A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL ‘Mandate’ a mostly misused word T he word “mandate” was mentioned many times during the Baker County commissioners’ work session Wednesday aft ernoon, Jan. 12, at the Baker County Events Center. Th e word was used in reference to the executive orders Oregon Gov. Kate Brown has issued requiring people to wear masks in indoor public spac- es, and some people to be vaccinated against COVID-19. But this gathering was a blatant example of how the “mandate” for masks is hardly mandatory. Few of the 40 or so people in the audience wore a mask, even though the county’s announcement for the event stated that masks were required and that “all individuals in attendance at meetings under the control of Baker County are expected to comply with this rule.” As for vaccinations, aff ected employees in many agencies, including Baker City and the Baker 5J School District, were allowed to avoid inoculation by claim- ing a religious or medical exemption. Th e ostensible topic of the work session was a request by a local group, YOUR VIEWS Preserving the sanctity of voting crucial to democracy Baker County United, for commission- ers to adopt a resolution declaring a “constitutional county.” Several speakers contend that such a resolution would give the county clout in fl outing Brown’s mandates. It’s certainly reasonable to emphasize the importance of elected offi cials to fulfi ll their oath to uphold both the state and federal constitutions. But as Commissioner Bruce Nichols, who participated in the work session remotely, pointed out, the governor’s executive orders, however onerous and ineff ective they might be, have so far withstood legal challenges. To defy those orders, Nichols believes, is to violate his oath. “I too do not like mandates, forced vaccinations. and the ongoing never-ending rules,” Nichols wrote, a comment that was read aloud during the work session. At the same time that work session was going on, hundreds of students in Baker schools, and their teachers, were in classrooms, wearing masks. Some people who addressed commissioners criticized the mask requirement for schools. But medical experts say that Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act are important starting points for securing our democ- Voting is a fundamental con- racy. Kudos to our Senators Jeff stitutional right, and the very Merkley and Ron Wyden for basis of a democracy. If you supporting this important leg- truly champion democracy and islation and, especially to Sen- our constitution, I encourage ator Merkley for championing you to call national legislators fair and secure elections. and encourage them to support Barbara O’Neal voting rights and safeguards. Baker City Everyone with the right to vote deserves the kind of safe, open Thank you to Cpl. Dennis and accessible voting we enjoy Lefever for helping a here in Oregon. stranger All of us deserve to have our vote counted and respected. What a heartwarming “good State legislators should not deed” story told by the travel- have the power to overturn the ing stranger, Steve McKibben, vote of the people — that is not involving a Baker County Sher- democracy. iff Officer, Cpl. Dennis Lefe- I have been following an ver! Thank you, Cpl. Lefever, organization called Represen- for being a good man, show- tUs since its inception. Repre- ing caring for a total stranger sentUs (at www.represent.us) in need of help; for showing brings together conservatives, concern to do the right thing, progressives, and everyone in for showing compassion to do between to pass powerful laws even more! Thank you! that end corruption and fix our Cheryl and Richard broken political system. They Gushman support fixing our election sys- Baker City tems, stopping political bribery, and ending secret money. If we Why we’re opposed to want a country by and for the ‘constitutional county’ people, we need to start by tak- proposal ing multinational corporations, foreign powers, “dark” money, My husband and I had and millionaires out of our vot- planned to appear in person at ing processes. The Freedom to the Wednesday, Jan. 12 Baker County Commissioners’ meeting where members of Baker County United (BCU) were to present a proposal to change Baker County into a “constitutional county.” None of the BCU members wore masks at the previous meet- ing so we sent our response by email. Here are our objections to changing Baker County into a “constitutional county”: • We oppose the concept that “constitutional sheriffs” would have more power than our state and federal govern- ments in determining laws af- fecting Baker County. • The state and federal gov- ernments provide oversight that protects counties from being politically hijacked by a minority, fringe group with one view. BCU fits that pro- file. • We are opposed to the fol- lowing organizations: BCU; the County Sheriffs and Po- lice Officers Association (CSPOA); and Oath Keepers. These groups are considered far right extremists with an- ti-government platforms by Southern Poverty Law Center. They believe state and federal governments are subordinate to the power of local “consti- tutional sheriffs.” • We believe BCU should follow the required protocol masks, though far from perfect pro- tection, can potentially help reduce the spread of the virus. Masks certainly don’t hurt. And one thing is indisput- able — Baker students have been in their classrooms for the entire school year so far. Which is where they ought to be, regardless of the pandemic. Yet the biggest threat to continuing in-person school, as well as sports and other extracurricular activities, isn’t a government mandate. It’s the omicron variant, which, though less virulent than previous strains, is more infec- tious. More than a dozen school em- ployees missed work on Jan. 12, some of them due to COVID-19 infection or exposure. Th ere’s reason to be optimistic that the current surge in infections won’t last as long as previous trends. And statistics show that omicron is less likely to cause severe illness or death — espe- cially in people who are vaccinated. In that respect, omicron is similar to the delta variant. Brown seems to under- stand that, despite record numbers of cases this month, the situation isn’t so of obtaining signatures and creating a Charter before their proposal is allowed on the November ballot. • Finally, we believe strongly in our state and fed- eral Constitutions, the right for each person’s vote to count, the importance of op- posing views, and, the neces- sity of the difficult process of compromise. In essence, we believe in our democracy. Karen and David Andruss New Bridge dire as raw numbers might suggest. Th e governor hasn’t issued any new, restrictive executive orders in response to omicron. And as the Jan. 12 work session made clear, individuals are still deciding whether or not to wear masks, never mind the governor’s putative “man- dates.” Th e government isn’t sanction- ing people for their decision, either. But wearing a mask, in situations where doing so might reduce the risk of transmitting this virus, isn’t capitula- tion to a draconian government edict. Baker students and school staff aren’t supplicants — they’re doing what they can to keep schools going and, poten- tially, spare themselves and others from illness. If the county doesn’t intend to en- force the mask “mandate,” then it ought to cease implying that it will do so by posting signs or stating, in announcing public events, that it expects attendees to comply. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor Baker County needs to approve a constitutional county resolution I was not able to attend the work session Jan. 12 because I had to work. But I want to make my voice heard to the Baker City Herald that I am absolutely behind the consti- tutional county resolution. We must have that resolution in place because the illegal and unconstitutional mandates, which I remind you are abso- lutely not laws, are trampling on our rights in the guise of “it’s for your own good” rhetoric! If you are unfamiliar with history, I remind you that Hitler, Stalin, Mao and other dictators and murdering “leaders” did the same thing to control the peo- ple. Enough is enough! Landers County, Nevada, has already proven our cowardly commis- sioners wrong. We can and should follow their example! Shannon Watt Baker City The simple pleasure of going to the movies T he epiphany arrived while I was lounging in a well-padded chair in the Eltrym Theater, watching Spider-Man soar around the Statue of Liberty, attached by gos- samer threads. Spider-Men, actually. The latest film to feature the ac- robatic arachnid-human hybrid su- perhero — “Spider-Man: No Way Home” — in fact boasts a trio, bring- ing together the three actors who have portrayed the character in the cinematic series — Tobey Maguire, Andrew Garfield and, most recently, Tom Holland. I have seen only a few of the sev- eral films during their nearly two-de- cade run, but I’m familiar enough with the story to not feel especially befuddled as the plot progresses. It was an entertaining movie that seemed to pass, as engrossing films do, much more rapidly than its run- ning time of more than two and a half hours suggests. My bladder, alas, which has con- siderably less patience than it did during its carefree youth, reminded me, with its customary urgency, about the soda I had guzzled even before the previews were finished. (Ice-chilled and carbonated liq- uid being, of course, a necessary chaser when you’re gobbling the salty, slightly greasy popcorn with- out which no trip to the theater is complete.) As I watched the three red-and- blue suited actors perform their computer-aided heroics during the film’s predictably spectacular cli- max, it struck me, with a slightly jarring suddenness, that Baker City residents have been seeing similar rousing conclusions to big screen epics, in this very space, for the bet- ter part of a century. The Eltrym opened on June 27, 1940, at the northwest corner of First Street and Valley Avenue. Its unusual name, so unlike the Rios and Roxys and Rivaltos that littered smalltown American down- towns during the 20th century, hon- ors Myrtle Buckmiller. With her husband, Frank, Myrtle planned the theater’s construction. Sadly, she didn’t see its grand opening. Myrtle — Eltrym is her name spelled back- ward — died on Jan. 3, 1940. A building 81 years old is not, to be sure, especially ancient by the standards of Baker City, which dates to 1864. Several venerable structures, in- cluding St. Francis de Sales Cathe- dral, the Geiser Grand Hotel, the Baker Tower, Baker City Hall and the Baker County Courthouse, are each older than the Eltrym — by several decades in some cases. Like the Eltrym, all of those, with the exception of the Baker Tower (which I find difficult to refer to as anything but Hotel Baker), serve es- sentially the same functions today as when they were built. Yet theaters, it seems to me, are different — unique even. Jayson Jacoby Movies are a shared experience — the residents of a remote city in Northeastern Oregon watch the same scenes as New Yorkers. The Baker City native might have pre- cious little in common otherwise with the Manhattanite, but when they each settle into their respec- tive seats, and the house lights dim, the 3,000 miles between them, and the perhaps even greater gulfs in their backgrounds and their fu- tures, disappear in the glow of the images that appear on the screen. It wasn’t this cultural bridge, though, that I was thinking of as I watched the Spider-Men defy gravity (and, indeed, logic, but of course the temporary suspension of reality is among the great attrac- tions of the cinema). Rather I was pondering all those years and decades that have passed since 1940, that purgatorial year between the start of the great cata- clysm in Europe and America’s de- scent into the maelstrom. I imagined, as I crumpled my popcorn bag, entombing the drift of unpopped kernels before my urge for one more savory mouth- ful left me with an aching molar, about how many thousands of peo- ple had sat where I was sitting. I thought about how many movies they had watched, how many gasps of surprise at some plot twist, how many tears were shed during par- ticularly poignant scenes, how many ounces of soda were expecto- rated during a comedic interlude. (I have a distinct memory, while watching one of the “Austin Pow- ers” movies at the Eltrym, of learn- ing what it feels like to have 7-Up travel through the nasal passages. Cold. And tickly.) The Eltrym’s history doesn’t quite extend back to the transition from silent films to “talkies,” but it’s close. Most of the movies that are widely acclaimed as classics made their debut here, in the hinterlands of Oregon, just as they did in the great metropolises. I imagine the marquee and all the titles that have appeared be- tween its garishly colored lights, on warm summer nights and on win- ter evenings when the gleam strug- gled to penetrate the shifting flakes of a blizzard. That one modest space, hanging over the sidewalk on the west side of First Street, marks the passage of time in its inimitable way, and wel- comes us to come inside, where we know it will be dark and warm and smelling pleasantly of popcorn. From “Citizen Kane,” which came out the year after the Eltrym opened, through “The Godfather” and “Star Wars” in the 1970s, “Harry Potter” a couple decades later, and so many dozens of others, before and since. (A movie scene which perfectly captures this concept is in “Field of Dreams,” when Ray Kinsella, played by Kevin Costner, is strolling the downtown of Chisholm, Minnesota, at night. The movie is set in 1988, but Kinsella realizes he has, as a person can do in the fictional world of film, gone back in time. First he sees a poster for Richard Nixon’s reelection campaign, and then the camera fo- cuses on the theater marquee — the Plaza, alas, not nearly so interesting as the Eltrym — which is advertis- ing “The Godfather.” Both place the scene indubitably in 1972.) The small town theater is not so common today as it was in decades past, supplanted in some cases by anodyne suburban multiplexes that have all the architectural charm of an East German apartment com- plex, and in others by the inexorable changes in the economy. Lucky we are that the Eltrym per- sists. In this one building, generations have joined in a grand American tradition. And it’s a tradition which, unlike so much else which has been rendered unrecognizable to our fore- bears by technology, in particular the digital sort, still bears its original name, so rich and so enticing in its possibilities. Going to the movies. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.