Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Thursday, January 12, 2017 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 Ceding social media to the trolls There was a time we to be the case. thought that social media Our calls for respect could be a beneficial, have turned to demands for progressive influence on the agreement. The shouting and world. shaming have increased and In 2010, it helped Tunisian made nuanced discussion protesters organize and in an open venue nearly overthrow an oppressive impossible. We keep our real Tim regime. In Egypt and other Trainor opinions to our virtual chest places where governments for fear of a mud fight. Comment controlled information and That has made social restricted freedom, online networks decidedly less networks crowed about their ability human — largely the domain of to organize people in pursuit of a hackers and scammers, and the trolls greater good. who latch themselves onto each That thought trickled through all and every online conversation. The of us — that Twitter could overthrow internet is where complainers and oppressive governments, Facebook insult-hurlers feel most comfortable, could strengthen human rights and and those eager to tear down rather Weibo could promote freedom and than build support are given wide self-expression. In short, that social berth. media was the The technology key for spreading that was supposed The technology that to bring us Western, democratic values is now was supposed to together across the world a vehicle for — this country’s bring us together outrage and aim for much of incomprehension. is now a vehicle the past century. Nihilism is in vogue. Our nation We considered for outrage and the worldwide a reality incomprehension. elected implications, but television star and also the personal his supporters ask ones. the majority of Americans to find the humor in it. Many opinions about gay people A caring person is now a changed rapidly for the better, thanks snowflake. An autocrat is now looked in no small part to social media. For on with admiration. millenia, homosexuals had been Social media has failed to make hidden from view and away from our online selves as caring and the mainstream. But as our online neighborly as we are in real life. It networks expanded, we found out has become nothing more than a we knew and loved gay people, worldwide mob that warps reality or we knew and loved someone and attacks people and institutions. who knew and loved a gay person. Mob mentality is a studied Understanding and respect grew, and people who posted hurtful and hateful phenomenon — how a crowd can get the people who comprise it to things were quickly confronted by act in opposition to how they would newly emboldened online crowds. as individuals. Social media has The impact was immediate, and increased the herd factor by the many Americans quickly changed billions, and at the same time it has their minds about the issue, both decreased the human interaction and politically and personally. Perhaps this portended a world empathy that have long been the core with more personal connections, and of a civilized world. an increase in compassion and maybe Its potential to damage to our someday a decrease in conflict. world is currently much larger than its potential to help. Yet that has clearly turned out not 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 Raise pay of Oregon legislators The (Albany) Democrat-Herald A pair of legislators from central Oregon recently made a bit of news when they said they would not accept the pay raises for legislators that were included in Gov. Kate Brown’s proposed budget. The legislators, Rep. Knute Buehler and Sen. Tim Knopp, said it sent the wrong message to accept the pay raises at a time when the state is facing a budget deficit that’s closing in on $2 billion for the next two-year budget cycle. They said the law doesn’t allow them to actually decline the raises, so they planned to donate the extra money (the 2.75 percent increase works out to about $648) to charities. OK, that’s fair enough. We have considerable respect for the work that Buehler and Knopp are doing in the Legislature, and they’re free to do what they like with their money. Still, this raises a couple of points that are worth additional discussion. First, although it’s tempting to take a political slap at Gov. Brown, she included the increase for legislative pay because that’s what was in state statutes; the governor doesn’t decide unilaterally what legislators should be paid. (Although it would make for interesting news stories if the governor did get to make that call, say at the end of each session.) If Buehler and Knopp want to make an issue of how much legislators get paid, they should launch an effort to change the law. (To be completely fair, the two have said they plan to do that in the 2017 session.) Legislative salaries are computed using the state’s Management Service Compensation Plan. Effective Dec. 1, the plan was increased by 2.75 percent for a cost of living adjustment. Before the adjustment, a legislator pulled down $1,964 a month. Now, beginning with their Jan. 1 checks, they’re being paid $2,018 a month. The total annual salary is $24,216. The total added cost to the state works out to $58,320 a year. Now, we don’t claim any particular skills at math, but a quick run with a calculator says that amount works out to be about 0.003 percent of the state budget shortfall. It’ll take a lot more than that to fill this particular hole. And let’s run a little mental calculation of our own. The Legislature this year is scheduled to meet for 160 days, about 22 weeks. Let’s assume for the sake of argument that a typical legislator works 60 hours a week while in session (we suspect that this is way low). That’s 1,320 hours. Let’s assume that legislators work 10 hours a week on state business even when the Legislature isn’t in session (again, this likely is way low). That adds another 300 hours to the total. If you divide 1,620 hours by what we pay them, it works out to $14.95 an hour, and that rate is almost certainly high. Oregonians pride themselves on having a citizen Legislature; by 2022, after the last few increases in Oregon’s minimum wage, we’ll have something very close to a minimum-wage Legislature. We understand where Knopp and Buehler are coming from; the timing of this particular raise, as small as it is, is unfortunate at best. But there’s a larger issue here: Considering what we ask from them and the complexity of the issues that they must grapple with, you can make a strong case that we don’t pay our legislators nearly enough — especially if we want to attract younger legislators who must also juggle families and other jobs. This probably isn’t the session to address this issue. But that doesn’t mean the problem is going away. OTHER VIEWS Bannon vs. Trump t’s becoming clear that for the next Dugin has written, “of which the core few years U.S. foreign policy will could be described as human rights, be shaped by the struggle among anti-hierarchy and political correctness Republican regulars, populist ethno- — everything that is the face of the nationalists and the forces of perpetual Beast, the Antichrist.” chaos unleashed by President-elect “We, the Judeo-Christian West, Donald Trump’s attention span. really have to look at what (Putin) is The Republican regulars build talking about as far as traditionalism their grand strategies upon the goes,” Bannon said, “particularly David post-World War II international order Brooks the sense of where it supports the — the U.S.-led alliances, norms and underpinnings of nationalism.” Comment organizations that bind democracies Last week’s intelligence report and preserve global peace. The on Russian hacking brought the regulars seek to preserve and extend this order, Republican regulars, like Sens. John McCain and see President Vladimir Putin of Russia as of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South a wolf who tears away at it. Carolina, into direct conflict with the ethno- The populist ethno- nationalist populists. Trump nationalists in the Trump planted himself firmly in White House do not believe the latter camp, and dragged in this order. Their critique Fox News and a surprising — which is simultaneously number of congressional moral, religious, economic, Republicans with him. political and racial — is If Trump were as nicely summarized in the effective as Putin, we’d remarks Steve Bannon, the probably see a radical shift incoming senior counsel for in U.S. grand strategy, a Trump, made to a Vatican shift away from the postwar conference in 2014. global consensus and Once there was a toward an alliance with collection of Judeo- various right-wing populist Christian nation-states, movements simmering Bannon argued, that around the globe. practiced a humane form of biblical capitalism But Trump is no Putin. Putin is theological and fostered culturally coherent communities. and cynical, disciplined and calculating, But in the past few decades, the party of experienced and knowledgeable. When Davos — with its globalism, relativism, Bannon, Michael Flynn and others try to pluralism and diversity — has sapped away make Trump into a revolutionary foreign the moral foundations of this Judeo-Christian policy president, they will be taking on the way of life. entire foreign policy establishment under a Humane capitalism has been replaced leader who may sympathize with them, but by the savage capitalism that brought us is inattentive, unpredictable and basically the financial crisis. National democracy has uninterested in anything but his own status at been replaced by a crony-capitalist network the moment. of global elites. Traditional virtue has been I’m personally betting the foreign policy replaced by abortion and gay marriage. apparatus, including the secretaries of state Sovereign nation-states are being replaced by and defense, will grind down the populists hapless multilateral organizations like the EU. around Trump. Frictions will explode within Decadent and enervated, the West lies the insanely confusing lines of authority in vulnerable in the face of a confident and the White House. Trump will find he likes convicted Islamofascism, which is the cosmic hanging around the global establishment threat of our time. the way he liked having the Clintons at his In this view, Putin is a valuable ally wedding. In office he won’t be able to fixate precisely because he also seeks to replace the on the Islamic State group but will face a multiracial, multilingual global order with blizzard of problems, and thus be dependent strong nation-states. Putin ardently defends on the established institutions. traditional values. He knows how to take the The result may be a million astounding fight to radical Islam. tweets, but substantively no fundamental It’s actually interesting to read Trump’s strategic shift — not terrible policy-making, ideologist, Bannon, next to Putin’s ideologist, but not good policy-making, either. Alexander Dugin. It’s like going back to the The larger battle is over ideas, whether 20th century and reading two versions of the Republican Party as a whole will become Marxism. an ethno-populist party like the National One is American Christian and the other Front or the U.K. Independence Party. In this orthodox Russian, but both have grandiose, fight the populists might do better. There’s sweeping theories of world history, both something malevolently forceful about their believe we’re in an apocalyptic clash of ideology, which does remind you of Marxism civilizations, both seamlessly combine in its early days. There’s something flaccid economic, moral and political analysis. Both about globalism, which is de-spiritualized and self-consciously see themselves as part of which doesn’t really have an answer for our a loosely affiliated international populist economic and cultural problems. movement, including the National Front in In short, I suspect Steve Bannon is going France, Nigel Farage in Britain and many to fail to corral the peripatetic brain of Trump. others. Dugin wrote positively about Trump But he may have more influence on the next last winter, and Bannon referred to Dugin in generation. his Vatican remarks. ■ “We must create strategic alliances to David Brooks became a New York Times overthrow the present order of things,” Op-Ed columnist in 2003. I Putin is theological and cynical, disciplined and calculating, experienced and knowledgeable. YOUR VIEWS Corporations should warn customers of scammers They hit again: A very sophisticated group claiming to be from DirecTV said I needed new software on my receiver and, since my warranty had expired, there would be a charge. I asked many questions, insulted them, and they kept on for a half hour before they got around to asking for my credit card number, at which point I said “We’re done here” and hung up. I called DirecTV to verify and they said it was a fraud and they’d heard of it before. Then, as my wife asked, ‘Why weren’t we warned?’ Steven Janke, Pilot Rock Uninformed electorate poses a danger to democracy “A properly functioning democracy depends on an informed electorate.” Thomas Jefferson wrote about the importance of a well-informed electorate many times. Unfortunately, we have apparently dismissed Jefferson’s ideal. The recent election presented us with the specter of victory of the uninformed over the informed. The Electoral College victor, though losing the popular vote, was the candidate who lied throughout his campaign, and then lied to deny his lies. Fake news and conspiracy hoaxes were the cornerstone of his campaign. Now, as president-elect, he even claims he is too smart to need intelligence briefings. But this is not new; the GOP has long suppressed research as a way to further their goals: They denied the CDC authority to investigate gun violence (research could suggest guns are hazardous.) They denied the Pentagon authority to explore climate change as a threat to the nation (presumably it’s better not to know what threats climate change might pose). And now, in consort with the incoming administration, they plan to suppress climate science research occurring in NASA even though this agency provides much of the best climate research in the world. Jefferson would be appalled: The worship of anti-democratic ignorance has become the hallmark of government. Alan Journet Jacksonville