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  • Letters

    Jun 3, 2015

    Help Needed! The 1948 Harley-Davidson bought new by the City in 1952 was recently put up for sale by the Mayor and Police Chief. They wanted to use the money to buy another police car. They said it had no historical value. The sale of this motorcycle for that reason made a large group of people feel that it was necessary to work to save it from being lost forever. There was a deadline made by the Police Chief for the sale. The Whitman County Historical Society was contacted and wanted to buy it, but did not have the money. A citizen bought the...

  • Rich Lowry

    Jun 3, 2015

    If the National Security Agency’s bulk-data program expires, the coroner should conclude that it was “Death by Bumper Sticker.” Rarely has a controversial government program been so fiercely debated and so poorly understood. Authorized by soon-to-expire Section 215 of the Patriot Act, it has been brought to the edge of extinction by a couple of simple but inaccurate phrases, including “listening to your phone calls” and “domestic spying.” You can listen to orations on the NSA program for hours and be outraged by its violation of our liberties...

  • Bob Franken

    Jun 3, 2015

    The Alabama Legislature has made the state the fourth to officially call for a convention to amend the Constitution. That’s the U.S. Constitution, the one that protects our freedoms, or purports to, the one that sets limits on the government of the United States. They’d better watch it, because they’re playing with fire. Article 5 outlines the way the nation’s foundation can be reworked. Congress can pass an amendment by a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate in Washington, followed by ratification by three-fourths of the country...

  • Feeling safe?

    Gordon Forgey|Jun 3, 2015

    The Transportation Safety Administration is going through a shakeup. Reportedly, the agency failed in detecting dangerous items passing through security at airports. The items were brought by TSA agents posing as passengers. They were to test the integrity of the security system. The screeners failed to detect the test items ninety-five percent of the time As a result, agency managers are being reassigned and a number of procedural changes are being made. This news comes at the same time that it was discovered that a government laboratory...

  • Bruce Cameron

    May 27, 2015

    Editor’s Note: The following column was originally published in 2010. Few things have ever given me as much national pride as learning that an American named Monte Pierce currently holds the world record for firing a dime the longest distance (10 feet, 10.5 inches) using his earlobe. China’s economy may be growing faster than ours, and maybe we aren’t competitive at soccer, but at this, using ears as slingshots, we excel. Take that, world. I learned about this dime-shot accomplishment from the folks at Guinness, who manage the most famou...

  • Don C. Brunell

    May 27, 2015

    While protesters were trying to block a Shell oil rig from docking in Elliott Bay, a team of surgeons and nurses at Vancouver’s Legacy Salmon Creek Hospital was replacing my left hip. Interestingly, the tools used in both places primarily came from raw materials made from coal, oil and natural gas. Some of the Seattle protestors were in a flotilla of kayaks — boats made, ironically, from petroleum-based products. Their attempted blockade is the latest chapter in a larger campaign across the nation to eliminate fossil fuels. But fossil fuels con...

  • Rich Lowry

    May 27, 2015

    The Amtrak crash outside of Philadelphia was an invitation for practically every politician in the Northeast and every transit expert in America to complain about lack of funding for the county’s infrastructure. They didn’t even wait to know what was the cause of the tragedy to take to the airwaves and recite the usual litany of laments for our “crumbling” infrastructure and our lack of high-speed rail. What these advocates rarely do is take account of Amtrak as it actually exists. It is a test case of a highly subsidized (and politic...

  • BOB FRANKEN

    May 27, 2015

    What a dilemma for the Republicans. They’re holding their first debate later this summer, and they have some 20 candidates who have either officially declared or made it clear they’d like to. They are mostly prominent: governors, senators, brain surgeons, business executives, business executives who are publicity hounds and assorted others. Depending on your point of view, the GOP has either an embarrassment of riches or a lineup that’s an embarrassment. The question is, which ones do you dare cut? Forget about relying on their ranking in th...

  • More than words

    May 27, 2015

    This Memorial Day was marked by speeches, ceremonies and concerts. The President spoke at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. Tombstones around the country were decorated with flags and flowers. Some grave sites were marked with personal gifts. The words were nice and so were the tributes. Veterans, however, often need more than words. They need assistance in returning to civilian life. They need decompression time. They may need medical care. And, often not stated, they need a national policy that gives them the opp...

  • Bruce Cameron

    May 20, 2015

    Editor's Note: The following column was originally published in 2010. My younger sister looks to me to provide her with advice on how to do her job better -- though she's too shy to ask me questions, so I have to give her my opinion on an unsolicited basis. (She's a doctor.) "You're 'book smart' in medicine. I'm 'street smart,'" I explain to her. "I've been practicing for 20 years!" she replies. "Well, keep at it, practice makes perfect. I think you're coming along fine," I say charitably. (Her response to this is, as they say in the medical...

  • Don C. Brunell

    May 20, 2015

    There’s an old saying that people living in glass houses shouldn’t throw rocks. The moral is that before criticizing others, you should make sure your own house is in order. Companies, such as REI, supporting Gov. Inslee’s climate change legislation should heed that advice. REI is an iconic Northwest retailer of high-end outdoor gear popular with nature enthusiasts and millennials. REI has been a big booster of Gov. Inslee’s climate change agenda which pits Washington businesses against one another. The company hosted the governor’s rollout of...

  • Letters

    May 20, 2015

    Who are they? The Gazette had a front page story, below the fold, about Patagonia buying full page ads in several newspapers in Washington state. These ads were to get people to agree and contact our state senators to attempt to destroy four hydroelectric dams. The ads failed to mention these dams have generated very cheap power for Washington residents for many years. If these dams were gone, several unintended consequences would be: 1. Electricity rates for many Whitman County users would skyrocket. 2. Every spring these rivers would run...

  • Rich Lowry

    May 20, 2015

    Manicures and pedicures aren't usually news or fodder for commentary, but a blockbuster report in The New York Times has made them a compelling issue. Under the headline "The Price of Nice Nails," the story cataloged the abusive treatment of workers in New York City's ubiquitous nail salons. The story generated an enormous reaction; it highlighted the poignant juxtaposition of affluent women enjoying what once would have been a luxury, thanks to poor, exploited women with no other options. It is a tableau that doesn't feel very American or...

  • Bob Franken

    May 20, 2015

    "Used to be I couldn't spell 'politician.' Now I are one." Yes, it's come to that. It seems that now candidates are proudly declaring as they run for the most powerful political office in the world that they don't know the first thing about politics. In fact, neurosurgeon-turned-presidential-candidate Ben Carson made no brains about it: "I'm not a politician," he insisted. "I don't want to be a politician. Because politicians do what is politically expedient -- I want to do what's right." Easier said than done, Ben. There are an awful lot of...

  • Time to ask questions

    May 20, 2015

    The candidate filing period is closed. Even the special three-day filing period for positions without a candidate closed Wednesday. The look of the August ballot is decided, except perhaps for a write-in challenge. Mary Dye of Pomeroy, just appointed to fill Susan Fagan’s vacated state representative seat, has filed to retain that seat by popular vote. Two others, Richard Lathim of Pasco and Kenneth Caylor of Othello, have filed to take it for themselves. In Colfax, incumbent Todd Vanek wants to keep his job. Two others want it as well. F...

  • Don C. Brunell

    May 13, 2015

    How is Seattle’s Lighthouse for the Blind connected to the Export-Import Bank? Very closely. Since 1918, The Lighthouse for the Blind has provided education, training and manufacturing jobs for people with visual and hearing disabilities. Of the 400 people currently employed there, approximately 240 are blind or deaf-blind. In its certified machine shop, the Lighthouse employs more than 70 visual or hearing-impaired machinists whose customer list includes the Federal Defense Logistics Agency, The Boeing Company and BAE Systems. The m...

  • Bruce Cameron

    May 13, 2015

    Editor’s Note: The following column was originally published in 2010. I’ve read that an average dog possesses a vocabulary of 200-300 words, which is enough for him to have his own Twitter account. Most people won’t buy their dogs a smartphone, though, so you don’t see too many canines tweeting their friends unless they have access to a computer. Probably from the dogs’ point of view there are a lot of words they would just as soon not know, the N-word being the most obnoxious. Here’s an excerpt from a dog’s wiki-dictionary on known words:...

  • Letters

    May 13, 2015

    Three things Could we ask our state legislators to do three things regarding recreational drugs? One would be to take some action against the largest recreational drugs. What’s to stop our state from declaring that alcohol, tobacco (and marijuana?) are semi-legal drug s— legal enough to be sold in restricted circumstances, but not legal enough to be advertised? Tobacco kills 420,000 Americans each year, and alcohol is the number one drug related to crimes of violence, including violent sexual predations, and produces about half the workload for...

  • Bob Franken

    May 13, 2015

    Our country is unraveling, right before our eyes. No longer can we treat the eruptions of violence in places like Baltimore as isolated incendiary incidents. If, as a nation, we don’t take immediate remedial action, which means a complete overhaul of a brutally unfair system, the grudges that have simmered for so many generations will explode wherever there are people who are oppressed by those who benefit from a grossly inequitable economic system. It’s too easy to dismiss the rioting in Baltimore as the actions of some punks who went on a r...

  • Rich Lowry

    May 13, 2015

    President Barack Obama responded to the Baltimore riots with a heartfelt bout of self-righteous hectoring. Supposedly, we all know what’s wrong with Baltimore and how to fix it, but don’t care enough. Not only is this attitude highhanded, it rests on a flagrantly erroneous premise. President Obama doesn’t have the slightest idea how to fix Baltimore. His solutions fall back on liberal bromides going back 50 years. Dating back to the Kerner Commission after the riots of the 1960s, the left’s go-to solution to urban problems has been more so...

  • Candidate deadline

    May 13, 2015

    Numerous local elected positions are coming up for a vote throughout the county. Friday is the last day to file for these offices and to be on the fall ballot. These positions are of vital importance to the direction municipalities, school districts and other taxing districts take. Those elected to these posts can make a big difference. These are the positions that intimately affect local lives and communities. The outcome of these elections often have a greater impact on communities than elections for higher offices. This voting cycle, which i...

  • Bruce Cameron

    May 6, 2015

    Editor’s Note: The following column was originally published in 2010. My parents live in the part of the United States that is Canada. It is so far north that Minnesota lies in the same direction as Miami. They have four distinct seasons: Winter, More Winter, Still More Winter, and That One Day of Summer. They’re not completely isolated: They can send and receive text messages, for example, provided they have pen and paper handy. And electricity is a lot more reliable now that it no longer comes from flying a kite in a thunderstorm. It sti...

  • Don C. Brunell

    May 6, 2015

    The Longshoremen’s work slowdown that snarled west coast ports for nine months is over, leaving behind bitter memories and billions in economic damages. But the global trends that foreshadowed that port disruption remain. Big container ships are coming to Washington ports and they are behemoths. Stand one upright and it would be taller than the Empire State Building. A decade ago, the world’s largest container ship sailing into the ports of Seattle and Tacoma carried 9,600 20-foot containers — enough to hold 1.3 million color TVs or 50 milli...

  • Letters

    May 6, 2015

    (Open letter from Susan Fagan written last week prior to her resignation from office) Proud to serve It is with a sad heart that I am informing the governor by letter tomorrow that I am resigning, effective at the close of business Friday. This is not a decision I made lightly. It concludes a process that began about six months ago, when issues were raised regarding mileage reimbursements from the state. After careful review of my records, many of these concerns have been resolved. At the same time, I agreed that some were problematic, and...

  • Rich Lowry

    May 6, 2015

    When Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks, the world should listen. He has a much keener sense of the direction of negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program than the president of the United States, and is evidently much more forthright about it. When the Iranians and the United States cut what was portrayed as a tentative deal on the Iranian nuclear program, they described it differently. The U.S. emphasized that sanctions would only be phased out gradually and that inspections would ensure complete transparency. Ayatollah Khamenei tweeted that t...

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