A4 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Tuesday, August 23, 2022 • Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL County seeks to legalize public road access F or a route that’s steep, narrow, strewn with rocks and inaccessible to many vehicles, the Pine Creek Road has attracted quite a lot of attention the past 2 years. And quite a lot of litigation. But the controversy over this road on the east side of the Elkhorn Mountains, about a dozen miles north- west of Baker City, isn’t surprising. The issue isn’t the condition of the road, but where it goes. The road not only accesses several parcels of pri- vate property, some of which have cabins, but it leads to some of the more scenic alpine country in Baker County. After passing through swathes of private property, the road enters the Wallowa-Whitman Na- tional Forest. It’s the access route to Pine Creek Reser- voir, a popular place for visitors to see mountain goats on the eastern slopes of Rock Creek Butte, at 9,106 feet the tallest summit in the range. The road ends at an unofficial trail that crosses a ridge and descends to Rock Creek Lake, another jewel of the Elkhorns. It was inevitable, then, that people would be up- set after David McCarty bought the largest chunk of private land in the area, 1,560 acres, in September 2020, then installed a locked gate at the east end of his property. Baker County commissioners reacted to the subse- quent public outcry by cutting the lock. After McCarty filed a lawsuit against the county in April 2021, commissioners started the process, un- der Oregon law, of declaring the road a public right- of-way. Commissioners gave final approval, on Aug. 17, to a resolution doing so, and ordering all gates and other obstacles to be removed. The requirements didn’t take effect immediately, as the resolution is in a 60-day appeal period. Commissioners’ legal action was appropriate considering the importance of the road and its de- cades-long history of public access. Unfortunately, that access had never been formalized. In court fil- ings McCarty has pointed out that before he bought the property he reviewed a title report that showed no public rights-of-way across his property coinciding with the road. McCarty’s suit, in which he is asking the county to pay $730,000 if the road is deemed to be public, is still active. So is the lawsuit that two couples, who own property adjacent to McCarty’s, filed in late July. They’re asking for at least $250,000 each for loss of en- joyment of their property. The Pine Creek Road controversy illustrates the potential issues that can arise when a road has been customarily used by the public for decades, but never actually had a legal right-of-way. This is hardly sur- prising, considering such issues weren’t necessarily important when the county was young. The county’s new resolution doesn’t end the dispute over Pine Creek Road — the two lawsuits are pending. But ideally the commissioners’ action will legally, and permanently, establish the public’s right to travel a road that has been a popular route into the high coun- try of the Elkhorns, and access for private landowners, for decades. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor YOUR VIEWS Sarcasm and stereotyping intended to highlight problems That someone took um- brage with my last letter to the editor is unsurprising. I ste- reotyped by design. My goal was to show the un-researched kneejerk reactions and hypoc- risy that permeates our locale. It was meant as a humorous smack. The quiet zone is a smart, logical and very worthy pur- suit. I certainly apologize if in any way I made that goal more difficult to achieve, since it will not be voted on by our good, smart, hard-work- ing, welcoming community members. I think not. I am also confident that inside my “disparaging circle” I am not alone. I’m guessing there are others who don’t feel obliged to accept or respect everyone. Respect is a two-way street. My sarcasm and stereotyping was meant to annoy and irri- tate, just as I am annoyed, ir- ritated and appalled on a daily basis, “Let’s Go Brandon,” “Joe and the Ho Gotta Go” “Move Oregon’s Border”. ... There is a little shop downtown with a notice posted threatening you if you enter with a mask? There exists a flag on one of our lovely city streets “F” Joe Biden and F you for voting for him”? The pickup trucks wav- ing the Confederate flag. Who is making who feel less than or othered? Not conducive to any lovey dovey feelings emanat- ing from this guy. The deep partisan trenches already exist. ... no digging necessary. Many of the words and hand gestures hurled our way during both the Pride and Woman Rights walks were hardly filled with kindness and respect. Let’s not forget about the BLM rally (intimi- dators brandishing assault ri- fles actually showed up for this small respectful gathering?) Hard to make peace with that. If I offended with my outland- ish, cartoonish stereotypes maybe you should be look- ing at why? I leave you with a quote from Salman Rushdie: “The moment you declare a set of ideas to be immune from criticism, satire, deri- sion or contempt, freedom of thought becomes impossible.” Mike Meyer Baker City OTHER VIEWS After a year under Taliban rule, Afghans feel the price of peace EDITORIAL FROM THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: A fghanistan today under Taliban rule virtually mirrors what the coun- try was like before the Ameri- can invasion in October 2001. Girls cannot attend sec- ondary school. Once again, women no longer work as lawyers, judges or police offi- cers. Men must wear beards and traditional Afghan garb. As it was before, moral- ity police scan streetscapes to make sure women are in burqas and accompanied by a male relative. The country has been fire- walled from any Western influence. Movies, foreign broadcasts and music have all disappeared. A year after the Taliban retook Kabul and imposed its oppressive brand of gov- ernance, Afghanistan enjoys peace. But that peace comes at a stiff price — acquiescence to a fundamentalist, backward way of life that cannot be de- fied. For the U.S., Afghanistan poses a profound foreign pol- icy quandary. The country is starving. Following the Taliban take- over, Afghanistan’s economy collapsed. Unemployment and food prices skyrocketed. Afghan families are selling their household belongings to survive. The United Nations World Food Program says more than half of the coun- try’s population isn’t getting enough food, and 25 out of its 34 provinces are experiencing acute malnutrition at emer- gency levels. Afghanistan’s central bank has $7 billion that could help buoy the country’s economy, but it’s in the wrong place. Af- ter the Taliban took over the country, the Biden adminis- tration froze the $7 billion that the Afghan central bank had previously deposited in the Federal Reserve Bank in New York. That money remains frozen. In February, Biden de- cided to set aside half for fam- ilies of Sept. 11 victims to pur- sue in court. The other $3.5 billion was supposed to aid the Afghan people, but this week the Biden administration an- nounced it would continue to keep that money frozen. The reason? Ayman al-Za- wahri. The al-Qaida leader was killed July 31 by a U.S. preci- sion drone strike as he stood on a balcony at a safe house in a Kabul neighborhood where many Taliban leaders live. Though the Taliban deny providing al-Zawahri safe ha- ven, it’s abundantly clear that they were indeed sheltering him. The house he was in be- longs to a top aide of Sirajud- din Haqqani, the Taliban’s interior minister and head of terrorist group the Haqqani network. After the strike, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the Taliban had “grossly violated” the terms of the withdrawal accord reached between the extremist group and the U.S. Essentially, the Taliban gave Biden little choice but to continue the freeze on the $3.5 billion in Afghan assets held in the U.S. Releasing that money to the Taliban re- gime risks seeing it end up in the hands of terrorist groups. Though the Taliban portray themselves as a legitimate government with the best in- terests of the Afghan people in mind, their continued alle- giance to al-Qaida and uncon- scionable treatment of women say otherwise. Taliban leaders know what they have to do. Allow women to pursue any career track they wish, permit girls to attend secondary school and do away with crude tools of oppression such as the regime’s morality police. And, of course, Taliban leaders must prove to the U.S. and the rest of the world that they no longer align them- selves with terror groups. Words won’t be enough. It will be up to the U.S. to decide when the regime has shown it no longer is a terror enabler, and hence a threat to the West. Until then, it must be treated as a pariah state. Gov- ernments that harbor terror- ists can’t expect the rest of the world to lend a helping hand. Domestically, the Taliban can help themselves by helping their people — not with re- strictive edicts and brute force, but with basic rights. COLUMN Deceptive marketing of the ‘Inflation Reduction Act’ BY E.J. ANTONI T he so-called Inflation Reduc- tion Act is one of the greatest examples of deceptive market- ing around today. Not only will the legislation fail to reduce inflation, it will further increase prices. Inflation is fundamentally a prob- lem of too much money chasing too few goods and services. It was hardly a surprise: In the last two years, the government has spent, borrowed and printed trillions of dol- lars while also hamstringing produc- tion in the economy. The result was a vast increase in the amount of money in circulation without comparable growth in the size of the real economy. All that ex- tra money bid up the price of goods and services, a phenomenon we call inflation. Unfortunately, this latest piece of legislation in Washington does noth- ing to solve the problem. It does not reduce the amount of money in circu- lation. Worse, it reduces the quantity of goods and services through mea- sures like higher energy taxes and ex- cessive regulation. People underestimate just how much energy affects the price of ev- erything we do and everything we buy. Before an item can be placed on a store shelf, it had to be transported there, whether on a train, a ship, a plane, a truck or even all of these. En- ergy is used not just in transportation and manufacturing, but also in sup- plying services. The modern world could not func- tion without electricity. More than 60% of electricity in the U.S. comes from coal, oil and natural gas. Addi- tional taxes on those fuel sources un- der this new legislation will drive up electricity prices, which will trickle down into higher prices everywhere in the economy. Yet this legislation is marketed as providing relief to consumers — a bald-faced lie. Meanwhile, natural gas is not only a widely used fuel for both power sta- tions and home use, but also used in producing countless chemicals that go into making even more products. Ad- ditional taxes on natural gas will make all these more expensive. Once again, the marketing around this legislation is not merely mislead- ing, but exactly opposite its actual ef- fects. The higher prices that stem from these tax increases on energy will ulti- mately decrease the amount of goods and services that consumers can af- ford. As fewer goods and services are traded, the economy contracts. In June, sky-high energy prices proved a sure-fire way to decrease consumer purchases. Gasoline consumption in July fell to levels below where it was two years prior — during the pan- demic when there were mandatory lockdowns, causing people to drasti- cally cut back their driving. As if the energy taxes were not bad enough, the legislation provides for 87,000 new IRS agents. We’re told they’re intended to hound tax-cheat- ing billionaires, but this is just more deceptive marketing. There are fewer than 3,000 billionaires in the country, and they already face high audit rates. The new army of agents will allow the IRS to perform an additional 1.2 mil- lion audits a year, far exceeding the number of billionaires supposedly in the crosshairs. The claims about only going after those making more than $400,000 a year is also just a politi- cal talking point because when Con- gress had the chance to enshrine that into the statute, it was voted down by Democrats – strictly on party lines. The expansion of the IRS will target the middle class. Unlike the claims of going after tax cheats, the massively expanded IRS will prey upon people who are overwhelmed by a 10-mil- lion-word tax code. In one experi- ment, when 46 different tax profes- sionals were given the same family’s tax return to file, they produced 46 different estimates for what the family either owed or was entitled to in a refund. Even if the IRS expansion is suc- cessful in raising billions of dollars from the already-squeezed middle and working classes, that money does not magically disappear from the economy; the government will simply spend it instead of house- holds. The amount of currency in circulation has not been reduced, it has merely changed hands. In other words, there is still no reduction in inflation. The talking points and even the name of the Inflation Reduction Act are misleading at best. The more one digs into the legislation, the bigger the lies become. Perhaps a single line from the 1940s film “Pinocchio” best sums up the marketing of this tax- and-spend boondoggle: “A lie keeps growing and growing until it’s as plain as the nose on your face.”  E. J. Antoni is a research fellow for regional economics at the Heritage Foundation’s Center for Data Analysis and a Senior Fellow at Committee to Unleash Prosperity.