Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Friday, May 22, 2015 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher JENNINE PERKINSON Advertising Director DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor OUR VIEW Tip of the hat; kick in the pants Tip of the hat to the Hyphen District, Milton-Freewater’s new plan to unite and revitalize its downtown district(s). We’re in favor anytime a city chooses to embrace its quirks instead of run from them, and we’re also in favor of a good name. The Hyphen District, that’s just between SoHo and TriBeCa right? And building off wine from the nearby Rocks District, the city has marketed itself as a fun and intriguing place. The plan suggests restoring the main streets of both Milton and Freewater (they were two different towns before the hyphen arrived) while turning the land between the two towns into a mixed-use commercial and residential common area dubbed the “Hyphen 'LVWULFW´7KH3RUWODQG¿UP6(5$WKDW came up with the name, also proposed resurrecting Milton-Freewater’s dormant railroad for trips through wine country. In keeping with the train theme, SERA suggested a fare-free, trolly-style bus, a pedestrian pathway by the river and converting an old cannery into a community center. They’re all great ideas — and they all cost money — but the Hyphen has plenty of opportunity to succeed, grow and become vibrant. Wine-wealthy Walla Walla is just across the state line, and bringing some RIWKDWJURZWKLQWR8PDWLOOD&RXQW\LVDEHQH¿WIRUWKHWZRWRZQVVHSDUDWHG by a hyphen, and the county and state to which we belong. A kick in the pants to the city of Pendleton for their increasingly outlandish rules about marijuana. Earlier this week, they added the scent of marijuana, whether growing or drying, to the list of offensive odors on the city’s nuisance ordinance. Still not on the list: tobacco, curry chicken, dog vomit and diapers. The strange rule has already attracted regional media coverage, and a story about the ordinance made the website Reddit for an online discussion as harsh as you might imagine it would be. Nearly all commenters, both locally and nationally, have mocked the ordinance for being unfair and foolish. We guess the city will have to purchase a roughly $1,500, comically ULGLFXORXV³¿HOGROIDFWRPHWHU´WKDWKDVWKHDELOLW\WRPHDVXUHVPHOOV6LPLODU devices were purchased by Colorado agencies in the lead up to legalization. Though there have been dozens of “smell complaints” in the city, it’s hard to ¿QGDQ\RQHZKRKDVEHHQ¿QHGIRULW7KHUHLVRQHWKLQJDQRUGLQDQFHOLNH this — however unenforceable — does: It allows the government to come VQLI¿QJDURXQG\RXUSURSHUW\ “You do have people who just object to the whole idea,” Ben Siller, a FRGHHQIRUFHPHQWRI¿FHUZLWKWKH'HSDUWPHQWRI(QYLURQPHQWDO+HDOWKLQ Denver, told USA Today back in 2014. “(The smell) is discernible. It’s there, but you get used to it, just like any odor.” That seems so obvious, but for some reason it wasn’t to a majority of Pendleton city council members. 7KHGHIHQVHKDVEHHQPDGHWKDWLW¶VDQRWKHUWRRORQWKHRI¿FHU¶VEHOW a way to make persistently annoying neighbors knock off an offensive EHKDYLRUE\WKUHDWRID¿QH%XWWKHUHDVRQPDULMXDQDKDVEHHQVLQJOHGRXW — and why it more offensive than rotting walnuts — is beyond us. A tip of the hat to Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who teamed up with 5HSXEOLFDQSUHVLGHQWLDOKRSHIXO6HQ5DQG3DXO5.\LQD¿OLEXVWHUWR block the mass collection of phone records under the Patriot Act. Both senators, despite their seats on opposite sides of the aisle, have been RSSRQHQWVRIWKH16$EXONVXUYHLOODQFHWHFKQLTXHV3DXOXVHGWKH¿OLEXVWHU to block fellow Kentucky Republican Senator Mitch McConnell’s attempt to renew the Patriot Act rather than letting the House vote on a bill to stop the data collection. “There comes a time in the history of nations when fear and complacency allow power to accumulate and liberty and privacy to suffer,” Paul said in the early afternoon to begin a 10-and-a-half hour speech that included several senators. “That time is now. And I will not let the Patriot Act, the most un-patriotic of acts, go unchallenged.” Wyden joined the effort at about 3:45, spoke for 45 minutes, then returned in the evening. The whole thing was a bit of a show, as politics at all levels tend to be, but it made a strong statement of bipartisan support for eliminating a harmful practice of the NSA. 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. OTHER VIEWS Iraq war history ensares Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush I n January 2007, shortly after word ‘mistake.’ It wasn’t because of entering the race for the 2008 political expediency. After all, primary Democratic presidential voters and the press were clamoring nomination, Hillary Clinton traveled to for me to say that word. When I voted ,RZDZKHUHRQHRIWKH¿UVWTXHVWLRQV to authorize force in 2002, I said that she faced was about her vote to it was ‘probably the hardest decision I authorize the war in Iraq. have ever had to make.’ I thought I had “If we had known then what we acted in good faith and made the best know now, there never would have decision I could with the information Byron been a vote,” Clinton said, “and I never I had. And I wasn’t alone in getting it York would have voted to give (President wrong. But I still got it wrong. Plain Comment George W. Bush) that authority.” and simple.” Clinton had been saying that since In recent days, Jeb Bush has 2004. As she ramped up her campaign, she struggled to answer the if-I-knew-then-what- said it more and more. “If I-know-now question about I had known then what I Iraq. Bush stumbled through know now, I never would three or four tries before have voted to give the ¿QDOO\VD\LQJWKDWLIKHKDG president authority,” Clinton known what would happen, said at a Democratic debate “I would not have gone into in June 2007. “Obviously, Iraq.” if I had known then what I That should be enough. know now about what the Unlike Hillary Clinton, president would do with Jeb Bush did not vote to the authority that was given authorize the war. Unlike him, I would not have voted Clinton, he was not privy to the way that I did,” she said the secret intelligence used on “Meet the Press” in September 2007. to justify invading Iraq. Unlike Clinton, he It didn’t work. Democrats, and some in the GLGQRWJLYHDVSHHFKIURPWKH6HQDWHÀRRULQ press, demanded more. They wanted Clinton support of authorization. to acknowledge that she had made a grievous Jeb Bush faced intense questioning on Iraq error that went far beyond simply believing mostly because it was his brother who started intelligence that turned out to be false. They the war, and many voters quite reasonably wanted Clinton to say she had made a huge want to know how a President Jeb Bush mistake and deeply regretted her actions. They would be different from President George W. wanted her to grovel. Bush. Jeb really could not get away with not “She uttered the most irritating and answering. disingenuous nine words in politics: ‘If Now that he has answered, it seems likely we had known then what we know now,’” that criticism he received from conservatives wrote New York Times columnist Maureen will subside. But attacks from the Left will Dowd of Clinton during that 2007 Iowa visit. increase. “(Democratic Sen.) Jim Webb knew. Barack -XVWPRPHQWVDIWHU-HE¶V¿QDOVWDWHPHQW Obama knew. Even I knew, for Pete’s sake. the liberal writer Josh Marshall wrote: “It The administration’s trickery was clear in real won’t end there. Because with a consensus time.” Dowd’s conclusion, and that of many in place that the Iraq War was a bad idea, the on the left, was that Clinton didn’t have the whys and hows of just how we made this guts to stand up to a popular president. decision are up for discussion in a very new Still, Clinton resisted a full-scale way.” An hour or so later, the Democratic confession. She ended up paying a heavy National Committee announced a conference price, losing the nomination to Obama, who call to “hold Jeb Bush accountable on Iraq.” had not been in Congress at the time and had In other words, Bush’s I-would-not- the luxury of saying he opposed the Iraq war have-gone-into-Iraq answer immediately all along. transformed the debate into a partisan one. But Clinton knew she had to confess Conservatives who criticized Jeb’s earlier sometime. In her 2014 book “Hard Choices,” ÀXEEHGDQVZHUVZLOOOLNHO\VD\KH¶VGRQH she wrote that she not only regretted her vote, enough. The Left will keep pressing for she regretted not regretting it earlier: more — just like they pressed Clinton. But of “While many were never going to look past course, Jeb has no Iraq vote to regret. my 2002 vote no matter what I did or said, I Besides, in the end it seems unlikely the should have stated my regret sooner and in public is interested in a full replay of the the plainest, most direct language possible. 2002-2003 Iraq war debate. Bush made a I’d gone most of the way there by saying I commonsense statement. That’s probably regretted the way President Bush used his enough for most voters. authority and by saying that if we knew then Ŷ what we later learned, there wouldn’t have Byron York is chief political correspondent been a vote. But I held out against using the for The Washington Examiner. Unlike Hillary Clinton, Jeb Bush did not vote to authorize the Iraq War. YOUR VIEWS Texting and driving a plague invading our communities I want to warn Pendleton residents of a terrible plague that has invaded our community. Across our country it kills and injures thousands more than the horrible Ebola virus. Americans panic at the mention of Ebola, but pay little attention to this much more dangerous problem. What is it? Talking or texting while driving. This deadly habit has become so accepted and so universal that police departments are overwhelmed with the staggering number of people who think this activity is okay and ignore the law. Sometimes I think they just throw up their hands and give up on citing these lawbreakers. On my evening walks through downtown Pendleton I see an average of three drivers talking on phones. Recently I tried to be nice to a young lady by the Dairy Queen who was headed west DQGZDLWLQJIRUDORQJVWULQJRIWUDI¿F,KHOG off going through the intersection to give her time to turn in front of me. She was looking at me, but she was also talking on her cellphone. She just sat there talkling on her phone. It was obvious her small brain couldn’t process both tasks at once. I waited a few seconds then, with lots of cars waiting behind me, I went RQWKURXJK2QO\WKHQGLGKHUEUDLQ¿QDOO\ recognize the opportunity, and she rushed across in front of me missing me by inches. I yelled for her to get off her phone and drive, but was only met by a string of obscenities. The phone was still glued to her ear. 7KHPLQLPXP¿QHIRUEUHDNLQJWKLVODZLQ Oregon is $142. Police departments who are ZRUULHGDERXWEXGJHWVFRXOGJHW¿OWK\ULFKLI DOOWKHLOOHJDOFDOOHUVZHUHVWRSSHGDQG¿QHG, should state that I think the Pendleton Police Department and city council are dedicated and hard working folks. Both entities have many issues and challenges to deal with. I am convinced, however, that only much larger ¿QHVDQGDFRPPLWPHQWWRD]HURWROHUDQFH policy will change the usage of cell phones in the car. And what about the latest wonderful hi-tech gadget by Apple? The new wrist watch computer/cell phone will increase wrecks and deaths even more. Can you just picture someone twisting their wrist around to look at their “watch” then manipulating the buttons with the other hand while they negotiate WKURXJKWUDI¿F"7KHZRUVWLV\HWWRFRPH LETTERS POLICY David Burns Pendleton 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. Send letters to 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com.