Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Tuesday, November 8, 2016 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor MARISSA WILLIAMS Regional Advertising Director MARCY ROSENBERG Circulation Manager JANNA HEIMGARTNER Business Office Manager MIKE JENSEN Production Manager OUR VIEW ODFW needs consistent state funding OTHER VIEWS Changes in social behavior and two license fee increases — one in public financing will increasingly 2018 and another in 2020, with future affect how we fund the Oregon increases indexed to inflation. Department of Fish and Wildlife, These increases come at the and whether some of the Pacific same time other hunting and fishing Northwest’s outdoor traditions are costs also are on the rise. In addition able to continue. to the constant struggle to afford Our Capital Bureau reported last insurance and upkeep on vehicles week that a task force charged with and vessels, hunters in particular finding sustainable funding for ODFW face steep increases in fees they must is considering waiting on scheduled pay for access to many previously license fee increases. free forestlands. It wants to see if the If parents can’t Weyerhauser and other Legislature approves corporations have afford to go been aggressively either an income tax surcharge or a surcharge raising access fees — hunting or fish- ostensibly as a way to on beverage containers to fund the department. for forest upkeep. ing themselves, pay Why should the About a third of the majority of citizens who agency’s budget — it’s unlikely their neither fish nor hunt roughly $60 million a care about any of this? year — is generated children will. Many who enjoy nature by selling hunting and in ways that do not require licenses fishing licenses. State and federal — everything from birdwatching funds account for two-thirds. Like many other states, Oregon has to the satisfaction of knowing wild places exist — individually pay a experienced a gradual but inexorable few dollars in taxes a year to ODFW decline in the number of people still operations, as opposed to $180 for a interested in harvesting their own full combination adult license fee. wild fish and game. And like other Oregon Public Broadcasting states, Oregon has partially offset this reported this week on the difficulties decline in participation by raising license fees on those who remain. This ODFW has in funding conservation measures for nongame species results in a cycle of less financially — everything from bats to frogs. advantaged residents being squeezed out of hunting and fishing, along with Problems like this will get nothing but worse if hunting and fishing those whose who have only marginal participation rates and license income enthusiasm for rod and gun sports. continue to languish. As much or perhaps more than What can we do? Certainly support other recreational activities, interest legislative efforts to establish a in hunting and fishing typically is reliable safety net for ODFW funding. established in childhood or not at Other voluntary options already all. ODFW and its peers around the exist and are fully described at www. nation have taken a variety of steps dfw.state.or.us. One of the easiest to encourage parents to get kids engaged in the outdoors, offering free is buying $20 habitat conservation stamps via the internet or at any or discounted license options, special location that sell fishing and hunting events and other incentives. But if licenses. parents can’t afford to go hunting or If we care about Oregon wildlife fishing themselves, it’s unlikely their — and surveys show we strongly children will. do — we have to figure out new ways This leads to the kinds of internal to pay for the vital work performed by struggles evidenced by the state’s Fish and Wildlife. task force, which is reluctantly eying 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. The post-familial election H ow did we get here? How did ahead into their country’s future, white it come to this? Not just to the baby boomers especially see less to Donald Trump phenomenon, but recognize immediately as their own. to the whole choice facing us Tuesday, This alienation is heightened when in which a managerial liberalism and an the descendants they do have seem to authoritarian nationalism — two visions be faring worse than they did — as in of the president as essentially a Great those white working-class communities Protector: a feisty grandmother or fierce where opioid addiction, worklessness sky father — are contending for the and family breakdown have advanced Ross votes of an ostensibly free people? Douthat apace. The combination of small Start with the American family. Start families and social disarray feeds a Comment with my own family, as an illustration grim vision of the future, in which after — white Protestants for the most part on you’ve passed, your few kids and fewer both sides with a few Irish newcomers mixed, grandkids will be beset, isolated and alone. rising and falling and migrating around in the This sense of dread, in turn, bleeds easily way of most families that have been in this into ethno-racial anxiety when the benefits of that imagined future seem to belong country a long time. increasingly to people who seem culturally My maternal great-grandfather had five alien, to inheritors who aren’t your natural children, four of whom lived to have families heirs. For this reason mass immigration, the of their own. His son, my grandfather, also had five children, two sons and three daughters, who technocratic solution to the economic problems created by post-familialism — fewer workers grew up as part of a dense network of cousins. On my father’s side, the families were a little supporting more retirees — is a double-edged sword: It replaces the missing workers but smaller. But my dad was one of three siblings, exacerbates intergenerational alienation, meaning that I had six aunts and uncles overall. because it heightens anxieties about inheritance Then the social revolutions of the 1970s and loss. arrived. There were divorces, later marriages, In this landscape, the white-identity politics single parenthood, abortions. In the end all those of Trumpism or European nationalism may aunts and uncles, their various spouses and my be a more intuitively attractive form of right- parents — 12 baby boomers, all told — only wing politics than a libertarian conservatism. had seven children: myself, my sister and five Right-authoritarianism offers some of the same cousins. welfare-state protections that liberalism offers So instead of widening, my family tree to its Julias, it offers tribal solidarity to people tapered, its branches thinned. And it may thin whose family bonds have frayed — and then again, since so far the seven cousins in my generation have only three children. All of them it links the two, public programs and tribal consciousness, in the promise of a welfare state are mine. This is a very normal Western family history. that’s only designed for you and yours. For conservatives who abhor Trumpism Everywhere across the developed world, families have grown more attenuated: fewer and this presents a hard dilemma. No politician can address a Trump voter (or a LePen or UKIP later marriages, fewer and later-born children, supporter) alienated from their country’s future fewer brothers and sisters and cousins, more people living for longer and longer stretches and say — as strangely true as it may be — that on their own. It’s a new model of social life, a “you should have had more children when “post-familial” revolution that’s unique to late you had the chance.” So conservatives have to modernity. figure out how to go partway with their anxious For a while, conservatives have worried older voters, to push against the post-familial that this revolution is a boon to liberalism, trend in public policy while also adapting to the to centralization and bureaucratic control anxieties that it creates — and all without being — because as families thin people are more swallowed up by bigotry. likely to look to politics for community and For liberals, to whom an expansive state government for protection. is a more uncomplicated good, the challenge This idea is borne out in voting patterns, may seem easier. They can hope that with time where marriage and kids tend to predict the racial and ethnic differences between the Republican affiliation, and the single and generations will diminish, and that eventually divorced are often reliable Democratic state programs can more smoothly substitute partisans. The Obama White House’s “Life for thinning families without ethno-cultural of Julia” ad campaign in 2012 — featuring a anxieties getting in the way. woman whose every choice was subsidized by But I’m not so sure that it will work like the government from cradle to grave, with a this. A post-familial society may unleash tribal lone child but no larger family or community competition within the coalition of the diverse, in sight — seemed to many conservatives like as people reach anew for ethnic solidarity and a perfect confirmation of our fears: Here was then fight furiously over liberalism’s spoils. liberalism explicitly pitching the state as a Or else a technocratic and secular liberalism substitute for kith and kin. may simply not be satisfying to a fragmented, But while we worried about the liberal atomized society; there may be a desire for a vision, our own ideological side was adapting left-wing authoritarianism to bind what’s been to the family’s attenuation in darker ways — fragmented back together, in comradeship and speaking not to singletons or single mothers, but common purpose. to powerful post-familial anxieties among the In either case, the demagogues of the future middle-aged and old. will have ample opportunity to exploit the deep Human beings imagine and encounter loneliness that a post-familial society threatens the future most intensely through our own to create. progeny, our flesh and blood. The Constitution This loneliness may manifest in economic speaks of “our posterity” for a reason: We are anxiety on the surface, in racial and cultural a nation of immigrants, but when people think anxiety just underneath. But at bottom it’s more about the undiscovered America of the future, primal still: A fear of a world in which no one is its strongest claim on them is one their own bound by kinship to take care of you, and where descendants make. you can go down into death leaving little or If those descendants exist. But for many nothing of yourself behind. native-born Americans there are fewer of them ■ — fewer children and, as birthrates drop and Ross Douthat joined The New York Times as marrying age rises, still-fewer grandchildren or an Op-Ed columnist in 2009 and previously a none at all. Which means that when they look senior editor at The Atlantic. YOUR VIEWS CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES U.S. Senators U.S. Representative Consider the Constitution this election and vote Ron Wyden Greg Walden Washington office: 221 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 202-224-5244 La Grande office: 541-962-7691 Washington office: 185 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, DC 20515 202-225-6730 La Grande office: 541-624-2400 Jeff Merkley Governor Washington office: 313 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3753 Pendleton office: 541-278-1129 Kate Brown 160 State Capitol 900 Court Street Salem, OR 97301-4047 503-378-4582 The Preamble of the U.S. Constitution is as follows: “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.” If you still have your ballot, please consider our U.S. Constitution and fill in those ovals, sign your ballot envelope with your ballot enclosed and take it to the county courthouse. If you heard on the news that today’s post- mark counts, you must have been listening to a Washington station. For Oregon, the ballot must be received by 8 p.m. Tuesday. That is easy in Pendleton. I’m not sure of locations elsewhere in Umatilla County. Hopefully the newspaper will list them prominently. In Pendleton you can drop your ballot into the box in the parking lot at the rear of the courthouse (closer to Southeast Fifth), acces- sible from either Southeast Court or Southeast Dorian before 8 p.m. Or, you can deliver it directly to the Elections Division office. That office is on the building’s Southeast Fourth and Southeast Dorian corner, with a basement entrance. It is open until 8 p.m. Tuesday. Garnet Olson 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. 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.