VIEWPOINTS Saturday, November 19, 2016 Warming Station, Relief Nursery relocate That’s awesome, maybe the warming station can be open earlier and longer. — Sharon Boothe Great way to utilize one of many empty spaces! — Angela Cimmiyotti A wonderful act. — Pat Tempinski Hermiston growth continues Thank you Port of Morrow for providing jobs for all of the people in Hermiston! — Tim Wardwell Love the new paint job on the water tower! Good job! — Jeanne Perkins Meteor flashes through sky We were coming from Tri-Cities, it streaked across the southern sky. Beautiful colors and went almost to the horizon, First one I ever saw. — John Perkins I saw it from my kitchen window. My family thought I was crazy. — Tena Tickal One of the great lessons of the Twitter age is that much can be summed up in just a few words. Here are some of this week’s takes. Tweet yours @Tim_Trainor or email editor@eastoregonian. com, and keep them to 140 characters. D ear conservative family outweigh the importance of those pesky members and friends, Ten Commandments and the like? You’ve been urging You’ve been trying to reassure me me and like-minded folks who that now that he’s won, Mr. Trump were shocked and disheartened will be a changed man. He wants to be by Donald Trump’s victory to quit everyone’s president, he says, and no whining and rally around our new one should be afraid. leader. We all need to pull together, But surely you realize you say, to help our country move that after months of Hal forward. McCune demonizing Muslims I know you’re sincere. But I and Hispanics, belittling Comment hope you’ll admit that it would be women, and cheering on a lot more genuine if you hadn’t violent followers, some spent the last eight years calling President of us will take a wait and see Obama the Antichrist. Your “team” proudly attitude. The enduring image for me is Mr. abrogated its duty to work with other Trump gleefully ridiculing a handicapped members in Congress to address America’s reporter. challenges, and instead concentrated on being If the president-elect wants to reject the obstructionists — and was very good at it. So, bigotry and hatred his campaign cultivated, I hope you’ll understand that while your plea appointing a chief strategist with a history for cooperation is understandable, it is soaked of espousing degrading opinions of women, in the most blatant hypocrisy. demeaning Jews and championing white To help me move forward, I also need you nationalist views is a strange way to show it. to explain how you squared your Christian But let’s get to the crux of the matter. values with your support of Donald Trump. I’m aware that this election exposed a deep Some far-right fundamentalists went mistrust of the “establishment” and a backlash so far as to proclaim that God had raised against “political correctness” by a large up Mr. Trump for this specific time to segment of society that feels ignored and “make America great again,” but it takes a disenfranchised. I know political affiliation depressingly cynical view of God to believe does not determine the goodness of a person, he would choose an arrogant, dishonest, actions do. I know you love your kids and womanizing internet troll as his vessel, and grandkids every bit as much as I do mine, and allow him to lurch through life grabbing you want the best possible future for them. women and cheating debtors and college You want peace, a safe home and economic students until the time came for him to lead security, just like I do. the USA out of bondage. That’s why I want President Trump to So, I’d like to know, do character and succeed. Despite my deep skepticism I’m actions matter, or does political expediency willing to give him some time to prove if he’s Living in a bubble, even in a small town I n my small town in southwestern Colorado, those who did not vote for Donald Trump seemed numbed and stunned by the result. Mostly college-educated and originally from away, they grouped in their usual places to commiserate. Maybe it was a shocking result. But if these folks had visited outside their circles, if they’d tried to get a fix on what makes the longtime locals tick, they might have had a better sense of what was to come. Mancos, Colorado, population about 1,300, is mostly white, with folks here mostly ranching and farming and some doing outdoor recreational and nonprofit work. It is also a Colorado Creative District, and because of its growing diversity, Mancos was named one of the “Top 20 Small Towns” by Smithsonian Magazine. But in my experience, pockets of people here act more like species in the wilderness. They clump together and interact with other groups only when they must. That’s too bad, since reaching beyond a comfortable circles has mostly positive consequences. Researchers at Stanford and Harvard universities say so. Yet I see plenty of miscommunication and even disdain between community groups here. An example: Mancos’ motto is “Where the West Still Lives” and sure enough, cattle drives are regular deals. Recently, I helped friends move 50 pairs along a few miles of back road. Most cars stopped to let us pass, but one local driver in a new Subaru tried to pass a stopped car and push through the herd. Now, side-by-side vehicles blocked the cattle, and the frustration was palpable. The driver, in his ignorance and impatience, had made matters worse. Maybe it’s a scene that plays out across other small Western towns. Another example: Colorado is a fence-out state, so gates and fences are nothing new. But more and more transplants to our area lock their gates. Inevitably, cattle get through their fencing. Perry Lewis served on the town board. Born and raised here, Lewis lived in California, Illinois, Massachusetts and elsewhere before returning home. “I wanted my three sons to be able to grab their horse and their dog and go up into the mountains,” he said. I asked Lewis about diversity, newcomers and old-timers. “I love the Page 5A Wish Trump the best, but watch closely Quick takes By MADDY BUTCHER Writers on the Range East Oregonian diversity. But the thing that drives me batty? They want paved roads or don’t want their neighbor to have chickens. But that’s why they moved to Mancos.” You might think differences could be worked out over a cup of coffee. But even coffee reveals divisiveness. Most ranchers grab their morning cup at the Conoco station or at the P & D, which for decades has served as the town’s grocery store. A quarter-mile away, Fahrenheit Coffee Roasters charges the same price but hosts a different clientele, who tote laptops and smartphones. Some sit for hours at the metal tables, working online. Matt Lauer, who owns Fahrenheit with his wife, smiles at how old-timers label his customers. “It’s ‘yuppie,’ ‘new age,’ ‘expensive,’” he said. “There are folks who grew up on Folgers and who think this coffee sucks.” One rancher told me that cowboy hats don’t fit through Fahrenheit’s doorway and that Lauer’s customers “need to get a job.” You might assume that transplants are better at embracing a town’s diversity. But sandal wearers with messenger bags are just as rutted in their routines as the cowhands dipping Copenhagen. Lewis and others said they do not see the new, young farmers reaching beyond their circle to get know farmers who have lived in Mancos for generations. It makes me think that diversity takes work. Books help. My favorite is “The Good Neighbor Guidebook for Colorado,” edited by Nancy S. Greif and Erin J. Johnson. The driver stuck in cows would do well to read it: “New neighbors must be prepared to assume responsibility for the impact that their presence can have on working farms and ranches ... living next door to a farm or ranch involves ... a commitment to open communication, hard work, and constant learning.” “Great Work,” a business practices book by David Sturt, points to the need to reach outside usual circles. When people do that, “it makes communities interesting, welcoming, vibrant,” Sturt writes. “It’s actually a disadvantage to only talk with people who like us, care about us, and believe in us.” I mentioned the cattle drive snafu to Sturt. He laughed and offered the driver some advice: “Get out of your little bubble. Roll down your window. Smell the cattle. Listen to them. Get off autopilot. It takes more effort. And it’s a delight.” ■ Maddy Butcher is a contributor to High Country News. up to the task. We should be able to agree on some of the measures for that success, such as a humane and equitable revision of immigration policy and an overhaul of our stupefying tax system, which does a pathetic job of sharing the burden of citizenship fairly among all classes of society (i.e., a lot of millionaires pay little or no taxes, such as Mr. Trump). But you and your choice for president should know, I am not willing to shrug off demeaning treatment of women, or disparaging remarks and policies regarding immigrants, minorities, gays and lesbians, or people who don’t worship the same way you do — there should be no going back when it comes to treating all people equally. I’m not going to sit by quietly if willful ignorance of climate change threatens the future for my posterity. I’m not going to passively accept a gutting of the Environmental Protection Agency so BP or Halliburton can make a little more money while the world burns. You’re right, we’re in this together. But clearly we see the world, and how best to progress as a country and society, very differently. Despite all those obstacles, I suspect we still have a lot in common when it comes to what’s most important us, and that’s cause for hope, and maybe even cooperation. ■ Hal McCune is a longtime Pendleton resident. You’re right, we’re in this together. Say no to Hells Canyon condors mostly outside the area who took over the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. Nevertheless, many in the county were — and still are — sympathetic to the movement to he U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service “take back” Western public lands currently recently awarded the Nez Perce Tribe $200,000 to study introducing California administered by the federal government. This leads me to believe that anything condors into the Hells Canyon area between that looks like an increased federal presence Idaho and Oregon. in this part of the West is bound to provoke I can save everybody time and money by suspicion and hostility among local people. announcing right now: California condors And condor introduction comes with its own can almost certainly survive in the Snake built-in controversy: River Canyon once lead poisoning. introduced there. I The first press can make the same releases on the grant prediction about any to the Nez Perce number of locations Tribe noted that lead from the Pacific Coast ammunition for hunting to the Black Hills. I has been banned in base my conclusion California, principally on almost 50 years of because of the threat studying the condor of condors dying from and its history. My lead fragments found question: Why would in the animal carcasses anybody want to they eat. Sportsmen’s put condors in Hells Joseph Brandt/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via AP groups and anti-gun Canyon? control groups quickly Hells Canyon was expressed concerns about the almost certainly not within future of hunting if condors the historic breeding range were introduced. Sadly, this of the condor. Condors in adds one more reason for some the 19th century might have locals to “hate the Feds.” occasionally wandered The federal government that far east, but if nesting does a lot of good work ever occurred in Oregon, in the region, and most of it would have been in the its land management has western part of the state, at benefitted local economies as least 300 miles from Hells well. Many residents know Canyon, and in far different this, and there are many environmental conditions. Call me a purist — which, indeed, I am, when examples of excellent cooperation between the government, communities, and individuals. it comes to environmental tinkering — but I Why, then, inflame anti-government feelings think species belong where they belong. with something that is biologically illogical, Some might suggest that we set aside and probably unnecessary? “purism” and introduce condors where they If increasing the chances of condor survival haven’t been before, if that’s what it takes to is the issue, why not put the full force of save the birds. I like condors enough that I the government behind first expanding the might agree, if there were no places in their condor recovery program in California? The recent habitat into which they could expand. Yurok of northwestern California have much That isn’t the case. There are locations stronger cultural ties to condors than do any of in California, and perhaps in western the Northwestern tribes, and they have been Oregon, that look highly suitable for condor working on a reintroduction strategy for years. reintroductions. They lie within the bird’s While the ban on using lead ammunition in recent — meaning the last 150 years or so — California may not have completely resolved historic habitat, and they are not likely to be what most threatens condors, it is a done deal, pioneered by condors expanding their range from current release sites. So, why fiddle with and it doesn’t have to be re-fought with every new release proposal. Involving the Yurok Mother Nature if we don’t have to? Tribe in condor survival will also open the There are strong socio-political reasons door for condor releases in other areas. to keep condor introductions out of eastern Let’s not let the recovery of California Oregon and Idaho. First, there are few areas in condors become yet another anti-government the country where “We hate the government” cause for a vocal minority in the Mountain feelings are stronger. Twenty years after West. the fact, wolf introduction in Idaho and the ■ wolves’ subsequent spread to Oregon is still a Sandy Wilbur is a contributor to Writers hot-button issue. You can’t deny that wolves on the Range, the opinion service of High have killed some livestock, and some people Country News. He is a wildlife biologist and are still afraid of the “big bad wolf.” historian who headed the California condor Recently, the citizens of Harney County research and recovery efforts from 1969-1980. were traumatized by armed agitators from By SANFORD “SANDY” WILBUR Writers on the Range T The canyon was almost certainly not within the historic breeding range of the condor.