soldiers march in formation. Troops place cannons in preparation for engagement with the opposite side. The thrill of the booming can- nons is unforgettable; the smoke from the big guns wafting over the battlefi elds. The generals and majors on their horses commanding the battle atop their steeds. It may not be the Avengers or the Stormtroop- ers, but it is just as exciting. Every battle scene, every en- campment populated with soldiers and those in support of the armies is a master class in how the Civil War was fought and what it was like to live in the 1860s. Kids (and adults) won’t even think about learning when they attend the civil war re- enactment, they will be so thrilled with the sights and sounds, they will only realize they learned something when they tell their friends what they experienced. —LAZ Helping hope return By MICHAEL GERSON The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently released a report that is the closest thing we have to the quantifi cation of despair. Between 1999 and 2017, suicide rates in Amer- ica rose to their high- est level since World War II. The increase can be found among women and men, and in every racial and ethnic group. But the spike among people between the ages of 15 and 34 is particularly disturbing. Hopelessness among the young seems a more di- rect assault on hope itself. Researchers posit that the opioid epidemic may be partly to blame. Just as a family can be decimated by an overdose, a sense of general de- spair may take root in communities where overdose deaths are common and visible. Another proposed explanation is social media, which may expose younger people to bullying while constricting meaningful human in- teractions -- increasing the need for emotional support while narrowing the sources of emotional support. Even worse, emotionally fragile people can fi nd perverse forms of online community that echo and encourage their despair. Weighing and testing such ex- planations are important to under- standing the sociology of suicide. But for people who contemplate or attempt suicide, the struggle is more personal and philosophic. If the most important attribute of human beings is autonomy, and the purpose of life is a positive balance of pleasure over pain, then mental anguish and physical suffering can make suicide seem like a rational choice. It can even be seen as the ul- timate expression of autonomy and choice. But this is deceptive in a variety of ways. First, autonomy is a lie. Hu- man beings are fundamentally social creatures who only fi nd mental health in the context of supportive relationships. In isolation, naturally depres- sive people are more likely to enter downward spirals of despair. The inner voice that normally whispers worthless- ness can become a shout of self-con- demnation. And it is dangerous when there are no other voices -- no kinder voices -- to contradict it. Second, in most cases, the ratio- nal weighing of suicide’s costs and benefi ts is a lie. Suicidal people with mood disorders are at a particular- ly dangerous stage when consider- ations that seem true to them are not true at all. I am not talking here about a ter- minally ill patient wanting a “do not resuscitate” order. This strikes me as determining not the length of liv- ing, but the length of dying. End- of-life choices often require rational thoughts about horrible dilemmas. But in the case of suicide, the instrument that determines our view of reality is malfunctioning. The computer is wired in favor of despair. The decision to commit suicide is generally informed by lies that seem very, very true in the moment. That loved ones don’t love you. That friends secretly have con- tempt for you. That problems are permanent. That everyone would be better off without you. This is the reason that people with depression need intrusive family and friends around them. They need other voices people who will gently but fi rmly intervene when they withdraw, or start giving possessions away, or talk a lot about death, or have a major loss (of a loved one or job), or begin saying goodbye to others, or buy a weapon, or use drugs and alcohol to dull pain, or act recklessly, or exhibit other changes in mood or behavior. In these situations, intervention is not the violation of privacy -- any more than using a defi brillator on a person having a heart attack is a violation of privacy. Intrusiveness -- defi ned by pushing a depressed person toward professional help -- is the appropriate response to a medi- cal emergency. But people who suffer from de- pression have responsibilities of their own. In times when their depres- sion is under control, they need to cultivate a circle of family members and friends who are fully informed about their illness. And this requires the exact opposite of autonomy. It requires people with depression to be vulnerable and willing to receive help. In this case, secrecy and shame can lead to death. And since the children of people who commit sui- cide are more likely to commit sui- cide themselves, death spreads like anthracnose through family trees. It is not an easy or natural thing for people to periodically distrust their own version of truth. But that is what someone with depression must learn to do. When things that are self-condemning and self-de- structive appear self-evident, that is the time to trust in some other person’s more reliable perception of reality. And then, with patience and professional help, hope can make its return. ( Washington Post Writers Group) Humans shouldn’t speed up climate change An aching heart is the result of daily news reports that, while my government ignores the fact-based warnings that climate change, glob- al warming, the greenhouse effect, no matter its name, means that, if we continue as we’re going now, it will not be possible for the hu- man species to survive within a few decade’s time. A threat to all living things, President Trump, with help from U.S. Senate GOP members and former lobbyist cabinet mem- bers, has made eliminat- ing federal regulations a priority with 83 former air, land and water envi- ronmental protections in termination. Yet, Trump, who has a reputation for not reading anything, listening only to coal barons and those most against renewable energy, and he who em- braces the climate deniers, refuses to protect our planet’s human pop- ulation. He has taken the U.S. out of the 2015 Paris Climate Accords while 173 other United Nations members signed up to work togeth- er in a concerted, coordinated effort to reduce carbon emissions, slow global temperature risings, and help all the countries of the world con- trol the effects of climate change. In Oregon, the legislature tried to make headway with carbon emis- sions controls. However, the survival in offi ce of GOP politicians by their absence from the capitol “won” the day over human survival concerns. It’s mortuus est fi nis here! Elsewhere in the world there are those who seek to help ach- ing hearts, most recently exam- pled by Pope Francis. The pope convened some of the biggest and most powerful oil and companies in the world, including Exxon Mobil, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, and Chev- ron, to a Vatican climate summit where he en- couraged them to focus on the risks of climate change to their business- es and the importance of switching to cleaner en- ergy sources. Pope Francis also em- phasized the moral im- perative “to save God’s creation.” When he spoke he also pointed out to the gathering of the oil executives that, if managed well, the new world design would “gen- erate new jobs, reduce inequality and improve the quality of life for those affected by climate change” (as would have happened in Oregon by passage of House Bill 2020). Pledges to change secured by Pope Francis were followed up on at the Europe- an Union summit where these same leaders discussed efforts to combat climate change by bringing carbon emissions to a halt by 2050. Venture it to say, any Oregonian who has lived through the last fi ve decades, and been poignantly con- gene h. mcintyre scious of his surroundings, knows that our winters are shorter, spring now comes earlier, summers are more torrid and fall is a season of greater length. Oregon’s forests are dryer and more often afi re as are the open fi elds and range lands east of the Cascade Range. For now, however, we may be considered the more fortunate in the U.S. compared to the brutal, devastating tornadoes, days of rain that result in fl oods that turn farmlands, towns and cities into paths of overfl owing rivers and waist-deep lakes where the water then stands dirty brown, drowning people and farm animals, destroying everything it covers. Meanwhile the polar ice caps melt and oceans rise. The new order of life in America is that it is under a huge strain with the former occupants of lowlands and farms wondering if they’ll ever return to normal conditions. How- ever, normalcy is unlikely to happen since humankind continues to add carbon emissions in tonnages to na- ture that was formerly friendly to humans but now a threatening foe. We should all heed and be agents of action here and throughout the planet. We should demand that our government lead the way to change; however, unfortunately, making money remains a stronger motiva- tor than that which, if implemented, would save humanity. (Gene H. McIntyre shares his opinion regularly in the Keizertimes.) End of legislative session is in sight Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com SUBSCRIPTIONS One year: $35 in Marion County, $43 outside Marion County, $55 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 POSTMASTER Send address changes to: EDITOR & PUBLISHER Lyndon Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon In case you missed it, Sine Die long) passed in the House Cham- has been declared imminent by both ber this week. The bill now goes to the Senate and House leadership… the Senate Chamber. Currently, the meaning notice to announce work Senate Republicans are threatening sessions in order to further legisla- to “walk out” if the bill moves to the Senate Floor for a vote. tion is now suspended. In The Senate Republi- other words, legislation cans agreed to vote on can move very quickly any budget bill but will and the 80th Legislative not be voting on HB Session is getting closer 2020. The Governor to adjournment. Con- has announced if the stitutionally, the session Senate Republicans do needs to adjourn by June walk out, she will hold 30th. I’ve been asked a special session the fi rst many times what’s taking week in July and order so long to adjourn with a Oregon State Po- supermajority? Especially from the the lice to bring the Senate considering that Wash- Republicans back to ington adjourned almost capitol the Capitol. two months ago and with By BILL POST So…as of right now, a $52.4 billion budget… the legislature has not double the size of Ore- adjourned because of gon’s budget. the HB 2020 debacle Most of the conten- tious bills have already passed this and we still have budget bills to pass. session…SB 1008 (Measure 11 re- Interestingly enough, HB 5048 has form), HB 2015 (allowing undoc- already been signed by the Gover- umented immigrants to obtain a nor, which ensures that any state driver’s license), HB 3427 (educa- agency with no budget before July tion funding tax), SB 870 (Nation- 1, 2019, remains at current service al Popular Vote), etc. Probably the levels. In other words, if no other most heated discussion this year… budget bill were to pass by the end cap and trade. HB 2020 (100 pages of session, the legislature would still meet its obligations of a balanced budget. I also believe the other two con- troversial bills holding up adjourn- ment are HB 2270 (raising tobacco taxes by $2.00 per pack) and HB 2005 (extending paid family leave benefi ts). On a personal note: the bills that I was most passionate fared about 50/50. Daylight Saving Time passed and was signed by the Gov- ernor this week (but still must pass California’s Senate and be approved by Congress to take effect) and the “Sudafed” bill is dead. To fi nd out more about this session and specif- ics on bills, keep an eye out for my town hall coming soon at a date and location to be determined. (Bill Post represents House Dis- trict 25. He can be reached at 503- 986- 1425 or via email at rep.bill- post@ oregonlegislature.gov.) Share your opinion Submit a letter to the editor, or a guest column by noon Tuesday. Email to: publisher@keizertimes.com