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  • Don C. Brunell: Mitigate Massive Wildfires Danger

    Sep 14, 2017

    At last count firefighters were battling 82 major wildfires in 10 western states. The fires have already scorched 2,300 square miles of forests and range lands, dislocated thousands of people, and burned hundreds of homes and buildings. This has been the third worst forest fire season on record, prompting western congressional members to add billions to emergency hurricane relief legislation It isn’t over yet. The cost of fighting fires already broke this year’s U.S. Forest Service budget. It is part of a disturbing trend in which com...

  • Letters: Sept. 14, 2017

    Sep 14, 2017

    Bewildered I was very much bewildered when, on Sept. 6, I attended the Regular Meeting of the Board of Commissioners of the Public Hospital District No. A-1 of Whitman County (Pullman Regional Hospital) regarding gender reassignment surgery. It seemed obvious that the board went through the necessary process to appear as if they had debated and studied this issue, but really they only went through the process because it was required. It appeared to me that collectively they already had their decision made before they started the process. The...

  • Rich Lowry: Trump gets DACA right

    Sep 14, 2017

    Even in our divided politics, it should be a matter of consensus that the president of the United States can't write laws on his own. That's what President Barack Obama did twice when he unilaterally granted amnesties to swaths of the illegal immigrant population. The courts blocked one of these measures, known as DAPA, and President Donald Trump has now begun the process of ending the other, DACA, on a delayed, rolling basis. In a country with a firmer commitment to its Constitution and the rule of law, there'd be robust argument over how to...

  • Bob Franken: Humanity and Inhumanity

    Sep 14, 2017

    Hurricane Harvey is such a tragic natural disaster that it's been impervious to the vigorous attempts to steal the spotlight by that unnatural disaster Donald Trump. His attempts at provocation -- like the Joe Arpaio pardon and his usual Twitter outrages -- were not enough to deflect our focus. The nation was concentrating instead on the thousands upon thousands of people suffering in the Gulf region, particularly Houston, as the historic deluge drove them from the safety of homes that had been turned into death traps by the rising water. But...

  • The Pope and climate change

    Sep 14, 2017

    It is not exactly pope-speak but Pope Francis called people who deny climate change “stupid,” using a quote from the Bible. It is a “moral responsibility,” he said, to do everything possible to alleviate the changes. He is right. The climate is changing. It has been changing for years. Those who deny the fact seem most intent on denying the causes and the effects. As one said, the climate has been changing since the end of the last Ice Age, there is nothing to do about it. And, so it has, but there are many things humans can do to lessen...

  • Frank Watson: Bipartisan Tax plan

    Sep 7, 2017

    If the news is correct, both major political parties are ready to work with each other to reform the US tax code. The debate over expenditures should be debated at another time and place. This is the income portion of the budget, save everything else for another discussion. The first task should be to determine the objective of an ideal revenue code and write a tax plan mission statement. I suggest the following: In our democracy, taxes are needed to generate the funds necessary to operate our government. Tax collection should be fair and...

  • Don C. Brunell: People coming together is Silver Lining to Hurricane Harvey

    Sep 7, 2017

    All of the things that went wrong in New Orleans with Hurricane Katrina in 2005 appear to have been corrected with Houston's recent Hurricane Harvey. Chalk it up to a series of important lessons learned. By now everyone knows that Harvey came ashore from the Gulf of Mexico, dumped a record 51 inches of rain on 22 million people from Corpus Christi to Port Arthur, TX, and sent thousands to shelters. The hurricane hit Houston, America's fourth largest city and an urban area which accounts for 3 percent of our nation’s GDP. It had the makings o...

  • Letters: Sept. 7, 2017

    Sep 7, 2017

    Extend medicare In 2009 all Republican and two Democratic senators killed ACA’s (ObamaCare’s) proposed “public option” that likely would have led to national single-payer health care (Medicare-for-all). Although vastly superior in coverage and more equitably affordable than Republicans’ recent draconian bills, ObamaCare may hardly cut overall costs. Fortunately, single-payer Medicare-for-all would both greatly cut costs and markedly increase ObamaCare’s improved coverage, impossible until health insurance companies lose control. Canadian si... Full story

  • Rich Lowry: Stop Making Excuses for Antifa Thuggery

    Sep 7, 2017

    One of the least safe places to be in Berkeley, California, is in the vicinity of someone holding a "No Hate" sign. So-called anti-fascist, or antifa, activists bearing shields emblazoned with those words assaulted any of the handful of beleaguered Trump supporters they could get their hands on at a small political rally over the weekend. All in the cause, mind you, of demonstrating their supposed opposition to hatefulness. Too many people were willing to perfume antifa in the wake of Charlottesville, where it clashed with Nazi thugs who caused...

  • Bob Franken: The Two Donalds

    Sep 7, 2017

    What I'm about to describe is Fake News -- it hasn't happened, at least so far. However, I think it's just a matter of time. At some Nazi/KKK rally where some of President Donald Trump's "good people" are joining the lunatic-fringe types in hateful demonstrations, they are confronted by angry counterprotestors. Someone pulls a gun and starts firing. The violence escalates, and people die. You say that it has already occurred, in Charlottesville, Virginia? True, that's where an angry right-wing lunatic took his car and slammed into a crowd of... Full story

  • Pet Peeves and Okeydokes

    Sep 7, 2017

    YYYY Thank God for neighbors – especially Steptoe neighbors who fight fire. #!*! Real farmers spray their thistles and keep the ditches clean, no cattails to plug up the ditches. 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...

  • The fair has started!

    Sep 7, 2017

    The Palouse Empire Fair is back on center stage. The fair has been a long-running show for the county at its permanent home outside Colfax at Mockonema, at the intersection of Highway 26 and Endicott Road. Every year improvements are made at the site. The most dramatic ones to greet visitors this year are the additions and improvements to the Community Building. Regardless of the changes and improvements, the fair is really about people. It is one of the greatest meeting places in the county. Rural residents and city residents mingle at the... Full story

  • Don C. Brunell: Taxing Robots to Slow Down Worker Displacement

    Aug 31, 2017

    Last February, the European Parliament rejected a tax on robots, but took the first steps to regulate their development and deployment. The legislation also aims to establish liability for the actions of robots including self-driving vehicles. Europe’s governing body, while rejecting the tax to be dedicated to worker training, overwhelmingly passed a resolution to study regulating robots. In an interview with Quartz.com, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates said he believes that the government should tax companies’ use of robots. That would tem...

  • Frank Watson: Happy Birthday

    Aug 31, 2017

    I had a birthday last week the same day as the eclipse. It was kind of neat that most of America celebrated and looked skyward with anticipation during my birthday. Most of my many birthdays aren’t any big deal. They just come and go without a lot of fanfare. We didn’t celebrate birthdays much when I was a kid. We acknowledged them, but there were so many seats around our dinner table that we would have been celebrating much of the time. There is one, however, that stands out. It was my 28th. I was in Viet Nam flying Shadow Gunships. We had...

  • Rich Lowry: Yes, Work for Trump

    Aug 31, 2017

    Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin took the highly unusual step over the weekend of publicly explaining why he won't resign. He responded to Yale classmates who had written an impassioned open letter urging him to quit in protest over what they called (ridiculously overstating their case) President Donald Trump's "support of Nazism and white supremacy." There was no reason for Mnuchin -- a busy man and one of the most important economic officials on the planet -- to bother replying unless he feels a little defensive. After Charlottesville, the...

  • Bob Franken: Alt-Universe

    Aug 31, 2017

    So, we have the "alt-right," the "alt-left" and a president who is clearly not "alt-there." What Donald Trump is fast becoming is alt-isolated, as the accumulated disgust for his constant degradation of the office has boiled over. After days of vacillating, his news conference tantrum -- where he argued that there is a moral equivalence between Nazis, Klansmen and other violent white nationalist haters and those who fight them -- revealed the depths of his immorality, amorality or just plain stupidity. That was the last straw for many who had...

  • Harvey hits Texas

    Aug 31, 2017

    Hurricane Harvey smashed into the Texas Gulf Coast. The predictions were dire. Almost every hurricane computer model predicted the storm would make landfall and then stall out, drenching the coast and Houston in particular. The computers were right, although ‘drenching” is hardly the word for what is happening in Texas. Early on, it was estimated that 11 trillion gallons would fall on Houston. Some places have suffered from approximately 50 inches of rain in just a few days. And, the rains continue. As of this writing, the storm, after lea... Full story

  • Frank Watson: Racial Supremacy

    Aug 24, 2017

    The incident in Charlottesville is a tragedy. Most accounts blame the white supremacists. Their protest has been compared with KKK meetings at the height of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. It was a white supremacist who drove the vehicle into the crowd. A few reporters, however, attribute part of the blame to the counter protesters who expressed their views forcefully and physically. No one, however, has thought to blame the city leaders who decided to remove the statue of Robert E. Lee. It was a dumb decision. Lee is a national hero....

  • Don C. Brunell: Dan Evans Would Serve America Well

    Aug 24, 2017

    Recently, family, friends and dignitaries gathered at Hurricane Ridge near Port Angeles to celebrate the designation of the Daniel J. Evans Wilderness at Olympic National Park honoring Washington’s distinguished three-term governor and U.S. senator. Today, America needs a calming voice of reason – a steady and measured leader with the strength, experience and ability to unify our nation. Daniel J. Evans fits that mold. At 91, Evans is still spry and fit. His legacy is that he worked with Democrats as well as Republicans to get things done. The...

  • Letters: Aug. 24, 2017

    Aug 24, 2017

    Inventory Have you ever looked at the buildings along Main Street in downtown Colfax and wondered about their history, their design, who built them and why? Maybe you own one of these buildings, work there, or shop there and would like answers. On Aug. 30, from 6 to 8 p.m., at the Center next to the county library, you can find out. The Colfax Historic Preservation Commission, in association with AHA!, an architectural history and archaeology firm, has conducted an inventory of the historic buildings in the Colfax business core and will be... Full story

  • Rich Lowry: It's Time to Mothball Confederate Monuments

    Aug 24, 2017

    Robert E. Lee wasn't a Nazi, and surely would have had no sympathy for the white supremacist goons who made his statue a rallying point in Charlottesville, Virginia. That doesn't change the fact that his statue is now associated with a campaign of racist violence against the picturesque town where Thomas Jefferson founded the University of Virginia. The statue of Lee was already slated for removal by the city, but the Battle of Charlottesville should be an inflection point in the broader debate over Confederate statuary. The monuments should... Full story

  • Bob Franken: On Many Sides?

    Aug 24, 2017

    Finally President Donald Trump acknowledged in a statement that "Racism is evil," and described the "KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other hate groups" as "criminals and thugs." Put that in the "too little too late" file. It had taken two days before he could denounce the extremist bigots responsible for the deaths in Charlottesville, Virginia. Still, his immediate response was the one that matters, because it reveals what a toxic force he is. Originally he had condemned "this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many...

  • Revising history?

    Aug 24, 2017

    The rush is on. Governments and public institutions are scrambling to remove Confederate war statues and memorials. It has been coming for a long time. Most recently, Confederate flags were removed from some public property in the south. The move has picked up dramatically as a result of the protests and violence in Charlottesville, Virginia. That is where racial hate groups and counter-protestors clashed. One young woman was killed when a white supremacist ran her over with a car. The uproar only increased when President Trump first failed to... Full story

  • Don C. Brunell: Massive Fires Increasing Wood Prices

    Aug 17, 2017

    Massive forest fires in western parts of Canada and the U.S. are not only choking us with layers of smoke, but are cutting off lumber supplies around our country. The result is the cost of a new home is rising because of the growing shortage of framing lumber and laminated decking. The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported combination of the wildfires and the 30 percent tariff President Trump slapped on Canadian lumber producers are causing lumber shortages and drove up the average prices on new single-family homes nationwide to $406,400 in May....

  • Letters: August 17, 2017

    Aug 17, 2017

    Qualified? Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers said at her Aug. 10 Town Hall meeting, “I support Donald Trump because, because, because he’s a disrupter and we need to change DC. I continue to support him.” When a later question about Donald Trump was asked, she said, “Donald Trump was elected POTUS. He won the election and I’ve already told you why I support him.” So, being a disrupter is McMorris Rodgers qualification for POTUS? Another woman recently disagreed with her when she said she thought the POTUS should be: “Someone who knows his...

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