A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Oregon money managers choose Russia I t’s not our fault. We don’t have the expertise. Our hands are tied. It’s about maximizing profits and beating investment benchmarks. Don’t worry, it’s not going to undermine Oregon’s investment returns for the Public Employees Re- tirement System. We have rarely read an article so syrupy thick with excuses. But those are some provided by the state of Oregon and investment professionals about Oregon’s investments in Russia in Ted Sickinger’s excellent overview in The Oregonian. Oregon has lost some $100 million — at least for now — in its $95 billion investment portfolio be- cause of the invasion of Ukraine by Russia and the resulting collapse of the value of Russian assets. Nobody would say $100 million is insignificant. It is, though, relatively insignificant when compared to the scope of Oregon’s overall investments. State employees of Oregon and people on state committees overseeing the state’s investments don’t actually decide where most of the state’s money is invested. They hand it over to others who man- age funds. Those professional money managers look for ways to invest it. They are always looking to maximize profits, to exceed benchmarks. Rus- sia could be a win. The state says that now that the markets in Russia are essentially closed Oregon can’t pull its money out if it wanted to. The state says it doesn’t have the expertise to make decisions about good and bad regimes. It hires money managers who do the risk calculations and look at the geopolitics. So when Russia supported separatist movements in 2008 in Georgia and more than 2,000 people were killed, those money managers thought it was OK to keep on investing in Russia. So when Russia invaded Crimea in 2014 and ab- sorbed it into Russia, money managers thought it was OK to keep on investing in Russia. And so now it is Oregon investments that are helping pay for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Your money at work. OK, we can’t fault people for not knowing Putin’s mind and not perfectly predicting the invasion of Ukraine. What we don’t hear are Oregon politi- cians asking questions. We don’t hear our elected leaders, at least, debating what Oregon might do better about its investment policy. In February, there were reports China had en- croached on Nepal. China has militarized islands it built in the South China Sea and has always been keenly interested in Taiwan. But after Ukraine, Or- egon will just count on the money manager system that has worked for us so well. 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. YOUR VIEWS Baker City’s generosity keeps couple gon. She has rejected advice to be “pack- aged for public consumption,” and does coming back to town all of her own correspondence work! Hello Baker City community. We would like to thank a special couple, who sur- prised us completely by paying our total dinner bill on Feb. 24 at the Latitude 45 Grill! We don’t know who they are (our waitress was sworn to secrecy), although we suspect it was a sweet couple across the restaurant from us. They witnessed us asking the waitress to take a picture of us for our 40th anniversary celebration. This single act was tremendously gen- erous, unexpected, and indicative of the people in Baker City we’ve found. Two separate years we have driven to Baker City from the Tri Cities for an anniver- sary mini ski vacation. Both the town and Anthony Lakes Ski Area have filled our hearts with warm and welcoming experi- ences. Besides the beauty there, the shop owners, hotel and restaurant staff, ski area staff, and residents have all given us a “home away from home” feeling, which is rare! And certainly gives us good reason to return again and again. We thank you all, and especially the one couple whose gift was beyond generous (and already paid forward on numerous occasions)! We hope their anniversary is as joyful as ours turned out to be! Warmest thanks, Lindsay and John Dale Richland, Washington Why I’m excited to cast my vote for Kerry McQuisten I’d like to share my excitement about gubernatorial candidate, Kerry McQuis- ten, who offers the most forthright way for us to reclaim our state. Kerry has put herself on the line with unprecedented transparency in her social media accounts, prolific commentary/ posting on the issues, and tireless efforts to repeatedly visit every county in Ore- We feel that Kerry McQuisten fulfills the requirements that our governor will have to have in order to make Oregon a She hasn’t promised the moon, dished great state again. out emotional appeals, or become side- What can we say about Kerry! She tracked by campaign fever. She is simply, knows her Constitution, she knows the and very seriously, ready to work for us. laws of the state, she knows government Kerry’s solid foundation is her unshake- protocol, and she knows that we need to able faith in the God-given rights that are get government back into the hands of the already ours. She has a deep desire to pro- people. Kerry has been knowledgeable, vide Oregonians the freedom to utilize those rights in a lawful manner, allowing straightforward, honest and dignified in us to take responsibility for our own lives. running her campaign. We will be voting for Kerry McQuisten She will use her background and knowl- edge to clear the path as we move forward and ask that you vote for her too. Joe and Wilma Johnson to fight against the chaos that has crept Baker City into our communities and beautiful state. If you take the time to ask Kerry about McQuisten has common sense and any current legislative happenings, she will know them by name and particulars. conservative values She is well-versed in the issues facing We are supporting Kerry McQuisten Oregonians, and regards none of them for governor. We have known Kerry since as insurmountable. She will approach a she was in grade school at Burnt River/ necessary course-change one step at a time, as she has done with her grassroots Unity. Kerry is a seventh-generation Or- egonian. She grew up on a cattle ranch in campaign. Eastern Oregon, so she understands the Kerry cares about everything we do; rural part of Oregon. She had the oppor- small business, excellence in education, tunity to live and work overseas before agricultural/environmental balance, healthy employment, and honor for per- returning stateside to complete her edu- cation at Willamette University. She has sonal freedoms. Combined with her ex- had a chance to experience both city and perience in larger communities, and her practical understanding of governmental rural living. Kerry is now back in Baker City where law, it’s a win. If you’re tired of empty promises, tired she owns her own publishing company, is mayor of Baker City, and raising her two of politics, and ready to “be the change,” join me in voting for Kerry McQuisten for daughters. Kerry has campaigned in ALL 36 coun- Oregon’s next governor. Whitney Black ties in Oregon to listen to the concerns of Baker City ALL Oregonians. She cares! If you want someone who has good Kerry McQuisten is ready to lead common sense with conservative val- ues, and someone who will stand up as Oregon’s governor and fight to get our Oregon back, then Kerry McQuisten is just the candidate We have watched the race for gover- nor with great interest, knowing that who for you! is elected will be key to the future of the Patty Trost state of Oregon. Unity COLUMN Is society deferring too much to the experts? BY CORY FRANKLIN In one of the most dramatic mo- ments of the Senate confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, Sen. Mar- sha Blackburn asked the judge, “Can you provide a definition for the word ‘woman’?” After a brief hesitation, Jackson re- sponded, “I’m not a biologist.” Now on its face, that is a silly re- mark because you don’t need a bi- ologist to define what a woman is. (The percentage of babies born with indeterminate sex, in which a medi- cal evaluation is necessary, is less than 1%). But upon consideration, it was actually a clever response because it was basically the only answer avail- able to Jackson that would avoid en- raging either the Republican senators or her progressive allies. It was a pru- dent nonanswer. Yet, putting aside for a minute her predicament before the Senate, Jack- son’s answer provides a window into the current role conferred on experts and how reliance on experts may be encroaching into territory that was once within the purview of com- mon sense. For those on Twitter who are wait- ing to pounce with a charge that I’m minimizing the importance of ex- perts, let me state the obvious: A func- tioning society depends on experts. They are indispensable to every pro- fession for tasks ranging from devel- oping essential software to building bridges to performing cardiac surgery. But in an ever more complex so- ciety, have we run the risk of be- coming overly dependent on experts — delegating decisions and respon- sibilities to them that are outside their domain? The danger is quite simply this: Ex- perts are human. Some are modest and self-effacing; others crave atten- tion, money and power. When the latter group enters the public forum because “we rely on them,” there is trouble ahead. Politicians court their favor and flatter them with public moneys and posts that are often little more than sinecures. In return, those politicians use their expert opinions to advance political aims. There is an aphorism that if you put a cup of soup in a bowl of garbage, it’s garbage. And if you put a cup of gar- bage in a bowl of soup, it’s garbage. Along those lines, if you inject politics into science, it’s politics. And if you in- ject science into politics, it’s politics. When politics become a consid- eration, the temptation for experts to abandon objective interpretations of scientific data is undeniable. Wit- ness how during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, public health authorities deemed some po- litical rallies safer than others based on nothing other than the cause the rally supported. No matter that in any case, tens of thousands of peo- ple who practiced limited distanc- ing came from all over the country to shout and chant, thereby possibly spreading the virus. Experts deter- mined that in terms of safety, what mattered was the cause. There was nothing scientific about that. The situation becomes even more parlous when experts are permitted to make public policy, and governments hide behind those they appointed. Margaret Thatcher once said, “Ad- visers advise, ministers decide.” But during the COVID-19 pandemic, not only the United Kingdom but also the U.S. and most of the world seemed to eschew that dictum. In retrospect, the plan of public health authorities to lock down society “to flatten the curve” seems to have been a monumental act of hubris, consid- ering the effects on the economy and especially on young people. The pub- lic health community failed to recog- nize that others like economists and business leaders had to be consulted to assess the complex trade-offs. The best illustration of what can happen when expertise morphs into a political tool is when Soviet leader Josef Stalin made one scientist, Tro- fim Lysenko, the arbiter of all Soviet agricultural science in the 1930s. Any scientist who criticized him was criticizing the Communist Party and the state itself. That political faith in Lysenko’s junk science caused mass starvation and the destruction of the careers of many dissenting but honest Soviet scientists. It slowed the progress of Soviet science for de- cades. We have crossed the Rubicon re- garding our dependence on experts when a smart, Harvard-educated Su- preme Court justice cites the need for a biologist to define womanhood. Think how far afield this is from 1965, when Bob Dylan penned a seminal lyric for the Vietnam gener- ation: “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.” Dylan was in effect telling a rebel- lious Vietnam generation not to place too much faith in experts — use your common sense in your efforts to bring down the establishment. Today, society has done a 180 — the Viet- nam generation is now the establish- ment, and employing experts is a key tactic to asserting authority and, in some case, to infantilizing the public. To be “guided by the science” should never be an excuse for us to blindfold ourselves willingly in defer- ence to expert opinion. █ Dr. Cory Franklin is a retired intensive care physician.