Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Wednesday, November 23, 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 Travel safely during the holidays With visions of Thanksgiving turkey dancing in their heads, thousands of Oregonians will get behind the wheel before celebrating the holiday with friends and family this weekend. Others will jump on a plane or take public transport, sweet potato casserole resting on their knees. Oregon State Police Capt. Bill Fugate said law enforcement expects, starting today and lasting through Sunday, “one of the highest volumes of traffic in over a decade,” on freeways and highways and mountain passes across the state and region. Expect traffic to be terrible through much of urban Oregon, and on Black Friday expect backups in retail areas even in our region. There is major precipitation in the forecast, too, with heavy rain predicted for low elevations and snowfall on mountain passes. There’s also that Civil War football game on Saturday, and an Apple Cup in Pullman on Friday, so readers traveling to the Willamette Valley or Palouse should be aware. And for those hardy and blessed souls traveling through downtown Ukiah this Thanksgiving, plan to leave 2-3 seconds earlier than normal to account for a rare car in front of you. In all seriousness, traffic isn’t something we worry about in Eastern Oregon. But travel is. We’re spread out in open country, which means that drive to grandma and grandpa’s house is often a trip of more than 50 miles, over dark and empty roads in our area’s notoriously fickle winter weather. Fugate said in a press release that 10 people died on Oregon highways in the past week, and that number could spike again this week if drivers don’t take additional precautions. OSP is urging motorists to travel safely, chiefly by planning ahead, expecting heavy traffic and poor driving conditions. We’ll take the opportunity to pass along the reminder. In short: slow down. Give the car in front of you additional room and show humility to the elements and the roadway, whether it be a driving rainstorm, a swirling snowstorm or a strong and sustained gust of winter wind. Keep an eye on tripcheck.com, and news sources like the East Oregonian website, to be aware of slowdowns and closures. Eastern Oregon drivers should always be prepared for an emergency, and should use the change in the weather as a prod to add water, food and blankets to your trunk. Because what good is Thanksgiving if you don’t arrive where you’re expected? You wouldn’t rush your family’s secret turkey-roasting technique, and you shouldn’t rush the drive either. Arrive safe and enjoy every bite. 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 When state gun laws run afoul of federal law The Hutchinson (Kan.) News W hen members of the Kansas Legislature enthusiastically supported in 2013 the politically popular “Second Amendment Protection Act,” some people raised concern that the law — which said federal law had no bearing on guns and ammunition produced and sold only within Kansas — might run afoul of federal gun laws. One of those people was U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who issued a letter to Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback warning that federal officials would continue to enforce laws in Kansas and that any efforts to thwart them would be met with litigation. Secretary of State Kris Kobach — an uber supporter of the bill and an investor in a Kansas gun company that stood to benefit from the state law — replied that we’d be happy to meet the feds in court. But now, it’s not Kobach or Brownback who have to stand in court facing federal prosecution; it is two poor guys from Chanute who mistakenly thought the sale and purchase of firearms and gear would be protected under Kansas’ much-ballyhooed, arm-flexing, Second Amendment gun law. Shane Cox, owner of Tough Guys guns, and Jeremy Kettler, a disabled veteran who purchased a silencer from Cox, were convicted this week of federal firearms violations, including illegally making and marketing firearms and purchasing an unregistered silencer. Both men believed Kansas law protected them. “For believing and following the laws of the state of Kansas, I now find myself wrongfully accused in federal court,” said Kettler, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan before being honorably discharged. “The whole thing is ridiculous.” It is ridiculous, because the law was little more than a charade designed to bolster the conservative bonafides of a few Kansas lawmakers — and put other lawmakers in a tough spot by forcing them to vote “no” on a bill that essentially said, “You love the Second Amendment, don’t you?” To his credit, Kobach at least offered to assist the men in drafting a defense, and he asked Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt to join in the defense of the case. Schmidt, however, said he could only intervene if the constitutionality of state law was in question. But the law was faulty from the beginning, and the federal government warned Kansas it would not stand against federal authority. Some lawmakers saw through the rhetoric and immediately recognized the supremacy of federal law in the matter. Yet, it was primarily a politically motivated bill, and when the careers of lawmakers are concerned, who cares whether a couple of Kansans get caught in the crossfire? The Kansas Legislature, with its overwhelming support for the Second Amendment Protection Act, completely failed the people of Kansas. Despite concerns and warnings from lawmakers and the federal government, nothing was done to test the bill’s validity or to explain to the state’s residents what did or did not fall under the law’s scope. And now, two men stand alone without the support of the Kansas officials who so brazenly told Kansans that federal law had no authority here. Their lives have been irreversibly altered, while some of the failed law’s champions are busy eying the next rung on their career ladders. OTHER VIEWS A jolt of blue-collar hope N EW CASTLE, Del. — The It’s home to the state’s largest high nearby factory that made school, William Penn, which has long Dodge Durangos closed educated the children of workers from eight years ago. The General Motors General Motors and the refinery. By Boxwood Road Plant — open since 2011, enrollment had fallen by nearly 1947 — closed the next year. So did 20 percent as students fled for other the oil refinery in Delaware City. options. In the span of a year during the “People came out and said, financial crisis, once-prosperous ‘The high school is not serving the David northern Delaware had to confront Leonhardt community,’” the former principal, post-industrial devastation. Jeffrey Menzer, told me. “They Comment It’s sort of the devastation that wanted more career opportunities, now has the country’s attention. more hands-on stuff.” Donald Trump won the presidency with huge Markell makes a similar point: “A lot of margins in places left behind. He lost the kids who drop out of high school — they don’t drop out because popular vote but won 26 of they’re not intelligent. They the 30 lowest-income states, including the old powerhouses “A lot of kids who drop out because they think they’re learning is not of Pennsylvania, Ohio and drop out of high what relevant to the rest of their Michigan. lives.” These places are stuck in school ... drop William Penn reorganized what I call the Great American out because they itself into 20 “majors,” and Stagnation. Tens of millions of student must pick one, people have experienced scant think what they’re every progress for decades. Median be it manufacturing, computer net worth is lower than in science or agriculture. (The learning is not the 1980s, and middle-aged state has a broader version of relevant to the rest the program, called Pathways whites, shockingly, aren’t living as long as they used to Prosperity.) One goal, of of their lives.” to. Ending this stagnation is course, is to prepare students — Jack Markell, for a career. When William the central political problem Governor of Delaware Penn tried to start a nursing of our age: It fuels Trumpian anger and makes every other major, the state pushed back, societal problem harder to pointing to a glut of such solve. programs — and the school started a medical- I came here to New Castle looking for diagnostics major instead. a jolt of hope after the terribly dispiriting But having a major can also help students presidential campaign. I came to see one who don’t know what they want to be when of the more promising attacks on the Great they grow up. It connects book learning American Stagnation. to real life. It can help launch them into In the wake of the financial crisis, college or a certificate program and avoid Delaware’s new governor, Jack Markell, and the epidemic of academic drift. No wonder other officials did obvious things, like using enrollment at William Penn has improved. stimulus money to stem the damage and Kiara Roach, a senior, told me that she even managing to reopen the refinery. But didn’t care about her grades, or do very well, Markell, who’d run as an insurgent Democrat, until she became passionate about cooking. understood that nostalgia alone wouldn’t help (As she told me this, I was enjoying a moist pork sandwich in a teacher cafe she helps families pay their bills. So he began looking run.) Mike Rodriguez, who one day hopes for ways both to save old jobs and to create to start a heating-and-cooling business, said: new ones. His answer wasn’t original — but “I get bored in class. I like standing up and that’s OK, because it was right. working on something.” Jacob Sobolesky, a In his almost eight years in office, he has junior, told me: “There’s only so much you made his No. 1 priority lifting the skills of Delaware’s citizens. He worked on traditional can learn from word of mouth.” Many people in New Castle, not to education, expanding high-quality pre-K and mention the industrial Midwest, feel a deep helping low-income teenagers go to college. And he worked on what academic researchers cultural connection to craftsmanship — to like Robert Schwartz call “the forgotten half”: making things and working with their hands. They’re not inspired by working in cubicles the many students who won’t graduate from or comfortable offices. college but who also need strong skills to At the same time, they can’t simply do find decent jobs. Their struggles are a major as previous generations did and graduate reason that America’s workforce is no longer from high school into a good job. They can’t considered the world’s most highly skilled. It’s too early for a final verdict in the state, bring back yesterday’s economy. They need blue-collar skill-building to thrive. but the signs are encouraging. High school The country has failed to provide nearly graduation rates have jumped. Educational enough of that skill-building, and we’re all attainment is above average — as are living with the consequences. incomes. The jobless rate is 4.3 percent. ■ New Castle, on the Delaware River, is telling, because it has focused on skills David Leonhardt is an op-ed columnist for while staying true to its blue-collar roots. The New York Times. YOUR VIEWS FBI should prosecute police at Standing Rock The FBI is responsible under law to protect the natives on federal treaty lands, just like in the case of a murder on a reservation. They are present now at Standing Rock and looking for the perpetrators. They will prosecute the bad cops, and the mercenaries and thugs when convicted will do hard time in a federal prison. Any police caught in lies protecting the perpetrators will be prosecuted as accessories to criminal acts committed on natives. The FBI should take statements from injured water protectors — each injured person needs to and has to make a statement to the FBI — so they can prosecute. The bad cops, mercenaries and thugs hurting people at Standing Rock, North Dakota, must stop. Mike Yeager 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.