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  • Don C. Brunell: Abundant Salmon Runs are Early Christmas Present

    Dec 9, 2015

    Pacific Northwest fishermen have good and very good news this Christmas. The good news is timely releases of stored water from reservoirs like Lake Roosevelt behind Grand Coulee Dam kept stream levels up and water temperatures down. That helped young salmon migrate to the ocean and adults return home to spawn. Overall, 2.3 million mature salmon passed through Bonneville Dam, making it the second-strongest year on record for the entire Columbia Basin. The return numbers were positive upstream as well. According to the East Oregonian, Pendleton,...

  • Rich Lowry: They Hate What We Hold Dear

    Dec 9, 2015

    The Paris attacks have occasioned a wide-ranging debate about what they mean and how to respond, involving Islam and its role, military strategy and, oddly enough, how Muslims in New Jersey reacted to Sept. 11 (thanks, Donald Trump). It's all very interesting and, for the most part, quite important. At bottom, though, the import of the Paris attacks is not complicated: ISIS terrorists are enemies of our civilization. In Paris, they chose their target well. They assaulted a city that dates back thousands of years and has been a leading Western... Full story

  • Bob Franken: Inauguration Nightmare

    Dec 9, 2015

    He had already kept one of his campaign promises: Donald Trump had demanded a wall along the U.S./Mexican border, and even insisted that the Mexican government would build it. Sure enough, the moment Trump was elected president, hordes of Americans decided it was time to live elsewhere. Millions believed that the bitter cold made Canada uninhabitable, and they decided, instead, to head south. Suddenly, the border was flooded with "los ilegales" fleeing the United States. The Mexican government had no choice but to build a wall. Construction...

  • Another look at 195

    Dec 9, 2015

    Two deaths occurred on area roads recently. Both of the deceased were Washington State University students. One died on Highway 26 outside of Dusty, the other on Highway 195 north of Rosalia. Both accidents involved a vehicle crossing the center line. As a result of these tragedies, an effort has started to demand that the two-lane highways be made safer. Unlike the calls by this newspaper in the past, these are being originated from out of the area. WSU parents are involved. They are using all avenues, especially social media, to make sure...

  • Don C. Brunell: When a Higher Wage Isn’t

    Dec 2, 2015

    The news is full of organized protests and street demonstrations demanding a $15 minimum wage. Several cities across the nation have passed or are considering big hikes in their minimum wage. SeaTac was the first in our state to pass the $15 minimum wage, followed by Seattle and the University of Washington. Washington, D. C. now has the nation’s highest “state” minimum wage at $10.50, followed closely by Washington state at $9.47. Supporters say a $15 minimum wage will improve the lives of low-wage workers and boost the economy by putti...

  • Letters Dec. 3

    Dec 2, 2015

    Other issues I appreciate Randy Suess' analysis of the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiated recently by our President and currently awaiting ratification. Here are some items I believe are worthy of consideration before we agree to the TPP. Our ability to sell our soft white wheat is primarily because 1. We produce something the world needs, 2. We enjoy a consistent production ability, 3. Our product is of outstanding quality, 4. We have developed the infrastructure (roads, rails, waterways, storage and handling facilities and marketing...

  • Rich Lowry: Obama's Sanctimony on Syrian Refugees

    Dec 2, 2015

    President Barack Obama has seen the enemy, and it is the refusal to accept more Syrian refugees. From the tone of his post-Paris remarks, you'd think that a sophisticated terrorist assault on a major Western city is a setback; sentiment in the U.S. against taking more Syrian refugees is an atrocity. Obama warned against "that dark impulse inside of us," as if we were debating whether Syrian refugees should be drawn and quartered. He said that "slamming the door in their faces would be a betrayal of our values." He was joined by liberal...

  • Bob Franken: Our Cheapened Instincts

    Dec 2, 2015

    What's most pathetic about the presidential campaign is how it's becoming little more than a battle between cheap-shot artists. Each day brings a new limbo contest, as they all compete to see how low they can go. Take, for instance, the ridiculous heckling by various Republicans because President Barack Obama and other Democrats don't want to describe the brutal ISIS terrorists as manifestations of "radical Islam." The administration avoids the term because it casts the United States as an enemy of Muslims, which we make believe we are not....

  • What good does it do?

    Dec 2, 2015

    The presidential election is just less than a year off. Already the campaigns are reaching new levels of vitriol and ridiculousness. Donald Trump, for one, has outraged nearly every minority in the country. Now, he has, some think, mocked a disabled person. Few have escaped his scathing remarks. Trump is causing real consternation among establishment Republicans. They fear is that his remarks and beliefs will be taken as representative of the Republican party as a whole. Trump, of course, is not the only candidate, Republican or Democrat, to...

  • Don C. Brunell: Presidential Travel, China Style

    Nov 25, 2015

    When China’s President Xi Jinping flew into Seattle last September, his presidential airliner looked like any other Air China 747-400 passenger jet. That is because it was. The Chinese have a different approach to flying their leaders. Its Air Force owns a small fleet of 737s to shuttle dignitaries on short hauls, but they contract with independently owned Air China for extended overseas missions. In the United States, our government leaders exclusively fly military aircraft—-many of which are made by Boeing in Washington State—-but those... Full story

  • Letters Nov. 26

    Nov 25, 2015

    Trans Pacific Partnership From an agricultural standpoint, the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) is of great benefit to farmers and our state. Countries within the TPP account for 42 percent of all U.S. agricultural exports. Soft white wheat grown here accounts for a large share of that business. TPP puts farmers on a level playing field by removing barriers to trade, like tariffs and import duties. Currently, TPP countries Vietnam and Malaysia have a growing middle class where diets are improving. The first thing they add is meat, which...

  • Rich Lowry: After Paris, Empty Symbolism

    Nov 25, 2015

    The instant online symbol of global support for Paris after last week’s attacks was a roughly rendered peace symbol with an Eiffel Tower in the middle of it. The French designer Jean Jullien sketched it as soon as he heard the news of the atrocity. He called it “Peace for Paris,” and it immediately became a sensation on social media. Its success is a sign of the times. We have become experts at treacly online mourning. We take grotesque atrocities and launder them into trite symbols and slogans that are usually self-congratulatory and, of co... Full story

  • Bob Franken: Empty Threats

    Nov 25, 2015

    Here is one of the most disturbing questions of all: How do you severely punish groups of fanatics for whom martyrdom is the highest aspiration? When French President Francois Hollande promises his nation “will be merciless toward the barbarians of Islamic State group” and “will act by all means anywhere,” what reason is there to believe that Islamic State maniacs will be moved in any way, except to laugh and expand their murderous assaults on humanity? Even with massive airstrikes, ISIS is threatening new massacres. So the answer is that th... Full story

  • Shopping small is big

    Nov 25, 2015

    Big store Black Friday strikes again. It follows the tradition of early openings with the biggest price cuts for the first to arrive uninjured. Some retailers tried to get the jump on other retailers by being open on Thanksgiving Day. These openings may never catch on because the traditional stampedes are missing. A lot of shoppers view out of town Black Friday as a special outing and adventure. Some people just like contact shopping. Small communities and small, independent stores have trouble competing with the rush and crowds of Black Friday... Full story

  • Don C. Brunell: No Requiem for Northwest Aluminum

    Nov 18, 2015

    Alcoa’s announcement that it is shutting down our state’s last two aluminum smelters may be a long awaited requiem for some, but there are other factors we should consider before burying it. First, the Seattle Times reports the decision will cost 1,500 family-wage jobs with good benefits. And even though the trend has not been good for our aluminum industry, we need to look for opportunities to resurrect it. In 2000, Seattle economist Dick Conway found the five largest smelters in Washington employed more than 7,500 people and generated $2....

  • Letters

    Nov 18, 2015

    NAFTA I do not know what our presidents think when it comes to international trade agreements. President Clinton signed NAFTA (North American Foreign Trade Agreement) and now President Obama is getting ready to sign the TPTA (TransPacific Trade Agreement). I cannot imagine what Obama might be thinking. NAFTA resulted in several million U.S. jobs moved overseas. TPTA will probably also result in a similar departure of jobs. I cannot believe that an American Citizen could negotiate such an agreement as a benefit to our citizenry. It will remove...

  • Rich Lowry: A Stupendous Bounty

    Nov 18, 2015

    We live in an age of miracles. Throughout all of human history, material progress essentially didn't exist until around 1800. The economic trajectory was flat until the human lot began to improve in ways that would have been unimaginable in prior millennia. This change gave us the world as we know it. In her brilliant book on the transformation, "Bourgeois Dignity," Deirdre McCloskey writes how the average person in the world subsisted on roughly $3 a day during humanity's long economic stasis. Then, with the breakout, countries that experience...

  • Bob Franken: The No Thanksgiving

    Nov 18, 2015

    As even-handed as I try to be, it is time to be fair and balanced about Thanksgiving, meaning we should give equal time to the unthankful side, with the traditional discussion of my pet peeves. This is not a comprehensive list, because I have so many pet peeves you could fill up a peeve petting zoo with them. For starters, there's that annoying presidential turkey pardon. Each year, since the Bush I administration, POTUS holds a White House ceremony to spare a couple of the birds, so they end up in some nearby park instead of on a platter,... Full story

  • A real quandary

    Nov 18, 2015

    The world is faced with a real quandary. What to do with ISIS? The ISIS attacks in Paris which left 132 dead and hundreds injured have brought the threat of Islamic terrorists to the forefront. ISIS is no longer seen as a gaggle of terrorist, but as a group able to execute complex plans far from its base. It is certainly not the junior varsity. It is now clearly a global threat of the first order. Nations must now decide how to confront it. Refugees from the Middle East are swamping Europe. Among them are some terrorists using the refugees as...

  • Don C. Brunell: Apply Navy’s Nuclear Technology to Civilian Use

    Nov 10, 2015

    Today, many elected officials are fixated on tearing down coal-fired power plants and replacing them with solar and wind farms. But that isn’t practical, because when there is no wind or sunlight those plants produce no electricity. There is an alternative. Nuclear power plants supply 10 percent of world’s electricity. But opponents say they are too dangerous and too expensive. They point to the 1986 meltdown of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in the Soviet Union, considered to be the world’s worst nuclear disaster. But 30 years later, comme...

  • Letters Nov. 12

    Nov 10, 2015

    Veteran’s return Sitting at home, remembering friends lost, and so many more from Vietnam. I was fortunate, not only to survive a year “in country” but to have grown up in Colfax, which like all Whitman County communities, really knows what patriotism is. As a child I watched vets march up Main Street with awe and admiration. These WWII and Korean vets instilled pride in those of us watching. Ten years later I “became” one of those vets and came home in time to march in the 1966 Memorial Day parade. I was very lucky to be welcomed home, as...

  • Rich Lowry: Obamacare Is Still Failing

    Nov 10, 2015

    For the press, the debate about Obamacare is over. There may be a few proverbial Japanese soldiers wandering on isolated islands yammering on about the failure of Obamacare, but word will eventually filter down to them, too. This assumption is so deeply embedded that it is impervious to new evidence that Obamacare is an unwieldy contraption that is sputtering badly. Yes, Obamacare has covered more people and has especially benefited those with pre-existing conditions (to be credible, Republican replacement plans have to do these things, as...

  • Bob Franken: Cover the Story, Don’t be It

    Nov 10, 2015

    This will not endear me to the television industry's muckety-mucks, because their news divisions make huge, almighty buckety-buck profits thanks to the astronomical ratings that come when they present the primary elections' presidential debates. So they're not going to be thrilled with my advocating that we end our Faustian deals with the parties and stop producing their candidate cattle calls ... or perhaps stampedes. I've criticized certain CNBC moderators for embarrassing us all with their vacuous and blatantly hostile questions and...

  • Burden of proof

    Nov 10, 2015

    Recently, journalists have been in the news as much as they have been reporting it. The media is once again being roundly attacked. This is nothing new, but the fervor increased when Republican candidates for president objected to the tone and nature of the questions asked by moderators during the CNBC Republican presidential debate. Then, CNN and others investigated some of the personal claims made by presidential candidate Ben Carson. There has been no confirmation of the facts from Carson’s camp or from his friends and relatives. In fact, Ca...

  • Don C. Brunell: Politics Aside, Koch’s Way is Good for America

    Nov 4, 2015

    To listen to liberal politicians such as President Obama and Hillary Clinton, political donations by conservative billionaires Charles and David Koch epitomize what’s wrong with America’s political system. But Obama and Clinton are silent when liberal billionaires George Soros and Tom Steyer do the same. Casting politics aside, the Koch brothers embody the ideals of our free market system, which has made America the economic power it is today. Charles Koch’s book, Good Profit, details his philosophy that consumer choice in the marke...

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