VIEWPOINTS Saturday, December 31, 2016 Quick takes New laws start Jan. 1 And the governor y’all elected wants to cut our drug task force and crime lab over here. So explain that one. — Tony Covlin Hurrah for the whistleblower laws. Harder for those corrupt state managers to destroy evidence of their behavior. — Patience Searle The majority of poachers in Oregon are people trying to put food on the table. Try passing laws that matter. — Ian Van Gelder Elk herd drown in icy lake Hate to think of those poor things drowning and suffering. Sad. — Helen Morrison Mother Nature can be beautiful and a beast. — Adreanna Dugan Christmas fire strikes home We get more house fires because a lot of houses in this town are far from up to code, in the electrical department especially. — Timothy Coggins How sad. Glad everyone is ok. —Malia Keene-Johnston 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. East Oregonian Page 5A There once was a man not named Ishi where it languished for decades before being returned to the Pit River Tribe to be accorded a traditional burial. Ishi seems to have always represented ne hundred years ago, an iconic something larger than himself. Now, on the Native American died. We do not centennial of his passing, it’s time to see remember him as a tribal leader, him as an individual human being. “Ishi,” holy man or an activist. His biggest after all, means “man.” That means trying accomplishment was simply enduring. to imagine what his life was like We know him by the name before Oroville. “Ishi,” because if he had a name Ishi was born around 1860, when for himself, we never learned it. the Yahi people and the invading When he wandered down from Gold Rush settlers were entrenched his homeland in the California in bitter, bloody hostilities that raged foothills of Mount Lassen and for years. By the early 1870s, the was found huddled in a corral Yahi numbered only 15, and all of near the town of Oroville, he them went into hiding, adopting entered history. His people, the such a secretive existence that they Yahi, had supposedly vanished were presumed to have died out. decades earlier, and because “Ishi” in 1915 Several decades later, only four they were the last Natives living remained: Ishi, his mother, sister and freely in the West, Ishi became uncle. Those four persisted in anonymity until famous as “the last wild Indian.” November 1908, when everything fell apart. Anthropologists at the University of Surveyors stumbled upon their hidden California arranged to have him placed village while Ishi was away; his uncle and under their supervision, and he spent the remainder of his life in San Francisco. They sister fled, and were never seen again. His mother, ill and immobile, was left unharmed, called him Ishi, a Yahi word for “man,” but died soon after. Afterward, Ishi entered because in Yahi culture personal names an era of solitude the likes of which you and I were private, not to be uttered casually. will never know, let alone comprehend. Ishi adjusted surprisingly well to urban For a thousand days, Ishi was utterly alone. society. He was employed as a custodian, It’s not the length of time that’s so difficult rode trolleys, saw airplanes, witnessed to grasp, it’s the poignancy and magnitude surgeries and relished ice cream. But of his isolation. He’d lived his entire life in a there were darker elements to his story. tiny world that had shrunk until he was the His “home” was actually a museum, and only one left in it. He wasn’t just the last of he was, for a time, put on display. New to modern life, he soon contracted tuberculosis his family, he was the last of his culture, of his nation. What toll did that extract from him? and died fewer than five years after he What happens to hope when the future offers arrived. His body was then subjected to nothing but more isolation? an autopsy during which his brain was How that affected Ishi we’ll never removed and sent to the Smithsonian, By JOSEPH BELLI Writers on the Range O know, for he was reluctant to talk about his life in the wild. I don’t know whether anyone ever asked him why he undertook his fateful journey in the summer of 1911. Some say he lost the will to live; others think that he was starving. If he was hungry, I believe it was for something other than food. People have long wondered what effect “civilization” had on Ishi. Another question is to wonder what effect Ishi had on society. His greatest impact has been as a symbol — of the end of the Wild West, or of Anglo-Native American relations, a 500-year-old culture clash encapsulated in one man’s experience. Today, there might be another interpretation of his life: Ishi as inspiration. It’s not just that he endured, but how he did. Ishi lived out his days in an unfamiliar world, but he was no lackey. He may have been given a suit and tie to wear, but he never did reveal his name. And he never lost his humanity. He didn’t withdraw upon entering a strange new world. He forged friendships and made the most of his new life, touching those who knew him with his gentleness and forbearance. Ishi was much more than “the last wild Indian.” He was a man who had looked into an abyss of genocide and loneliness and somehow emerged with his mind and senses intact and alert; he was able to adapt, as much as possible, to the world that had ended his. He handled “civilization” far better than it handled him. ■ Joseph Belli is a contributor to Writers on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News. He is a wildlife biologist and lives along Pacheco Pass, California. Voters must heed wake-up call T Year’s end quiz H appy almost New Year! C) Public service announcement Wow, we’ve been through warning young men about steroid a lot. Let’s take a look back abuse. at 2016 and see how much of the 8. Trump’s choice for labor silliness you remember. We’re not secretary, Andrew Puzder, is a going to talk about Hillary. Too fast-food franchise baron who once sad. But here’s an end-of-the-year said ... quiz about: A) “Vegetables are much more Republicans We Once Knew dangerous than people realize.” Gail 1. It’s been a long year for Chris B) “I like beautiful women Collins Christie, but he made history when eating burgers in bikinis. I think it’s Comment ... very American.” A) The National Governors C) “Everybody has a minimum Association voted him “Least Likely to wage. Mine just happens to be $1 million Succeed.” a year.” B) A Quinnipiac poll in New Jersey Trump, Trump, Trump showed his job disapproval rating at 77 9. Trump won the Electoral College by percent. one of the lowest margins in U.S. history C) He did the tango on “Dancing With and got nearly 3 million votes fewer than the Stars.” Hillary Clinton. Afterward, he referred to 2. Ted Cruz said that when his wife, his victory as ... Heidi, became first lady ... A) “God’s will.” A) “She’ll put prayer back in the prayer B) “A gift from the founding fathers.” breakfast.” C) “A landslide.” B) “Michelle Obama’s garden will 10. In a TV interview, Trump said that become a croquet court.” when he looks in the mirror he sees ... C) “French fries are coming back to the A) “Orange skin.” cafeteria.” B) “Fantastic hair.” 3. Marco Rubio’s ad about how “It’s C) “A person that is 35 years old.” Morning Again in America” made news 11. Trump said he didn’t need a daily because ... intelligence briefing because ... A) It was an excellent depiction of why A) “I’m, like, a smart person.” he is truly a Reagan conservative. B) “The CIA is out to get me.” B) It was filmed in a way that made C) “Putin’s people give me plenty of Rubio appear to be more than 6 feet tall. information.” C) It opened with a shot of the 12. Trump’s doctor, who wrote the Vancouver, British Columbia, skyline. famous letter declaring Trump would be 4. In a debate, Ben Carson said that “the healthiest individual ever elected when a president vets potential Supreme to the presidency,” gave an interview in Court nominees, he should consider ... which he said it had never occurred to A) “How they’d look in the group him that Trump, at 70, would be the oldest picture.” president-elect. But he added ... B) “The fruit salad of their life.” A) “70 is the new 41.” C) “Legal things.” B) “If something happens to him, then The Cabinet of Tomorrow it happens to him. ... That’s why we have a 5. Rick Perry, Donald Trump’s nominee vice president and a speaker of the House for secretary of energy ... and a whole line of people. They can just A) Lost the paso doble competition to keep dying.” Vanilla Ice on “Dancing With the Stars.” C) “Bronzer keeps you young.” B) Came up with some new ideas for And in Other News ... combating global warming. 13. In a Seattle suburb, Dane Gallion C) Said his earlier reference to Trump’s was so unnerved by stories of mass campaign as “a barking carnival act” was shootings that he armed himself before simply “one of my ‘oops’ moments.” going to see the movie “13 Hours: The 6. Retired Gen. Jim Mattis, Trump’s Secret Soldiers of Benghazi.” Watching selection for secretary of defense, is the film with a handgun tucked into his nicknamed ... waistband, Gallion ... A) Mad Dog. A) Became a hero when a disturbed B) Cranky Corgi. man waving a rifle walked into the C) Sullen Setter. auditorium. 7. Linda McMahon, Trump’s pick to B) Became a hero when he stopped an head the Small Business Administration, armed robbery at the snack bar. has known the president-elect a long time. C) Accidentally shot the woman sitting McMahon’s husband. Vince, once paired in front of him. with Trump in a ... ——— A) Professional wrestling production in ANSWERS: 1-B, 2-C, 3-C, 4-B, 5-A, which Trump shaved off McMahon’s hair. 6-A, 7-A, 8-B. 9-C, 10-C, 11-A, 12-B, 13-C B) Build-the-Wall golf match in which ■ they tried to see who could hit the most Gail Collins joined the New York Times balls into Mexico. in 1995 as a member of the editorial board. he good news in Oregon for In real life, we wish a lot for things. those of us who have grown We say, “It sure would be nice if we weary of one-party control is that could only afford it.” There are many Republican Dennis Richardson will be things we would enjoy, but can they be our new Secretary of State for the next paid for? four years. The voters of Oregon also Any government program, saw through the agenda of the public regardless of the value, must be paid unions and defeated Measure 97. This for. The most basic rule of economics measure would have made the people comes into play. There is a cost to Greg of Oregon $6 billion poorer, added Barreto everything and there are no free another 18,000 public union jobs and lunches, period. The question is, how Comment chased away 38,000 jobs from the much can we afford? Listening to the governor, the private workforce (per an analysis speaker and the Senate president at this done by the nonpartisan Legislative Revenue month’s business summit, it’s all the fault of Office.) the business community that the state doesn’t More good news at the state level is that have enough money. The fact is, there will Republicans picked up a Senate seat so there never be enough money to satisfy this state’s is no longer a Democrat supermajority in the wants. The government was Senate. The disappointing never intended to satisfy news is that the House our wants — regardless of Republicans did not add any what those on the far left members to their caucus and continue to say. Everyone are still only one seat away should live within their from a super-minority just means and those that are as we were in 2015-16. able should pay their own Examples abound way and this includes in poor policy that has the state of Oregon. Just been passed in the last because we want a new car two legislative sessions when we can’t afford a new and then topped off by car doesn’t mean we should expect someone the elitist public union’s introduction of else to buy it for us. Measure 97. The fallout that has ensued But don’t be discouraged, we can only go leaves Oregon’s majority party unable to pay down this road for so long until the voters that for the spending and poor investments they have elected our legislators into office start have created over the last 30 years. And they to realize that if we continue to dig a deeper now blame their lack of management on the financial hole, at some point, we will be business community. A shortfall in revenue unable to dig ourselves out. And I’d say we’re when revenue has increased by $3.1 billion just about there. Someone must pay, and if since 2014 is hard to imagine. How about the burden falls on the business community, I mismanaged government, shortsightedness, anticipate some businesses that can, will start fiscal irresponsibility and payback to the to move out of the state as the majority party public unions that contribute heavily to their continues to demonize them. Every rock will campaigns? be turned over to extract more revenue from Well, what’s coming for 2017? A everyone, including the middle-class worker, common-sense approach might be to look to satisfy this insatiable bent of unbridled at serious reductions in spending and living spending. I hope voters hear their wake-up within our means, but instead we are seeing call. more tax proposals coming from the left. The next legislative session starts Feb. 1. It More proposed regulations and mandates for should be an interesting year. businesses including predictive scheduling and requiring companies’ financial records to ■ be made public. Do you think that will bring Greg Barreto, of Cove, represents District good job creators to our doorstep? Me neither. 58 in the Oregon House of Representatives. The fact is, there will never be enough money to satisfy this state’s wants. States have power to protect environment The New York Times, Dec. 26 S tate governments will serve as an important bulwark against any attempt by President-elect Donald Trump to roll back the progress the United States has made in addressing climate change. And that’s good news for the planet. Over the last decade or so, most states have reduced their greenhouse gas emissions by promoting energy efficiency and renewable fuels. These trends should continue as clean energy costs continue to decline and, in some parts of the country, fall below the cost of dirtier fuels like coal. The Brookings Institution reported this month that between 2000 and 2014, 33 states and the District of Columbia cut carbon emissions while expanding their economies. That list includes red states run by Republican legislatures, like Alaska, Georgia, Tennessee and West Virginia. Many people expect Trump to walk away from President Obama’s commitments under the Paris climate agreement and get rid of or weaken the E.P.A.’s Clean Power Plan, which requires states to lower carbon emissions from the electricity sector. He and his appointees might also try to water down fuel economy regulations for cars and trucks, and cut clean energy tax incentives and research spending. States could blunt much of that damage. Even now, many states will be able to meet the Clean Power Plan’s targets by following through on planned investments and increasing energy efficiency, according to M. J. Bradley and Associates, a research and consulting firm. Some populous states have set targets that are even more ambitious and appear to be on track to meet them. California and New York plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030. Hawaii hopes to get all of its electricity from renewable sources by 2045. This month, Charlie Baker, the Republican governor of Massachusetts, proposed new rules for power plants and vehicles to make sure the state achieves its goal of a 25 percent cut from 1990 levels by 2020. Emissions are already down by around 20 percent. Cheap natural gas, which has increasingly replaced coal as a fuel source, has had a lot to do with this progress, but so has the drop in the cost of wind and solar power — 41 percent in the case of land-based wind turbines and 64 percent for solar, between 2008 and 2015, according to the Energy Department. The cost of batteries has dropped by almost three-fourths. In some states, including Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Nebraska and parts of Texas, new wind turbines can generate electricity at a lower cost, without subsidies, than any other technology, according to a report published this month by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin. States are also beginning to put a price on carbon emissions to increase the cost of older fuels and encourage cleaner sources of energy, which Congress has refused to do. California has a cap and trade system in which electric utilities, fuel distributors and other businesses have to buy emission permits through auctions or from one another.