OPINION 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2015 Democrats being Democrats 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 HEATHER RAMSDELL, Circulation Manager Get set as new law on marijuana kicks in T Liquor commission publicizes rules, works on commercial sales issues he 2014 vote to legalize recreational marijuana use in Oregon divided residents, but state authorities are working in a pro- active manner to hone the details of how the new law will work. With issues occurring else- where where recreational mar- ijuana has been made legal, the commendable strategy of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission is to try to answer questions — and head off poten- tial problems — before the law and accompanying rules takes effect July 1. For those of you intending to smoke pot, be aware of several key components of the law: • It will be legal for Oregon residents aged 21 and older to grow up to four plants per house- hold on their property. Adults may possess up to 8 ounces of usable marijuana in the home and carry up to 1 ounce when out. The limit of four plants is regardless of the number of occupants in the home. It does not mean, for example, that four adults in a residence can grow 16 plants. • Smoking marijuana in public remains illegal. The OLCC has ZRUNHGKDUGWRGH¿QH³SXEOLF´ • Minors cannot possess or use marijuana, even where they live. • Driving while impaired re- mains a criminal offense. Measure 91 did not make any changes to employment law. As a result, your employer could GLVFLSOLQHRU¿UH\RXIRUWHVWLQJ positive at your place of work. And because marijuana remains in your system for days or a week after smoking, be aware that a SRW¿OOHG ZHHNHQG RU YDFDWLRQ could still land you in trouble with your boss. Also, Measure 91 was specif- ically written to have no impact attract swing voters is a paign contributions, but also because of the belief mug’s game, because such that they really know how voters don’t exist. Most the world works. n Friday, House Democrats supposed independents As it turns out, how- are in fact strongly aligned shocked almost everyone ever, they don’t. In the with one party or the other, by rejecting key provisions need- and the handful who aren’t 1990s the purported wise HGWRFRPSOHWHWKH7UDQV3DFL¿F are mainly just confused. men blithely assured us that we had nothing to So you might as well take Partnership, an agreement the IHDUIURP¿QDQFLDOGHUHJ- a stand for what you be- White House wants but much of ulation; we did. After cri- lieve in. Paul the party doesn’t. On Saturday sis struck, thanks in large But the party’s change Krugman Hillary Clinton formally began isn’t just about politics, it’s part to that very deregula- tion, they warned us that we should also about policy. her campaign for president, and On one side, the success of be very afraid of bond investors, who surprised most observers with Obamacare and related policies — would punish America for its budget an unapologetically liberal and millions covered for substantially GH¿FLWVWKH\GLGQ¶W6RZK\EHOLHYH less than expected, surprisingly ef- them when they insist that we must populist speech. These are, of course, related fective cost control for Medicare approve an unpopular trade deal? And this loss of credibility means events. The Democratic Party is be- - have helped to inoculate the party against blanket assertions that gov- that if Clinton makes it to the White coming more assertive about its tra- ernment programs never work. And House she’ll govern very differently ditional values, a point driven home on the other side, the Davos Demo- from the way her husband did in the by Clinton’s decision to speak on crats who used to be a powerful force 1990s. As I said, you can describe all of Roosevelt Island. You could say that arguing against progressive policies this as a move to the left, but there’s have lost much of their credibility. Democrats are moving left. But the more to it than that - and it’s not at story is more complicated and inter- all symmetric to the Republican esting than this simple statement can You could move right. Democrats are adopting convey. ideas that work and rejecting ideas say that You see, ever since Ronald Rea- that don’t, whereas Republicans are gan’s election in 1980, Democrats doing the opposite. Democrats have been on the ideological defen- And no, I’m not being unfair. VLYH(YHQZKHQWKH\ZRQHOHFWLRQV Obamacare, which was once a con- are moving they seemed afraid to endorse clear- servative idea, is working better than left. But the ly progressive positions, eager to even supporters expected; so Demo- demonstrate their centrism by sup- crats are committed to defending its story is more porting policies like cuts to Social achievements, while Republicans Security that their base hated. But are more fanatical than ever in their complicated efforts to destroy it. Modestly high- that era appears to be over. Why? and er taxes on the wealthy haven’t hurt Part of the answer is that Dem- the economy, while promises that tax ocrats, despite defeats in midterm interesting cuts will have magical effects have elections, believe — rightly or proved disastrously wrong; so Demo- wrongly — that the political wind than this crats have become more comfortable is at their backs. Growing ethnic with a modest tax-and-spend agenda, diversity is producing what should simple ZKLOH 5HSXEOLFDQV DUH PRUH ¿UPO\ be a more favorable electorate; statement can in the grip of tax-cutting cranks than growing tolerance is turning social ever. And so on down the line. issues, once a source of Republican convey. Of course, changes in ideology strength, into a Democratic advan- matter only to the extent that they tage instead. Reagan was elected by a nation in which half the public still I’m referring to the kind of peo- FDQ LQÀXHQFH SROLF\$QG ZKLOH WKH disapproved of interracial marriage; ple — many, though not all, from electoral odds probably favor Clin- Clinton is running to lead a nation in Wall Street — who go to lots of in- ton, and Democrats could retake the which 60 percent support same-sex ternational meetings where they as- Senate, they have very little chance marriage. sure each other that prosperity is all of retaking the House. So changes At the same time, Democrats about competing in the global econ- in the Democratic Party may take a VHHP¿QDOO\WRKDYHWDNHQRQERDUG omy, and that this means supporting while to change America as a whole. something political scientists have trade agreements and cutting social But something important is happen- been telling us for years: adopting VSHQGLQJ 6XFK SHRSOH KDYH LQÀX- ing, and in the long run it will matter “centrist” positions in an attempt to ence in part because of their cam- a great deal. By PAUL KRUGMAN New York Times News Service Founded in 1873 MORE ONLINE • For more details and a list of FAQ, go to www.whatsleg- aloregon.com • Email marijuana@oregon. gov or call 800-452-6522 with questions. • For information about med- ical marijuana, go to www. mmj.oregon.gov on existing medical marijuana regulations, which came into ef- fect after that was legalized by a ballot measure in 1998. In conjunction with a public awareness campaign about per- sonal possession and use, the OLCC is drawing up regulations to tax and license marijuana sold commercially. Tax revenue — estimated at $18 million over a two-year period — would be al- located to schools, local govern- ments, police and drug services. The OLCC will begin accept- ing applications from growers, wholesalers and processors on Jan. 4, 2016, with residents able to buy their drug from a retail outlet once rules are in place in fall 2016. Public input is still being sought on these rules and now is the time to comment. The way the new law was written, the ability of local gov- ernments to regulate or restrict WKH SRWHQWLDO LQÀX[ RI FRPPHU- cial vendors is minimal. Law enforcement agencies and local leaders would do well to accept the inevitability that Oregon’s social landscape is about to make D VLJQL¿FDQW FKDQJH DQG DFW DF- cordingly. O Baseball and black history ghosts of those girls. when professional base- “I do feel really bad, ball was segregated. Jackie because they could have Robinson was its star. , ¿UVW ZURWH DERXW WKH ast summer, a 13-year-old changed the world,” she said. “And for them to lose team in August, and about named Mo’ne Davis landed Bandura, who ditched a their lives at such a young on the cover of Sports Illustrated, age? You never know what better-paying career in sales a national sensation after she they could have done.” and marketing to devote himself to a sports program You never know what pitched a shutout in the Little aimed at instilling pride, they could have done. League World Series, where al- purpose and discipline in That’s true not just of chil- Frank most all of the other players are dren who don’t get to grow disadvantaged kids. Bruni boys. She’s believed to be the up. It applies to millions He reasons that if they only black girl ever to participate more — too many of them minori- appreciate how the road was paved ties — who are denied a real chance, for them, they’ll be more likely to take in the competition. maybe because there’s no one to guide full advantage of it. If they see what This summer, she plans to do them, maybe because no one ever African-Americans endured and ac- something else surprising: visit spots and heralds their gifts. complished, they’ll understand their Mo’ne was 7 years old when the own strength and abilities. They’ll also the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., where four black team’s coach, Steve Bandura, hap- understand their obligation, which isn’t girls were killed in a 1963 bombing. pened to see her throwing a football. MXVWWREHQH¿WIURPSURJUHVVEXWWRSHU- He convinced her mother, who was petuate it, for the kids who come next. Three of them were 14. Mo’ne will skeptical, that she had serious athletic Bandura is white and grew up in a turn that age on the day she shows up talent, then mentored her, even helping Philadelphia neighborhood where he at the landmark. to secure a scholarship for her at a pri- often recoiled at the racism he saw. For Mo’ne, who grew up in a poor vate school. His wife, Robin, a physical therapist, neighborhood in Philadelphia, life She has performed well there and is black, and one of their two children, since her Sports Illustrated coronation her goal is within reach: to go to the Scott, 13, plays on the Monarchs, has been electric: a meeting with the University of Connecticut and graduate which they have turned into an extend- Obamas at the White House, a quickie into a career in the Women’s National ed family. memoir, an appearance in a Chevrolet %DVNHWEDOO$VVRFLDWLRQ6KH¶VDV¿HUFH The kids and their parents describe commercial directed by Spike Lee, on the court as she is on the mound. the team as a lifeline and a ladder. even a line of sneakers named for her. The kids aren’t encouraged to aim But over three weeks in late June for higher education. They’re informed The kids aren’t that they’re going to college, period. and early July, she and 13 other kids istoric preservation has be- the Guy Boyington Building and on her team — the rest of them boys, This is hammered into them by the encouraged to fence around their South Philly baseball most of them black, all roughly her come Astoria’s hallmark. the Commodore Hotel. diamond. It’s bedecked with banners aim for higher Clatsop Community College Honored by the Astoria City age — have a schedule of exhibition signaling the alma maters of former games across the country that mixes even has a program that teaches Council Monday, Justin Power’s exhilarating notes with somber ones. Monarchs: Temple University, Penn education. the basic skills of this craft. But restoration of the Thompson State, the University of Pennsylvania. They’re not just hitting the road. They’re The kids are also instructed that conserving Astoria’s building and house in Uppertown is a double They’re taking it south, into history: the they’re ambassadors of the inner city church in Birmingham, the bridge in housing stock was not always the victory. Power has accomplished Selma. They’ll play ball, then visit Lit- informed that and that in baseball, as in life, a cer- town’s goal. something of note. And prior to his tle Rock Central High School, a battle- tain conduct engenders respect. Ban- they’re going dura insists that their shirts always 7KH VLJQL¿FDQFH RI (GZDUG intervention, the home was a city JURXQGLQWKH¿JKWWRLQWHJUDWHVFKRROV to college, be tucked in. There’s no taunting of They’ll swing for the fences, then bow Harvey — whose name is given code enforcement problem. opponents, no roughhousing with one their heads at the house in Jackson, to the city’s award Monday night Doing a restoration such as 0LVVZKHUH0HGJDU(YHUVOLYHG period. another when they’re supposed to be — was a prod to preserving and the Thompson house is a long concentrating. In a country still lurching toward “You’ve got to see the world,” Bandura, 54, has intervened in a designating the town’s historic slog. Such projects demand deep racial harmony and looking to give Mo’ne explained, adding that she and underprivileged kids more grounding, similar fashion for hundreds of oth- homes, before that became a na- NQRZOHGJHGHGLFDWLRQRI¿QDQFLDO grit and hope, it’s a compelling itiner- er kids who were or are members of her teammates can’t do that if they’re tional ambition. resources and patience. ary. And at a time when corruption and his team, the Anderson Monarchs. He looking down, into gadgets, and not Most preservationists peg their This year has also hatched criminal behavior have cast a pall over started it two decades ago and runs it up. “You have to see it with your own movement’s national kick-start what will become the ultimate soccer, football, boxing and more, it’s out of the Philadelphia Department of eyes.” WR WKH KLJKSUR¿OH GULYH WR VDYH restoration. That would be Greg a feel-good reminder of the positive Parks and Recreation, which employs of it. She’s getting a big, heady glimpse impact athletics can have on young him. Grand Central Station in 1975. That Newenhof’s purchase of the Flavel people — on the way in which sports, And we’ll know exactly what she The Monarchs play basketball, roughly coincided with the decade home at 15th Street and Franklin too, can be a bridge. soccer and baseball, depending on the could have done with her life, because Mo’ne told me that she relished the season, and the kids are together year- she’s positioned to do it. She’s primed of Dr. Harvey’s activity in Astoria. Avenue. trip as a tribute to trailblazers who “put round. The team is named for Marian WR IXO¿OO WKDW SRWHQWLDO 6KH DQG KHU Some 20 years later, the Liberty Bravo to Monday’s honoree. their lives out there and got beaten so Anderson, who in 1955 became the teammates have been given more than Theater would have its restoration, And bravo to all who take on these that we could have the freedom we ¿UVW EODFN VLQJHU WR SHUIRUP DW WKH bats, cleats and the promise of an epic Metropolitan Opera in New York City, summer. and a number of others would fol- epic projects. Their completion have.” They’ve been given a sense of mis- But she’s also braced for sadness, and for the Kansas City Monarchs, a ORZ LQFOXGLQJ WKH +RWHO (OOLRWW makes Astoria a better place. particularly in that church, with the standout in the Negro Leagues back sion and a set of wings. History is our high card H Restoration a long slog, but makes Astoria a better place By FRANK BRUNI New York Times News Service L