Saturday, July 13, 2019 VIEWPOINTS East Oregonian A5 Getting your goat E ach spring, when the city of Pend- brush. No room for Abby. They would leton fires up its $25,000 flower be back to get her in June when the road munching, goat-driven weedeater, opened. There were 300 pounds of dry I think back to when I was a goatherd. dog food in their cabin. Would I keep her To be a bit more precise, I once owned a company? She slept beside my bunk. She goat. snored. Thirteen of us began the winter 32 At dusk a couple of weeks later, miles off the nearest two fellows from the val- plowed road, high in the ley showed up on snow machines bearing whiskey Salmon River Mountains of central Idaho. Four and lettuce, precious com- modities for the snowbound. were under the age of 5. “MANDY We did it up right. When A friend who had a min- ing claim nearby decided DISAPPEARED the whiskey was gone, the we needed more milk for boys mounted up and DURING A MAY city the smaller citizens, and tore back out of town. About showed up before the first midnight, Beth loaded a LIGHTNING snows with a half a ton dishpan from the party STORM, JUST of hay and a milk goat. house and headed down to Her name was Mandy, wash room at the foot of DISAPPEARED.” the marked like a mule deer the hot pool. with floppy ears. Howdy Two minutes later she had an older resident screamed. We poured out of goat, Granny, who was the party house, down to the about milked out. Granny pool, to find Abby, red muz- zled, standing over Gran- was pleased to have the ny’s body. Mandy was treading water in company. The only other domestic critters in the pool. The noise and speed of the snow town were six hens, a pet rat named Ros- machines had been more than Abby could coe, a Collie named Snoopy, and a full- stand. grown Great Dane named Abby. Abby We held a town meeting. Should we became a bit overexcited when dealing shoot Abby? I said that if she was mine with quickly moving objects, like humans I probably would, but she wasn’t and I on sleds. We had a hill where one could wouldn’t kill another’s dog. No one else flop onto a plastic sled and shoosh 50 wanted to play executioner. Should we yards right into a large hot springs pool. butcher and eat Granny? No, we had Abby liked to run alongside the sleds and plenty of food in the root cellar, particu- larly with Abby’s owners gone. We would nip at butt cheeks. She rarely drew blood, bury Granny in the morning. I didn’t but I didn’t slide down the hill on my sleep well with Abby snoring beside my back. In early February, Abby’s owners bunk that night. She had just killed a crit- loaded up their snow machine and trailer ter that was my size. with kids, announced that they’d had It required pick, shovel, axe, pry bar, a enough of Paradise and were headed back bonfire and six hours for Howdy and me down the mountain to the snow-free sage- to dig a goat grave beneath 5 feet of snow and through 4 feet of frozen rock patch. When we yarded Granny to her resting place we discovered that she was frozen stiff in a prone position and would not fit in the hole, Granny went to goat paradise as a quadruple amputee. I began locking Mandy in the barn at night. A month later, days turned warm enough to melt the top inch of snow, which then froze into backcountry side- walks by midnight. Abby had eaten the last of our chickens and we voted her off the mountain. At the next full moon, Stewart, Laurel and Abby walked 15 miles over the frozen slush, down into the Salmon River canyon. Laurel walked back in two weeks later. They had given Abby to a young couple from Boulder who were hitching around the country, and were afraid of cougars. I wondered how hitch- hiking with a Great Dane was going to go. Mandy disappeared during a May lightning storm, just disappeared. I tried tracking her, watching for cougar or bear sign, but could not sort between the goat, deer, and elk tracks. We were back on powdered milk. The pass opened on the last day of June. One of the first rigs to make it over was Abby’s owner. He rolled up to the edge of the hot pool, popped the door on a camper shell and out jumped Abby. Seems he had stopped to pick up some hitchhikers and ended up giving them $50 for his own dog. He was a bit hissy until we told the Granny story. The very next morning I woke to a clomping on my porch. Mandy had returned, looking a bit worse for her vaca- tion. The hair was rubbed from her lower legs where she had negotiated deadfall for a couple of months. Her udder was dry. Her backstrap was a tick parking lot. She had lost 20 pounds. I got out of the goat business on the J.D. S mith FROM THE HEADWATERS OF DRY CREEK Fourth of July by talking Abby’s owner into letting Abby ride with him in the cab and loading Mandy into the camper. He was to find a herd for her off the moun- tain, somewhere she wasn’t going to be the lone member of her species. I never heard from her again. She didn’t write or call. However, I have noted in the Pend- leton weedeaters a few buckskin critters with wandering eyes that may carry her DNA. ——— J.D. Smith is an accomplished writer and jack-of-all-trades. He lives in Athena. Apollo 11 Golden Anniversary: something for everyone feared that the upcoming 50th anni- the moon landing possible. On the negative versary of the first manned moon land- side, therapists feel the films may encour- ing might get eclipsed by other celebra- age teen suicide. (“Seriously, dude — if I tions (the 75th anniversary of D-Day, the ever get a haircut like that one, strap me 50th anniversary of the Stone- to a Saturn rocket and aim me at a wall Riots, the 10th anniversary brick wall.”) of financier Jeffrey Epstein’s lat- Dance enthusiasts are excited est girlfriend learning to tie her that archival material may finally shoes, etc.), but apparently the confirm that Neil Armstrong’s hast- ily scrapped original plans for his sky is the limit for Apollo 11 first words on the moon were “Put remembrances. And why not? This milestone your right foot in, take your right offers something for everyone. foot out, right foot in and you shake D anny Those of us with enough gray it all about.” T yree hairs and wrinkles to remem- On a related note, linguists and COMMENT ber the moon landing as “current survivalists alike are glad that Pres- ident Kennedy’s 1962 speech gave events” view the New Frontier Americans a challenge that was character- nostalgically, although we now experience ized as “hard” — not “easy peasy, lemon some of the era’s buzzwords with a dif- ferent perspective. Nowadays the eagerly squeezy.” awaited “splashdown” has less to do with Stamp collectors are ecstatic that the an ocean rendezvous than with the hoped- United States Postal Service is releas- ing two commemorative stamps featuring for results of our latest high-fiber diet. Youngsters with aspirations of a STEM iconic images of the Apollo 11 mission. (science, technology, engineering, and Next year, the USPS will issue commemo- rative stamps with iconic images of stamp math) career relish seeing footage of the collectors sitting home alone while their myriad behind-the-scenes folks who made I spouses are out on the town. Conspiracy theorists are keenly inter- ested in the anniversary. (“Of course, we actually went to the moon instead of film- ing it out in the desert. But the average per- son doesn’t realize that it was all part of a botched scheme to beam deadly vaccina- tion rays back down on an unsuspecting earth!”) Representatives of a certain fledgling industry hope to capitalize on the wist- ful thoughts of peaceniks who reminisce, “Maybe it cost billions, but for a few brief days in July of 1969, the world forgot its differences and pulled together.” (“Ahem — it might have been cheaper to have given everyone a lifetime supply of mari- juana-infused Tang. Just saying.”) Native American activists, mindful of how painfully slow our manned space explorations have been in the past half-cen- tury (compared to the rapid spread of rail- roads, highways and communications infrastructure) look with bemusement on the anniversary. (“Sure, if Columbus had spent three days here, then gone home and 50 years later sponsored a Duran Duran concert ... yeah, I could live with that.”) More visionary thinkers, on the other hand, see the Apollo 11 hoopla as a jump- start for manned missions to Mars and beyond. Like the Whos in the Dr. Seuss book, certain segments of mankind want to announce to the vast universe, “We are here, we are here, we are here.” Granted, when the bill for the deficit spending comes due, they may sing a dif- ferent tune. (“We are temporarily indis- posed, we are temporarily indisposed, we are temporarily indisposed ... and we didn’t leave a forwarding address!”) ——— Danny Tyree wears many hats (but still falls back on that lame comb-over). He is a warehousing and communications spe- cialist for his hometown farmers coopera- tive, a church deacon, a comic book col- lector, a husband (wife Melissa is a college biology teacher), and a late-in-life father (6-year-old son Gideon frequently pops up in the columns.) Danny welcomes email responses at tyreetyrades@aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.” Acosta resigned — the Caligula administration lives on O n Monday, Donald Trump dis- invited the then-British ambas- sador, Kim Darroch, from an official administration dinner with the emir of Qatar, because he was mad about leaked cables in which Darroch assessed the president as “insecure” and “incompetent.” There was room at the dinner, how- ever, for Trump’s friend Robert Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots, who was charged in a prostitution sting this year. Kraft was allegedly serviced at a massage parlor that had once been owned by Li Yang, known as Cindy, a regular at Trump’s club Mar-a-Lago. Yang is now the target of an FBI inquiry into whether she funneled Chinese money into Trump’s political operation. An ordinary president would not want to remind the world of the Kraft and Yang scandals at a time when Jeffrey Epstein’s arrest has hurled Trump’s other shady associations back into the limelight. Epstein, indicted on charges of abus- ing and trafficking underage girls, was a friend of Trump’s until the two had a fall- ing out, reportedly over a failed business deal. The New York Times reported on a party that Trump threw at Mar-a-Lago whose only guests were him, Epstein and around two dozen women “flown in to provide the entertainment.” Epstein, of course, was also linked to the administration in another way. The president’s labor secretary, Alex Acosta, was the U.S. attorney who over- saw a secret, obscenely lenient deal that let Epstein escape federal charges for sex crimes over a decade ago. On Friday, two days after a tendentious, self-serving news conference defending his handling of the Epstein case, Acosta finally resigned. Even with Acosta gone, however, Epstein remains a living reminder of the depraved milieu from which the president sprang, and of the corruption and misog- yny that continue to swirl around him. Sorensen resigned after his ex-wife came Yet Trump has been only intermittently forward with stories of his violence toward interested in distancing himself from her. that milieu. More often he has sought, Elliott Broidy, a major Trump fund- raiser who became the Republican whether through strategy or instinct, to National Committee deputy normalize it. finance chairman, resigned last This weekend, Trump National year amid news that he’d paid Doral, the president’s other Flor- ida golf club, planned to host a $1.6 million as hush money to fundraiser allowing golfers to bid a former Playboy model, Shera on strippers to serve as their cad- Bechard, who said she’d had an dies. Though the event was can- abortion after he got her pregnant. celed when it attracted too much (In a lawsuit, Bechard said Broidy attention, it’s at once astounding had been violent.) Casino mogul M ichelle and not surprising at all that it was Steve Wynn, who Trump installed G olDberG approved in the first place. as the RNC’s finance chairman, COMMENT In truth, a stripper auction is resigned amid accusations that tame by the standard of gross he’d pressured his employees for Trump stories, since at least the women sex. He remains a major Republican donor. were willing. Your eyes would glaze over In 2017, Trump tapped the former chief if I tried to list every Trump associate executive of AccuWeather, Barry Myers, implicated in the beating or sexual coer- to head the National Oceanic and Atmo- cion of women. Still, it’s worth review- spheric Administration. Then The Wash- ington Post discovered a report from a ing a few lowlights, because it’s astonish- ing how quickly the most lurid misdeeds Department of Labor investigation into fade from memory, supplanted by new Myers’ company which found a culture of degradations. “widespread sexual harassment” that was Acosta, you’ll remember, got his job “severe and pervasive.” The Senate hasn’t because Trump’s previous pick, Andrew yet voted on Myers’ nomination, but the Puzder, withdrew following the revelation administration hasn’t withdrawn it. that his ex-wife, pseudonymous and in dis- And just this week, a senior military guise, had appeared on an Oprah episode officer came forward to accuse Gen. John about “High Class Battered Women.” (She Hyten, Trump’s nominee to be the next later retracted her accusations.) vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief of derailing her career when she turned strategist, was once charged with domestic down his sexual advances. “My life was violence, battery and dissuading a witness. ruined by this,” she told The Associated (The case was dropped when his former Press. (The Air Force reportedly cleared wife failed to appear in court.) After Bill him of misconduct.) Shine, a former co-president of Fox News, Trump will sometimes jettison men was forced from his job for his involve- accused of abuse when they become a ment in Fox’s sprawling sexual harassment public relations liability. But his first scandals, Trump hired him. instinct is empathy, a sentiment he seems White House staff secretary Rob Por- otherwise unfamiliar with. In May, he ter resigned last year after it was revealed urged Roy Moore, the theocratic Alabama that both of his ex-wives had accused him Senate candidate accused of preying on of abuse. White House speechwriter David teenage girls, not to run again because he would lose, but added, “I have nothing against Roy Moore, and unlike many other Republican leaders, wanted him to win.” The president has expressed no sympathy for victims in the Epstein case but has said he felt bad for Acosta. Trump seems to understand, at least on a limbic level, that the effect of this caval- cade of scandal isn’t cumulative. Instead, each one eclipses the last, creating a sense of weary cynicism that makes shock impossible to sustain. It was just three weeks ago that E. Jean Carroll, a well-known writer, accused Trump of what amounted to a violent rape in the mid-1990s, and two friends of hers confirmed that she’d told them about it at the time. In response, Trump essentially said she was too unattractive to rape — “No. 1, she’s not my type” — and claimed that he’d never met her. That was a prov- able lie; there’s a photograph of them together before the alleged attack. It didn’t matter. The story drifted from the head- lines within a few days. Since Epstein’s arrest, many people have wondered how he was able to get away with his alleged crimes for so long, given all that’s publicly known about him. But we also know that the president boasts about sexually assaulting women, that over a dozen have accused him of vari- ous sorts of sexual misconduct, and one of them has accused him of rape. We know it, and we know we can’t do anything about it, so we live with it and grow numb. Maybe someday justice will come and a new generation will wonder how we toler- ated behavior that was always right out in the open. ——— Michelle Goldberg is an American blog- ger and author. She is a senior correspon- dent for The American Prospect and a col- umnist for The Daily Beast, Slate, and The New York Times. She is a former senior writer for The Nation magazine.