Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Wednesday, November 9, 2016 OTHER VIEWS 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 OTHER VIEWS Wolves enter Klamath Basin The (Medford) Mail-Tribune delist the animals. The move is controversial, because our cattle confirmed killed by there are still relatively few wolves wolves last month in the Klamath in the western two-thirds of the Basin have ranchers on edge, but state. And as dramatic as the wolf it does not appear any drastic changes kills are, they total just four animals. in policy or wolf protection levels are Ranchers lose cattle to warranted. a variety of hazards, Oregon Department including disease, Ranching of Fish and Wildlife digestive problems, biologists who interests want birthing problems examined the four and predators other to see the carcasses said wolves than wolves. Wildlife were responsible, wolf delisted, officials say wolves do most likely the Rogue pose a significant Pack, established by which requires not threat to humans. celebrity wandering The ranchers who congressional wolf OR-7 and his lost cattle are being mate. action. compensated by the Wolves are Oregon Department of gradually increasing Agriculture after the their presence in Oregon since the Klamath County Wolf Depredation first animals wandered into the state Committee approved the payments. from Idaho. They are numerous ODFW staff also are working with enough in roughly the eastern third ranchers to employ non-lethal of the state that they are no longer methods to discourage wolves from protected under the Endangered attacking livestock. Species Act, which means they fall The immediate threat will diminish under the state’s management plan soon in any case, because the herds and can be killed legally in some involved will be moved to winter circumstances. West of Highway 395, pasture in California. Before the cattle wolves are still on the endangered return in the spring, the Depredation species list and are therefore protected Committee hopes to have additional from being hunted or killed, even if a prevention measures in place, and rancher sees them attacking livestock. will apply for state and federal grant Ranching interests want to see funds to pay for them. the wolf delisted, which requires Meanwhile, ranchers need to congressional action. The U.S. Fish adjust to the new reality of wolves and Wildlife Service supports that becoming part of the ecosystem again move as well, and the Klamath Falls as they were in the past. office has proposed legislation to F Investigation of UO law professor a teachable moment The (Eugene) Register-Guard illiteracy, not just in Shurtz but in her social and academic milieu. efenders of University of Oregon UO President Michael Schill law professor Nancy Shurtz responded quickly and forcefully. will point to the context of her Law school colleagues and others Halloween costume: have signed letters She attended a private and petitions calling party dressed as Dr. UO needs more for the professor’s Damon Tweedy, author understanding, resignation. Schurtz of “Black Man in a been placed White Coat: A Doctor’s not one fewer has on administrative Reflections on Race and Medicine.” Plainly, and the UO law professor. leave, Schurtz did not intend Office of Affirmative to make any kind Action and Equal of racist statement Opportunity is investigating. by donning blackface as part of her Lesser reactions would condone costume. offensive actions and imagery, But just as plainly, there’s another and invite worse ones. But what context to consider: the context of the UO needs is not one fewer law a mainly white university that is professor, but more understanding. struggling to make black students Shurtz’s experience offers an and faculty feel welcome, and the opportunity to explore the lines context of a long history of racist between self-expression and hurtful stereotypes communicated by messaging, between cluelessness blackface. At some point in the and consideration, between privilege planning of her Halloween costume, and vulnerability. Shurtz should have stopped to say, A university exists to teach “Wait a minute — this is not a students how to think, not what to good idea.” The fact that she didn’t think — and here’s a chance to do reveals a thickheaded cultural just that. D YOUR VIEWS Don’t let politics divide neighbors and communities As I write, it is one day until the presidential election. There are other issues on the ballot, but the main one everyone is watching is the election of our 45th president. The battle has been intense, loud, fractious, rude and ugly. It seems that everyone has an opinion on who is the best candidate ... and everyone believes the other candidate will bring the End Of The World. There are threats of anarchy if the election goes “the wrong way.” Suggestions of rigged elections have been made. It’s scary. In many ways I am no different from those whom I’ve described. However, I am different in one way: I am hoping we can find a way through this in order to live and work together in the future. What kind of future this will be depends on us. Not on the candidates, not on the political parties, not on the press. It may not seem so now, but we — the people — as corny as it sounds, have the ability to direct this future. How we chose to do so is the question. My husband and I have strong political feelings. Lifelong beliefs. Our neighbors have equally strong feelings. The difference is that they support “the other side.” They even have a sign promoting their candidate. At first this annoyed us. We discussed putting up our own sign. We knew this would inflame feelings, but what the heck. This is war. Then we thought a bit further. These are good neighbors. We are friendly; we inform each other when we go away and watch each others’ property. Outwardly our lives are similar; we take pride in our homes, mow the lawn, wash our cars, pay our bills and obey the law. We love our family, our country and God. I trust them. I hope they trust us. My point is that if politics were removed from the picture, there would be no issue. We have decided to not let politics dictate our relationship. When I think about the day after the elections, I wonder how we will survive. Can we return to normal? Will Congress function? Will as we know it be replaced with anger and tension and distrust in all our dealings? Then I think about our neighbors. Nothing has really changed. They are still the people they were before this started and so are we. The power rests in all of us to make the hate go away and move on. Therefore, I am asking each of you who reads this to reach out to someone who is different, who voted for the “wrong person.” I truly believe this is the only way we will survive: If we each — alone and together — resolve to make the effort. Start small. Speak or wave when you pass. Hold a door open, ask about their kids. Resolve to remember the 99 ways in which you are alike rather than the one way you are different. Make peace. Nancy Rees Duff Helix Let’s not do this again I f I had to sum up the election of even his primitive primate dominance 2016 in one clause, I would say it displays, he has shredded the accepted has been a sociological revolution, understandings of personal morality a moral warning and a political that prevent the strong from preying on summons. the weak. Sociologically, this campaign has Most disturbing, all this has been been an education in how societies greeted with moral numbness. The come apart. The Trump campaign has truest thing Trump said all year is been like a flash flood that sweeps that he could shoot someone on Fifth David away the topsoil and both reveals Brooks Avenue and not lose any votes. We and widens the chasms, crevices and learned this year that millions of Comment cracks below. Americans are incapable of being We are a far more divided society morally offended, or of putting virtue than we realized. The above partisanship. educated and less educated And that brings us to the increasingly see the world summons. The events of and vote in different ways. 2016 represent a watershed So do men and women, and a call to do politics blacks and whites, natives differently. and immigrants, young and Personally I’ve always old, urban and rural. disdained talk of a third We like to think of party, mostly because the democracy as a battle of structural barriers against ideas and a process of such parties are so high, no individual deliberation, but matter how scintillatingly this year demography has attractive they seem in been destiny. The campaigns theory. But it’s becoming have pushed us back into our tribal bunkers. clear that the need for a third party outweighs Americans now seem more clannish, and even the very real barriers. more incomprehensible to one another. The Republican Party will probably remain This year a legitimate social uprising has the white working-class party, favoring been twisted to serve destructive means. closed trade, closed borders and American During the past 50 years, most of us have withdrawal abroad. The Democratic Party, benefited from feminism, the civil rights meanwhile, is increasingly dominated by movement, mass immigration, the information its left/Sanders wing, which offers its own age and the sexual revolution. But as Charles populism of the left. Murray points out, one class has been buffeted There has to be a party for those who are by each of these trends: white workers. now homeless. There has to be a party as The white working class once sat confidently opposed to populism as populists comfortably at the core of the American idea, are in favor of it. but now its members have seen their skills There has to be a compassionate globalist devalued, their neighborhoods transformed, party, one that embraces free trade while their masculinity delegitimized, their family looking after those who suffer from trade; structures decimated, their dignity erased and that embraces continued skilled immigration their basic decency questioned. Marginalized, while listening to those hurt by immigration; they commonly feel invisible, alienated and that embraces widening ethnic diversity while culturally pessimistic. This year the workers understanding that diversity can weaken social overthrew their corporate masters and grabbed trust. control of the Republican Party. There has to be a patriotic party that That would be progress and even inspiring, understands that the world benefits when but — maybe because of the candidate who is America serves as the leading and energetic leading it — the working-class revolt has been superpower. laced with bigotry, anti-Semitism, class hatred, There has to be a party that misogyny and authoritarianism that has further unapologetically emphasizes public character rent the American fabric. formation. It’s not clear that our political Our partisan divides now menacingly culture is producing individuals capable of overlap with our racial and class divides, exercising freedom wisely. But citizenship threatening to form a trinity of discord with is a skill that can be nurtured — by a party horrendous consequences. that insists on basic standards of decency The moral health of the polity is in even in its candidates; that practices politics in scarier shape. Any decent society rests on humble, honest ways; that strengthens trust codes of etiquette and a shared moral ecology and institutions by playing by the rules, by to make cooperation possible, to prevent confirming appointees and the like. economic and political life from descending The problems go deeper than the jobless into a savage war of all against all. rate and the threat of ISIS. The underlying But this year Donald Trump has decimated social and moral foundations of the nation the codes of basic decency without paying have been weakened. Yesterday a rancid a price. With his constant, flagrant and chapter ended. Let’s start with fresh ground unapologetic lying, he has shredded the and a new party. standards of intellectual virtue — the ■ normal respect for facts and truth that makes David Brooks became a New York Times conversation possible. With his penchant for Op-Ed columnist in 2003. He is currently also cruelty, bigotry, narcissism, selfishness and a commentator on PBS. This year a legitimate social uprising has been twisted to serve destructive means. 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.