Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Friday, June 10, 2016 OTHER VIEWS Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN DANIEL WATTENBURGER Publisher Managing Editor JENNINE PERKINSON TIM TRAINOR Advertising Director Opinion Page Editor OUR VIEW Tip of the hat; kick in the pants A kick in the pants to the Oregon Republican Party, which tried to pull a fast one at last week’s state convention. The group of 10 prospective delegates — including House District 58 representative Greg Barreto — called themselves a “unity” slate, but they certainly didn’t unify the party by trying to change convention rules to get each of them elected while elbowing out all others. Our Capital Bureau reporter Paris Achen told the story earlier this week and the complex rules ight is well-described in her work. To summarize, convention rules said that the 10 candidates who got the most votes would win seats. Pretty simple right? Yet the ballot noted, and party chairman Bill Currier instructed, that party members should vote separately for delegates and at-large delegates. That would have made it easier for a slate to sweep and ill out the entire delegation. It may seem like a silly ight over nothing, but it helped drive a wedge through a state party that needs to be united if it is going to pull off the statewide wins it hasn’t been able to do in recent years. A kick in the pants to the city of Pendleton for closing and removing playground equipment without properly notifying and engaging the public. After a recent court decision, the city’s insurance policy required changes be made to equipment in three parks where equipment was below current safety standards. The city’s parks and rec department cordoned them off and planned to remove them without explanation nor discussion with the community as a whole. It has upset park users and residents citywide. Certainly, dollars are hard to come by in Pendleton. And the debate about whether to risk them with uninsured equipment, or spend them on new equipment, could be cut and dry. But it’s still a discussion worth having — or at the very least, an explanation of why decades-old playgrounds were suddenly gone. Thinking back to how the community banded together to rebuild Pioneer Park after a tragic arson destroyed the playground, it’s obvious this community can come together to rebuild and improve things it cares about. Instead of being the enemy in this situation, the city could have been a partner. Consider it another missed opportunity. 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 Advice to the class of 2016 St. Cloud (Minn.) Times C ongratulations to all the high school graduates in the Class of 2016. As you move into the next stage of your lives — be it college, a job, the military or a “gap year” — let us offer you some advice. We are in a unique position to give that advice. We aren’t your parents or peers, but we also genuinely care about you because you are our future. — Find your inner happiness. Ask: What really makes you happy? What do you look forward to doing? What brings you the most satisfaction? When you have answered those questions, go for it. — Set lofty goals. But don’t measure your self-worth on whether you reach those big goals. Success comes in the lessons you learn along the way. But without a road map to reaching those goals you will wander. As you follow that map, remember it takes small steps to reach for big goals. — Think of ways you can give back to your community. You may move to a new place. Learn about your new home. Find ways you can contribute to the community. It may be a college community or a workplace community. You will learn much from giving back. Your community or workplace will beneit from your talent. — Step outside your comfort zone. It is easy to settle into a routine in your new stage of life. Avoid falling into a rut. Challenge yourself to experience new people, places and things. Experience the diversity in cultures, ages, religions and races. Perhaps it will be as simple as dining at a true ethnic restaurant or listening to a different style of music. — Find a mentor. Find a person who will invest time in you and guide you. They will let you make mistakes. But they will encourage and challenge you. Most important, they will be there for you. — Step back to step ahead. Speaking of taking a year off before starting post- secondary education, the military or a career, we offer this advice: Don’t waste this “gap year.” Going to the beach to learn to surf for a year or backpacking around Europe to ind yourself may sound good, but think again. Even Steve Jobs took college classes after he dropped out of school. Later in his career, Jobs talked about how those drop-in classes helped him in developing the unique Apple products that have changed much of our world. Dump the GOP for a Grand New Party I f a party could declare moral and can do only limited damage given our checks and balances. bankruptcy, today’s Republican Really? Mr. Speaker, your agenda Party would be in Chapter 11. is a mess, Trump will pay even less This party needs to just shut attention to you if he is president and, itself down and start over — now. as Sen. Lindsey Graham rightly put Seriously, someone please start a New it, there has to be a time “when the Republican Party! love of country will trump hatred of America needs a healthy two-party Hillary.” system. America needs a healthy Thomas Will it ever be that time with this center-right party to ensure that the Friedman version of the GOP? Democrats remain a healthy center-left Comment Et tu, John McCain? You didn’t party. America needs a center-right break under torture from the North party ready to offer market-based Vietnamese, but your hunger for re-election is solutions to issues like climate change. so great that you don’t dare raise your voice America needs a center-right party that will against Trump? I hope you lose. You deserve support common-sense gun laws. America to. Marco Rubio? You called Trump “a con needs a center-right party that will support man,” he insults your very being and you common-sense iscal policy. America needs a still endorse him? Good center-right party to support riddance. both free trade and aid to Chris Christie, have workers impacted by it. you not an ounce of America needs a center-right self-respect? You’re serving party that appreciates how as the valet to a man who much more complicated claimed, falsely, that on foreign policy is today, when 9/11, in Jersey City, home you have to manage weak to many Arab-Americans, and collapsing nations, not “thousands and thousands just muscle strong ones. of people were cheering as But this Republican Party that building was coming is none of those things. down.” Christie is backing a man who made Today’s Republican Party is to governing up a baldfaced lie about residents of his what Trump University is to education — an own state so that maybe he can be his vice ethically challenged enterprise that enriches and perpetuates itself by shedding all pretense president. Contemptible. This is exactly why so many Republican of standing for real principles, or a truly voters opted for Trump in the irst place. They relevant value proposition, and instead plays intuited that the only thing these Republican on the ignorance and fears of the public. politicians were interested in was holding It is just an empty shell, selling pieces onto their seats in ofice — and they were of itself to the highest bidders — policy by right. It made voters so utterly cynical that policy — a little to the Tea Party over here, a many igured, Why not inlict Trump on little to Big Oil over there, a little to the gun them? It’s all just a con game anyway. And at lobby, to anti-tax zealots, to climate-change least Trump sticks it to all of those politically deniers. And before you know it, the party correct liberals. And anyway, governing stands for an incoherent mess of ideas doesn’t matter — only attitude. unrelated to any theory of where the world is And who taught them that? going or how America actually becomes great But it does matter. I know so many again in the 21st century. thoughtful conservatives who know it matters. It becomes instead a coalition of men One of them has got to start the NRP — New and women who sell pieces of their brand to whoever can most energize their base in order Republican Party — a center-right party liberated from all the Trump birthers, the for them to get re-elected in order for them to Sarah Palins, the Grover Norquists, the Sean sell more of their brand to get re-elected. Hannitys, the Rush Limbaughs, the gun lobby, And we know just how little they are the oil lobby and every other narrow-interest attached to any principles, because today’s group, a party that redeines a principled Republican Party’s elders have told us so conservatism. Raise your money for it on the by (with a few notable exceptions) being internet. If Bernie Sanders can, you can. so willing to throw their support behind a This is such a pivotal moment; the world presidential candidate whom they know we shaped after World War II is going wobbly. is utterly ignorant of policy, has done no This is a time for America to be at its best, homework, has engaged in racist attacks on a defending its best values, which are now sitting judge, has mocked a disabled reporter, under assault in so many places — pluralism, has impugned an entire religious community, immigration, democracy, trade, the rule of law and has tossed off ignorant proposals for and the virtue of open societies. Trump will walls, for letting allies go it alone and go nuclear and for overturning trade treaties, rules never be a credible messenger, or a messenger at all, for those values. A New Republican of war and nuclear agreements in ways that would be wildly destabilizing if he took ofice. Party can be. If you build it, they will come. Despite that, all top Republican leaders say ■ they will still support Donald Trump — even Thomas L. Friedman won the 2002 Pulitzer if he’s dabbled in a “textbook deinition” of racism, as House Speaker Paul Ryan described Prize for commentary, his third Pulitzer for The New York Times. it — because he will sign off on their agenda The GOP is just an empty shell, selling pieces to itself to the highest bidders. YOUR VIEWS Vulnerable train towns must consider oil train dangers My father was the manger of the old Hinkle depot so, like many others, I’ve beneited from family members being employed by the Union Paciic Railroad. Because of my upbringing, I respect the UPRR and have no quarrel with the many people employed by the UP. But I do wonder what my dad would say about the UPRR’s decision to run oil trains consisting of 96 tanker cars through Hinkle. Would he breath a sigh of relief when a oil train pulled out of the Hinkle yard? Last Friday the residents of Mosier’s luck ran out. It could have happened at Pendleton, Stanield, Echo, Boardman or Hinkle. Now if the reader chooses to think I’m a alarmist, let’s look at this another way. Every oil train that leaves the Hinkle yard has to pass through many towns before it reaches it destination. The derailment at Mosier is an example of how vulnerable communities along the mainline are. We don’t often think of ourselves as part of the global community, but it’s a fact that what happens here affects others elsewhere. Just because an oil train has left our region doesn’t mean we should have an “out of sight, out of mind” attitude. This isn’t about the many freight trains that safely pass through Hinkle every day. I’m simply asking the residents of Umatilla and Morrow counties to think about our role in this. Is it right for us to condone the UPRR’s decision to continue running oil trains through other communities located on the mainline? Eileen Laramore, executive director Tour of Knowledge Hermiston 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. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about individual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. 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. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com.