OPINION 6A T HE D AILY A STORIAN When cultures shift too far By DAVID BROOKS New York Times News Service Founded in 1873 STEPHEN A. FORRESTER, Editor & Publisher LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN, Production Manager DEBRA BLOOM, Business Manager SAMANTHA MCLAREN, Circulation Manager Our indexed minimum wage still makes sense O Planning for annual increases works for business regon Capital Insider — which our company publishes in collaboration with Pamplin Media Group — reported last Friday that mandatory paid sick leave is moving forward in the Oregon Legislature, in place of the $15 minimum wage. It is encouraging that Democratic legislators are step- ping back from the minimum wage bill. Moving Oregon’s min- imum wage abruptly to $15 per hour would have major effect on small- and mid-sized businesses. Oregon voters did a wise thing in 2002 in passing Measure 25, which raised Oregon’s mini- mum wage from $6.50 to $6.90. The most important aspect of that ballot initiative was to in- de[ the minimum wage to inÀa- tion. Today Oregon’s minimum wage is $9.25. California’s is $9 and Washington’s is $9.47. Among all the states, Oregon’s is the third highest minimum wage. The wisdom of indexing the minimum wage is twofold. It recognizes that the mini- mum wage should not remain static, but follow the econo- my. Secondly, indexing allows businesses to plan and budget for that increase. They can see it coming. There is a huge dif- ference between planning for annual payroll increases in the minimum wage and facing a sudden leap. Jumping Oregon’s minimum wage by $5 in one year would have different effects throughout the spectrum of the state’s busi- nesses. There is gap between large Oregon employers such as Nike and Intel and the broad mass of Oregon businesses. While metropolitan Portland’s economy is fueled by those two global brands, the economy of towns across Oregon are sus- tained by small- and mid-sized businesses. It is those small- and mid-sized businesses that would have great dif¿culty absorbing the sudden jolt of the jump to a $15 minimum wage Oregon’s Measure 25 was an intelligent response to real need. It still makes sense. Oil re¿nery in Longview? D This project must fully immunize the Columbia River oes it make sense to build a new oil refinery on the banks of the Columbia River in Longview, Wash., especially one that will be supplied with crude oil via rail? No, but this answer is not quite so clear cut as en- vironmental advocates make it seem. Riverside Energy Inc. indicates it is looking into several locations in Oregon and Washington for a new West Coast re¿nery that would turn crude oil — likely from the %akken ¿eld of North Dakota and Alberta — into gasoline and other products. The company says it is far from ¿rmly settled on Longview, though its very name — Riverside — suggests that a facility based on Columbia River transportation and water may be a fundamental aspect of its business plan. This will be anathema to many in the environmental and ¿shing com- munities. Even pipelines are sus- ceptible to spills, but rail-based tank cars are a particularly potent source of concern. There is no disputing that they have suffered derailments, explosions and other mishaps that have cost lives and forced expensive cleanups. Even a relatively minor spill at the wrong time could wipe out a critical salmon run, while a major accident could put an end to ¿shing, clamming and tourism for years. Lives have been lost under such circumstances and doubtless will be again, and we don’t have to go along with accommodating such risks in our neighborhood. However, much as some might wish to permanently end fossil fuel exploitation immediately and forever, economic realities dic- tate that time is still at least two or three decades in the future, if we’re lucky. The vast majority of Paci¿c Northwest residents continue to depend on petroleum products for a broad range of necessities, from transportation to home heating, plus many uses that aren’t so immediate- ly apparent, from tires to fertilizer. Only about 19.4 gallons in a 42-gal- lon barrel of oil becomes gasoline. The entire West Coast is plagued with gasoline prices that tend to be significantly higher than those in oth- er parts of the U.S. In part, this is be- cause we lack refinery capacity. The loss of a single refinery for routine maintenance or to make repairs fol- lowing an accident causes a month- long spike in Western fuel prices. With a growing population, we could certainly use additional refining. Technological advances mitigate some concerns raised by Riverside’s opponents. For example, existing re¿neries in highly environmental- ly conscious Whatcom and Skagit counties in northwest Washington state are not permitted to emit “a toxic soup of carcinogens and neu- rotoxins” as Columbia Riverkeeper states is true of re¿neries in general. Such scare tactics aren’t helpful. As always with industrial pro- posals, Riverside’s plans to build a re¿nery must be forced to fully in- ternalize costs and risks. Promises of jobs, taxes and useful products must not sway communities and regu- lators from ensuring that wherever a new re¿nery is eventually built, neighbors and regional citizens are in no way left on the hook for cop- ing with pollution or other costs. Any plan that can’t fully immunize the Columbia River and its creatures and communities must itself be re- ¿ned or rejected. THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, APRIL 20, 2015 I n January 1969, two quar- terbacks played against each other in Super Bowl III. Johnny Unitas and Joe Namath were both superstars. They were both from western Pennsylvania, but they came from different cultural universes. Unitas was reticent, work- manlike and deliberately unglamorous. AP Photo/JR Namath was Three pro athletes indicate that Àashy and a they have overcome knee prob- playboy. He lems by kicking out their right turned himself feet with American Airliners stew- into a marketing ardess Kathy Dunn at a midtown brand and wrote David restaurant in New York on Tues- a memoir jok- Brooks day, Jan. 19, 1972. Joe Namath ingly called, “I Can’t Wait Until Tomorrow ‘Cause I of the New York Jets, left, John- ny Unitas of the Baltimore Colts, Get Better Looking Every Day.” The contrast between these two and Tommie Agee of the New men symbolizes a broader shift from a York Mets, right, gathered for the culture of self-effacement, which says, launching of American Airliners- “I’m no better than anybody else and sixth-annual golf classic in which nobody is better than me,” to a culture the three athletes competed at of self-expression, which says, “Look Puerto Rico the next month. at what I’ve accomplished. I’m spe- cial.” Magazines ran articles on the wonder- The conventional story, beloved ful lifestyle changes that were going to especially on the right, is that this make lives easier — ultraviolet lights cultural shift took place in the 1960s. that would sterilize dishes in place of First there was the dishwashing. Greatest Generation, There was a soft- What’s lost ening whose members in the moral were modest and sphere. In 1946, is the more Rabbi Joshua self-sacri¿cing, but Li- then along came the ebman published a balanced baby boomers who book called Peace were narcissistic and view, that we of Mind that told ev- relativistic. erybody to relax and As I found are splendidly love themselves. He while researching a a new set of endowed but wrote book, this storyline commandments, in- doesn’t really ¿t the also broken. cluding “Thou shalt facts. The big shift not be afraid of thy in American culture did not happen hidden impulses;” thou shalt “love around the time of Woodstock and the thyself.” Liebman’s book touched a Age of Aquarius. It happened in the nerve. It stayed atop The New York late 1940s, and it was the members of Times’ best-seller list for 58 weeks. the Greatest Generation that led the A few years later, Harry Over- shift. street published The Mature Mind, The real pivot point was the end which similarly advised people to of World War II. By the fall of 1945, discard the doctrine based on human Americans had endured 16 years of sinfulness and embrace self af¿rma- hardship, stretching back through the tion. That book topped the list for 16 Depression. They were ready to let weeks. loose and say farewell to all that. There In 1952, Norman Vincent Peale followed what the historian Alan Peti- came out with The Power of Positive gny called “the renunciation of renun- Thinking, which rejected a morali- ciation.” The amount of consumer ty of restraint for an upbeat morality advertising on the radio exploded. of growth. That book rested atop the best-seller list for an astounding 98 weeks. Then along came humanistic psy- chology, led by people like Carl Rog- ers, who was the most inÀuential psy- chologist of the 20th century. Rogers followed the same basic line: Human nature is intrinsically good. People need to love themselves more. They need to remove external restraints on their glorious selves. “Man’s behavior is exquisitely ra- tional,” Rogers wrote, “moving with subtle and ordered complexity toward the goal his organism is endeavoring to achieve.” Humanistic psychology led to the self-esteem movement and much else, reshaping the atmosphere in schools, human-resources departments and across American society. In short, American popular cul- ture pivoted. Once the dominant view was that the self is to be distrusted but external institutions are to be trusted. Then the dominant view was that the self is to be trusted and external con- straints are to be distrusted. This more positive view of human nature produced some very good so- cial bene¿ts. For centuries people in certain groups in society had been taught to think too poorly of them- selves. Many feminists and civil rights activists seized on these messages to help formerly oppressed groups to be- lieve in themselves, to raise their sights and aspirations. But I would say that we have over- shot the mark. We now live in a world in which commencement speakers tell students to trust themselves, listen to themselves, follow their passions, to glorify the Golden Figure inside. We now live in a culture of the Big Me, a culture of meritocracy where we promote ourselves and a social me- dia culture where we broadcast high- light reels of our lives. What’s lost is the more balanced view, that we are splendidly endowed but also broken. And without that view, the whole logic of character-building falls apart. You build your career by building on your strengths, but you improve your char- acter by trying to address your weak- nesses. So perhaps the culture needs a rebalance. The romantic culture of self-glori¿cation has to be balanced with an older philosophic tradition, based on the realistic acknowledgment that we are all made of crooked tim- ber and that we need help to cope with our own tendency to screw things up. That great tradition and body of wis- dom was accidentally tossed aside in the late 1940s. It’s worth reviving and modernizing it. Starving for wisdom in information sea highest return now goes to In The Odyssey, the those who combine soft beautiful nymph Calyp- skills — excellence at so offers immortality to Odysseus if he will stay e are drowning in infor- communicating and work- ing with people — with on her island. After a mation, while starving technical skills. Àing with her, Odysseus for wisdom.” “So I think a human- ultimately rejects the of- That epigram from E.O. Wilson ities major who also did fer because he misses his captures the dilemma of our era. Yet a lot of computer science, wife, Penelope. He turns down godlike immortality the solution of some folks is to dis- economics, psychology, or other sciences can be quite to embrace suffering and Nicholas dain wisdom. death that are essential to valuable and have great Kristof “Is it a vital interest of the state career Àexibility,” Katz the human condition. to have more anthropologists?” Rick said. “But you need both, Likewise, when the Scott, the Florida governor, once in my view, to maximize your po- President’s Council on Bioethics asked. A leader of a prominent Inter- tential. And an economics major or issued its report in 2002, Human net company once told me that the computer science major or biology Cloning and Human Dignity, it cit- ¿rm regards admission to Harvard as or engineering or physics major who ed scienti¿c journals but also Ernest a useful heuristic of talent, but a col- takes serious courses in the human- Hemingway’s The Old Man and the lege education itself as useless. ities and history also will be a much Sea. Even science depends upon the Parents and students themselves more valuable scientist, ¿nancial humanities to shape judgments about are acting on these principles, re- professional, economist or entrepre- ethics, limits and values. Third, wherever our careers lie, treating from the humanities. Among neur.” college graduates in 1971, there My second reason: We need peo- much of our happiness depends upon were about two business majors for ple conversant with the humanities our interactions with those around each English major. Now there are to help reach wise public policy us, and there’s some evidence that seven times as many. (I was a polit- decisions, even about the scienc- literature nurtures a richer emotional ical science major; if I were doing it es. Technology companies must intelligence. Science magazine published ¿ve over, I’d be an economics major with constantly weigh ethical decisions: a foot in the humanities.) Where should Facebook set its pri- studies indicating that research sub- I’ve been thinking about this af- vacy defaults, and should it tolerate jects who read literary ¿ction did ter reading Fareed Zakaria’s smart glimpses of nudity? Should Twitter better at assessing the feelings of a new book, In Defense of a Liberal close accounts that seem sympathet- person in a photo than those who read Education. Like Zakaria, I think that ic to terrorists? How should Google non¿ction or popular ¿ction. Litera- the liberal arts teach critical think- handle sex and violence, or defama- ture seems to offer lessons in human nature that help us decode the world ing (not to mention nifty words like tory articles? “heuristic”). In the policy realm, one of the around us and be better friends. Literature also builds bridges of So, to answer the skeptics, here most important decisions we hu- are my three reasons mans will have to understanding. Toni Morrison has the humanities enrich make is whether to helped all America understand Afri- our souls and some- Regulators allow germline gene can-American life. Jhumpa Lahiri il- times even our pock- modi¿cation. This luminated immigrant contradictions. should be etbooks as well. might eliminate cer- Khaled Hosseini opened windows First, liberal arts tain diseases, ease on Afghanistan. informed In short, it makes eminent sense equip students with suffering, make our communications and by first-rate offspring smarter to study coding and statistics today, interpersonal skills and more beautiful. but also history and literature. science, John Adams had it right when he that are valuable and But it would also genuinely rewarded change our species. wrote to his wife, Abigail, in 1780: in the labor force, but also by It would enable the “I must study Politicks and War that especially when ac- wealthy to concoct my sons may have liberty to study first-rate companied by tech- superchildren. It’s Mathematicks and Philosophy. My nical abilities. humanism. exhilarating and ter- sons ought to study Mathematicks and Philosophy, Geography, natural “A broad liberal rifying. arts education is a key To weigh these is- History and Naval Architecture, nav- pathway to success in the 21st-cen- sues, regulators should be informed igation, Commerce and Agriculture, tury economy,” says Lawrence Katz, by ¿rst-rate science, but also by ¿rst- in order to give their Children a right a labor economist at Harvard. Katz rate humanism. After all, Homer ad- to study Painting, Poetry, Musick, says that the economic return to pure dressed similar issues three millenni- Architecture, Statuary, Tapestry and Porcelaine.” technical skills has Àattened, and the ums ago. By NICHOLAS KRISTOF New York Times News Service ‘W