OPINION Wallowa County Chieftain A4 Wednesday, May 22, 2019 VOICE of the CHIEFTAIN CELEBRATION AND REMEMBRANCE I n Wallowa County, late May is a time of celebration and remembrance. Celebration as our youth graduate and move for- ward toward fulfi lling lives. Remem- brance of those who gave their lives so that these young people could ful- fi ll their dreams. Though they may seem unrelated, the two are intimately intertwined. We all know that without the free- dom to choose our individual paths — the life, liberty and pursuit of hap- piness that Jefferson enshrined in the Declaration of Independence — our nation would be impoverished in spirit and innovation. Education is a major stepping-stone along this path. Our June graduates are well on their way toward applying those three unalienable rights to a successful and productive future. Some will go on to college and perhaps graduate school. Others will hone their skills in less academic settings. Some will become doctors, nurses, computer coders, lawyers, veterinarians, and some will start businesses. Some will enter the armed services. Some will become skilled mechanics, fi refi ghters, artists, pilots, or heavy equipment operators. Some will construct our fences, barns, houses and buildings. We should be proud of each and every student, each and every gradu- ate. They are on their way to a bright future of their own choosing, and one that America’s Founding Fathers sought to guarantee. We hope that they will stay here and continue to build our community. Or if not, that they will one day return. But without the sacrifi ce of those we remember on Memorial Day, none of this would be possible. Memorial Day is an occasion that rose from our grass-roots tributes to soldiers who died in the Civil War. In the late years of the war, and after its end, Amer- icans began spontaneously holding springtime services in towns and cem- eteries across the nation to remember those who gave their lives for their cause. In 1971, Memorial Day — the last Monday of May — became an offi cial U.S. holiday. Waterloo, New York has been recognized as the offi - cial place of origin. Their remem- brance was fi rst held as an offi cial community-wide event on May 5, 1866, with businesses closed and ser- vices at local cemeteries. This year, the Eagle Cap VFW Post 4307 and Wallowa Lake Amer- ican Legion Post 157 will hold ser- vices at Wallowa County cemeteries, culminating in a 1 p.m. service at the County Courthouse that will remem- ber 29 men and women who have served and who passed away this year, including military, EMT, and fi refi ghters. We owe a huge debt of gratitude to them. We should all pause and pay them tribute, as well as to the many living veterans who have had their lives forever changed by their service. Without the sacrifi ce of these men and women throughout our history, our graduates would not have the bright futures and the paths to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness that Americans are assured today. Cel- ebration and Remembrance. It’s a time for both. Notes on our current political standoff S ometimes it’s helpful to take a few steps back in order to get a better perspective on what is happening around you right now. If you turn the clock back about 30 years, you might recall that Reagan’s presidency was marred by the Iran-Contra scandal, while George H.W. Bush’s one term as president began as the world cele- brated the tearing down of the Ber- lin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union. What you might not recall from that period is that a couple of years into his presidency, Bush acted on the advice of his deputy Attorney General William Barr and pardoned several former Reagan administration offi cials for their role in the illegal arms deal, effectively ensuring that Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger would not testify that the former vice president had not really been “out of the loop,” as Bush had claimed, regarding that violation of law. Barr was later rewarded for his loyalty and expeditious han- dling of the matter by being pro- moted to Attorney General, where he served until Bill Clinton was elected in 1992. Meanwhile in the former Soviet Union, new countries were forming, previously held state assets were being gobbled up by high-ranking offi cials, oligarchs were consolidating vast wealth, and an economy and govern- ment that resembled an organized crime syndicate was fi lling the newly created economic and polit- ical void. Foremost in the scram- ble for power was Vladimir Putin, the former head of the Soviet spy agency, who knew how to use his inside connections and secret dirt to leverage power for his own per- sonal and political gain. At the same time in the United States, according to recent revela- tions from tax returns over more than a decade during this period, a fl amboyant New York business- man named Donald Trump was losing more than a billion dol- lars in a variety of failed ventures including casinos, hotels, an air- line, and a football league, and paying virtually no taxes during that time. In fact, the estimate of a billion in losses might have been conservative, because according to a story told by Trump’s daugh- ter Ivanka, her father once pointed to a homeless panhandler and said casually, “That guy is worth about POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY John McColgan eight billion dollars more than I am.” Fortunately — though per- haps not coincidentally for Trump — toward the end of the nine- ties, when Trump’s real estate ven- tures were about all he had left and when he could not get a con- ventional loan from U.S. banks, along came a former Soviet offi - cial and another Russian investor who called themselves the Bay- rock Group, and they began shift- ing Trump’s focus from real estate development to selling his world- wide “brand.” Within a few years, Deutsche Bank, which was now doing more business with Rus- sian and eastern European inves- tors, were willing to back some of Trump’s real estate developments, and by 2008, Donald Trump Jr. reported that “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-sec- tion of a lot of our assets.” One example was a property in Flor- ida that Trump Sr. was able to sell to a Russian investor for $95 mil- lion during the depths of the hous- ing collapse, apparently only for the odd purpose of allowing that oligarch to tear down the buildings and sell the land for a mere $35 million. By 2015, Trump was boast- ing that in Russia, he had met with “the top level people, both oli- garchs and generals, and top of the government people. I can’t go fur- ther than that,” he continued mys- teriously, before adding, “and the relationship was extraordinary.” What Trump labeled as “extraordinary” is probably true in the literal sense of the term, but others have found Trump’s “rela- tionship” with the Russians to be peculiar and highly suspicious. So much so that in July of 2016, the FBI began to investigate whether Trump or members of his presi- dential campaign might be conspir- ing with Russians to infl uence the campaign and the election. Follow- ing revelations about that investi- gation in early 2017, Trump fi red his FBI Director James Comey, but in order to quell the uproar that fol- lowed, a special investigation was authorized into Russian meddling, headed by Robert Mueller, another former FBI Director who was deeply respected by politicians on both sides of the aisle. About a year into Mueller’s investigation, in June 2018, along came a 20-page letter from the for- mer Attorney General William Barr to President Trump, in which the then-civilian Barr complained about the entire nature, scope, and alleged unfairness of the special counsel’s investigation. Trump obviously relished Barr’s criticism, and he rewarded Barr for his views by choosing him in 2019 to replace Jeff Sessions as the new Attorney General. So it really should have come as no surprise to people who have followed Barr’s career that now Barr has tried to condense the 448 page Mueller Report into a four page letter that aims to exoner- ate the president of all wrongdo- ing, even though Mueller himself did not do that in his actual report. Meanwhile a newly elected Dem- ocratic House is exercising their Constitutional powers by conduct- ing their own investigations into Trump’s fi nances, and his con- nections with the Russians during the campaign and during his administration. In response, Barr seems to be acting more as Trump’s personal attorney rather than as the Attor- ney General of the United States. In the absence of Michael Cohen, Trump’s former “fi xer” who has now been convicted on several charges, Barr has stepped in to try to “fi x” the president’s trou- bles by arguing that Congress has no power to investigate or pros- ecute a sitting president, and that the courts might not have such power either. Suffi ce to say that the chairs of the House Commit- tees on Financial Services, Intel- ligence, Judiciary, and Oversight and Reform all disagree, as does the House Speaker. Barr recently taunted Mrs. Pelosi, asking if she had brought her handcuffs for him. But what she has brought are contempt charges that have been approved in committee and will likely soon be brought against Barr before the entire House. Stay tuned for further developments. ——— John McColgan writes from his home in Joseph WHERE TO WRITE Washington, D.C. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D — 516 Hart Senate Offi ce Building, Washington D.C. 20510. Phone: 202-224-5244. E-mail: wayne_kin- ney@wyden.senate.gov Web site: http://wyden.senate.gov Fax: 202-228-2717. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D — 313 Hart Senate Offi ce Building, Wash- ington D.C. 20510. Phone: 202-224- 3753. E-mail: senator@merkley.sen- ate.gov. Fax: 202-228-3997. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R (Second District) — 1404 Long- worth Building, Washington D.C. 20515. Phone: 202-225-6730. No direct e-mail because of spam. Web site: www.walden.house.gov Fax: 202-225-5774. Medford offi ce: 14 North Central, Suite 112, Med- ford, OR 97501. Phone: 541-776- 4646. Fax: 541-779-0204. Pending Bills For information on bills in Con- gress — Phone: 202-225-1772. Wallowa County’s Newspaper Since 1884 M EMBER O REGON N EWSPAPER P UBLISHERS A SSOCIATION Published every Wednesday by: EO Media Group VOLUME 134 USPS No. 665-100 P.O. Box 338 • Enterprise, OR 97828 Offi ce: 209 NW First St., Enterprise, Ore. Phone: 541-426-4567 • Fax: 541-426-3921 Contents copyright © 2019. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is prohibited. General manager, Jennifer Cooney, jcooney@wallowa.com Interim Editor, Ellen Morris Bishop, editor@wallowa.com Publisher, Chris Rush, crush@eomediagroup.com Reporter, Stephen Tool, steve@wallowa.com Reporter, Ellen Morris Bishop, ebishop@wallowa.com Administrative Assistant, Amber Mock, amock@wallowa.com Advertising Assistant, Cheryl Jenkins, cjenkins@wallowa.com Salem Gov. Kate Brown, D — 160 State Capitol, Salem 97310. Phone: 503-378-4582. Fax: 503-378-8970. Web site: www.governor.state. or.us/governor.html. Oregon Legislature — State Capitol, Salem, 97310. Phone: (503) 986-1180. Web site: www. leg.state.or.us (includes Oregon Constitution and Oregon Revised Statutes). State Rep. Greg Barreto, R-Cove (District 58) — Room H-384, State Capitol, 900 Court St. N.E., Salem OR 97301. Phone: 503- 986-1458. E-mail: rep.gregbar- reto@state.or.us. Web site: http:// www.oregonlegislature.gov/ barreto State Sen. Bill Hansell, R (Dis- trict 29) — Room S-423, State Capitol, Salem 97301. Phone: 503- 986-1729. E-mail: Sen.BillHansell@ state.or.us. Web site: www.oregon- legislature.gov/hansell. Periodical Postage Paid at Enterprise and additional mailing offi ces Subscription rates (includes online access) Wallowa County Out-of-County 1 Year $45.00 $57.00 Subscriptions must be paid prior to delivery See the Wallowa County Chieftain on the Internet Wallowa.com facebook.com/Wallowa twitter.com/wcchieftain POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Wallowa County Chieftain P.O. Box 338 Enterprise, OR 97828