Saturday, June 29, 2019 VIEWPOINTS East Oregonian A5 Some free advice for life O ur daughter, Annie, recently grad- uated from high school. For her and the dozen or so fellow class- mates — such are the numbers at Gris- wold High School in beautiful Helix — it was a time of genuine celebration with friends and family. For the second year in a row, we were lucky enough to have a contingent of some of my favorite relatives from the Wil- lamette Valley come and partake of the festivities at the Helix Rodeo. The fact that they are related to the co-valedicto- rian of this year’s crop of students (yes, I am a very proud father) gave them rea- son enough to stay for an extra day or two over Memorial Day weekend, which, in my opinion, is about the most pleas- ant time of year in rural Eastern Oregon because it falls between our two seasons of mud and dust. While they were in the area, I took my cousins on a number of “tours” to show off our Briar Patch (anyone remem- ber Br’er Rabbit and the tales of Uncle Remus?). My cousins are all slightly older than me — a couple of them are even approaching that mysterious station in life I’ve vaguely heard about called “retire- ment” — and, hence, are in the stage of contemplation about what really matters in life. As we traversed gravel, and even dirt (there’s a big difference) roads through the rolling hills and sparsely populated ter- rain of my “neighborhood,” we exchanged opinions regarding success, well-being and happiness — important things for recent high school graduates to consider. I always start with my personal three commandments: • Work hard. • Be honest. • Have fun — in that order. In my opinion, we Americans are all too likely to focus too much on having fun before our work is complete. In fact, when I used to drop the kids off at school when they were too young to drive the 7 miles themselves, I simply admonished them to work hard and be honest and, barring unforeseen catastrophe or calamity, the rest would fall into place. Strive for perfection — even though you’ll seldom attain it. Don’t be someone who doesn’t give a stinky large rodent’s posterior and leaves behind a sloppy job not well done that someone else has to fix or clean up. Remember names of folks upon whom you depend and treat them with the respect they deserve. Foremost on this list in my experience would be the hired help who do the “grunt work” — the secretary who knows where everything is, and the neigh- bor’s dog, because he is an astute judge of a person’s true character. If you go through a gate that was closed when you came to it, close it after you pass through. Sometimes, this might even mean using the fence-stretcher on the back of the flatbed. In short, leave stuff like you found it, especially if it’s someone else’s stuff. Learn how to change a flat tire and send an email. For anyone who knows me, they will readily affirm that I am far more adept at the former than the latter. But, to a limited degree, even I have made an attempt to become minimally func- tional at tasks required in modern times — though not necessarily willingly. The inability of one to change a flat can be blamed on simple irresponsible parenting. In short, care enough about your kids to teach them things that are important. While it is important to know when to keep your mouth shut, it’s best not to keep information or secrets from your spouse or your banker. Each of them holds your financial future in their hands and, if they choose, can make your life really difficult if they have a bone to pick. Always carry matches and a shovel. In a more broad sense, be prepared. You never know when you may have to start a fire — or put one out. Write things down, but don’t always keep score. I believe record-keeping is imperative; everything from when your grandparents were born to balancing your checkbook. However, don’t keep exact “tabs” on how many rounds you’ve bought the neighbors or vice versa. Most people have a pretty fair assessment of who (or who isn’t) packing their share of the load. I would never purport this to be enough guidance to get through the next seven or eight decades after high school, M att W ood FROM THE TRACTOR it’s just some free advice. And remember, (usually) you get what you pay for. ——— Matt Wood, a community columnist for the East Oregonian, lives and farms near Helix. The S word, the F word and the ballot W hat did you think of the bunch of socialists you just saw debating Dems, please don’t drive me away I could never in a million years vote for Don- calize it so one gets the impression they want to ald Trump. So my question to Democrats is: undermine capitalism altogether. Will there be a candidate I can vote for? Third, Democrats are wandering into dan- gerous territory on immigration. They prop- According to a recent Gallup poll, 35% of erly trumpet the glories that immigrants bring Americans call themselves conservative, 35% to this country. But the candidates call themselves moderate and 26% call can’t let anybody get to the left of them themselves liberal. The candidates at the on this issue. So now you’ve got a lot debates this week fall mostly within the of candidates who sound operation- 26%. The party seems to think it can ally open borders. Progressive par- win without any of the 35% of us in the ties all over the world are getting dec- moderate camp, the ones who actually imated because they have fallen into delivered the 2018 midterm win. The progressive narrative is dominat- this pattern. ing in part because progressives these Fourth, Democrats are trying to D aviD days have a direct and forceful story to start a populist vs. populist campaign B rooks tell and no interest in compromising it. against Trump, which is a fight they COMMENT It’s dominating because no moderate cannot win. Democratic populists wants to bear the brunt of progressive talk as if the only elite in America is fury by opposing it. big business, Big Pharma — the top 1%. This It’s also dominating because the driving allows them to sound populist without actually dynamic in this campaign right now is not who going after their donor bases — the highly edu- cated affluent people along the coasts. can knock off Joe Biden, the more moderate But the big divide in America is not between front-runner. It’s who can survive the intense the top 1% and the bottom 99. It’s between the struggle between Elizabeth Warren, Bernie top 20% and the rest. These are the highly edu- Sanders and others to be the surviving left-wing cated Americans who are pulling away from alternative. All the energy and competition is everybody else and who have built zoning on the progressive side. Biden tries to bob and restrictions and meritocratic barriers to make weave above it all while the whole debate pulls sure outsiders can’t catch up. sharply leftward. The party is moving toward all sorts of posi- If Democrats run a populist campaign tions that drive away moderates and make it against the business elite, Trump will run a more likely the nominee will be unelectable. broader populist campaign against the entire And it’s doing it without too much dissent. educated elite. His populism is more compelling First, there is health care. When Warren and to people who respond to such things. After all, Kamala Harris raised their hands and said that he is actually despised by the American elite, they would eliminate employer-based health unlike the Democrats. insurance, they made the most important ges- Finally, Democrats aren’t making the most ture of the campaign so far. Over 70% of Amer- compelling moral case against Donald Trump. icans with insurance through their employ- They are good at pointing to Trump’s cruelties, ers are satisfied with their health plan. Warren, especially toward immigrants. They are good at Harris and Sanders would take that away. describing the ways he is homophobic and rac- ist. But the rest of the moral case against Trump According to a Hill-HarrisX survey, only 13% of Americans say they would prefer a means hitting him from the right as well as the health insurance system with no private plans. left. Warren and Sanders pin themselves, and per- A decent society rests on a bed of manners, haps the Democratic Party, to a 13% policy habits, traditions and institutions. Trump is a idea. Trump is smiling. disrupter. He rips to shreds the codes of polite- Second, there is the economy. All the Demo- ness, decency, honesty and fidelity, and so ren- ders society a savage world of dog eat dog. crats seem to have decided to run a Trump-style Democrats spend very little time making this American carnage campaign. The economy is completely broken. It only benefits a tiny sliver. case because defending tradition, manners and civility sometimes cuts against the modern pro- Yet in a CNN poll, 71% of Americans say that gressive temper. the economy is very or somewhat good. We’re The debates illustrate the dilemma for mod- in the longest recovery in American history erate Democrats. If they take on progressives and the benefits are finally beginning to flow to they get squashed by the passionate intensity of those who need them most. Overall wages are the left. If they don’t, the party moves so far left rising by 3.5%, and wages for those in the low- est pay quartile are rising by well over 4%, the that it can’t win in the fall. highest of all groups. Right now we’ve got two parties trying to Democrats have caught the catastrophiz- make moderates homeless. ing virus that inflicts the Trumpian right. They ——— take a good point — that capitalism needs to be David Brooks is a columnist for the New York Times. reformed to reduce inequality — and they radi- cans, point by point, with parties almost everyone would classify as right-wing authoritarians — par- ties like Hungary’s Fidesz, which onstage? has preserved some of the forms of Wait, you may protest, you democracy but has effectively cre- didn’t see any socialists up there. ated a permanent one-party state. And you’d be right. The Demo- cratic Party has clearly moved left Fidesz has cemented its power in recent years, but none of the by politicizing the judiciary, creat- ing rigged election rules, suppress- presidential candidates are anything ing opposition media and using the close to being actual socialists — power of the state to reward the no, not even Bernie Sanders, whose party’s cronies while punishing embrace of the label is really more businesses that don’t toe the line. about branding (“I’m anti-establish- ment!”) than substance. Does any of this sound like some- thing that can’t happen here? In Nobody in these debates wants fact, does any of it sound government ownership like something that isn’t of the means of produc- tion, which is what social- already happening here, ism used to mean. Most and which Republicans will of the candidates are, do much more of if they get the chance? instead, what Europeans One might even argue would call “social demo- crats”: advocates of a pri- that the GOP stands out vate-sector-driven econ- among the West’s white omy, but with a stronger nationalist parties for its P aul KRUGMAN social safety net, enhanced exceptional willingness COMMENT bargaining power for work- to crash right through the ers and tighter regulation guardrails of democracy. of corporate malfeasance. Extreme gerrymandering, They want America to be more like naked voter suppression and strip- ping power from offices the other Denmark, not more like Venezuela. party manages to win all the same Leading Republicans, however, — these practices seem if anything routinely describe Democrats, even more prevalent here than in the fail- those on the right of their party, as ing democracies of Eastern Europe. socialists. Indeed, all indications Oh, and isn’t it remarkable how are that denunciations of Demo- crats’ “socialist” agenda will be blasé we’ve become about threats of legal persecution and/or physical front and center in the general elec- tion campaign. And everyone in the violence against anyone who criti- cizes a Republican president? news media accepts this as the nor- mal state of affairs. So it’s really something to see Which goes to show the extent Republicans trying to tar Demo- crats as un-American socialists. to which Republican extremism has If they want to see a party that been accepted simply as a fact of really has broken with fundamental life, barely worth mentioning. American values, they should look To see what I mean, imagine the in the mirror. media firestorm, the screams about But that won’t happen, of course. lost civility, we’d experience if any Whoever the Democrats nominate prominent Democrat described — even if it’s Joe Biden — Repub- Republicans as a party of fas- cists, let alone if Democrats made licans will paint him or her as the that claim the centerpiece of their second coming of Hugo Chávez. The only question is whether it will national campaign. And such an work. accusation would indeed be some- what over the top — but it would be It might not, or at least not as a lot closer to the truth than calling well as in the past. By spend- ing decades calling everything Democrats socialists. that might improve Americans’ The other day The New York lives “socialist,” Republicans have Times published an op-ed that used squandered much of the accusa- analysis of party platforms to place tion’s force. And Donald Trump, U.S. political parties on a left-right who was installed in office with spectrum along with their coun- terparts abroad. The study found Russian help and clearly prefers that the Republican Party is far to foreign dictators to democratic the right of mainstream European allies, is probably less able to play conservative parties. It’s even to the “Democrats are unpatriotic” the right of anti-immigrant parties card than previous Republican like Britain’s UKIP and France’s presidents. National Rally. Basically, if we saw Still, a lot will depend on how something like America’s Repub- the news media handle dishon- licans in another country, we’d est attacks. Will we keep seeing classify them as white nationalist headlines that repeat false claims extremists. (“Trump Says Democrats Will Ban Hamburgers”), with the information True, this is just one study. But that the claim is false buried deep it matches up with lots of other evi- dence. Political scientists who use inside the article? Will we get cov- erage of actual policy proposals, as congressional votes to track ide- ology find that Republicans have opposed to horse-race analysis that only asks how those proposals seem moved drastically to the right over to be playing? the past four decades, to the point I guess we’ll soon find out. where they are now more conserva- tive than they were at the height of ——— Paul Krugman is a columnist for the Gilded Age. Or just compare the Republi- the New York Times.