THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 2021 Baker City, Oregon A4 Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com OUR VIEW Mask mandate puts schools in focus In defense of ‘misinformation’ I n late July, our school-age children and youth were once again thrust into the center of the COVID-19 pandemic when Gov. Kate Brown ordered new mask mandates for K-12 students. Our students shouldn’t be there. Nor should our teachers and administrators. Yet they are, and while it is disappointing and creates new questions about local control, the gov- ernor’s decision was the right one — for now. Still, the new mandates potentially push stu- dents and teachers and administrators into the middle of what is essentially a cultural/political debate regarding vaccinations and the seriousness of the COVID-19 pandemic. There is also the risk that many parents — for various reasons — will keep their students away from education centers because they do not agree with the mask mandate. If so, that doesn’t help in our collective effort to provide our youth with the best education possible. Another piece that complicates this new para- digm is that many children are still ineligible to be vaccinated. Recently, Intermountain Education Service District Superintendent Mark Mulvihill said the new mask mandate puts schools “in the crosshairs” of an issue that has polarized America. He rightly was concerned about how much more pressure will be placed on teachers and school administrators to enforce a new mask requirement. As a community, regardless of where we stand on vaccinations and masks, we should work to be as helpful as possible to our local schools. We need to remember that the teachers, super- intendents and other school offi cials are not re- sponsible for the mask mandate. They, like all state agencies, must obey the orders of the governor. They don’t have the option to ignore her mandate. That means trying to push them into the center of a political/cultural debate about COVID-19 and vaccinations is wrong and won’t solve the basic problem. Our students and their teachers should not be in the middle of this debate. However, as cases climb, and vaccination rates continue to lag, we now face a new COVID-19 crisis. No one wants to return to the draconian restrictions instituted by the governor last year. We must all work hard to ensure we do not. Meanwhile, we must give our local school dis- tricts, teachers and administrators all the help we can as they struggle to work through yet another COVID-19 challenge. ——— Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the Baker City Herald. Columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the Baker City Herald. STEPHEN CARTER I’m no fan of the current war on “misinformation” — if anything, I’m a conscientious objector — and one of the reasons is the term’s pedigree. Although the Grammar Curmudgeon in me freely admits that the word is a perfectly fi ne one, the effort by public and private sector alike to hunt down misinformers to keep them from misinforming the public represents a return to the bad old days that once upon a time liberalism sensibly opposed. First, as to the word itself. The Oxford English Dictionary traces “misinformation” in its current sense to the late 16th century. In 1786, while serving as ambassador to France, Thom- as Jefferson used the word to deride the claim that the U.S. Congress had at one point sat in Hartford, Connecticut. In 1817, as every fi rst-year law student knows, the U.S. Supreme Court used the word as part of a shaky effort to defi ne fraud. In the run-up to the Civil War, supporters of the newly formed Republi- can Party denounced as misinformation the notion that they harbored “hostile aims against the South.” Depending on context, the word can even take on a haughty drawing-room quality. Sir Hugo Latymer, the pro- tagonist of Noel Coward’s tragic farce “A Song at Twilight,” discovers that his ex-lover Carlotta believes that she has the legal right to publish his letters to Hugo’s ex-lover Perry. Says the haughty Hugo: “I fear you have been misin- formed.” (Writers have been imitating the line ever since.) True, according to the always excel- lent Quote Investigator, a popular Mark Twainism about how reading the news makes you misinformed is apocryphal. QI does remind us, however, that there’s a long history of writers and politicians using the term as one of denunciation. Which leads us to the pedigree problem. Chances are you’ve never heard of the old Federated Press. (The old Feder- ated Press has no relation to the current organization using the same name.) It was founded in 1918 as a left-leaning competitor to The Associated Press, and died 30 years later, deserted by hun- dreds of clients after being declared by the U.S. Congress a source of “misinfor- mation.” Translation: The Congress didn’t like its point of view. But the Federated Press was hardly alone. For the Red-hunters of the Mc- Carthy Era, “misinformation” became a common term of derision. As early as 1945, the right-leaning syndicated columnist Paul Mallon complained that “the left wing” was “glibly” spreading “misinformation about American for- eign policy” — and, worse, that others “were being gradually infl uenced by their thinking.” In a 1953 U.S. Senate hearing on “Communist Infi ltration of the Army” — yes, that’s what the hearing was called — Soviet defector Igor Bogolepov (popular among the McCarthyites) assured the eager committee members that a pamphlet about Siberia distrib- uted by the Army contained “a lot of deliberate misinformation which serves the interest of the Communist cause.” A report issued by the Senate Judiciary Committee three years later begins: “The average American is unaware of the amount of misinforma- tion about the Communist Party, USA, which appears in the public press, in books and in the utterances of public speakers.” Later on, the report pro- vides a list of groups that exist “for the purpose of promulgating Communist ideas and misinformation into the bloodstream of public opinion.” Second on the list is the (by then dying) Feder- ated Press. In 1957, the chief counsel of a Senate subcommittee assured the members that “misinformation” distributed by “some of our State Department offi cials” had “proved to be helpful to the Com- munist cause and detrimental to the cause of the United States.” The habit lingered into the 1960s, when — lest we forget — President John F. Kennedy and his New Fron- tiersman were adamant about the need to combat the Communist threat. “International communism is expend- ing great efforts to spread misinforma- tion about the United States among ill-informed peoples around the world,” warned the Los Angeles Times in a 1961 editorial. The following year, At- torney General Robert Kennedy gave a major address in which he argued that America’s ideological setbacks abroad were the result of — you guessed it — Communist “misinformation.” I’m not suggesting that “misinfor- mation” is always an unhelpful word. My point is that for anyone who takes history seriously, the sight of powerful politicians and business leaders joining in a campaign to chase misinformation from public debate conjures vicious images of ideological overreaching that devastated lives and livelihoods. I’ve written in this space before about the federal government’s deliber- ate destruction of the career of my great-uncle Alphaeus Hunton, based largely on his role as a trustee for the Civil Rights Congress, a group labeled by the Senate as — you guessed it — a purveyor of “misinformation.” So forgive me if, in this burgeon- ing war on misinformation, I remain a resister. America has been down this road before, and the results were ugly. I’m old-fashioned enough to believe that your freedom to shout what I consider false is the best protection for my freedom to shout what I consider true. I won’t deny a certain pleasurable frisson as the right cowers before what was once its own weapon of choice. And I quite recognize that falsehoods, if widely believed, can lead to bad outcomes. Nevertheless, I’m terrifi ed at the notion that the left would want to return to an era when those in power are applauded for deciding which views constitute misinformation. So if the alternatives are a boister- ous, unruly public debate, where people sometimes believe falsehoods, and a well-ordered public debate where the ability to make one’s point is effectively subject to the whims of offi cially as- signed truth-sayers, the choice is easy: I’ll take the unruly boister every time. ——— Stephen L. Carter is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a professor of law at Yale University and was a clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. His novels include “The Emperor of Ocean Park,” and his latest nonfi ction book is “Invisible: The Forgotten Story of the Black Woman Lawyer Who Took Down America’s Most Powerful Mobster.” OTHER VIEWS Masking up again, and stiffer vaccine mandates Editorial from New York Daily News: New York Mayor Bill de Blasio had a week to consider the CDC rec- ommendation that “fully vaccinated people wear a mask in public indoor settings in areas of substantial or high transmission” of COVID-19, as the quickly spreading delta variant has necessitated a change. Despite plenty of time, the mayor and his health commissioner are only rec- ommending the recommendation. The formal legal term is “ducking.” It’s our recommendation, too, but unlike the Health Department, we don’t have the ability to issue a mandate, which is the best way to boost compliance. New Yorkers have plenty of experience with COVID-19, and those wise enough to get vaccinated (de Blasio just marked 10 million doses) are already putting their masks back on inside. City Hall’s decree would only help. Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he agrees with the CDC, but he can’t impose a new mask rule unless the Legislature gives him that power, which they’re not going to do. For a year, de Blasio wanted author- ity returned to local control from Albany. He has it. Now use it; re- quiring masking now will increase the chances that this COVID-19 wave passes more quickly, and we can go back to bare faces indoors again soon. On vaccines, both the mayor and governor have urged private employers require the shot (as has President Biden), but they’ve only taken small steps toward that goal with their own workforces, settling for a weaker vax-or-weekly-test option, about which some unions still balked. Cuomo did go the whole way of mandatory vax with the limited number of people working with patients in state-run health hospitals. De Blasio was correct to issue an executive order requiring that every new employee get vaccinated or provide legitimate evidence of medi- cal or religious exemption. If it’s good enough for new cops and new fi refi ghters and new teachers, it’s good enough for those who started working last week or last year or decades ago. It’s an easy slogan, especially for employees interacting with the public and unvaccinated kids: No jab, no job. CONTACT YOUR PUBLIC OFFICIALS President Joe Biden: The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D.C. 20500; 202-456-1111; to send comments, go to www.whitehouse.gov. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley: D.C. offi ce: 313 Hart Senate Offi ce Building, U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C., 20510; 202-224-3753; fax 202-228-3997. Portland offi ce: One World Trade Center, 121 S.W. Salmon St. Suite 1250, Portland, OR 97204; 503-326-3386; fax 503-326-2900. Baker City offi ce, 1705 Main St., Suite 504, 541- 278-1129; merkley.senate.gov. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden: D.C. offi ce: 221 Dirksen Senate Offi ce Building, Washington, D.C., 20510; 202-224-5244; fax 202-228- 2717. La Grande offi ce: 105 Fir St., No. 210, La Grande, OR 97850; 541-962-7691; fax, 541-963-0885; wyden.senate.gov. U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz (2nd District): D.C. offi ce: 2182 Rayburn Offi ce Building, Washington, D.C., 20515, 202-225- 6730; fax 202-225-5774. La Grande offi ce: 1211 Washington Ave., La Grande, OR 97850; 541-624-2400, fax, 541-624-2402; walden. house.gov. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown: 254 State Capitol, Salem, OR 97310; 503-378-3111; www.governor.oregon.gov. Oregon State Treasurer Tobias Read: oregon.treasurer@ ost.state.or.us; 350 Winter St. NE, Suite 100, Salem OR 97301- 3896; 503-378-4000. Oregon Attorney General Ellen F. Rosenblum: Justice Building, Salem, OR 97301-4096; 503-378-4400. Oregon Legislature: Legislative documents and information are available online at www.leg.state.or.us.