SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 2021 Baker City, Oregon A4 Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com EDITORIAL Animal ‘cruelty’ initiative frightening It sounds farfetched, and quite likely it is. Oregonians ought to hope so, anyway. At least those Oregonians who like to eat the occa- sional burger or slice of bacon. Or hunt deer and elk. Or watch or compete in rodeos. But the economic destruction that Initiative Peti- tion 13 could cause in this state is so severe, and so widespread, that the campaign supporting it, however quixotic it might be, simply can’t be ignored. David Michelson of Portland is the chief petitioner. His goal is to put on the statewide ballot in November 2022 a petition that would criminalize, under animal abuse laws, essential parts of the ranching business, in- cluding branding and dehorning cattle, and castrating bulls. Even artifi cial insemination could be classifi ed as sexual assault of an animal, which is a Class C felony. Backers of the initiative emphasize that it would not actually prohibit ranchers from selling their animals to slaughter — but they could do so only after the animal dies naturally. You needn’t be in the livestock business to know this wouldn’t — couldn’t— work. The petition would also eliminate exceptions to animal cruelty laws for hunting, fi shing, rodeos and wildlife management. It might seem unbelievable that a majority of Or- egonians would vote for a measure that would wreak such havoc on an industry that’s a big part of Oregon’s economy. But little wonder that the Oregon Farm Bureau and other groups are preparing to counter the petition with compelling stories about how much dam- age this effort could have. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor OTHER VIEWS It’s time to pay college athletes Editorial from The Chicago Tribune: It’s not just mania about college hoops that puts the “madness” in March Mad- ness. Think about the money behind NCAA basketball. John Calipari, coach of perennial powerhouse University of Kentucky, makes $8 million a year. Duke’s famed Mike Krzyzewski makes $7 mil- lion. Closer to home, University of Illinois men’s basketball coach Brad Underwood got $3.8 million this year. Before the pandemic, March Madness raked in $1.18 billion in television ad rev- enue for the NCAA, which also gets $1.1 billion for TV rights to the tournament. How about the man at the top — NCAA President Mark Emmert? Nearly $4 mil- lion annually. What about the athletes who hit the buzzer beaters, who dunk the dunks and leap into end zones to win games and championships? Consider the story of Shabazz Napier, who in 2014 helped the University of Connecticut Huskies win the NCAA men’s basketball title. Napier told the media at the time, “Sometimes, there are hungry nights where I’m not able to eat, but I still got to play up to my capabilities.” This week, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling that could finally open the door for college athletes to be fairly com- pensated for their work and talent, which makes millions for the people at the top. The case involved a former University of West Virginia football player who claimed the NCAA rules governing education- related compensation violated federal an- titrust law intended to foster competition. In a unanimous decision, the court ruled that the NCAA cannot prohibit education- related payments to college athletes. The decision has the potential to go much deeper, however. The court ap- peared open to a much broader challenge to the NCAA’s ban on paying athletes. In his concurring opinion, Justice Brett Ka- vanaugh wrote, “Nowhere else in America can businesses get away with agreeing not to pay their workers a fair market rate on the theory that their product is defined by not paying their workers a fair market rate. “And under ordinary principles of anti- trust law,” Kavanaugh continued, “it is not evident why college sports should be any different. The NCAA is not above the law.” Kavanaugh summed it up perfectly. It’s true, student-athletes often get scholar- ships, room and board, books and other perks in exchange for what they do on the court, field or gridiron. But what they do amounts to a full-time job. And the daily grind they endure — the practices, the strength training, the games and tourna- ments — is work product that morphs into massive profi ts for the NCAA and the people at the top rungs of universi- ties. We fully expect the NCAA to dig in its heels and fi ght to the last. The organiza- tion should brace itself, however, for the possibility that the nation’s high court de- cides sometime in the future to address, in a much broader way, the NCAA’s exploitation of student-athletes. Justice Neil Gorsuch offered a window into the court’s mindset, writing that the NCAA is a “massive business” and adding that those “who run this enterprise profi t in a different way than the student-athletes whose activities they oversee.” The NCAA doesn’t have to wait for the Supreme Court to act, however. It can see the writing on the wall, pay athletes, and fi nally remedy the unfairness it has perpetuated for far too long. Carelessly wielding statistics as a weapon I remember, and more clearly than most childhood episodes, the day my dad explained to me the concept of guilt by association. I think my memory remains unusually vivid, among so many dozens of conversations, because the idea seemed to me then so unfair. It still does. I surely was no older than 10 that day, and probably nearer to eight. But even more than four decades later I bristle at the notion that anybody might malign my character not because I had done something wrong, but because I was linked to someone who had. I was particularly irked that I might be branded as guilty even if the “association” were contrived rather than real. I had occasion recently to ponder that distant discussion with my dad. The impetus for my reminiscing was a story in the Salem States- man Journal newspaper about a survey conducted this January in Oregon. DHM Research and the Or- egon Values and Beliefs Center, which the newspaper described as “independent nonpartisan organizations,” surveyed 603 Oregon residents in a 15-minute online questionnaire Jan. 8-13. There were quotas for each area of the state, as well as for gender, age and education, to ensure the respondents represented the state’s diversity. The lead paragraph in the story — as lead paragraphs are supposed to do — does an admirable job of JAYSON JACOBY introducing the topics to come. “Nearly four in 10 Oregonians strongly or somewhat agree with statements that refl ect core argu- ments of white nationalist and other far-right groups, according to a new statewide survey.” Any reader, even those who are barely sentient, couldn’t help but be intrigued by that sentence. Although I suspect most people would react with something other than basic curiosity. Disgust, for instance. As a native Oregonian with a great affi nity for the state, I certainly fi nd abhorrent the notion that in any group of 10 people within our borders, four are apt to be bigots. I’d be especially incensed if I be- lieved that statistic to be accurate. But I don’t. What I fi nd obnoxious is how the organization that paid for the survey has used the results to im- pugn about 1.7 million of my fellow Oregonians. Lindsay Schubiner, a program director at that organization, West- ern States Center, described the survey fi ndings as “disturbing.” “These numbers show that they’re certainly not the majority, but I think this data does give in- sight into the size of the population that white nationalists may be able to appeal to or potentially recruit from,” Schubiner told the States- man Journal. Here are some of the numbers on which Schubiner bases this scur- rilous contention. The survey found that 86% of respondents agreed that America should “protect and preserve” its multicultural heritage, down from 92% in a similar survey in 2018. Meanwhile, the percentage of respondents who believe America “must protect and preserve its white European heritage” has risen from 31% in 2018 to 40% — hence the claim that four in 10 Orego- nians are merely waiting for the skinheads and neo-Nazis to show up with their propaganda (larded, most likely, with enough misspell- ings and questionable grammar to disappoint a second-grader). I fi nd it passing strange that anyone, upon learning that more than twice as many people in a survey think it’s important to preserve multicultural heritage, as compared with preserving white European heritage, would deduce that the population represented in the survey is fertile recruiting terri- tory for white supremacists. Another fi nding in the survey is that more Oregonians actually admit supporting what the news story describes as “white national- ism and paramilitary groups” now as in 2018. That support has risen from 6% of respondents then to 11% in the 2021 survey. But the difference between that 11%, and the 40% who think white European heritage is worth protecting and preserving, is hardly trivial. In straight numbers, extrapolat- ing from the 40% survey result, this amounts to about 1.2 million Oregonians. And the Western States Center implies that this group is susceptible to the outland- ish and hateful messages spewed by malcontents who think the swastika is cool. I fi nd far more compelling than a survey the actual events that transpired in Grant County in 2010. The national director of the Ary- an Nations, Paul R. Mullet, showed up that year in John Day, claiming he was looking to buy property and establish a “national compound” for his goose-stepping cretins. Mullet told the Blue Mountain Eagle newspaper that he believes his group “is a good fi t with the values here.” Perhaps he meant the sort of people who, if asked in an anony- mous survey, might agree that white European heritage, along with a bunch of other heritages, is a part of American history worth preserving. But it turns out that Grant County residents didn’t cotton to a bunch of bigots moving into their bucolic section of Oregon. They put on a public protest against the Aryan Nations. John Day’s mayor, Bob Quinton, told the Blue Mountain Eagle that being associated with the Aryan Nations was “the last kind of thing our reputation needs. We need to be inclusive and emphasize positive things here.” What bothers me almost as much as surveys being used to draw ridiculously broad assump- tions about people’s feelings is that such exaggerations also suggest that nasty people have far more infl uence than actual evidence — Grant County, for instance — sug- gests they possess. In effect, groups such as the Western States Center contribute to white supremacists’ ability to coopt people’s pride in their heri- tage. There is of course nothing inher- ently offensive about such pride. Indeed, the survey itself strongly suggests that Oregonians respect all cultures, and not only their own. Considering how marginalized white supremacists are, I fi nd it fanciful for the Western States Center to contend that the sur- vey results in any way refl ect the number of Oregonians who have anything in common with racist cretins. I don’t think it’s coincidental that Schubiner was conspicuously hedging in her comments to the Statesman Journal — speaking of white nationalists who “may be able to appeal to” or “potentially recruit from” Oregonians based on the survey results. Still and all, I think the group is engaging in guilt by association. I’m confi dent that the vast majority of people who are proud of their heritage — whatever that might be — are all but impervious to the poison propaganda of those few among us who pervert pride into hatred. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.