Serving Whitman County since 1877

Opinion / Letters


Sorted by date  Results 1727 - 1751 of 3747

Page Up

  • Rich Lowry: The Age of Unilateral Rule

    Jun 22, 2017

    The Trump administration has been exhaustingly eventful, but almost none of the events have involved Congress. The beginning of Donald Trump's presidency has been an extension of the last six years of the Obama administration, when Capitol Hill was largely a sideshow to the main event in the executive branch in general and the Oval Office in particular. Barack Obama and Donald Trump have almost nothing in common, except their modes of governance. Obama was coolly cerebral and deliberative to a fault, whereas Trump is blustery and impulsive....

  • Pet Peeves and Okeydokes: June 22

    Jun 22, 2017

    #!*! Avista sending elderly people letters telling them they used more energy than their neighbors not using electric heat. Send your pet peeves and okeydokes to Whitman County Gazette P.O Box 770, Colfax, WA 99111 or drop them off at the Gazette office... Full story

  • Bob Franken: Swamp Creatures

    Jun 22, 2017

    "If you can't dazzle them with your brilliance, baffle them with bulls--t." That's just one of the rules of the Washington Swamp. A case in point is the statement from Marc Kasowitz, the New York attorney who has long represented private citizen Donald Trump in his various shady dealings, and who now has brought his hired gun to the really dark corners of the new Trump presidency. When James Comey, the former FBI director fired last month by Trump, testified about his dealings with the chief executive (who came across as The Godfather),...

  • Don C. Brunnel: Refocusing Climate Debate to Practical Solutions

    Jun 15, 2017

    Debating whether it was wrong for President Trump to pull the United States out of the Paris climate accord negotiations is never ending. Both sides will find ample evidence to claim the accords are good or bad for America; however, the rhetoric can’t obfuscate our ongoing work to reduce greenhouse gases. The focus needs to be on what is being done to reduce emissions globally and how our innovations and technology can be implemented across our planet. For perspective, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported in April that U.S. e...

  • Letters: June 15

    Jun 15, 2017

    Federal budget “Robin Hood in Reverse” The federal budget proposal released by President Trump would cut and eliminate a vast array of critical programs that fight hunger, help people meet their basic needs, and lift people out of poverty. Essential services like food assistance, Medicaid, affordable housing, utility assistance, and basic support for people with disabilities are all on the chopping block – all while expanding unprecedented tax cuts for the wealthiest. This “Robin Hood in reverse” budget must be rejected by Congress. Congress...

  • Rich Lowry: Can Wonder Woman Just be Wonder Woman?

    Jun 15, 2017

    In the new "Wonder Woman" movie, the heroine is mystified by the ways of humankind -- and she doesn't even read the internet. The fevered commentary about the new hit film raises the question, "Can't an Amazonian superhero wield her Lasso of Truth and bullet-deflecting bracelets while wearing an up-armored version of a figure-skating outfit without inciting more battles in the culture war?" This being contemporary America, the answer is, "Of course not." The critics have swooned, and some of them have literally cried over the movie. This is a b...

  • Bob Franken: No Laughing Matter

    Jun 15, 2017

    I am a huge fan of Michelle Obama, like just about all people with brains in their heads. However, I pretty much disagree with her when she says, "When they go low, we go high." I'm of the "when they go low, go lower" persuasion. If you aren't willing to roll around in the mud with your opponents, you still get slimed. And when it comes to down-and-dirty, the man who holds the highest office in the land scrapes bottom. Having said that, there's such a thing as too low, even when it comes to dissing Donald Trump. Comedian Kathy Griffin managed... Full story

  • Legislative time crunch

    Jun 15, 2017

    The deadline is looming. The Washington legislature is coming up against a hard deadline to avoid a government shutdown. Now, in its second special session, it has only until June 30 to pass a budget for the new biennium. If the second session does not result in a budget, then the legislators will have to meet for a third special session. The current session ends June 21. Even so, if a budget is not finalized by June 30, the state government may start to shut down. In fact, preparations for a partial shutdown are being made. The sticking point...

  • Don C. Brunell: Connecticut Comeuppance

    Jun 8, 2017

    Recently, the Wall Street Journal editorialized that Connecticut’s elected officials are getting their “comeuppance” for years of absorbingly high taxes, failing to implement state spending constraints, and treating business as a bottomless well of cash. Just as Washington lawmakers are meeting in special session to balance the budget for the next two years, so are Connecticut legislators. While the differences between Democrats and Republicans over taxes are great in both states, Washington’s tax collections from existing sources are rising,...

  • Letters June 8

    Jun 8, 2017

    Cemetery looked good During our visit to several cemeteries over the Memorial Day weekend the Colfax cemetery stood out. I appreciate all the work that was put into making the cemetery look so beautiful this year. Also thank you to everybody that put the flags up on Friday morning. I have three members of my family with flags there, and it was very nice seeing them fly Friday morning when I was there. Gwen Leland Goodman, West Richland Balancing Concept Here’s a balancing concept for you. For drugs that are used recreationally, the s...

  • Rich Lowry: Embrace the Robots

    Jun 8, 2017

    We have seen the enemy, and it is the robot. A wave of fear over automation is driving dire predictions about robots rendering swaths of Americans unemployable and has created a vogue for outlandishly stupid policy proposals. A popular idea in Silicon Valley is for a so-called universal basic income -- the government would write everyone a monthly check -- to cushion the unemployment effect of automation (never mind that such a policy would itself have an unemployment effect). Bill Gates wants to tax robots, which makes about as much sense as...

  • Bob Franken: The Fight Plight

    Jun 8, 2017

    I've wrestled with this my entire career: What do journalists do immediately after we're attacked while lawfully doing our jobs? It takes place on occasion. In this age of Donald Trump, it's happening more. Our president has turned long-simmering bad feelings about media into boiling hatred. We can consider the reasons in a moment, but the reality is that the nutcases are emboldened as never before to physically attack those who cover news in ways they don't like. I am pondering this again thanks to the attack by Greg Gianforte, who ran in a...

  • Commuter heroes

    Jun 8, 2017

    It turned out badly. Three men tried to protect two frightened young girls from a racist assault. They were on a light rail commuter train in Portland. The girls, both black with one wearing a hajib, were accosted by a man full of hate. Witnessing the tirade, other men moved to defend the girls. Suddenly, the confrontation turned ugly and violent. The attacker killed two of the men and injured the third with a knife, slashing his throat. This is not how the incident should have ended. The three good Samaritans ideally would have defused the...

  • Bob Franken: Friendly World, Hostile Home

    Jun 1, 2017

    As President Donald Trump returns from all the heads-of-state pageantry in far-off lands, he cannot distance himself from the piles of mess he's left back home. Just ask Richard Nixon, whose travels couldn't escape Watergate, or Bill Clinton, who had Monica Lewinsky and all the other petty scandals to preoccupy the swarming opposition and journalists back in the U.S. of A. Now, Donald Trump has Russia, an all-consuming national political issue, not just a geopolitical one. He doesn't have to travel to world capitals to face Vladimir Putin;...

  • Rich Lowry: Not on Our Soil

    Jun 1, 2017

    The Turkish government is obviously familiar with the concept of "chutzpah," if not necessarily the word. Ankara summoned the American ambassador to protest allegedly "aggressive and unprofessional actions" by the Washington, D.C., police. Their offense? Intervening after Turkish security personnel mauled peaceful protesters outside the Turkish ambassador's residence in Washington. Video of the incident is jaw-dropping. About a dozen people protested Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- arriving at the ambassador's residence after a White... Full story

  • So you want a city council seat?

    Jerry Jones|Jun 1, 2017

    Gazette Editor Three rookies will take seats on the Colfax City Council at the start of next year. Each applied for a seat that failed to attract other candidates. The three new council members and short-term appointee Sarah McKnight will make up a majority of the council. Public service can have its rewards, but it can also have its headaches. The number of late calls from residents who are upset and want something done about a problem, real or imagined, never gets on the public record. Colfax has had several episodes of rough going over the... Full story

  • Frank Watson: Responsible Government Requires an Incentive

    May 25, 2017

    Shortly after I was commissioned as a second lieutenant, my brother-in-law, Jim, approached me and said that I would be in charge of a lot of government money. I told him that second lieutenants aren’t in charge of much of anything. He replied, “Not now but eventually you will be, and when you are, I want you to treat each dollar as if it were the one I put in.” I promised I would and tried to keep my promise the rest of my military career. Jim was not a rich man by any definition. He owned a dump truck and hauled gravel for county roads... Full story

  • Don C. Brunell: Forest Landowners Prove Cooperation Works

    May 25, 2017

    Recently, Washington state’s largest environmental, wildlife and natural resources agencies recognized 43 large forest landowners for their “exemplary efforts” to upgrade forest roads and stream crossings which improved salmon habitat and water quality. After investing more than $300 million collectively, these landowners rebuilt 25,000 miles of forest roads, replaced more than 6,000 in-stream barriers to migrating fish, and opened in excess of 3,500 miles of previously blocked spawning habitat. The recognition is a milestone in colla...

  • Rich Lowry: The Worst Word in American Politics

    May 25, 2017

    For the past couple of years, the most important word in American politics has been the worst -- "rigged." Emanating from slang back in the 17th century, developing into a description of financial fraud, and then branching out to apply to cheating in sports and elections, "rigged" had a breakthrough year in 2016, and it shows no sign of loosening its grip. It is a word of grievance and conspiracy. It is a word of institutional distrust. It is a word of larger forces beyond our control taking advantage of us. It is a word that says, "We wuz...

  • BOB FRANKEN: The White House's Management Problem

    May 25, 2017

    Mind you, I'm not anti-management. Some good leaders maintain thriving companies by inspiring a passion for a job well done in an atmosphere of confidence. Collaboration is their organizational approach, where praise co-exists with constructive criticism. The employees operate with a well-defined sense of mission, because it has been clearly communicated from the top. Then there are the bad bosses -- far too many of them. These are the ones who believe in a business culture of fear. Sometimes it's intentional, where the guy at the top gets his... Full story

  • Letters: May 25

    May 25, 2017

    Poisonous Hemlock We have Hemlock growing all over the place here on the Palouse as well as in Whitman County. There are no funds supposedly according to the Weed office to fight Poisonous Hemlock from its continuous spread in our water ways. There are landowners, that do nothing in controlling it, and Poisonous Hemlock is spreading. This Poisonous Hemlock runs from Moscow along the bicycle trail to Pullman, Albion is covered in it; Union Flat Creek that goes past LaCrosse is thick with it. People here in Whitman County need to take care of...

  • What's the "McCleary Promise"?

    Jerry Jones|May 25, 2017

    Gazette Editor “Keep the McCleary Promise” was enclosed in a logo design which was included in an advertisement in Sunday’s editon of the Spokesman Review. In the center of the logo was “Education is a civil right.” The advertisement encouraged readers to join forces with local educators and voice support for public schools and support the state house budget by calling a legislative hotline. The bottom of the advertisement listed 26 educators in the eastern region school districts as sponsors. All were officers in Washington Education...

  • Frank Watson-May 18, 1980

    May 18, 2017

    Every generation has at least one life-changing event that impacts the way they see the world. I remember every detail about the open house at Fairchild Air Force Base in 1980. My in-laws had been visiting for about a week, and I had talked them into staying an extra day to see the air show. It was a glorious Sunday afternoon. We had airplanes on display from bases all over the country. More than 10,000 visitors had just watched the Air Force Thunderbird’s show, when I noticed ominous clouds building in the west. The volcanic activity on M... Full story

  • Don C. Brunell-America Needs More Welders, Fewer Philosophers

    May 18, 2017

    “America needs more welders and fewer philosophers,” proclaimed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio during the 2016 presidential campaign. He hit the nail on the head without disrespecting philosophers. Industry News reported in 1988 there were 570,000 welders compared to the 360,000 in 2012. Considering the manufacturing and construction sectors have boomed in recent years, the growing shortage of welders is troublesome. Even worse, the American Welding Society estimates a 290,000 job deficit by 2020. This shortage is primarily due to the large num... Full story

  • Rich Lowry-The Pre-Existing Lie

    May 18, 2017

    If you've only followed coverage of the Republican health care bill loosely in the media, you might believe that House Republicans, after much effort, passed legislation to deny people with pre-existing conditions health insurance. The issue of pre-existing conditions has dominated the debate over the GOP health care bill out of all proportion to the relatively modest provision in the legislation, which is being distorted -- often willfully, sometimes ignorantly -- into a threat to all that is good and true in America. The perversity of it all...

Page Down

Rendered 12/30/2024 13:06