Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Saturday, December 30, 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 EO MEDIA GROUP East Oregonian • The Daily Astorian • Capital Press • Hermiston Herald Blue Mountain Eagle • Wallowa County Chieftain • Chinook Observer • Coast River Business Journal Oregon Coast Today • Coast Weekend • Seaside Signal • Cannon Beach Gazette Eastern Oregon Real Estate Guide • Eastern Oregon Marketplace • Coast Marketplace OnlyAg.com • FarmSeller.com • Seaside-Sun.com • NorthwestOpinions.com • DiscoverOurCoast.com OUR VIEW When the sky goes dark, you take notice As you surely noticed on today’s amount of jobs associated with the front page, the East Oregonian listed investment is low, there will still be our top stories of 2017. They run the dozens of high-paying employment gamut, from interstellar oddities to a opportunities coming into our region. new home for the county fair. It’s easy to see 5, 10, or 20 years In past years, the list has from now, how that will be one of unfortunately been well-populated the most important local stories with tragedies — from vehicle of this decade, and the action of accidents to fatal fires, murders certainly 2017 played a big part in and destruction. A loss of life that. understandably increases the Other developments did make long-lasting impact of any event. the final list: Marijuana legally Thankfully, Eastern Oregon was sold in Pendleton is something that spared from much of that in 2017. we believe would have shocked Sure, we noted some difficulties readers just a decade — ice storms that A controversial shut down roads Data centers, ago. mega-dairy built and schools for an extended period of while under outside Boardman was statewide news, time last winter, and the radar, and carries with it another summer of production fires and wolf kills. may someday massive possibilities as well But a majority of be seen as as environmental our top 10 (for a dangers. Drone change) was about the biggest developments at the change. It was about development airport in Pendleton development, as well brought some as local reaction to a in the area this have investment and dramatic shift in our federal government. year — maybe scientific advances, helped the airport Yet we can’t help this decade. and go from a money- but think that the loser to at least many of the Top 10 sustainable. stories (which were And underneath it all was a chosen by newsroom votes) miss local response to Donald Trump’s some of the deep, underlying issues election. A majority of voters that will eventually be seen as supported the president in Umatilla critically important to the region. County, but he has undoubtedly Take for example the massive widened the gulf in political investment in data centers in disagreements. A relatively quiet, Morrow County and west Umatilla conservative area has seen more County. Amazon alone has spent political marches and protest in the $2 billion on building data centers past year than any time in recent in Morrow County, though not all memory. It goes to show just how of that took place in 2017. But this past year, the company built another much Trump’s election has spurred many around the country into action. center at the McNary Industrial Still, political movements and Park east of Umatilla, and a fifth economic development cannot hold is currently under construction. Amazon this year also released plans a candle to our top pick. The sun doesn’t get blotted out to build four new data centers at a by the moon in Eastern Oregon site west of Hermiston. every day, nor every year, nor every The total market values of these century. It’s understandable why that centers is likely to approach $1 celestial event will stick with Eastern billion — which once enterprise Oregonians long into the future. zone tax breaks age out, will be a We hope every year that uplifting, massive infusion of resources to remarkable, fantastic events lead the Hermiston and county governments in Morrow and Umatilla. Though the top stories of the year. 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 Votes of no confidence against Veterans Affairs Medical Center The (Roseburg) News-Review T hree weeks ago, the Douglas County Veterans Forum issued a vote of no confidence against Dinesh Ranjan, the chief of surgery at the Roseburg Veterans Affairs Medical Center. We couldn’t agree more with how that vote ended up. The vote, which ended up becoming a unanimous call for Ranjan’s resignation, removal or reassignment, was the result of an overwhelming number of complaints filed by VA employees, issues with colonoscopies — a pretty routine practice — and a steady stream of retaliation complaints by current and former VA employees. The vote isn’t unprecedented. In 2014, the forum called for the resignation of three top VA officials, including director Carol Bogedain. About a month later, she stepped down. But the vote is a powerful expression of how the county’s veterans feel about the current situation. The forum represents 21 veteran groups and about 5,000 local veterans. Over the past few months, The News-Review has featured several gut-wrenching, confusing and downright strange situations involving alleged mismanagement. The forum, it seems, has been hearing the same stories. In a statement, representatives of the forum said, “We believe permitting the Chief of Surgery to continue in his position will continue to degrade VA employees’ morale and thus affect their merciful and diligent care giving.” That’s about as strong and as clear as a call for removal can be. We do, however, have one disagreement with the forum. Representatives said the forum remains confident in the work Director Doug Paxton is doing to bring about positive change at the VA. In a statement, the forum’s representatives said, “Paxton has fostered open and honest communications with the veteran community which is admired and appreciated.” While it may be true that Paxton himself is capable of having healthy conversations, his ability to hold other managers accountable isn’t anything to brag about. Holding other managers accountable is what directors are supposed to do. Simply ask Laura Follett, a 15-year Navy veteran, who alleged she was fired from the VA for refusing to bend the rules. “Mr. Paxton is the captain of his ship, and ultimately he is responsible for what’s going on,” she said. A unanimous call for a resignation. OTHER VIEWS Flying saucers and other fairy tales I am completely in favor of federal contact. But his arguments for the spending on UFO research, an outlay basic continuity between folklore and whose existence was revealed to flying saucers are quite compelling, surprisingly little paranoid excitement and I suspect he’s correct about the by The New York Times earlier this commonality of these experiences … month. It is a sign of civilizational … Which is not, of course, to say health to devote excess dollars to that they reflect the genuine existence the scientific fringe, and to hope that of some fifth-dimensional fairyland, bizarre secrets still await discovery from whence morally ambiguous Ross even in our satellite-surveilled world. Douthat beings emerge to play tricks upon So good for Harry Reid and his little- our race. Certainly for most sensible Comment green-men-obsessed billionaire pal for secular scientific-minded people, to keeping the flame of weird curiosity say that our era’s close encounters alive. are of the same type as encounters with But I also doubt that such research will the unseelie court of faerie is to say that ever prove that the strange lights and vessels they are all equally imaginary, proceeding filmed by human pilots actually belong to a from internalized fancies and hallucinatory starfaring species that’s come to our planet substances and late-night wrong turns, plus to study, experiment and eventually offer us some common evolved subconscious that a hand up or else ruthlessly fears shape-shifting tricksters invade. Other sapient species in modern Nevada no less may indeed be out there, than in the mists around Ben but the most parsimonious Bulben. explanation for all the UFO But if this rationalist encounters since Roswell is assumption seems natural not that our nuclear testing these days, it is not or space program finally necessarily permanent. The inspired the galaxy to come educated class of Victorian see what humanity is all England went wild for fairies about. and spirits in the heyday of Rather, it’s that our alien scientistic optimism, and encounters, whether real both Vallée and von Däniken or imaginary, are the same offered up their books amid kind of thing as the fairy the Age of Aquarius’ similar encounters of the human craze. (Just read Sally past — part of an enduring Quinn’s tales of murderous phenomenon whose interpretations shift but hexes in her recent memoir to recall how whose essentials are consistent, featuring the old-fashioned in their magical thinking the same abductions and flying crafts and lights New Age’s devotees could become.) and tricks with crops and animals and time Sometimes our own elite opinion seems and space, the same shape-shifting humanoids to be shopping for a new religion: I have and sexual experiments and dangerous gifts read books in the last year pitching versions and mysterious intentions. of Buddhism, pantheism and paganism to This was the argument of Jacques Vallée, the post-Christian educated set. For such a French-born scientist and a wonderful shoppers, the striking overlap between UFOs character in the annals of ufology, who and fairy stories might eventually become wrote a wild book in the heady year of 1969 an advertisement for an updated spiritualist called “Passport to Magonia: From Folklore cosmology, not a strike against it — especially to Flying Saucers,” which The Times’ UFO if woven together with multiverse and scoop gave me an excuse to read. universe-as-simulation hypotheses that imply Vallée’s conclusion is basically the reverse a kind of metaphysics of caprice. of Erich von Däniken’s thesis in “Chariots of Meanwhile those of us who remain the Gods,” published to better sales the prior Christian can be agnostic about all these year. Where von Däniken argued that old strange stories, not reflexively dismissive, myths and biblical tales alike contain evidence since Christianity does not require that all of ancient alien visitations (an idea picked paranormal experiences be either divinely sent up, most recently, by Ridley Scott’s “Alien” or demonic or imaginary. prequels), Vallée suggested that contemporary Rather the Christian idea is that whatever UFO narratives are of piece with stories about capricious powers may exist, when the true Northern European fairies and their worldwide God enters his creation, he does so honestly, kith and kin — and that it’s more reasonable straightforwardly, in a vulnerable and to think that we’re reading our Space Age fully human form — and exposes himself preoccupations into a persistent phenomenon publicly, whether in a crowded stable or on an that might be much weirder than a simple execution hill. So the glamour of UFOs, like visitation from the stars. the glamour of faerie, is an understandable This quasi-magical thesis made Vallée, as object of curiosity but a dangerous object for he put it, a “heretic among heretics” — the any kind of faith. The only kind of God worth UFO believer who rejected the UFO trusting is the kind who does not play tricks. community’s hope that their efforts could ■ one day be incorporated into the normal Ross Douthat joined The New York Times sciences and lead us to some Spielbergian first as an Op-Ed columnist in April 2009. The glamor of UFOs is an understandable object of curiosity, but a dangerous object for any kind of faith. YOUR VIEWS Medicaid a federal program that everyone pays into I’m writing in regards to the front page of the Dec. 27 edition of the East Oregonian regarding upcoming state ballot measure 101 on funding for Oregon’s Medicaid program. The reporter referenced Medicare which is a healthcare plan for those aged 65 and over. The article stated that Medicare is funded “solely by the federal government.” I beg to differ with that statement. Medicare Part A is funded solely by deductions from the paychecks of working American citizens. Review your paycheck stub — there is a line item showing a dollar amount deducted for the employee Medicare. This is not a program gifted by the federal government, but rather it is (prepaid) healthcare, paid for by every working American citizen via payroll tax deductions. Furthermore, while Medicare Part A begins at age 65, Medicare Part B is paid for by the individual, as is Medigap Plan (which covers the 20 percent not paid by either Medicare A or B) as well as a Medicare Part D plan for prescription drug coverage. There is no funding for any part of Medicare coming form the federal government in any way, shape or form. It is all paid for by the individual Medicare recipient in one manner or another. Medicare is not an entitlement benefit any more than Social Security or unemployment benefits. Our dollars paid out of our paychecks or personal funds — no federal dollars. Plus, where do any federal dollars for anything come from? None other than us by way of our tax contributions. Pamela Johnson Duso, Pendleton Approve Measure 101 Measure 101 is important to rural Oregon. Where you live should not determine the level of care you receive, or if you are able to receive care. Families living in rural communities deserve consistent access to quality health care. In some rural counties, more than a third of families rely on Medicaid. This January, voters will be asked to vote on Measure 101, which will provide direct funding for Medicaid in Oregon, protecting coverage for nearly 400,000 Oregonians and reducing premiums. It will also allow Oregon to receive nearly $5 billion in federal funding. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, Oregon’s rural uninsured rate fell by 51 percent between 2013 and 2015. We need to build on that success to keep all of us healthy and stabilize costs. We can’t go back to a time when many people waited too long to go the doctor and ended up in the emergency room, or never even made it to the hospital. Families should not be put in that position. Robert Duehmig Oregon Rural Health Association President Astoria