Page 6 May 24, 2017 New Prices Effective April 1, 2017 O PINION Martin Cleaning Service Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning Residential & Commercial Services Minimum Service CHG. $50.00 A small distance/travel charge may be applied CARPET CLEANING 2 Cleaning Areas or more $30.00 each Area Pre-Spray Traffic Areas (Includes: 1 small Hallway) 1 Cleaning Area (only) $50.00 Includes Pre-Spray Traffic Area (Hallway Extra) Stairs (12-16 stairs - With Other Services) : $30.00 Area/Oriental Rugs: $25.00 Minimum Area/Oriental Rugs (Wool) : $40.00 Minimum Heavily Soiled Area: $10.00 each area (Requiring Extensive Pre-Spraying) UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Sofa: $69.00 Loveseat: $49.00 Sectional: $109 - $139 Chair or Recliner: $25.00 - $49.00 Throw Pillows (With Other Services) : $5.00 ADDITIONAL SERVICES • Auto/Boat/RV Cleaning • Deodorizing & Pet Odor Treatment • Spot & Stain Removal Service • Scotchguard Protection • Minor Water Damage Services SEE CURRENT FLYER FOR ADDITIONAL PRICES & SERVICES Call for Appointment (503) 281-3949 A Sustained Attack against the Free Press Journalists in Trump’s crosshairs p eter C erto How can you tell an authoritar- ian when you see one? We know the 20th century hall- marks — brown shirts, street ral- lies, and the like. But there’s an autocratic attitude, some historians suggest, that can easily be traced across the centu- ries. To put it simply, New York Uni- versity professor Ruth Ben-Ghiat told Democracy Now recently, “authoritarians believe that in- stitutions should serve them, and not the other way around.” Just ask Jim Comey — who, as recently as October, might’ve been Donald Trump’s favorite person. Less than two weeks before the November vote, the now-for- mer FBI director announced that he was reopening an investiga- tion into one of Trump’s favor- ite subjects: Hillary Clinton’s emails. For that, Trump praised by Comey’s “guts,” while Clinton now blames Comey’s announce- ment for costing her the election. Trump seemed happy to accept that help. But in a twist, Comey also found the guts to investigate whether Trump accepted help from the Russians, too. For that, he was fired this month. “This Russia thing” was “a made-up story,” Trump com- plained by way of explana- tion. All that’s explosive enough. Even more so was a subsequent revelation: That Trump had called on Comey to “let go” of an investigation into Michael Flynn, Trump’s national security adviser who’d been oust- ed for lying about his own con- tacts with the Russians. That little bombshell is now headline news all over. But bur- ied in the New York Times story about that memo was another, less noticed bomblet: “Alone in the Oval Office,” the paper reported, Trump said “Comey should consider putting reporters in prison for publishing classified information.” That’s right: In addition to ask- ing Comey to stop investigating his friend Flynn, the president called on the FBI director to ar- rest journalists who published things Trump found unflattering. Perhaps including stories like this one. Was this an impulsive request? Not likely. In fact, the administra- tion appears to have been laying the groundwork for this for some time. Take WikiLeaks. Trump once said he “loved” the group for publishing leaked Clinton cam- paign emails. But then it earned the White House’s enmity by also publishing details about CIA hacking. Trump’s CIA director has since described WikiLeaks as “a hos- tile foreign intelligence service” and warned that “America’s First Amendment freedoms” will not “shield them from justice.” Attor- ney General Jeff Sessions is now trying to bring a case against the group’s founder, Julian Assange. While leaking classified infor- mation may be a crime, publish- ing it most certainly isn’t — that’s been protected by the Supreme Court since the early 1970s. In this respect, any charges brought against WikiLeaks could equally be brought against virtually every newspaper and TV station in the country. Which, by all appearances, is the idea. When CNN asked if the WikiLeaks case could lead to charges against other outlets, Sessions didn’t bother to deny it. Of course, this is all under the auspices of a candidate who called journalists “lying, disgust- ing people” and even wondered aloud about whether he’d kill them as president. (He ultimate- ly said no, but seemed reluctant.) And it’s the same White House that wants to sue journalists whose reporting it disputes. But consider that Michael S. Schmidt, the Times reporter who broke the Comey memo story, happens to be the very same per- son who reported on Hillary Clin- ton’s use of a private email serv- er. Has anyone benefited more from that reporting than Trump? It all depends on the headlines that come next, apparently. They’ve surely been spotty about it, but in a democracy pub- lic institutions — from law en- forcement to the free press — are supposed to serve the public, not the president. If Trump can’t ac- cept that, maybe he’s the one who should be fired. Peter Certo is the editorial manager of the Institute for Poli- cy Studies and the editor of Oth- erWords.org.