A8 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 11, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor State money comes with a gag order W e read something peculiar in the Malheur Enterprise: The board of a public development company has dictated that a family in Nyssa is forbidden to talk to the media if it wants up to $400,000 to help with an industrial road. That’s the government saying if you want a benefit, you get gagged. The background: The Froerers farm about 4,000 acres. The plan is to close a railroad reload center and move it to another location. That means the Froerers must truck their goods several additional miles to get them loaded. The money is from the Malheur County Devel- opment Corp. to build a new access road for the Froerers. The state de- partment of transportation is pro- viding funding, according to the newspaper. The gag order expires when the project is completed. The Froerers argue they were of- fered an unfair choice: Accept the gag order and get the money or no money. They signed. It’s not clear exactly why a gag order was put in place, though one reason could be obvious. The Froerers have in the past criticized Greg Smith, the reload center project manager, director of the Malheur County Economic De- velopment Department and a state representative. Smith said he didn’t put the gag provision in the con- tract. Lawyers did. Gag orders do occur in court cases to limit publicity and attempt to protect the right to a fair trial. And parties sometimes have sim- ilar provisions in legal settlements and nondisclosure agreements in development deals. For instance, Apple Inc. has had confidentiality agreements with Crook County and Prineville officials to keep them from talking about the com- pany’s plans there. This seems different. State money is being spent only on con- dition that a family keep quiet, when the family has been outspo- ken in the past. Yes the farmers are getting a benefit to compensate them for an expense they will pay because the reload center is mov- ing. But it also looks like state dol- lars are being used to muzzle criti- cism. Is that OK with you? Which is right, require or encourage vaccine? O regon State University-Cas- cades will be following OSU policy and requiring vaccina- tion for COVID-19. Central Oregon Community College will not require it, as of now. Why are they different? Which is right? The state has no regulation or mandate for colleges. The Oregon Health Authority says it’s up to the individual institution. Both OSU and COCC have re- quirements for other vaccinations. For instance, OSU already has vac- cination requirements for measles, mumps, rubella; meningococcal; tet- anus and diptheria; chickenpox; and Hepatitis B. There are medical and other exemptions. For most students, if they don’t have their immuniza- tions lined up, they are prevented from registering for the next term. OSU was the first public college in Oregon to require COVID vaccina- tions for faculty and staff. Students who only take part in classes online or staff who do not come on to cam- pus don’t need to have it. “This vaccination requirement is intended for students and univer- sity employees so that we mutually contribute to the greatest level of population protection possible from COVID-19,” OSU interim President Becky Johnson said in a statement. COCC’s approach is to strongly recommend the vaccine for stu- dents and employees. COCC Presi- dent Laurie Chesley told us COCC is following the guidance from the state Higher Education Coordinat- ing Council, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Ore- gon Health Authority and Gov. Kate Brown’s office. “We are focusing our efforts on pro-vaccine education and avail- ability,” she wrote us in an email. “If OHA or the Governor’s Office were to mandate COVID-19 vaccines at community colleges, we will cer- tainly comply....” Chesley believes COCC has the authority to require the COVID vaccination. It has chosen not to. The same discussion came up at the April COCC board meeting. At first, staff said COCC could not legally require the COVID vaccine. Then Chesley said it might be that such a requirement would be challenged and not hold up in court. The question is: What approach is right? Strongly encourage and re- quire the vaccination or just strongly encourage vaccination? Compulsory requirements may work. They can also alienate some people. The stu- dent populations at the institutions are also different. Could OSU and COCC both be getting it right? Editorials reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board, Publisher Heidi Wright, Editor Gerry O’Brien and Editorial Page Editor Richard Coe. They are written by Richard Coe. My Nickel’s Worth Move our schools forward For the past several years a multira- cial group of students, parents, teach- ers and community leaders have been working closely with the Bend-La Pine school district to advance fairness, eq- uity and inclusion in our schools. The nonprofit Restorative Justice and Equity group organized student town hall meetings that brought to- gether hundreds of students of all races in frank, informative and edu- cational conversations aimed at im- proving race relations and fostering a greater understanding of what it is like to be a student of color in over- whelmingly white schools. White students will attest that they were never “guilt-tripped” in these town halls and instead welcomed as friends and allies. This work has led to new multiracial, multicultural clubs run by students in our schools. All this good work is now threat- ened by four school board candidates who have lied about what this diver- sity, equity and inclusion work is and what it has accomplished. Their nega- tive spin would divide students along racial lines and make it much harder for students to come together. Don’t let this happen. Vote for Marcus LeGrand, Carrie McPherson Douglass, Janet Sarai Llerandi, and Shirley Olson to move our schools forward, not backward. — Michael Funke, Bend alleged is being taught in American schools regarding race. Among her statements was: “We believe politics have no place in the classrooms.” That Lopez-Dauenhauer made her statement on national television to a far-right political pundit makes me wonder whether the school Lo- pez-Dauenhauer attended covered the topic of “irony” and if so, whether she was present the day it was taught. — Rob Brazeau, Bend No street racing Northeast Purcell in Bend north of Empire and Yeoman have become dangerous raceways. Both the city road department and the police have been apprised of the situation, but nothing has changed. Purcell from Empire to Yeoman is a school zone that few pay atten- tion to. Additional signage reminding drivers would be beneficial. Enforce- ment would help tremendously. There have been motorcycle drag races at least twice, and hot rod “pedal to the metal” races occur regularly. Yeoman has no speed limit signs posted, so the assumption seems to be 55 regularly. Riding your bicycle on Yeoman is dangerous. While I would love to see a speed bump on Purcell, I suspect that won’t happen. So other speed reducing efforts need to be made. — Linn Harrison, Bend Irony in candidate’s comment Resist identity politics Bend-La Pine School Board can- didate Maria Lopez-Dauenhauer ap- peared on Laura Ingraham’s Fox News program recently, decrying what she In my youth I was raised to treat others as I wish to be treated and to judge others by their character and abilities. Letters policy Letters should be limited to one issue, con- tain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Since that has worked for me in life, I am taken back by the left’s promo- tion of “identity politics” with its em- phasis on race, gender, religious and sexual preferences. President Biden and the press took this to the extreme by introducing his cabinet members in terms of their race, gender, sexual preference, or re- ligious beliefs, not ability or qualifi- cations. To me, putting the emphasis on one’s race is the definition of racism and is a losing proposition. When we select someone for a position largely because of their race, or gender we risk offending someone of another race, or another gender who wasn’t se- lected. The potential for endless con- flict is high. We are approaching the point where every school board, or city council is evaluated for its racial or gender balance, with some emphasis on sexual preference and religion. Are teachers to be hired based on “identity politics,” rather than ability? I hope not. Would you board a plane on an airline that placed racial, or gender equality as a higher priority than abil- ity? As long as the selection standards are clear and everyone is given equal opportunity there should be no con- troversy. I know racism exists and we should not tolerate it. However, the current trend of labeling people racist if they disagree with you, or having politi- cians and the media using “identity politics” is placing emphasis on our differences rather than our similarities and is dividing the country. The use of “identity politics” and wokeism” should be resisted at every level. — Steve Young, Bend How to submit We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or Guest Column and mail, fax or email it to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com GUEST COLUMN Republican Party learned the wrong lesson about propaganda BY RICH BELZER T he 2020 election had me wor- ried. Over time, I became con- vinced that, given Donald Trump’s authoritar- ian leanings, if he won reelec- tion it would spell the end of democracy in the United States after more than 200 years. Naturally, I was relieved when Trump was defeated by Joe Biden, assuming that after Belzer losing the Senate and White House and having the Democrats re- tain the House, the GOP would back away from acting as a Trump cult and return to policy-based politics. I was wrong. Even following the in- vasion of the Capitol by Trump sup- porters on Jan. 6, Republicans in both the House and Senate remained in Trump’s thrall; the few Republicans in Congress who voted for impeachment (House) or conviction (Senate) be- came virtual outcasts in Trump’s GOP. Trump’s final assault on democracy, the Capitol invasion, has now been characterized as understand- able by many Republicans whose lives were in danger. It should be noted that over 400 participants in 1/6 have been indicted for a variety of crimes. The Republican Party has learned a lesson from the four years of Trump’s pres- idency but it was the wrong lesson. They learned about the effectiveness of an authoritarian tool known as pro- paganda; if you tell a lie over and over again, no matter how divergent from facts, your followers will believe it. Trump, if nothing else, was a master liar and it mattered not to him if his lies were easily proven false. He began his time in office with a lie about inau- guration crowd size that was easily dis- proved by photographic evidence. He ended his presidency with a lie about a stolen election, a massive fraud im- plemented by the Democrats that cost him the victory he so richly deserved. Let’s not forget that the Trump campaign and the Republican Party filed over 60 lawsuits challenging the supposedly fraudulent results in nu- merous states. None of these suits ever made it to trial; with a single ex- ception (involving a handful of late votes in Pennsylvania), these cases were thrown out by judges because the plaintiffs were unable to provide any evidence of fraud in their filings. It is one thing to toss out accusations of fraud in a press conference at the Four Seasons (Total Landscaping), it is quite another for an attorney to walk into court and lie about fraud. In Georgia, votes were counted three times, once by hand, and the results were the same each time. Results in Maricopa County, Arizona, were con- firmed by multiple reviews and cer- tified by state officials. The Arizona legislature has now mandated another review, this one conducted by Cyber Ninjas whose CEO has been echoing Trump’s false claims about voter fraud. Trump’s lie about voter fraud in the 2020 election has now been fully adopted by the GOP nationwide. Fif- ty-five percent of Republicans believe that Trump lost because the election was rigged so the propaganda cam- paign has been effective, at least with Republicans. Republican-led state leg- islatures around the country are re- lying on this big lie as a justification for passing bills designed to suppress minority voting. Georgia’s has already been signed into law and Arizona seems poised to join them. Georgia Republicans have been ac- cused of passing a racist voting law, a contention they dispute. In a Senate Ju- diciary Committee hearing, Sen. John Kennedy, R–La., confronted Stacey Abrams, challenging her to specifically detail aspects of the law that were rac- ist. Once her list reached seven items with no end in sight, Kennedy cut her off stating, “I get the idea.” What we are seeing is a classic pro- paganda effort designed to subvert American democracy. You repeat a lie about election fraud over and over again for months. Then you claim that new voting laws are needed to restore the faith of Americans in their elec- tions. Finally, you pass as many re- strictive voting laws as possible to limit voting by your opposition. This is clas- sic authoritarianism. Rich Belzer served as director of federal marketing for a NYSE-listed computer company and was subsequently a senior executive with two NASDAQ-listed high-tech companies. He moved to Bend to join Columbia Aircraft where he became VP of worldwide sales.