A4 East Oregonian Saturday, January 26, 2019 CHRISTOPHER RUSH Publisher KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor WYATT HAUPT JR. News Editor Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW A wall doesn’t solve the illegal immigration issue I f you believe the headlines, the par- tial shutdown of the federal gov- ernment has been the result of a dispute between President Trump and congressional Democrats over money to build a wall on the border with Mexico. The actual reason the government is shut down is because Congress failed in its constitutional duty to pass an annual budget and the necessary appropriations for the fiscal year that began last Oct. 1. Instead, as it has repeatedly done since the George W. Bush administration, Congress has passed a series of con- tinuing resolutions to extend previous spending for a specific period of time. Each time those resolutions expire without being replaced, the govern- ment faces a shutdown. And the can is kicked, as it was again Friday. But we digress. Trump wants $5 billion or so in the next continuing resolution to build a wall on the southern border. Democrats don’t want to build a wall. Building a wall, or not building a wall, is not the central issue in the debate over illegal immigration. It’s not that simple. The real question is who do we let into this country? The Constitution gives Congress sole authority to regulate immigration and there are numerous laws already on the AP Photo/Eric Gay A line of migrants recently released by U.S. immigration authorities waits to check in at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. books addressing the topic. Congress could liberalize those rules and expand the number of legal immi- grants it allows from Latin America, whether they be refugees or traditional immigrants. Though it seems to us that despite all the chest thumping and hand wringing that has passed in official Washington over this issue going back to the Rea- gan administration, precious little has changed. It is almost as if it is preferred that new arrivals creep over the border at some desolate desert crossing rather than be welcomed at the front door. And what of those who have so entered? There are perhaps 12 million ille- gal immigrants in the country. The majority are economic refugees, drawn here by the promise of opportunities unavailable in their home countries. The agriculture, construction and hos- pitality industries have come to depend on these workers, despite their status. Congress must offer illegal immi- grants temporary legal status and a path to permanent residency, but not citizen- ship, after 10 years if they can be prop- erly vetted and meet strict requirements — no prior felony convictions, no viola- tions while awaiting residency, learning to speak English and assimilate, and pay a fine and back taxes. The border should be secured. A viable agricultural guestworker pro- gram must be established, and employ- ers must verify the work status of their employees. We respect the rule of law, and do not lightly suggest rewarding those who have flouted it. But we are reluctant to disrupt the lives of otherwise harmless people who have done what we would do — whatever it takes to ensure the safety and welfare of our families. If Congress wants to make it eas- ier for refugees and others to enter the country legally, it should make it so. Only Congress can change the laws. Let more foreign nationals enter legally, or keep them out. Let illegal immigrants that are here stay, or make them go. Keeping them forever in the shadows does not serve the rule of law. OTHER VIEWS Your loyalties are your life YOUR VIEWS City tackles transient invasion Fueled by the variety of available sleep- ing accommodations both indoors and out, a seemingly endless supply of empty cans and bottles, and limited interference per- mitted from police by state and federal judicial officials, Pendleton has become a new destination of choice for transients. Local agencies vary on their approach to what some refer to as a crisis. Fed up with the attempted takeover of the post office, the U.S. Postal Service has taken the tough love approach and eliminated overnight guest accommodations. City Hall, on the other hand, has taken a more enabling approach, providing the cityhall lobby and library for daytime use, while the city Parks and Recreation Department has apparently donated the Stillman Park shelter with 24-hour lights, electricity, and a covered smoking/sleeping area. The addition of free bus service is also an added bonus. I was hoping this would reduce the sidewalk bike traffic, but it seems to have had little impact. At the request of Neighbor 2 Neighbor, operators of the warming center, City Hall Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. has waived the rental fee for use of the rec- reation center cafeteria to provide a free Sunday breakfast program previously held at the Methodist Church. However, lack of an adequate volunteer force is currently a stumbling block in getting the program back in operation, even with the city bear- ing the cost of utilities. This is where the Pendleton Enhance- ment Project and North Bank Umatilla Advisory Committee people come into play. Since they seem so anxious to get involved in civic and social projects, this is a chance to shine by getting involved in something constructive. These groups should find this new opportunity to serve the community a much more rewarding experience than repurposing a bridge or creating a wildlife refuge. City Hall’s focus on the “enabling” approach hasn’t had much success, judg- ing from the vandalism in city parks and the increase in temporary guests at the local crossbar hotel. Help from this host of new eager volunteers could really make a difference. Rick Rohde Pendleton In 1900, there were two great philosophers yourself away to it realizing that the cause is working side by side at Harvard, William more important than your individual pleasure James and Josiah Royce. James was from an or pain. You’re never going to find a cause if you are eminent Boston family and had all the grace, brilliance and sophistication that his class working in a bland office; you have to go out aspired to. Royce, as historian Allen Guelzo to where the problems are. Loyalty is not just points out, was the first major American phi- emotion. It is action. losopher born west of the Mississippi. His par- “The loyal man serves. That is, he does not ents were Forty-Niners who moved to Cali- merely follow his own impulses. He looks to fornia but failed to find gold. He grew up in his cause for guidance. This cause tells him squalor, was stocky, lonely and probably knew what to do,” Royce wrote in “The Philosophy more about despair and the brooding shadows of Loyalty.” The cause gives unity and consistency to that can come in life. James and Royce admired and learned from life. The cause gives fellowship, because there each other, but their philosophies were differ- are always others serving the same cause. Loy- ent, too. James was pragmatic and alty is the cure for hesitancy. Of course, there can be good tough-minded, looking for empirical causes and bad causes. So Royce truth. Royce was more idealistic and argued that if loyalty is the center of tender-minded, more spiritual and the good life, then we should admire abstract. those causes, based on mutual affec- They differed on the individual’s tion, that value and enhance other role in society. As David Lamberth people’s loyalty. of Harvard notes, James’ emphasis We should despise those causes, was on tolerance. We live in a plural- D aviD istic society and we each know only a based on a shared animosity, that B rooks fragment of the truth. People should destroy other people’s loyalty. If my COMMENT give one another enough social space loyalty to America does not allow so they can be themselves. For Royce your community’s story to be told, the good life meant tightly binding yourself or does not allow your community’s story to be to others — giving yourself away with others part of the larger American story, then my loy- for the sake of a noble cause. Tolerance is not alty is a domineering, predatory loyalty. It is making it harder for you to be loyal. We should enough. James’ influence is now enormous — instead be encouraging of other loyalties. We deservedly so. Royce is almost entirely forgot- should, Royce argued, be loyal to loyalty. Before Martin Luther King Jr. used it, ten. And yet I would say that Royce is the phi- losopher we need today. In an age of division, Royce popularized the phrase “the beloved fragmentation and isolation, Royce is the phi- community.” In the beloved community, polit- losopher we don’t know we have. He is the phi- ical opponents honor the loyalty the rival has for a cause, and learn from it. losopher of binding and connection. In such a community, people submit them- Royce argued that meaningful lives are marked, above all, by loyalty. Out on the fron- selves to their institution, say to a university. tier, he had seen the chaos and anarchy that They discover how good it is by serving it, ensues when it’s every man for himself, when and they allow themselves to be formed by it. society is just a bunch of individuals search- According to Royce, communities find their ing for gain. He concluded that people make voice when they own their own betrayals; evil themselves miserable when they pursue noth- exists so we can struggle to overcome it. Royce took his philosophy one more crucial ing more than their “fleeting, capricious and step: Though we have our different communi- insatiable” desires. So for him the good human life meant loy- ties, underneath there is an absolute unity to alty, “the willing and practical and thorough- life. He believed that all separate individuals going devotion of a person to a cause.” and all separate loyalties are mere fragments A person doesn’t have to invent a cause, or of a spiritual unity — an Absolute Knower, a find it deep within herself. You are born into moral truth. ——— a world of causes, which existed before you David Brooks is a columnist for the New were born and will be there after you die. You just have to become gripped by one, to give York Times. 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. 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 9780, or email editor@eastoregonian.com.