OPINION READER’S FORUM Founded in 1906 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 2022 A4 OUR VIEW Hermiston’s MLK march off ers lessons in unity A t the Martin Luther King Jr Day Peace March in Herm- iston on Monday, Jan. 17, speakers repeatedly called out for unity. We share their request; we hope for people to come together and strive for a better world. The event itself was a mixture of diff erent people. The speaker’s list included individuals of varied races and occupations. City government was represented with a speech by the Hermiston city manager, and local reli- gious leaders spoke, too. Also, the attendees at the event were a rainbow of diff erent races. The diversity of the crowd was mentioned in one speech at the event. A speaker pointed out that there were many types of individuals in the atten- dance. In stating this point, the speaker said this was in line with King’s mes- sage. King, the speaker said, would approve of a unity made up of diff er- ent parts. Speaker Marlando Jordan, a Ken- newick preacher, came to Hermiston to share his refl ections on King. He praised the civil rights leader for his faith, vision, courage and loving heart. It was because of all these things, Jor- dan said, that King was able to have broad appeal. People unifi ed behind the great man. It is a shame that King, a victim of hate, is not with us. He would be in his 90s now, if he had not been assassi- nated when he was only 39 years old. We have people in our community now who started having birthdays before King, so it is easy to picture King with us. In trying to make guesses as to what King would be saying to us, we lis- ten to people at the Hermiston march and at other marches. Making their points about a better world, speakers frequently quoted King. In advocat- ing for progress, the speakers pushed for unity. And there were several ideas in the speeches are worth further consideration. One point was that unity can be sur- prising. A partnership between The Church of Jesus Christ and Latter-day Saints and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo- ple, for instance, might not be the fi rst collaboration people might imagine. Still, their cooperation has led to the advancement of humanitarian interests. Taking their example, we might also accomplish great ends. Another point put forward at the march is that good things come from tireless work. A young speaker at the march told of how she is putting in an eff ort to educate others of our imper- fect history and our potentially bright future. King, her model, serves as an example for us all. We see how he worked hard in unity with others, and we try to act in similar fashion. A third point, which was also men- tioned in a speech, is that unity does not mean uniformity. We do not need to be the same; in fact, it is better that we are not all identical. The beauty of our community is that we have peo- ple who look, and sometimes think, diff erently. All of this goes to say that there were a lot of valuable takeaways from the Jan. 17 event. We here at the Herm- iston Herald are grateful to all the peo- ple who organized it and participated in it. For those who did not attend, we encourage you to make plans to be at the next one. You might also want to look out for the next event put on by the organizing organization, the Herm- iston Cultural Awareness Coalition. WRITERS ON THE RANGE A dangerous new predator stalks the West T he grizzly bear. The wolf. The cougar. These magnifi - cent creatures, apex preda- tors, how can we not admire them? People cross the world for the opportunity to see one in the wilds of Yellowstone or Alaska. There, we view them from a distance, free to indulge our awe in safety. It has been a long time since Americans lived in fear of wild beasts. But now that fear has returned. Fear felt not just in the woods, but also in cities Pepper and towns: Paradise, Califor- Trail nia; Talent; and now in Supe- rior and Louisville in Colorado’s Boulder County. The dangerous predator we’re facing these days is wildfi re, charging even out of grasslands to destroy our homes. And no one is safe. As an ecologist, I know that predators are essential to the health of wildlife communities, keeping prey populations in check. They’re also a driving force in evolution, favoring the faster or stronger or smarter animals able to escape their attacks. Of course, civilization long ago freed us from the evolutionary pressure exerted by predators. But that freedom has come at a cost. When populations and eco- systems grow badly out of bal- ance, there must come a correc- tion. Humans and the environments we have created are not immune to this rule, and we must recognize that we have unleashed the fi re-predator through our own choices. What choices? On the global scale, we have released vast amounts of carbon diox- ide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. This was done at fi rst in igno- rance, but for at least the past 30 years, it truly was a choice made in the face of increasingly desperate warnings. The resulting greenhouse eff ect has raised temperatures and decreased rain and snowpack throughout the West, contribut- ing to “fi re weather” like the hur- ricane-force winds that shockingly bore down on the suburbs of Den- ver in the dead of winter. We also made land-manage- ment choices that strengthened the threat of fi re. First, we behaved as if we could banish fi re from the landscape, suppressing all wild- land fi res everywhere, and ending the use of prescribed fi re in forests as a management tool. This led to a huge build-up of fl ammable fuels. Second, industrial-scale logging eliminated over 90% of fi re-re- sistant old-growth forests and replaced them with highly fl am- mable tree plantations. Finally, we vastly expanded our human foot- print, building houses right where the fi re-predator likes to roam, at the brink of forests and grasslands. Reconciling ourselves to the depredations of wildfi re requires that we take the long view. The fuel-choked forests resulting from our (mis)management need to burn, and they will burn. The best we can do is to preserve the old forests that remain and manage younger for- ests to increase their resilience to moderate-intensity fi re. It could be a century or more before a new forestland equilibrium is reached, one with lower fuel loads, better adapted to the high fi re-frequency climate we have created. Meanwhile, what about us? Col- orado’s Marshall Fire proved that wildfi re is the one predator we can’t eliminate. Far from any for- est, this was pushed through tin- der-dry grasslands by howling win- ter winds and burned more than 1,000 suburban homes in a matter of hours. So, like any prey species, we must adapt as best we can. As individuals, we can create defen- sible space around our homes. We can get skilled at escaping wildfi re by having evacuation plans ready. As a society, we can adopt sen- sible policies to limit development in fi re-prone areas. Recent events prove that these include not just remote forestlands, but grasslands near suburbs. Faced with predators, animals try to get into the center of the herd. We need to do the same, avoiding exposure to the fi re-preda- tor at the vulnerable edge. Finally, we can — we must — embark on an urgent global eff ort to end the burning of fossil fuels within the next few decades. If we do not, the West will face year- round fi re weather, and a future at the mercy of fi re. Yet there is reason for hope: the human capacity for rapid social and cultural evolution. Let’s har- ness that strength, and work toward the day when fi re is a predator no more, but our powerful partner in the stewardship of the land. ——— Pepper Trail is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writerson- therange.org, a nonprofi t dedicated to spurring lively conversation about the West. He is an ecologist in Ashland. PASTURES OF PLENTY Art and creativity need not be forged in suff ering G rowing up, I had never given the Beatles much thought. Like all good children being raised in corporate America, I had a tangential knowledge by way of adver- tisements. Nike and “Revolu- tion.” “Come Together” and luxury vehicles. The songs were clipped and snipped and ready to sell stuff . It was not until I Alex became a parent, fueled by Hobbs the revulsion of technology, that I purchased a record player for my children. It seemed fi tting that with their Union Jack-clad Victrola that a Beatles record should be spun fi rst. The record was “Abbey Road.” Less of a record and more of a launchpad. It wasn’t long after the needle fi rst descended onto vinyl that my sons began to show interest in cre- ation, little fi ngers fi nding their way along keys of a piano in paths they’ve never before taken. I started to ask myself how is a person imbued with a desire to create? What might the world be like if we were all given equal opportunity to fully explore the depths of art, to analyze the spark of human creation? If for a moment we were all released from the expectations and standards of what we should be producing, what might blossom in the void? In lieu of answers to these ques- tions, I have only the Beatles. Spe- cifi cally, the nine hours of footage compiled by Peter Jackson in his documentary “Get Back.” What is most notable about the entirety of the documentary is an underlying sense of playfulness. A joyful abandon. In fact, it reminded me of my sons. This isn’t necessar- ily equating “Let it Be” with what- ever combination of notes my son puts together, but in the distillation process, you will fi nd the same unbothered spirit. The same will- ingness to take risks, be silly, and lean into vulnerability. We have a misconception that art and creation are predicated upon pain. There are certainly no shortages of this trope in our col- lective mindset. For example, I recently visited Portland where I took my children to see Beyond Van Gogh: an installation that attempts to change the narrative surrounding the troubled painter. It was inspiring, but one left unable to isolate his art from his tragedy, his torture. Author Ursula Le Guin said, “The trouble is that we have a bad habit, encouraged by pedants and sophisticates, of considering hap- piness as something rather stu- pid. Only pain is intellectual, only evil interesting. This is the trea- son of the artist: a refusal to admit the banality of evil and the terrible boredom of pain.” If this isn’t an invitation to frolic in strawberry fi elds, I don’t know what is. ——— Alex Hobbs is a former educa- tor turned homeschooling mom. She has a degree in political sci- ence from Oregon State University. CORRECTIONS Printed on recycled newsprint VOLUME 115 • NUMBER 3 Erick Peterson | Editor • epeterson@hermistonherald.com • 541-564-4536 Angel Aguilar | Multi-Media consultant • aaguilar@hermiston herald.com 541-564-4531 Audra Workman | Offi ce Manager • aworkman@eastoregonian.com • 541-564-4538 Tammy Malgesini | Community Editor • community@eastoregonian.com • 541-564-4532 Andy Nicolais | Page Designer • anicolais@eomediagroup.com To contact the Hermiston Herald for news, advertising or subscription information: • call 541-567-6457 • e-mail info@hermistonherald.com • stop by our offi ces at 333 E. Main St. • visit us online at: hermistonherald.com The Hermiston Herald (USPS 242220, ISSN 8750-4782) is published weekly at Hermiston Herald, 333 E. Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838, 541-567-6457. Periodical postage paid at Hermiston, OR. Postmaster, send address changes to Hermiston Herald, 333 E. Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838. Member of EO Media Group Copyright ©2022 It is the policy of the Hermiston Herald to correct errors as soon as they are discovered. Incorrect information will be corrected on Page 2A. Errors commited on the Opinion page will be corrected on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories. Please contact the editor at editor@hermistonherald.com or call 541- 278-2673 with issues about this policy or to report errors. SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR Letters to the Editor is a forum for the Hermiston Herald readers to express themselves on local, state, national or world issues. Letters should be kept to 250 words. No personal attacks; challenge the opinion, not the person. The Hermiston Herald reserves the right to edit letters for length and for content. Letters must be original and signed by the writer or writers. Anonymous letters will not be printed. Writers should include a telephone number so they can be reached for questions. Only the letter writer’s name and city of residence will be published. OBITUARY AND DEATH NOTICE POLICY OBITUARY PACKAGE • Paid • Advertising formatting — off ering three, templated options featuring one full color photo. • Prices and sizes available: 2 column x 5” = $79.50 (approx. 150 words). 2 column x LETTER TO THE EDITOR Recent Supreme Court ruling should change vote-by-mail system I was intrigued by the recent Oregon Supreme Court ruling concerning the exclusion of inactive voters from being counted on petitions. In review of the opinion it stipulated that by statue inactive vot- ers are prohibited from voting. Thus only active voter’s signature will be counted. A voter is consid- ered inactive if they have not voted in the last 10 years and have been noti- fi ed by the county. I think this ruling will/ should have ramifi cations concerning Oregon’s vote- by-mail system. Instead of sending out mass ballots to all registered voters, only active voters should be allowed to vote using the rationale of the court’s ruling. I am not a proponent of vote-by-mail. I am a fi rm believer in one person, one vote. I also think peo- ple should have to show some type of identifi cation to vote. The United States is only one of a few coun- tries in the world that do not require identifi cation to vote. Given the impor- tance of each election, it is critical to ensure voter integrity. So, if you are in an inactive status your sig- nature will not count on a petition, and the same should hold true to your ballot. If you are in an inactive status, all you have to do is contact the Oregon Driver and Motor Vehicle Services to be activated. Some court rulings have unattended conse- quences, I think this one may and should change the vote-by-mail system in Oregon. Joe Mesteth Hermiston 10” = $159 (approx. 350 words). 3 column x 10” = $238.50 (approx. 575 words). • Obits following the templated format are available in other sizes for $7.95 per column inch. Obits formatted outside of the set templates will be billed at the publishing newspaper’s open rate. Package includes: • Obituary in the print edition on the publication day of your choice, within deadline. • Featured on the publishing newspaper’s website free of charge. • Publishing newspaper will also provide 5 complimentary copies of the newspaper (additional copies $1.50/each). • Place your obituary in a sister publication at a 25% dis- count. 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