A4 THE ASTORIAN • THuRSdAy, JuNE 23, 2022 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher Founded in 1873 DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor SHANNON ARLINT Circulation Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager WRITER’S NOTEBOOK Which Johnson would govern? etsy Johnson entered my office at The Astorian in 2000 as a candi- date for the state House of Rep- resentatives. Decades prior, our fam- ily histories intersected when my father and Johnson’s mother were colleagues on the state Board of Higher Education. They had a simpatico relationship. So I was inclined to like this legislative can- didate. And I did. Not being a pollster, I will leave it to others to speculate on the viability of Johnson’s strategy for winning the three-way race she has with Dem- ocrat Tina Kotek and STEVE Republican Christine FORRESTER Drazan. What interests me much more is what kind of governor she would be. Oregon has not had a governor with business ownership in their background since Victor Atiyeh, our last Republican governor, who led the state from 1979 to 1987. Atiyeh grasped the concept of being the state’s CEO. Our state government has grown con- siderably since the 1980s, but some of the same challenges beg for oversight. With government’s growth, the state’s dependence on computer systems and software platforms has grown markedly. And Oregon has lacked a governor who grasped that particular challenge and dealt with it. Oregon’s state government’s com- puter system disasters are no secret. Refreshing my memory about those malfunctions, I consulted a man with some 30 years of watching the state- house – Dick Hughes, our newspa- per’s Salem columnist. “They’re awful,” Hughes said. On the one hand, computer systems have become the nervous systems of most businesses and governments. On the other hand, no candidate for state B Dave Killen/The Oregonian Betsy Johnson, a former state senator, is running for governor as an independent. I WAS SORRy TO HEAR JOHNSON’S RESPONSE TO THE SCHOOL SHOOTING IN uVALdE, TEXAS, BuT IT WAS THE BETSy I LISTENEd TO SOME 20 yEARS AGO. office will run on a platform of improv- ing them. This is not sexy stuff. Based on what Hughes tells me and what I know of Johnson, she would have the moxie to ask the tough questions of systems and software providers who are contracted to serve the divisions of state government – which are equivalent to large companies – in terms of their pay- roll, budget and the size of the customer base they serve. Guns, however, are a sexy issue – a highly visible flashpoint. When John- son told me, more than a decade ago, about the machine gun that she pur- chased at an auction, I was startled. In U.S. Marine Corps infantry training, I had fired the M60 machine gun. Why, I wondered, would anyone not in uniform want that killing machine? When Johnson and I had this con- versation, a national community of pub- lic health physicians was gathering numbers on the scale of gun wound- ings, deaths and suicides. They argued that America should recognize this as a public health issue. A calamity. An epidemic. An example of this public health per- spective was “The Medical Costs of Gunshot Injuries in the United States,” published in the Journal of the Ameri- can Medical Association. Its conclusions were: “Gunshot injury costs represent a substantial burden to the medical care system. Nearly half this cost is borne by the US taxpayers,” (Aug. 4, 1999). David Hemenway, of the Harvard School of Public Health, was a leading explorer of the intersection of firearm woundings and deaths and public health. “Private Guns, Public Health” was his 2004 book. The virtue of Hemenway’s work and other public health physicians is that it moved the gun issue away from politics and emotion into the world of medicine, healing and prevention. In an attempt to have a fruitful dialogue with Johnson, I gave her one of Hemenway’s papers. At that point, this very articulate woman said nothing in response. I was sorry to hear Johnson’s response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, but it was the Betsy I lis- tened to some 20 years ago. I know that her independent cam- paign for governor demands that she cultivate a hard-line stance for the sin- gle-issue voter – to cut into the Repub- lican electorate. That’s fine for short- term thinking. But it is not leadership for what has become a mortal concern. Put simply, Johnson is on the wrong side of history. And if Oregon has another Umpqua Community College shooting (2015), Clackamas Town Cen- ter incident (2012) or Thurston High School shooting (Kip Kinkel, 1998), most Oregonians will want much more than a clichéd response from their governor. Steve Forrester, the former editor and publisher of The Astorian, is the presi- dent and CEO of EO Media Group. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Exclusion M y family has lived in Cove Beach for over 12 years. It’s been truly heart- breaking to see our community become so divided. What was once a restorative place that my family dreamed of spending every weekend at is now a place we only occa- sionally go to these last few years, prefer- ring places that bring us joy. In many ways, Cove Beach has become a microcosm of what is wrong with the world. Division, unkindness, misuse of power. We must ask ourselves, do we live in a gated community? No. Did the visionary governor, Oswald West, want just a few people to have the exclusive use of Cove Beach? No. Did he want to keep Oregon’s beaches accessible to all, not just the privi- leged few? Yes. Let’s consider how short-term rental policies impact access for all Oregonians. Prioritizing a small number of full-time residents’ nuisance complaints, versus keeping the Oregon Coast accessible to all of the state’s inhabitants is, by its very nature, exclusion. Issues like noise, garbage, fires on beaches, parking, water use, conservation, are all things that we, as a community, can fix together, but let’s not use those as a rea- son to exclude “others” and limit access. My continued hope is that we can all come together as a community, open our hearts and see the responsibility of the privilege we have as property owners in this amazing place, and work together — keeping in mind both our smaller neigh- borhood communities and access for our greater community of Oregonians. AMBER GEIGER Portland My hope I would hope that Congress can do some- thing about mass shootings. There is a myth circulating that Thomas Jefferson stated that the Second Amend- ment was written to keep government tyranny in check. The quote, falsely attributed to Jefferson, is being used to jus- tify the myth that we have the right to bear arms to keep our government in check. Garrett Epps wrote: “If good govern- ment actually came from a violent armed population, then Afghanistan and Soma- lia would be the two best-governed places on Earth.” Our founders would not have passed a constitutional amendment to liquidate a government that they worked and fought to create. Our founders, who fought in the Revolutionary War, had few illusions about the virtues of violence. LETTERS WELCOME Letters should be exclusive to The Astorian. Letters should be fewer than 250 words and must include the writer’s name, address and phone number. You will be contacted to confirm authorship. All letters are subject to editing for space, gram- mar and factual accuracy. Only two letters per writer are allowed each month. Letters written in response In 1787, the writers of our Constitution were aware of Shays’ Rebellion. This was a tax revolt against their state government. George Washington was so upset by this rebellion that he came out of retirement to help frame a new national charter to pre- vent this from happening again. President Washington, himself, led a national army into western Pennsylva- nia to put down what has been called the Whiskey Rebellion. Washington, in a mes- sage to Congress, showed no sympathy for Second Amendment remedies. The myth that the Second Amendment was passed to allow for the violent over- throw of our government is total nonsense. to other letter writers should address the issue at hand and should refer to the headline and date the letter was published. Discourse should be civil. Send via email to editor@dailyasto- rian.com, online at bit.ly/astorianlet- ters, in person at 949 Exchange St. in Astoria or mail to Letters to the Editor, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR., 97103. My hope is that other people will realize this, as well. BILL EAGLE St. Helens So what? A catch-up reading of The Astorian back issues disclosed the June 2 front-page bash of gubernatorial candidate Betsy Johnson — a reprint of Hillary Borrud’s article in The Oregonian. Betsy is a Class 3 owner of a fully auto- matic machine gun. The firearm is safely secured. More to the point, Betsy is lev- el-headed, responsible, emotionally secure and law-abiding, and worked hard for many years representing our district as our senator in Salem. I would trust her with an operational Abrams tank! The issue is not guns. It is deranged people accessing AR platform-type semi-automatic rifles. Betsy, a former search-and-rescue helicopter pilot, did not deserve the clearly political right hook reprinted in The Astorian. We have suffi- cient, common sense firearms laws in Ore- gon. Period. Betsy is lawfully exercising her right in accordance with the law and, like most reasonable Oregonians, appreci- ates Second Amendment rights and protec- tions under our U.S. Constitution. Do we clamor for punishing people who own large automotive vehicles by out- lawing them because a few nutbars have driven them into crowds of people? Do we politicize SUVs and four-wheel drive vehi- cles, along with smearing political candi- dates because he or she owns one? Incivility is running amok in our nation, and we need to be grateful that lev- el-headed people with common sense, like Betsy, are standing up to lead us. She owns a machine gun. So what? They’re fun to shoot in the hands of responsible people! MAURIE HENDRICKSON Astoria