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  • Bob Franken: Unhappily Ever After

    Jan 11, 2017

    Forget about the honeymoon being over. There won't be any honeymoon. If you're thinking my outburst came because I had a bad reaction to all the sugar in my Froot Loops this morning, that's always possible. But in this case, I'm merely expressing the dismal reality that Donald Trump will face when he becomes the 45th president of the United States. Usually, when someone is inaugurated as the new chief executive, he starts out with a bit of goodwill, at least for a few weeks while his administration gets its bearings. That certainly will not be...

  • Steve Jobs’ regret?

    Jan 11, 2017

    It was 10 years ago January 9th. On that day in 2007, the late Steve Jobs made one of the greatest new product introductions in history. Had he been alive today, he may have regretted it. The stunning iPhone and its quick and ubiquitous copies from Samsung, Google, Microsoft, etc., made what was already established on the internet that much more potent. Texting exploded because of how easy it was. Facebook and YouTube came to the phone. Instagram and sexting were next. Texting while driving skyrocketed, leading to national campaigns to prevent...

  • Don C. Brunell: Cop Shootings and Job Stress Increased Last Year

    Jan 4, 2017

    The number of police officers shot and killed last year rose dramatically. So did the number of assaults on cops and the stress under which they work. That trend ought to concern every American because violence impacts our neighborhoods, schools and where we work and shop. Ask any realtor and they will tell you that safe streets and good schools are top of mind among renters and home buyers. Officers Down, the group sponsoring the national law enforcement memorial, reported that 140 officers died in the line of duty in 2016. Gunfire claimed...

  • Letters Jan. 5

    Jan 4, 2017

    Required English? A century ago Teddy Roosevelt proclaimed that people who came to America and wanted to become citizens must be fluent in English. He had a strong belief that language is what binds a country together. The fight for having English as our official language became more serious in 1968. La Raza, an organization that wants us to be multi-lingual which is backed by the blue party, was formed that year. Finally, a Hawaiian senator organized U.S. English in 1983. They presented congress with a resolution in 1996. A poll was taken to...

  • Bob Franken: All Trump, All The Time

    Jan 4, 2017

    My loyal readers, both of them, possibly remember that I've long championed some outside-the-box ways to reduce the deficit before we're overwhelmed with national debt. High on the list is naming rights. Our agencies could rake in billions of dollars by allowing corporations and other deep-pocketed special interests to hang their logos on our buildings. It would be a symbol not only of the oligarchs' patriotism, but a way of showing that they've totally taken over and will direct the policies developed inside. In spite of the obvious merit of t...

  • Rich Lowry: Who’s the Boss?

    Jan 4, 2017

    Donald Trump was supposed to take over the Republican Party, but the question going forward will be whether the Republican Party takes over him. So far the early legislative agenda of Republicans after the Trump revolution is shaping up to be what you would have expected prior to the Trump revolution. It's a cookie-cutter GOP program that any Republican who ran for president in the past 40 years would feel comfortable signing, with its prospective centerpiece being another round of across-the-board tax cuts. This is why the Democratic approach...

  • Who is to blame?

    Jan 4, 2017

    Remember the lady who was burned by McDonald’s coffee when the cup tipped over and the coffee spilled on her lap? She sued the fast-food giant for injuries. To the surprise of many, she won a massive award, apparently because nobody had told her that fresh coffee might be hot. Now, some grieving parents are suing the computer company Apple. In 2014, this couple was hit from behind by a 20-year-old driver on a Texas highway. The man was traveling at approximately 65 miles an hour. He was allegedly chatting on FaceTime, the two-way visual c...

  • Don C. Brunell: Opportunities with the Shift from Oil

    Dec 28, 2016

    As 2017 approaches, it is fascinating to look back at the vast changes in our lives over the last century and then imagine where we may be headed in the next 25 years. It is hard to picture that in the year 1900, more than 100,000 horses were in New York City. However, in 1917 the final horse-drawn carts, cabs and carriages left the city to be replaced by trucks, cars and buses. Henry Ford had perfected the “horseless carriage.” The Economist, a London-based magazine, highlighted the transformation in special report on the future of oil. Whi...

  • Frank Watson: The American Rebellion

    Dec 28, 2016

    In 2012 when Washington state was hotly debating legalizing recreational marijuana, I kept my thoughts to myself. I had never used pot in any form but realized that our national drug policies were not working. There was widespread disregard for the laws. Even Hollywood seemed to condone non-compliance. TV detective shows routinely had police officers tell suspects, “I’m not concerned about the drugs, I’m after something bigger.” We had to do something different. So, in the end, I reluctantly supported I-502, believing that it would spur th...

  • Rich Lowry: Hillary Has Only Herself to Blame

    Dec 28, 2016

    The Democrats have a simple explanation for Hillary Clinton's loss -- the Russians did it. The party that has had a decades-long soft spot toward Moscow and been reluctant to believe that the Kremlin might have aggressive intentions or, say, cheat on an arms-control agreement is in a frenzy over Russian hacking that supposedly denied Hillary the victory that was rightfully hers. John Podesta, the chairman of a Hillary campaign that considered accepting the results of an election part of American writ as of about two months ago, refused several...

  • Bob Franken: Red Flags Over Trump Towers

    Dec 28, 2016

    There is a really good reason to support Senate confirmation of Rex Tillerson to be President-elect Donald Trump's secretary of state: Tony Perkins opposes him. Perkins is the president of the Family Research Council, otherwise known as the Bedroom Busybodies. He blasted out a statement condemning ExxonMobil CEO Tillerson as a person who "not only led the charge to open the Boy Scouts to gay troop leaders but whose company directly gives to Planned Parenthood." Tillerson was, in fact, active in the Boy Scouts and did lead the effort to open...

  • Write us!

    Dec 28, 2016

    The Gazette has been around for a long time. It was first published the year after General Armstrong Custer was defeated at the Little Big Horn and the United States celebrated its centennial. In 1877, the founding year of the Gazette, the Nez Perce Indians under Chief Joseph tried to escape Idaho for Canada, being stopped in Montana in the dead of winter. That is when Joseph famously proclaimed to “fight no more forever.” The Gazette was well established when the Gunfight at the OK Corral took place and later when Geronimo surrendered. Uly...

  • Don C. Brunell: Washington Apples Making Comeback

    Dec 21, 2016

    This year’s good news is Washington apple production is the second best ever. The better news is shipments to Asian markets are returning to normal. Let me explain. In 2014, our state had its best apple crop in history, but prospects to deliver cases of apples across the ocean were dampened by a labor dispute at West Coast seaports. That dispute led to a prolonged slowdown (and eventual shutdown) in loading ships carrying thousands of agriculture and manufactured products. According to a report issued jointly by the National Association of M...

  • Frank Watson: Worthwhile Projects

    Dec 21, 2016

    Just imagine that some generous benefactor gave you $5 million with the caveat that it had to be used to benefit the world we live in. How would you spend it? My first reaction would be world wide health care. There are research projects for aids, cancer and other crippling diseases that are hamstrung by lack of funds. Organizations such as Doctors Without Borders do wonderful work. I have run across some of these people in my travels and can assure you that they are dedicated to providing health care in parts of the world that don’t have w...

  • Rich Lowry: The Party of Workers

    Dec 21, 2016

    In the course of a couple of tweets, Donald Trump may have ended the image of the GOP as the party of corporate America. After striking a Carrier deal to preserve about 800 jobs, the president-elect slapped the Indiana company Rexnord on Twitter for "rather viciously firing" its workers and then went after Boeing for ripping off the public on a $3 billion Air Force One deal. Just like that, and in less than 280 characters, Trump had established more distance from big business than the GOP had in a generation. In his frenetic way, he is forcing...

  • Bob Franken: Fake Comet Ping Pongs

    Dec 21, 2016

    Most people think of the mainstream media as the scum of the earth -- and most of us are -- but we do at least try to check out information before we go with a story. What a waste of time! Nobody trusts us anyway. Apparently, people prefer reports that don't bother with trivialities like facts. They choose to believe "fake news," so called because the stuff is not real. It's the figment of someone's imagination -- someone who is a looney-tune or has a profit motive or political agenda. In the warp-speed world of the internet, thousands upon...

  • Yes, Virginia

    Dec 21, 2016

    Eight-year-old Virginia O’Hanlon wrote a letter to the editor of the New York Sun asking for the truth about Santa Claus because her friends were telling her he did not exist. The famous response written by Francis Pharcellus Church was printed as an editorial Sept. 21, 1897. VIRGINIA, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men’s or chi...

  • Don C. Brunell: Million Wreaths Across America

    Dec 14, 2016

    Christmas is a difficult time for anyone grieving for lost loved ones. It is especially painful for America’s military families whose son, daughter, spouse or parent was killed while serving in uniform. Normally, the fallen are remembered on Memorial Day, but thanks to a Maine family and more than 800,000 donors and volunteers, more than a million wreaths will be laid on the tombstones of our fallen soldiers, sailors and airmen on Dec. 17. The panoramic view of Arlington National Cemetery’s rolling hills with its white grave markers per...

  • Frank Watson: Standing Rock Protest

    Dec 14, 2016

    It looks like the weather will bring the protests in North Dakota to a halt – at least until spring. I have been trying unsuccessfully to make some sense out of the controversy, but I haven’t heard anything that says the pipeline is not a good idea. The United States uses more oil than any other country in the world. To fill our requirements, we have had to import crude from countries that are not always friendly. Some are downright hostile. Before we began development of the North Dakota oil fields, we were dependent on foreign sources for...

  • Letters Dec. 15

    Dec 14, 2016

    Transmogrify Friends and fellow citizens who are loudly advocating for the sanctity of the second amendment, remember, there’s a lot more to the Constitution that needs defending these days. It’s like the Ten Commandments, you don’t get to just pick the ones you like and ditch the rest. Let’s all keep our eyes on the ball and be sure our great democracy doesn’t transmogrify into an oligarchy or a kleptocracy. Too many have sacrificed too much. Steve Swoope, Colfax...

  • Rich Lowry: To Kill a Pipeline

    Dec 14, 2016

    One of the Obama administration's core competencies is suspending pipeline projects with no cause. It will leave office with another notch in its belt, now that the Army Corps of Engineers has acted to block a final piece of the Dakota Access Pipeline. The 1,200-mile pipeline is designed to move oil from North Dakota to Illinois and will have to await completion in a Trump administration with a more rational attitude toward pipelines specifically and fossil fuels generally. The story of the Dakota Access Pipeline will be familiar to anyone who...

  • Bob Franken: Winner's Revenge

    Dec 14, 2016

    Oh, the games the Donfather is playing. He does know how to take his pound of flesh. With Mitt Romney, for instance, he's extracting a ton. Donny the Avenger, who seems to be motivated by grudges, has been able to humiliate Mitt by making him grovel for the secretary of state job. And that was after he sent out his stalking horse Kellyanne Conway to say that making Mitt Romney his chief steward of foreign policy would be a "betrayal." Newt Gingrich, a stalking something else, ridiculed Romney for "sucking up." Their assignments from the boss se...

  • Trump takes on Boeing

    Dec 14, 2016

    The Boeing company has been tweeted down by President-elect Donald Trump. He took exception to the company’s work on a new generation of planes designed to carry the president and others. These would be the new Air Force One class of planes. Two of them are planned. They will replace the aging aircraft that have been in service since George H.W. Bush was president. New ones are needed. These are not average aircraft. They are equipped with massive amounts of electronics, sophisticated communications, defensive devices and in-flight refueling c...

  • Don C. Brunell: Removing Snake River Dams is Unwise

    Dec 7, 2016

    There are dams that should come down and those that shouldn’t. Hopefully, as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers conducts its review of the 14 federal dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers, that will become abundantly clear. Here is the difference. Demolishing the two dams on the Elwha River west of Port Angeles was a good thing. The dams were built in the early 1900’s to bring electricity to the Olympic Peninsula at a time when salmon and steelhead were plentiful in other Pacific Northwest rivers. Neither dam had fish ladders. On the Elwha, the i...

  • Frank Watson: Dam Logic

    Dec 7, 2016

    I have read several arguments against breaching our Snake River Dams. Some recently published here in the Gazette were excellent. They presented both the ecological and economic logic that would lead any rational person to conclude that the dams should stay. The problem we face, however, is that environmentalists are not rational. Anyone who has had any dealings with the EPA can testify that logic rarely gets in the way of their actions. My wife and I long dreamed of a waterfront getaway cabin. We finally saved enough for a down payment on our...

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