Serving Whitman County since 1877

Opinion / Letters


Sorted by date  Results 712 - 736 of 3750

Page Up

  • Staying connected during social distancing

    Jana Mathia, Gazette Editor|Mar 19, 2020

    Study after study shows the importance of social connection to overall health, especially mental. With the current emphasis on social distancing and fears of spreading disease, it can be easy to forget the importance of maintaining that aspect of our mental health. While we rejoice in our wireless accomplishments, we remain a herd animal drawn to the company of others. Sadly, those most needing to distance themselves are the ones that already suffer from isolation. Some elderly individuals alrea...

  • TP Shortage is Tip of Iceberg

    Don C. Brunell, Freelance Columnist|Mar 19, 2020

    If you think the run on toilet paper is just an American thing, think again. On March 10, Business Insider (BI) reported: “The spread of the coronavirus has brought with it panic-buying of food and household essentials, despite the attempts of governments to discourage stockpiling. But no item has made more headlines than the humble toilet roll.” “From buying enough toilet rolls to make a throne, to printing out blank newspaper pages to serve as extra toilet paper, people have had a seemi...

  • Sex education – spare me

    Mar 19, 2020

    Sex education is complicated because biology is complicated. We should base education on truth, to the extent that we can discern the truth. I'm not going to give an opinion, because my mind can not encompass the intricacies of genetics. Here's what I found on the first website I dove into. I'm now dizzy, and not going back for more! It begins with "Research suggests that..." It's not simple xx and xy. It's 46XX and 46XY and 45X and 45Y and 47XXX and 47XYY and 47XXY and 49XXXXY and "some males are born 46XX due to the translocation of a tiny...

  • Panic

    Mar 19, 2020

  • Bait jars could send a message to Fish and Wildlife

    Roger Harnack, Publisher|Mar 19, 2020

    Unintended consequence or bureaucratic power grab? Given the things being ordered behind locked doors of government offices, I’ll take the latter. Tonight, March 25, when the clock strikes midnight, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife is banning all fishing and boating statewide. This closure comes on the heels of a previous order to ban all camping on publicly owned, state-managed lands. The closures, Department of Fish and Wildlife officials say, is in keeping with Gov. Jay Inslee’s Mon...

  • Sex education bill

    Roger Harnack, Owner & Publisher|Mar 12, 2020

    Engrossed Senate Bill 5395, the sex education bill mandating “inclusive” curriculum beginning in kindergarten has been hotly contested this legislative session in Olympia. But with the House and Senate both backing the bill, it’s likely to become an issue locally. Under the bill sponsored by Sen. Claire Wilson, an openly lesbian Democrat from Federal Way, all public schools statewide would be required to start teaching a curriculum that includes gay, lesbian, transgender and other “protected cla...

  • Coronavirus Testing Telecommuting Effectiveness

    Don C. Brunell, Freelance Columnist|Mar 12, 2020

    Nobody knows how deep the impact of the coronavirus will be, but one thing that it is destined to test is how effectively people will work from home. Washington is at the point of the spear. Of the 22 U.S. deaths attributed to COVID-19, there are 19 in our state. To avoid further exposure, employers are encouraging telecommuting, canceling meetings, events and travel, and, taking extra caution to sanitize work locations. Seattle-based Alaska Airlines is among the carriers taking additional...

  • Russia gets a vote

    Mar 12, 2020

    I want to suggest for future elections we provide a space on the ballot for Russia to indicate who we should vote for. This would be a great benefit to our legislators so they wouldn’t have to spend the next four years and millions of tax dollars trying to find out if a candidate is being supported by Russia. We should also allow Russia to spend as much money as they wish putting ads in the media for or against any candidate. It couldn’t be any different than the baloney we get now from most candidates in the media. Certainly most of our vot...

  • That dam issue again!

    Mar 12, 2020

    Hey – we showed up in 2016 and let them hear our voices, we must show up and/or send comments again on this dam initiative. Let them know how we feel about this talk of taking them out. The squeaky wheel gets the grease – every time. Let’s squeak!! Public comments can be submitted through crso.info or mailed, and post marked by April 13 to US Army Corps of Engineers, CRSO EIS PO Box 2870, Portland, OR 97208-2870. P.S. Thanks Gordon for all the years of great journalism with the Gazette, we’ll miss you. Jeanne Kjack Rosalia...

  • Ice Age?

    Mar 12, 2020

    I’m pessimistic enough to believe that our carbon based energy production will overheat our planet. I’m also pessimistic enough to wonder if the planet will heat up on it’s own, somehow, no matter what we do. Imagine my excitement when I heard that NASA had issued a report this year (2020), predicting an ice age in the near future. So, I searched it! So disappointing. A NASA blog dated February 13, 2020, headlines, “There is no impending mini ice age.” They published a graft which has two lines – one represents the Earth’s temperature,...

  • A little breathing room

    Mar 12, 2020

  • A word from the new owner

    Roger Harnack, Publisher|Mar 5, 2020

    You’ve read that your hometown newspaper has been sold. You’ve been told that newspapers are failing. You may have even heard “print is dead.” Now, you are concerned local news and sports coverage will be disappear. You’re worried that that you’ll have to look to the Internet to see what’s happening in your neighborhood. B way of an introduction, let us assuage your concerns. We are Free Press Publishing, Eastern Washington’s largest community newspaper group. Our publications are found in mostl...

  • Gazette Sale Timely Good News

    Mar 5, 2020

    After 30 years at the helm, Gazette Publisher Gordon Forgey announced last week his paper was sold to journalist Roger Harnack, a partner of Free Press Publishing based in Cheney, Wash. This is great news for a retiring publisher and even better news for Whitman County, a stay from joining America’s vast desert of “No News Zones.” I met Harnack in 2012 when I joined the International Society of Weekly News Editors (ISWNE), a rowdy newspaper group that prides itself on upholding the tenets of community journalism and shining the spotlight on op...

  • Unbiased

    Mar 5, 2020

    Gordon, thanks for your unbiased service to the Gazette readers over the years and I do hope the new owners will not be biased as most newspapers are. To the typical Seattle reader of the Gazette who complained about depicting Bernie Sanders as an old man with a Soviet flag, nothing could have been more accurate. Bernie is 78, recently had a heart attack, went to Russia several times to study Marxism and his idol was none other than Fidel Castro. He has been a Senator for 25 years and had three bills of his own, two for naming post offices. He...

  • Legislators Must Find Better Ways to Reduce CO2

    Mar 5, 2020

    Washington and Oregon lawmakers want to end their legislative sessions; however, accounting for the costs of carbon emissions is a major road block. In Salem, rural Republican senators are boycotting session and thereby denying majority Democrats a quorum to vote on a “cap and trade” bill. The measure calls for an 80 percent state reduction in greenhouse gases (GHG) by 2050. The system would be similar to existing programs in California and some Canadian provinces. The state would set a cap on total GHG emissions. Oregon’s largest 100 indus...

  • Jackpot!

    Mar 5, 2020

  • Sale of the Gazette

    Gordon Forgey, Gazette Publisher|Feb 27, 2020

    I have sold the Gazette and Daily Bulletin. The new owners will take over on March 1. The papers will officially become part of the Free Press Publishing group in Cheney. It has been a big decision, but I am confident that the change will give the Gazette many more years of service to Whitman County. In the back room we have a variety of historic print items. One is a type drawer simply addressed to the Gazette, Colfax, WT. The WT stands for Washington Territory. The paper has had a long history, longer than Washington has been a state. The...

  • The Low Barr

    Bob Franken, Syndicate Columnist|Feb 27, 2020

    President Donald Trump is right that he does “have, as president, the legal right” to meddle in Department of Justice decisions. However, when he makes public comments, or when it can be shown that he has privately discussed any federal criminal case with his Justice subordinates, it should be considered undue interference, and a judge should order that all prosecutions of affected individuals or groups be halted. Furthermore, another count of obstruction of justice should be added to the list of criminal charges he will face when he leaves the...

  • William Barr Is His Own Man

    Rich Lowry, National Review Editor|Feb 27, 2020

    Can the republic survive Attorney General William Barr? That's the question that has seized the media and center left, which have worked themselves into a full-blown panic over an attorney general who is, inarguably, a serious legal figure and one of the adults in the room late in President Donald Trump's first term. Some 2,000 former Justice department employees have signed a letter calling on Barr to resign. An anti-Barr piece in The Atlantic opined that "it is not too strong to say that Bill Barr is un-American," and warned that his America...

  • Pet Peeves and Okeydokes

    Feb 27, 2020

    Okaydokes Local business owners who endure in a labor of love to serve their communities....

  • Human mind greatest resource

    Feb 27, 2020

    I have just read Carl M. Ogren’s letter where he hyperventilates over the coming climate warming catastrophe. I have also just read a 2020 report from NASA predicting a coming ice age. I worked for “The Mother Earth News” in the late 1970’s, and I recall very well all the predictions then of a coming ice age. I completely bought into Paul Ehrlich’s “End of Affluence” and “The Cold and the Dark.” I recall that Manhattan was predicted to be under an un-melting sheet of ice by the year 2000. Then the alarmist changed the meme to global warming…an...

  • Political tribal stances

    Feb 27, 2020

    Frank Watson’s article showing his skepticism about climate change issues brought to mind something that has become apparent to me over the last few years. People in general believe in the validity of science except when it comes to choosing science over cultural beliefs. I can ask anyone two questions concerning science and find out a tremendous amount about that person. I can’t tell their race, their income or their amount of education. But I can tell you if they are liberal or conservative leaning. The questions: 1) What are your views on...

  • Pandemic lethality

    Feb 27, 2020

    With all the news about the coronavirus, many are wondering about the impact of a truly global-wide pandemic on world population. I got to thinking about the population implications of such pandemics and ran a few numbers. The Spanish flu is thought to have killed about 50 million globally when the estimates for global population was about 1.75 billion for lethality of 3 percent. If the true lethality for coronavirus is 3 percent, that would work out to about 231 million deaths for the current world population of 7.7 billion. For comparison,...

  • Offensive cartoon

    Feb 27, 2020

    Gary Varvel’s political cartoon on the opinion page of the Gazette on Feb. 20, 2020, depicting presidential candidate Bernie Sanders in a wheelchair with a Soviet Union flag draped over his lap, being pushed off a cliff by a donkey, is offensive to many Americans and a gross distortion of reality. This sort of political opinion is not at all helpful in furthering reasonable political discourse in our nation. Mark Olson, Seattle...

  • Colorado River Water Problems Worsening

    Don C. Brunell, Freelance Columnist|Feb 27, 2020

    Last week, we visited the Grand Canyon National Park in northern Arizona. It is part of our National Parks “bucket list.” The trip was a real eye-opener. The Canyon is spectacular. It is hard to believe over a billion years ago it was flat ground and covered by ocean waters. In ancient times, there was too much water. Today, it is a deep gorge with a ribbon of water running through it. The Grand Canyon is 277 miles long, over a mile deep and 10 to 18 miles across. The famed Colorado River runs t...

Page Down