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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 2016)
OPINION 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JULY 8, 2016 Ready or not, here comes the future o one I know is looking forward to four months of presidential cam- paigns. As if we haven’t had enough. N Even though I thought I’d had read enough about Donald Trump, I succumbed to an opinion piece in The Washington Post last week. Morbid curiosity drew me to the head- line: “I hate Donald Trump. But he might get my vote.” The author was Jim Ruth, a retired fi nancial adviser. The opening of Mr. Ruth’s piece was a meditation on disturbing changes in Ameri- can culture — on cam- puses and in the media. The essence of Ruth’s rationale was: “Short of not voting at all — still an option some of us are consid- ering — (Trump) is the only one who appears to want to preserve the American way of life as we know it.” Steve That line hit a chord Forrester with me. I’ve heard this a lot. But the diffi culty of wanting things not to change — or want- ing thing to be how they once were — is that none of us get to have that. History is sprint- ing onward, like it or not. T he evangelical writer Michael Gerson has offered this refl ection on America and the business of wanting a return to the past. “His- torically speaking, nations defi ned by eth- nicity, motivated by grievances and looking backward to a golden age are commonplace.” Gerson adds that, “What has been different about the United States is its remarkable abil- ity to make a nation out of nations.” Political stability, it seems to me, is what people prize in the United States. We know that when we wake up in the morning the electricity will come on, the roads will be clear and there won’t be a violent overthrow of our various governments. If you have come to America from a less stable country, that value is even higher. Tom McCall had the capacity to lead Oregon through a very tumultuous period. AP Photo/Paul Sakuma Author Alvin Toffler, gestures during his talk on the Fourth Wave at the Astrobiology Roadmap Workshop in Mountain View, Calif., in 1998. Of course, there are some Americans who nurture political and even violent turmoil (think Malheur National Wildlife Refuge). But the majority of Americans aren’t keen on having armed revolutionaries in our midst. erson’s observation about the resilience of American political culture is reassur- ing. If you travel around America just a bit, you gain a sense of just how starkly different our regions are. The current issue of Texas Monthly contains an extensive article about Larry McMurtry, the writer whose novels have defi ned Texas. Wrote Skip Hollandsworth: “McMurtry has by turns elevated and eviscerated (Texas) with the kind of marrow-piercing observations only ever allowed native sons.” G Hollandsworth describes McMurtry’s response to the intense quiet of the prairie and of how that solitude can generate great real- life characters. Once I saw the late Oregon Gov. Tom McCall’s boyhood home in Terre- bonne , I sensed the remoteness of that place generated McCall’s outsized character. McCall had the capacity to lead Oregon through a very tumultuous period (the 1970s) and move our state into the future. uring the third year of McCall’s adminis- tration, Alvin Toffl er brought out a sem- inal work called Future Shock. Noting the book’s 40th anniversary in The New York Times, Farhad Manjoo describes the rele- vance of Toffl er’s warnings. “In Mr. Toffl er’s coinage, future shock wasn’t simply a meta- D phor for our diffi culties in dealing with new things. It was a real psychological malady, the ‘dizzying disorientation brought on by the premature arrival of the future.’ And ‘unless intelligent steps are taken to combat it,’ he warned, ‘millions of human beings will fi nd themselves increasingly disoriented, progres- sively incompetent to deal rationally with their environments.’” Manjoo adds: “In rereading Mr. Toffl er’s book, as I did last week, it seems clear that his diagnosis has largely panned out, with local and global crises arising daily from our collective inability to deal with ever-faster change.” n spite of candidates’ promises, we can’t have the past back. We only get the future. The question is whether we’ll get leaders — in the White House and Congress — who will help us prepare for that future. — S.A.F. I Gov. Tom McCall looks at the Surfsand Motel in Cannon Beach that ignited the discussion of Oregon’s beach laws in 1967. Submitted Photo FBI Director Comey: A theory about why he did it By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER Washington Post Writers Group W ASHINGTON — Why did he do it? FBI Director James Comey spent 14 minutes laying out an unassailable case for prosecuting Hillary Clinton for the mishandling of classifi ed material. Then at literally the last minute, he recommended against prosecution. This is baffl ing. Under the statute (18 U.S.C. section 793(f)), it’s a fel- ony to mishandle classifi ed information either intentionally or “through gross negligence.” The evidence, as outlined by Comey, is overwhelming. Clinton either sent or received 110 emails in 52 chains containing mate- rial that was classifi ed at the time. Eight of these chains contained information that was top secret. A few of the clas- sifi ed emails were so marked, contrary to Clinton’s assertion that there were none. These were stored on a home server that was even less secure than a normal Gmail account. Her communications were quite possibly com- injure the nation. But Clin- promised by hostile powers, ton clearly intended to thus jeopardizing American set up an unsecured pri- national security. vate server. She clearly “An unclassifi ed sys- intended to send those clas- tem was no place for that sifi ed emails. She clearly conversation,” said Comey received warnings from her of the classifi ed emails. A own department about the rather kind euphemism, dangers of using a private using the passive voice. In email account. plainer, more direct lan- She meant to do what Charles guage: It is imprudent, she did. And she did it. Krauthammer improper and indeed Intentionally. illegal to be conduct- That’s two She meant grounds for prosecu- ing such business on an unsecured priSvate one requiring no to do what tion, server. intent whatsoever. Yet Comey summed she did. And Comey claims that no up Clinton’s behav- reasonable prosecu- ior as “extremely care- she did it. tor would bring such a less.” How is that not case. Nor has one ever Intentionally. been brought. gross negligence? Yet Comey let Not so. Just last her off the hook, citing lack of intent. year, the Justice Department success- But negligence doesn’t require intent. fully prosecuted naval reservist Bryan Compromising national secrets is such Nishimura, who improperly down- a grave offense that it requires either loaded classifi ed material to his per- intent or negligence. sonal, unclassifi ed electronic devices. Lack of intent is, therefore, no The government admitted that defense. But one can question that there was no evidence that Nishimura claim as well. Yes, it is safe to assume intended to distribute the material to that there was no malicious intent to others. Nonetheless, he was sentenced to two years of probation, fi ned and for- ever prohibited from seeking a security clearance, which effectively kills any chance of working in national security. So why not Hillary Clinton? The usual answer is that the Clintons are treated by a different standard. Only lit- tle people pay. They are too well con- nected, too well protected to be treated like everybody else. Alternatively, the explanation lies with Comey: He gave in to implicit political pressure, the desire to please those in power. Certainly plausible, but given Com- ey’s reputation for probity and given that he holds a 10-year appointment, I’d suggest a third line of reasoning. When Chief Justice John Roberts used a tortured, logic-defying argu- ment to uphold Obamacare, he was subjected to similar accusations of bad faith. My view was that, as guardian of the Supreme Court’s public standing, he thought the issue too momentous — and the implications for the coun- try too large — to hinge on a decision of the court. Especially after Bush v. Gore, Roberts wanted to keep the court from overturning the political branches on so monumental a piece of social legislation. I would suggest that Comey’s think- ing, whether conscious or not, was sim- ilar: He did not want the FBI director to end up as the arbiter of the 2016 pres- idential election. If Clinton were not a presumptive presidential nominee but simply a retired secretary of state, he might well have made a different recommendation. Prosecuting under current circum- stances would have upended and redi- rected an already year long presidential selection process. In my view, Comey didn’t want to be remembered as the man who irreversibly altered the course of American political history. And with no guarantee that the prosecution would succeed, moreover. Imagine that scenario: You knock out of the race the most likely next presi- dent — and she ultimately gets acquit- ted! Imagine how Comey goes down in history under those circumstances. I admit I’m giving Comey the ben- efi t of the doubt. But the best way I can reconcile his reputation for integrity with the grating illogic of his Clinton decision is by presuming that he didn’t want to make history. I don’t endorse his decision. (Nor did I Roberts’.) But I think I understand it. 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 Founded in 1873