A4 East Oregonian Tuesday, June 4, 2019 CHRISTOPHER RUSH Publisher KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner ANDREW CUTLER Editor WYATT HAUPT JR. News Editor JADE McDOWELL Hermiston Editor Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW Legislature needs to go back to the drawing board on HB 2020 N o matter what its support- ers assert, Oregon House Bill 2020 isn’t ready for primetime. HB 2020 is the hopelessly compli- cated climate change legislation that has evolved into the key bill for Dem- ocrats in the 2019 session. The bill is grounded in good intentions. The global climate is changing, and humans are the cause. Just about everyone can agree we should — and must — do something to improve the environment and to battle climate change. How to do that, though, is where it gets com- plicated and HB 2020 is exhibit A in just how good intentions can quickly become convoluted and dense. The legislation will create a man- datory, statewide greenhouse gas emission reduction plan. The emis- sion reduction plan targets companies that discharge more than 25,000 met- ric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents each year. Carbon dioxide equivalents are a collection used to measure how much green house gas is entering the atmosphere. Supporters of the bill assert it will help the environment and curb cli- Courtesy photo House Bill 2020 is the expansive and complex legislation that would put Oregon at the fore- front of U.S. efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and combat climate change. mate change. Opponents believe the plan will hike gas prices, hurt the econ- omy and drive major firms away from the state. Who is correct is a matter of opinion and party affiliation. While nearly byzantine in its form, HB 2020 is also not a piece of legisla- tion that will get the necessary review and debate it needs. Democrats hold a super majority at the Legislature, which means they can pretty much push through whatever legislation they want unmolested. Also troubling is the fact that Dem- ocratic lawmakers have signaled time and again they are not going to listen to input from their Republican breth- ren on the bill. They are going to jam it through regardless. Democracy works when there is debate, discussion and compro- mise. When one party takes power — whether it is Republican or Demo- crat — and operates more like a faction than a group of lawmakers determined to do the people’s business, Democracy loses. A few years ago, lawmakers joined together, created and passed a massive transportation bill. Legislators — on both sides of the aisle — spent more than a year traveling the state, holding public meetings to gather input on the legislation. Lawmakers used a method- ical process to fine tune the transporta- tion legislation. Now, they should do the same with House Bill 2020. Shoving through the legislation may salve the consciousness of would-be world savers but it won’t help Democracy and it won’t help the state. HB 2020 isn’t ready for primetime. Not yet. OTHER VIEWS When trolls and crybullies rule the earth O YOUR VIEWS B2H will be a burden, not a boon, to Eastern Oregon Mitch Colburn, an Idaho Power spokesman for the controversial Board- man to Hemingway transmission line, insists that demands for electricity will increase and a shortfall will exist by 2025, but my research shows that the market is not growing. Idaho power’s billed sales (in all categories of customers) for the last 10 years have been essentially flat, if not declining. That’s supported by reports from the U.S. government and Idaho Power’s own data. Changes in electric utilities are occur- ring so rapidly that most industry analysts propose “strategic positioning” as the best investment to make at this time. However, the B2H is a highly centralized, $1.2 bil- lion mega-project that guarantees an $80 million dollar profit to Idaho Power and their partners’ shareholders, but does not serve the ratepayers or the public. The five Eastern Oregon counties that would be crossed by the line will see irrepara- ble environmental and cultural damages and increasing grid defections, leaving only the poorest of communities to pay the bills. Idaho Powers’ 12-year-old B2H plans are based on an old-school approach that has consistently ignored dramatic changes in power sources, delivery and storage. For about a century, affordable elec- trification has been based on economies 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. of scale, with large generating plants pro- ducing hundreds or thousands of mega- watts of power, sent to distant users through a vast transmission and distribu- tion grid. Today, utility industry develop- ments are replacing that simple model. At the top of the list is the availability of low-cost natural gas and solar power. Generators based on these resources can be built much closer to customers. We are now in the early stages of an expansion of distributed generation, which is already lessening the need for costly and wasteful long-distance transmission. The insecurity of a centralized trans- mission system is not in our best inter- est. If one large transmission line goes down, perhaps due to terrorism or forest fire, entire cities are blacked out and vul- nerable. With distributed generation, most areas would still have power. Ongoing price declines and techno- logical advances in energy generation and distribution show the proposed B2H transmission line will be obsolete from the onset. Considering decreasing con- sumer demands and the rapid and dra- matic changes in the industry, Idaho Power’s self-serving efforts to support need for the B2H are neither credible nor realistic. Contact StopB2H.org for more information. JoAnn Marlette, member, Stop B2H Coalition Baker City ver the past several years, teenage sui- others’ pain, so when they hurt you, they don’t cide rates have spiked horrifically. care. Depression rates are surging, and Amer- Trolling is a very effective way to gener- ate attention in a competitive, volatile atten- ica’s mental health overall is deteriorating. tion economy. It’s a way to feel righteous and What’s going on? important, especially if you claim to be trolling My answer starts with technology but is really about the sort of consciousness online life on behalf of some marginalized group. Another prominent personality type in this induces. economy is the crybully. This is the person who When communication styles change, so do takes his or her own pain and victimization and people. In 1982, scholar Walter Ong described uses it to make sure every conversation revolves the way, centuries ago, a shift from an oral to a around himself or herself. “This is the age of the printed culture transformed human conscious- ness. Once, storytelling was a shared experi- Cry-Bully, a hideous hybrid of victim and victor, ence, with emphasis on proverb, parable and weeper and walloper,” Julie Burchill wrote in myth. With the onset of the printing press it The Spectator a few years ago. become a more private experience, the The crybully starts with a genu- ine trauma. The terrible thing that content of that storytelling more realistic happened naturally makes the cry- and linear. bully feel unsafe, self-protective As L.M. Sacasas argues in the latest and self-conscious to the point of issue of The New Atlantis, the shift from self-absorption. The trauma makes printed to electronic communication is that person intensely concerned similarly consequential. I would say the about self-image. big difference is this: Attention and affec- tion have gone from being private bonds The problem comes from the D aviD to being publicly traded goods. subsequent need to control any sit- B rooks uation, the failure to see the big That is, up until recently most of the COMMENT picture, the tendency to lash out in attention a person received came from fear and anger as a way to fixate family and friends and was pretty stable. attention on oneself and obliterate others. Cry- But now most of the attention a person receives bullying is at the heart of many of our campus can come from far and wide and is tremen- dously volatile. de-platforming and censorship outrages. Sometimes your online post can go viral and Trolling, crybullying and other atten- tion-grabbing tactics emerge out of a feeling of get massively admired or ridiculed, while other weakness and create a climate that causes more times your post can leave you alone and com- pletely ignored. Communication itself, once pain, in which it is not safe to lead with vulner- ability, not safe to test out ideas or do the things mostly collaborative, is now often competitive, that create genuine companionship. with bids for affection and attention. It is also The internet has become a place where peo- more manipulative — gestures designed to gen- ple communicate out of their competitive ego: erate a response. I’m more fabulous than you (a lot of Instagram). People ensconced in social media are more You’re dumber than me (much of Twitter). It’s likely to be on perpetual alert: How are my rat- ings this moment? They are also more likely to not a place where people share from their hearts and souls. feel that the amount of attention they are receiv- ing is inadequate. Of course, people enmeshed in such a cli- As David Foster Wallace put it in that famous mate are more likely to feel depressed, to suf- fer from mental health problems. Of course, Kenyon commencement address, if you orient they are more likely to see human relation- your life around money, you will never feel you ship through the abuser/victim frame and to be have enough. Similarly, if you orient your life acutely sensitive to any power imbalance. Imag- around attention, you will always feel slighted. ine you’re 17 and people you barely know are You will always feel emotionally unsafe. saying nice or nasty things about your unformed New social types emerge in such a commu- nications regime. The most prominent new type self. It creates existential anxiety and hence is the troll, and in fact, Americans have elected a fanaticism. troll as the commander in chief. Two words loom large in this moment: Trolls bid for attention by trying to make oth- trauma and equity. Trauma is living with the ers feel bad. Studies of people who troll find aftershocks of a bad event — or, more import- ant, it is having no place to go where the after- that they score high on measures of psychopa- thy, sadism and narcissism. Online media hasn’t shocks can be healed because the public conver- sation is unsafe. Equity is the dream of a world made them vicious; they’re just vicious. Online in which all are given equal attention and dig- has given them a platform to use viciousness to nity. The dream is still out there, but it’s reced- full effect. ing with every vicious attack done in its name. Trolls also score high on cognitive empathy. ——— Intellectually, they understand other people’s David Brooks is a columnist for the New emotions and how to make them suffer. But they York Times. score low on affective empathy. They don’t feel 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 the editor to editor@eastoregonian.com, or via mail to Andrew Cutler, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801