Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Saturday, February 7, 2015 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN DANIEL WATTENBURGER Publisher Managing Editor JENNINE PERKINSON TIM TRAINOR Advertising Director Opinion Page Editor EO MEDIA GROUP East Oregonian • The Daily Astorian • Capital Press • Hermiston Herald Blue Mountain Eagle • Wallowa County Chieftain • Chinook Observer • Coast River Business Journal Oregon Coast Today • Coast Weekend • Seaside Signal • Cannon Beach Gazette Eastern Oregon Real Estate Guide • Eastern Oregon Marketplace • Coast Marketplace OnlyAg.com • FarmSeller.com • Seaside-Sun.com • NorthwestOpinions.com • DiscoverOurCoast.com MIKE FORRESTER Pendleton Chairman of the Board STEVE FORRESTER Astoria President TOM BROWN Bigfork, Mont. Director KATHRYN B. BROWN Pendleton Secretary/Treasurer JEFF ROGERS Indianapolis, Ind. Director OUR VIEW Grad rates must go up OTHER VIEWS The bedrock of Oregon’s 40- We’ve already started investing 40-20 plan is that 100 percent of more dollars in new programs, Oregon students will graduate high starting from the ground up to get school on time in the year 2025. Oregon students on track right from That’s not going to happen, preschool. That’s smart and a good obviously. Young people have all use of tax dollars. But it isn’t going kinds of extenuating circumstances to help improve graduation rates that can keep them from graduating for more than a decade, and adding on time, many of a lost decade to which cannot be numbers that have The failures avoided. Even been too low for state education too long isn’t good cannot be RI¿FLDOVDGPLWWKDWD for the future of our leveled only perfect high school state. graduation rate is Pendleton on the schools. Superintendent an aspirational goal, Jon Neither can it Peterson channeled one that cannot be accomplished. inner Aaron be placed on the his The psychological Sorkin at last lack of dollars. week’s school board EHQH¿WRIDFKLHYDEOH goals aside, the state meeting, summing It’s a cultural is not even close up the ways in to approaching which we have let problem. a perfect score. down this current Oregon’s FURSRIVWXGHQWV graduation’s rate is among the “They went through the recession nation’s worst. More than 1-in- where we eliminated 15 days 4 students are not graduating on of school in one year,” he said. time with a diploma. If that were “They’ve experienced, all of the translated into a letter grade, it sudden, larger class sizes that no wouldn’t be one you’d be excited to kid prior to them has experienced ... show your parents. They’re coming out at the end and Surely the failures cannot be we scratch our heads and wonder, leveled only on the schools. Neither ‘Why are we graduating only 72 can it be placed solely on a lack of percent of our kids?’ (It’s) because dollars. It’s a cultural problem as we fund education at a 72 percent much as an educational one, and we level is the truth. It makes me sick all bear a certain responsibility. to think about the experiences of the One thing that schools should kids that are coming through now confront right away is the dismal compared to the experiences we all truancy rate in Oregon. Just getting had when we went through.” kids to class goes a long way More money will help. But toward getting them to graduate. more likely, it will takes thousands Identifying reasons why students of people — administrators and skip class more regularly in Oregon teachers and parents and students — — whether it is open campuses, too to reinvigorate the Oregon education many open periods during the day system from the ground up. We’ve or a lack of personal investment started the process, but current high in their showing up — needs to be school students have been left out to addressed. dry. I Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board of Publisher Kathryn Brown, Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, and Opinion Page Editor Tim Trainor. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. &RQÀLFWDQGHJR f you read the online versions of to generate a visceral response. newspaper columns you can click They are a different kind of play over to the reader comments, of dominance. They are attempts by which are often critical, vituperative LQVLJQL¿FDQWPHQWRJHWWKHZRUOGWR and insulting. I’ve found that I can recognize their power and status. deal with these comments only by These Islamic State guys burn following the adage, “Love your hostages alive because it wins praise enemy.” from their colleagues, because it earns It’s too psychologically damaging attention and because it wins the sort David to read these comments as evaluations Brooks of perverse respect that accompanies of my intelligence, morals or fear. We often say that terrorism is an Comment professional skill. But if I read them act of war, but that’s wrong. Terrorism with the (possibly delusional) attitude is an act of taunting. These murderous that these are treasured friends bringing videos are attempts to make the rest of us feel me lovely gifts of perspective, then my eye powerless, at once undone by fear and addled slides over the insults and I can usually learn by disgust. something. The key is to get the question of The natural and worst way to respond is my self-worth out of the way — which is ZLWKWKHVRXOLQÀDPHG,IWKH\H[HFXWHRQHRI actually possible unless the insulter is really our guys, we’ll — as Jordan did — execute creative. two of their guys. If they chest-thump, we’ll It’s not only newspaper columnists chest-thump. If they kill, we’ll kill. who face this kind of problem. Everybody This sort of strategy is just a recruiting tool who is on the Internet is subject to insult, for the Islamic State. It sucks us into their trolling, hating and cruelty. Most of these QLKLOLVWLFVWDWXVZDU7KHLUEDUEDULVPDQGRXU online assaults are dominance plays. They response. are attempts by the insulter to assert his or The world is full of invisible young men her own superior status through displays of \HDUQLQJWRIHHOVLJQL¿FDQWZKR¶GORYHWR gratuitous cruelty toward a target. VKRFNWKHZRUOGDQGOLJKWIRONVRQ¿UHLQDQ The natural but worst way to respond is epic status contest with the reigning powers. to enter into the logic of this status contest. The best way to respond is to quiet our If he puffs himself up, you puff yourself up. disgust and quiet our instincts. It is to step out But if you do this you put yourself and your of their game. It is to reassert the primacy of own status at center stage. You enter a cycle our game. The world’s mission in the Middle of keyboard vengeance. You end up with a East is not to defeat the Islamic State, which painfully distended ego, forever in danger, is just a barbaric roadblock. It’s to reassert the needing to assert itself, and sensitive to primacy of pluralism, freedom and democracy. sleights. It’s to tamp down zeal and cultivate self- Clearly, the best way to respond is to step doubt. The world has to destroy the Islamic out of the game. It’s to get out of the status State with hard power, but only as a means to competition. Enmity is a nasty frame of mind. that higher moral end. Pride is painful. The person who can quiet the Many people have lost faith in that self can see the world clearly, can learn the democratic mission, but without that mission subject and master the situation. we’re just one more army in a contest of Historically, we reserve special admiration barbarism. Our acts are nothing but volleys in for those who can quiet the self even in the a status war. KHDWRIFRQÀLFW$EUDKDP/LQFROQZDVFDXJKW In this column, I’ve tried to describe the LQWKHPLGGOHRIDKRUUL¿FFLYLOZDU,WZRXOG LQWHUSOD\RIFRQÀLFWDQGHJRLQDUHQDVWKDWDUH have been natural for him to live with his trivial (the comments section) and in arenas LQVWLQFWVDÀDPH²¿OOHGZLWKLQGLJQDWLRQ that are monstrous (the war against the Islamic toward those who started the war, enmity 6WDWH,QDOOFDVHVFRQÀLFWLQÀDPHVWKHHJR toward those who killed his men and who distorts it and degrades it. would end up killing him. But his second The people we admire break that chain. inaugural is a masterpiece of rising above the They quiet the self and step outside the status natural urge toward animosity and instead war. They focus on the larger mission. They adopting an elevated stance. reject the puerile logic of honor codes and The terror theater that the Islamic State status rivalries, and enter a more civilized group is perpetrating these days is certainly logic that doesn’t turn us into our enemies. in a different category than Internet nastiness. Ŷ But the beheadings, this monstrous act of David Brooks became a New York Times human incineration, are also insults designed Op-Ed columnist in September 2003. YOUR STATUE VIEWS 5HTXDGRZQWRZQGRHVQ¶W¿W with rest of statues proposed Don Requa statue being placed in %URZQ¿HOG3DUNIRUYDULRXVUHDVRQVDVVL]H cohesiveness with statues already in place and history. I would like to bring to the attention of 3. The people upset about the placement the city council the original purpose of the of the Don Requa statue are connecting statues on Main Street here in Pendleton. The thought at the time was to recognize the it to other city problems and saying if the city doesn’t listen to them about this that early participants in the Round-Up. These they will vote against any city bond and names have been familiar with rodeo fans. urge others to do the same. So the Requa The Hall of Fame refers to Pendleton as the statue has become a focal point for political Cowboy Capital of the World. Most people backlash. call Pendleton the Rodeo City. The statues 4. People do not understand why the city are history, tradition and frame of mind. won’t change the placement of the statue While Don Requa is important to some after all but one of the other statues has been SHRSOH,GRQRWIHHOLWLV¿WWLQJWRSODFHKLV VWDWXHDPRQJWKH¿HOGRIWKHHDUO\5RXQG8S moved. “Why not save all the taxpayers money and just put the statue somewhere participants. It destroys the purpose of both JURXSV7RPHDPRUH¿WWLQJSODFHZRXOGEH else?” they ask, as well as, “Why aren’t they listening to us?” (I have no answers to these WKHDWKOHWLF¿HOGDWWKHKLJKVFKRRO+HZDV queries). an athlete, not a rodeo participant. I hope However, I do have a question of my WKHFLW\FRXQFLOFDQVHH¿WWRUHYHUVHLWVHOI RZQ,IWKHVWDWXHSODFHPHQWFDXVHVVXFK and recognize the original purpose of the dissension among the people of Pendleton thought. Robert Stangier will it really honor Don Requa or become a Pendleton focal point for more unhappiness? I hope the Arts Council, the Linebackers Club and the city council will rethink their decision. It’s not too late. Not too late to listen and rethink location of statue I have been mistaken for a member of the Arts Council of Pendleton several times now and gotten an earful about statues both standing and in progress. I would like to pass RQP\¿QGLQJVUHJDUGLQJVWDWXHV 1. Some people are still upset about the Stella Darby statue, seeing it as an inappropriate promotion of prostitution. Others are willing to accept it as local history. 2. Many people are very upset about the Marge Normington-Jones Pendleton Requa belongs at high school, where it can be focal point The Don Requa bronze should become a historical focal point on the campus of Pendleton High School. In these times, students have few opportunities to develop and nurture the history and traditions of their school. One of shopped here. The cowboys? Why not just move them to the Round-Up Grounds and, while we are at it, move Til Taylor to the courthouse. How silly and petty can we be? Can’t we ¿QGWKLQJVPRUHLPSRUWDQWWRVSHQGRXUWLPH on? Don Requa did more than coach. He taught many of us to drive. He laughed with us when the city put in the Main Street “mall,” that zig zag down the “gut” that WXUQHGLQWRDJDPHRIWRXFKWKHWUDI¿FFRQH after we discovered it was nailed down. Put his statue on Main Street where he can be seen by his students, their children and grandchildren. $¿QHPDQLQVWUXFWRUDQGFRDFKGHVHUYHV a place to be seen and remembered for more that just football. Susan Goodnow Pendleton LETTERS POLICY the service clubs or leadership groups at the school needs to capture this opportunity to keep Coach Requa’s story alive. Bring him home! Shirlee McGreer Pendleton .HHS5HTXDDW%URZQ¿HOG and let’s all move on Can we please stop arguing about statues on Main Street? Put the statue of Coach Don Requa on Main. He lived here, he worked here, and he The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to with- hold letters that address concerns about individual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private cit- izens. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. The phone number will not be published. Unsigned letters will not be published. Send letters to Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendle- ton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastorego- nian.com.