Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Saturday, October 24, 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 STEVE FORRESTER KATHRYN B. BROWN Pendleton Chairman of the Board Astoria President Pendleton Secretary/Treasurer CORY BOLLINGER JEFF ROGERS Aberdeen, S.D. Director Indianapolis, Ind. Director OUR VIEW OTHER VIEWS Lady Gaga and the life of passion E Briana Sanchez/St. Cloud Times via AP In this photo taken Sept. 25, owner of Sand Pine Pheasants Keith Sand goes pheasant hunting while wearing hunter orange, near St. Joseph, Minnesota. Don’t need a law to do the right thing A tragedy occurred in the hills outside Meacham earlier this hunting season: A 76-year-old man shot and killed his own son in the dwindling evening light, probably mistaking him for a game animal. Umatilla County Sheriff Terry Rowan said the victim had some blaze orange clothing with him, but did not appear to be wearing any. The investigation continues. But what’s not up for debate is the fact that it’s dangerous to be trekking in the woods — especially during WKHULÀHVHDVRQ²ZLWKRXWZHDULQJ hunter orange. It’s not, however, against the law in Oregon. Here, only hunters younger than 18 are required to wear it. “We are one of the last holdout states that haven’t made it mandatory,” said James Read, hunter education coordinator for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. It has made Oregon a more dangerous place to do what many of us love — track and take the state’s bountiful game. Oregon averages roughly one fatal hunting accident a year, outpacing most of our Western neighbors. The majority of fatalities in the last 20 years resulted from misidentifying targets — hunters killed accidentally by someone else in their party, or by a stranger a ridge and a half away. Twice as many are injured than killed from the same cause, according to ODFW records. There is something we could do to reduce that number. “The research is proven that hunter orange does save lives,” said Read. But Oregon hunters don’t want the government forcing them to do VRPHWKLQJQRPDWWHUWKHEHQH¿WV Read noted ODFW last tried to go down that road in 2012 and encountered plenty of pushback. “It took a year — a whole year of meetings around the state and input from the public — and a pretty big ¿JKW´5HDGVDLG³2YHUZKHOPLQJO\ the hunting community is against anything for adults.” Many hunters take to the hills to get away from the endless laws that society has come to rely on. But there are simple ways to keep our freedom, and keep another government regulation out of the conversation. First: remember the four rules of gun safety you learned from an older family member, or in your hunter HGXFDWLRQFODVV$VVXPHDOO¿UHDUPV are loaded. Control the muzzle. Keep \RXU¿QJHURIIWKHWULJJHUXQWLOLW¶V WLPHWR¿UH$QG¿QDOO\LGHQWLI\ the target, then what is in front and behind it. “Of the four basic safety rules, that last one is being violated the most, and it’s getting people killed or injured,” Read said. If that person on the next ridge is violating that fourth rule, make yourself safer by slipping on a blaze orange cap or vest each time you go out hunting. And do the same too, if you are just out hiking or foraging in the late summer or fall. It’s simple to do — easier than buckling your seat belt — and it too can save your life. 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. arlier this week I watched some emotional is to attach yourself to young musicians perform Lady something you value supremely but Gaga songs in front of Lady don’t fully control. To be passionate is Gaga. As India Carney’s voice rose to put yourself in danger. and swooped during the incredible Living with this danger requires a anthemic versions of her dance courage that takes two forms. First, hits, Gaga sat enraptured. Her eyes people with passion have the courage moistened. Occasionally her arms to dig down and play with their issues. ZRXOGÀLQJXSLQDPD]HPHQW)LQDOO\ We all have certain core concerns David she just stood up and cheered. Brooks and tender spots that preoccupy us It was at a dinner hosted by through life. Writers and artists may Comment Americans for the Arts, a leading change styles over the course of their QRQSUR¿WRUJDQL]DWLRQSURPRWLQJ careers, but most of them are turning the arts and arts education. Gaga received over the same few preoccupations in different an award, along with Sophia Loren, Herbie ways. For Lady Gaga fame and body issues Hancock and others. Her acceptance speech predominate — images of mutilation recur ZDVDVGUDPDWLFDVWKHPXVLF7HDUVÀRZLQJ throughout her videos. She is always being she said that this blessing of respectability was hurt or thrown off balconies. “the best thing that’s ever happened to me.” 3DVVLRQDWHSHRSOHRIWHQGLVFRYHU And she remembered her childhood dreams themselves through play. Whether scientists, this way: “I suppose that I entrepreneurs, cooks or didn’t know what I would artists, they explore their become, but I always wanted issues the way children to be extremely brave and explore the possibilities I wanted to be a constant RI3OD\'RK7KH\XVH reminder to the universe of imagination to open up what passion looks like. What possibilities and understand it sounds like. What it feels their emotional histories. like.” They delight in new ways to That passage stuck in the express themselves, expand head and got me thinking. their personalities and move When we talk about living toward their goals. Gaga, with passion, which is sort of to continue with today’s a cliché, what exactly do we mean? example, has always had a sense of humor I suppose that people who live with passion about her projects, about the things that start out with an especially intense desire to frighten and delight her. complete themselves. We are the only animals Second, people with passion have the ZKRDUHQDWXUDOO\XQ¿QLVKHG:HKDYHWREULQJ courage to be themselves with abandon. We RXUVHOYHVWRIXO¿OOPHQWWRLQWHJUDWLRQDQGWR DOOFDUHZKDWRWKHUVWKLQNDERXWXV3HRSOH coherence. with passion are just less willing to be ruled by Some people are seized by this task with a the tyranny of public opinion. ¿HUFHORQJLQJ0D\EHWKH\DUHSURSHOOHGE\ As the saying goes, they somehow get on wounds that need urgent healing or by a fear the other side of fear. They get beyond that of loneliness or fragmentation. Maybe they fog that is scary to approach. Once through are driven by some glorious fantasy to make it they have more freedom to navigate. They a mark on the world. But they often have a opt out of things that are repetitive, routine fervent curiosity about their inner natures and and deadening. There’s even sometimes a DQXQTXHQFKDEOHWKLUVWWR¿QGVRPHDFWLYLW\ certain recklessness there, a willingness to that they can pursue wholeheartedly, without throw their imperfect selves out into public reservation. view while not really thinking beforehand They construct themselves inwardly by how people might react. Gaga is nothing if not expressing themselves outwardly. Members permanently out there; the rare celebrity who of the clergy sometimes say they convert is willing to portray herself as a monster, a themselves from the pulpit. By speaking out witch or disturbing cyborg — someone prone their faith, they make themselves faithful. WRLQÀLFWLQJSDLQ 3HRSOHZKROLYHZLWKSDVVLRQGRWKDW%\ Lady Gaga is her own unique creature, teaching or singing or writing or nursing or whom no one could copy. But she is parenting they bring coherence to the scattered LQGLVSXWDEO\DSHUVRQZKROLYHVDQDPSOL¿HG impulses we are all born with inside. By doing life, who throws her contradictions out there, some outward activity they understand and ZKRPDNHVKHUVHOIDZRUNRIDUW3HRSOHOLNH GH¿QHWKHPVHOYHV$OLIHRISDVVLRQKDSSHQV that confront the rest of us with the question a when an emotional nature meets a consuming friend of mine perpetually asks: Who would vocation. be you and what would you do if you weren’t Another trait that marks them is that they afraid? have high levels of both vulnerability and Ŷ courage. As Martha Nussbaum wrote in her David Brooks became a New York Times great book “Upheavals of Thought,” to be Op-Ed columnist in September 2003. Who would you be and what would you do if you weren’t afraid? OTHER VIEWS Guns on community college campuses? The (Eugene) Register-Guard YOUR VIEWS Other cities struggle with gas tax dollars, too In the interest of providing factual information to our residents and in response to the comment in the editorial “Gas tax the best of bad options” (East Oregonian, Oct. 16): “But the fact that almost two of every three tax dollars earmarked for local roads don’t make their way into pavement shows how LQHI¿FLHQWDQGLQHIIHFWXDO3HQGOHWRQFDQ be.” In a few minutes of research a person FDQ¿QGWKDWLQHYHU\FLW\DVLJQL¿FDQWO\ smaller portion of their state and federal street tax revenue actually goes into asphalt maintenance because cities are required to provide street lighting, painting, sweeping, sanding, patching, signage, curbs and sidewalks. “This year, the city of Coos Bay budgeted to receive $880,000 in gas tax revenue. Of that amount nearly 32 percent (more than $281,000) will be spent just to keep the city’s street lamps RQDWQLJKWDQGWRNHHSWUDI¿FVLJQDOVLQ working order. After subtracting the cost associated with routine street sweeping, striping, crosswalk maintenance, sign maintenance, vegetation maintenance, grading gravel roads, and personnel costs etc., Coos Bay is left with less than $50,000 for street repair. We are left chasing pot holes — “a Band-Aid on a broken arm.” (Band-Aid on a Broken Arm, Local Focus Magazine, pg. 22, November 2014). ³,Q¿VFDO\HDUWKHFLW\¶V share of the state gas tax was $91,869. Expenses for personnel services alone totaled $94,985. The state gasoline tax is not enough to even fund our personnel services within the street fund budget, let alone materials and services.” (Street Needs in John Day, Local Focus, pg. 21, November 2014). Robb Corbett, city manager Pendleton LETTERS POLICY The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. Send letters to 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com. S uggestions for preventing mass shootings such as the one at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg on Oct. 1 fall into two familiar categories: Some call for fewer ¿UHDUPVZKLOHRWKHUVVD\WKHUHVKRXOGEH more of them. Community colleges in Oregon are legally constrained from pleasing either group. The Legislature needs to bring greater clarity to the question of how far community colleges can go in allowing or prohibiting guns on their campuses. The ambiguity stems from Oregon’s law UHJDUGLQJFRQFHDOHG¿UHDUPSHUPLWV$VRI 2013, permits had been issued to 185,000 2UHJRQLDQV²DERXWLQDGXOWV3HUPLW holders’ right to carry guns in public places apparently trumps community colleges’ right to ban them. A 2009 decision by the state Court of Appeals upheld school districts’, and by extension community colleges’, authority WRSURKLELWHPSOR\HHVIURPFDUU\LQJ¿UHDUPV but their power to require students, visitors and others to leave their guns at home is in doubt. Lane Community College, for instance, prohibits anyone — students, employees, college patrons and vendors — from SRVVHVVLQJD¿UHDUPRUHYHQJLYLQJWKH appearance of possessing a gun, on college property or at college-sponsored events. But LCC has an exception for those with concealed- carry permits, unless the permit holder is an employee engaged in work activities. So a college such as UCC can declare itself a gun-free zone, but the declaration is meaningless for the many people who have permits to carry concealed weapons. The only SHRSOHZKRDUH¿UPO\ERXQGE\DFRPPXQLW\ college’s no-guns policy are the college’s employees. The situation is different on university campuses, where the Court of Appeals has found that administrators have broad authority to regulate the “conduct of visitors or members of the public on institutional properties.” All seven of Oregon’s public XQLYHUVLWLHVEDQ¿UHDUPV7KHXQLYHUVLWLHV also have campus police departments with DUPHGRI¿FHUV²EXWVWDWHODZGRHVQRWDOORZ community colleges to create their own police forces, so they rely on unarmed security guards and city or county law enforcement agencies. The Legislature could provide consistency by allowing community colleges to extend WKHLU¿UHDUPVEDQVWRFRQFHDOHGZHDSRQ permit holders. It might also consider allowing police departments at community colleges, many of which have larger enrollments than universities. Whether one sees guns as the problem or as the solution, the status quo — which potentially allows everyone to be armed except school employees and security personnel — is illogical.