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  • Don Brunell

    Nov 13, 2013

    The good news is, America is bringing its troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. However, that presents a challenge because a large number of those troops will leave the military upon their return. That shift, along with significant cuts in military spending, means tens of thousands of veterans will be looking for work. Unfortunately, those veterans have a higher rate of unemployment than the general population — 10.1 percent, compared to 7.2 percent for the general population. Many of these brave citizens who put their lives on the line for u... Full story

  • Garth Meyer

    Nov 13, 2013

    This week Macy’s, Target, J.C. Penney, Sears, Best Buy and other retailers annnounced plans to open earlier on Thanksgiving Day. Last year was the first time in history that mainline stores opened on the holiday. With all of these chains competing with each other, if one is open the others have to be too. Or do they? There seems to be some missed opportunity in all of this. What if one big store just stayed closed? The sheer public relations benefit in being the high-profile store that says “no” would be worth it, likely in spades. They... Full story

  • Bruce Cameron

    Nov 6, 2013

    The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) recently announced that they’ve gone insane. Of course, that isn’t exactly how they worded it. What they say on their Website, www.peta.org, is that from now on, we should all refer to fish as “sea kittens.” PETA, you see, is against eating fish and figures that renaming the sea creatures will cause people to think twice before they head off to Red Lobster. Don’t think that, in terms of eating fish, ordering a lobster lets you off the hook, no pun intended. According to the 1904 Entente C...

  • Letters

    Nov 6, 2013

    Visit Matthew In the wake of recent cuts in aid to the poor by Congress, and looking forward to even more cuts in the future, it may be time for those of us who profess to be followers of Christ to visit Matthew 25:31-46. Jesus said, “ I was hungry and you gave me to something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was homeless and you took me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you cared for me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.” I am always struck by the fact that Christ did not say that the...

  • Don Burnell

    Nov 6, 2013

    In the midst of all the turmoil, confusion and partisan infighting over the Affordable Care Act, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s words have come back to haunt us: “We have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it.” Well, now we know. Millions of people who buy their own health insurance are losing their coverage because their policies don’t qualify under Obamacare. Contrary to the president’s repeated assurances, they can’t keep their policies or their doctors. And because Obamacare requires policies to include benefits an...

  • Bob Franken

    Nov 6, 2013

    When he declared, “No one is madder about the website than I am,” President Barack Obama delivered the line with his usual unemotional cool. But apparently he sent out some strong signals. The woman standing behind him who was reduced to one of those awful Washington human props started to faint. Maybe she picked up on his anger. His displeasure is certainly justified. The bureaucrats, the contractors and the geeks have managed to make an unholy mess of his legacy-defining health-care reform, just as it was beginning to get off the ground. The...

  • Letters

    Oct 30, 2013

    Misleading & costly I am encouraging everyone to vote “No” on Initiative 522 in Washington State, the food labeling initiative. While we do not grow any GMO crops on our farm, and I encourage everyone to know where their food comes from and what is in it. I-522 does not do this. If you want to make sure there is not any GMO ingredients in the food you buy, there are already two federal labels in place. You can buy those labeled “organic” or “Non-GMO” and be assured that no GMO products are in those foods. A willy-nilly, state-by-st... Full story

  • Don Brunell

    Oct 30, 2013

    When the first passengers took off in Boeing’s 747 in 1970, the aircraft was dubbed the “Queen of the Skies.” Since then, the company’s mammoth plant just south of Everett has been the kingpin of the world’s jumbo jet production. To date, Boeing has built 1,500 747s — all of them designed and assembled in Washington. In 1994, the company launched the 777. Developed in consultation with eight major airlines, it was designed to replace older wide-body airliners and offer passenger capacity between that of the 767 and the 747. The 777 was a techn...

  • Adele Ferguson

    Oct 30, 2013

    I FIRST BEGAN writing about Tom Foley in 1975 when “Scoop” Jackson was running for president and U.S. Rep. Foley was urged to be his replacement in the Senate should Jackson win. It wasn’t Foley doing the promoting. He loved the House and he loved being chair of the Agriculture Committee which endeared him to his farm country constituents. He early betrayed a patrician streak by using taxpayer funds to buy $2,295.40 of Lenox China for use at coffee breaks because he balked at drinking from chipped Navy issue china. He also was so liked by th...

  • Gordon Forgey

    Oct 30, 2013

    Tuesday, November 5, is election day. That is deadline day, the day that votes must be cast or ballots postmarked. This is primarily a local election. Some issues, such as initiatives 517 and 522, and advisory votes will be on the ballot for every voter in the county and the state for that matter. Some votes are regional in nature. However, most of the ballot choices are as local as they come. No ballot is particularly lengthy as local elections appear on the official ballot only in the areas eligible to vote on them. That means, local ballots...

  • Letters

    Oct 23, 2013

    Do the research I would like to urge all voters to do their research on genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, in our food supply. The multi-national corporations that are throwing millions of dollars into a campaign against I-522 hope that we will be lazy and only listen to the words crafted by their self-interested marketing departments. There is abundant information out there. Here are a few examples: Later this week there is a free “GMO Mini Summit” teleconference featuring leading experts from the international community of phy...

  • Rich Lowry

    Oct 23, 2013

    Nancy Pelosi infamously said that we had to pass Obamacare to find out what’s in it. The then-House speaker erroneously assumed, evidently, that people would be able to get onto the government-run exchanges created by the law. So far the law’s implementation has been as ugly as its passage. The rollout of Obamacare has been so disastrous that even “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart was plainly mystified and unconvinced when Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius came on his show the other day to offer reassurances. Judging by the hap... Full story

  • Don Brunell

    Oct 23, 2013

    In 1992, a single male sockeye salmon managed to swim 900 miles from the mouth of the Columbia River to Redfish Lake in Idaho’s Sawtooth Mountains, the end of his migratory journey. Biologists dubbed the sole survivor, “Lonesome Larry.” By 2010, the Northwest Power and Conservation Council happily reported record-setting runs for sockeye —nearly 387,000 had climbed the fish ladders at Bonneville Dam. The numbers, which fluctuate annually, stand at 186,000 this year. The resurgence of the sockeye is not unique. As of Oct. 9, more than one mil...

  • Gordon Forgey

    Oct 23, 2013

    Here we go again. The two parties in the two houses of Congress recently came to an agreement to reopen government and to tackle the debt limit ceiling. The agreement gives the country a respite for a few months. It didn’t really solve anything. It just put the decision off for a while longer. To use the now over-used expression, Congress kicked the can down the road once again. The promise is that Congress will come together and generate answers and solutions with a greater shelf life than just a few months. Over these past excruciating years,...

  • Bruce Cameron

    Oct 17, 2013

    Editor’s Note: The following column was originally published in 2009. This past Christmas Eve, I was proud to see my 10-year-old niece and 4-year-old nephew participate in their church’s annual production of the story of Jesus, Mary, Joseph and Batman. My nephew, you see, has Batman body armor that he refuses to take off, even in the bathtub. I don’t blame him: It gives his little-boy body the rippled abs of a dancer at Chippendales. My niece has long coveted the role of Mary, but the appointment is strictly political. Her parents just haven...

  • Rich Lowry

    Oct 17, 2013

    Refusing to negotiate is the new reasonableness. After years of agonized media commentary about the failure of key players in Washington to sit down and work out their differences, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid plans to win the fight over the government shutdown by rejecting all compromise, calling his opponents names and escaping blame in the press. It is a gambit available only to Democrats, who are presumed, almost by definition, to be free of any responsibility for a shutdown. For his part, President Barack Obama says he won’t n...

  • Bob Franken

    Oct 17, 2013

    Let’s give the tea partyers the credit they deserve, because they have pulled off a near-miracle: They have unified the Democrats. It’s hard to remember the last time President Barack Obama and the herd of cats in his own party were marching in such lock step. But then, the extremists are, to be honest, way over their heads. Unfortunately, they control the Republican agenda, dragging their up-till-now wimpy leaders into their “defund Obamacare” fool’s errand. Even after the government shutdown and the looming threat of a catastrophic national... Full story

  • Gordon Forgey

    Oct 17, 2013

    The most controversial issue to be voted upon in November is Initiative 522. If passed, this initiative would require special labeling of some genetically modified foods. Opponents say that I-522 is clunky, incomplete and politically motivated. They claim that it will be expensive for the consumer as well. All these things seem true. Consumers deserve to know what is in their food and food products. It is a basic right-to-know issue. Nutritional labeling has been required on foods for years. It allows the consumer to make some educated choices... Full story

  • Bruce Cameron

    Oct 9, 2013

    Whenever I make coffee, it winds up tasting like I filtered it through burned underwear. This makes me popular with exactly no one in the family, even though I’ve cut down on everyone’s caffeine intake and you’d think they’d be grateful for that. Besides, if you add enough milk and sugar to my coffee, it’s actually quite pleasant — sort of like a warm burnt-underwear milkshake. Since 66 percent of my three children have worked as coffee pushers, I get a lot of flack from them on my ineptitude. “I’m not a coffee pusher, I’m a coffee barista,... Full story

  • Letters

    Oct 9, 2013

    Colfax Achievements John Henry celebrated 50 years at Colfax Security in Colfax! He has been a solid business person. He has volunteered his time with the Planning Commission for the City for dozens of years. He has been a member of Rotary Club serving in many capacities with that group for more years than I can guess. He contributes to every kid that is trying to raise money for a school activity. He could be out collecting money for the lymphoma society... or doing other volunteer work for various organizations. I don’t know how many have b... Full story

  • Adele Ferguson

    Oct 9, 2013

    How sad,” writes a reader, “that Congress has become a battlefield of hatred and derision in the constant quest for power. Same goes for the legislature.” I recall when there was a camaraderie in the legislature. Democrats went to dinner with Republicans. Insults were unheard of. How do we get that old camaraderie back? It depends on the people you send to Olympia and Washington, D.C. Back in those good old days lawmakers got something like $3,000 a year and shared offices and secretaries so you got candidates who truly wanted to serve the publ... Full story

  • Don Brunell

    Oct 9, 2013

    In 1915, Franz Kafka wrote a novel about a man who was arrested by two unidentified agents from an undetermined agency and put on trial before unseen judges for an unspecified crime. He was compelled to defend himself without knowing what crime he’d allegedly committed. The proponents of new shipping terminals in Washington must know how that feels. For example, the Gateway Pacific Terminal at Cherry Point would ship a variety of bulk commodities to Asia, including grain and potash, a component of fertilizer. But the commodity that has garnered... Full story

  • Gordon Forgey

    Oct 9, 2013

    The winds are intense, and giant waves crash over the ship. It is awash and being pushed towards jagged rocks. “Reef the mainsail,” the captain hollers against the wind. Half the crew jumps into action, but it is too much for them. They need help. The rest of the crew refuses. They think the captain is sending them to their deaths. “Add more sail,” they demand. If the captain adds more sail, they say, it will help save the ship. If he doesn’t, then so be it, the ship will go down. The captain cannot convince all the crew that reefing the sail...

  • Bruce Cameron

    Oct 2, 2013

    When I was in sixth grade, I noticed something wonderful, something I’d never seen before: girls. Well, OK, I’d seen them, but I felt about them the same way I felt about housecats: They did only what they wanted to do, and they weren’t any fun to wrestle. And, like cats, they could be cute sometimes, but they always left me feeling mildly allergic. And then one day the girl in front of me in class smiled at me, and chemicals flooded my brain, turning it into the Love Canal. My immediate reaction was to try to get the girl to perform that...

  • Letters

    Oct 2, 2013

    Amendment I would like to make an insert to show what I believe the definition of the Affordable Care Act should really be. They need to add Catastrophic before Affordable Care Act. This way the acronym would be CACA. I’m quite sure anyone familiar with Spanish would agree it more accurately describes what it entails. It would also clear up any misunderstanding “we the people” and Congress might have, even though Congress gets an exemption. I hope we all remember this come voting time. Mel Mundell, Elberton Samaritan Monday the 23rd, my wife an...

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