That big
bright moon slid behind the mountains, leaving Venus to announce a
surreal sunrise of purple and orange, valleys steaming with mist,
shama thrush warbling, pig smells distracting Koko and Paele, and as
we returned from our walk, I saw the kids heading for the school bus:
ears plugged, heads down, thumbs working phones, and I thought, this
could be the first generation in human history raised with many of
its senses purposely stunted, shut off.
And it
did not seem to me to be a good thing, or evolutionarily wise, not
when we need more than ever to be looking up and out at the big
picture, actually seeing, smelling and hearing the real, living world
that we are creating and destroying.
It
brought to mind a quote from cultural expert Ramsay Taum, delivered
at a climate change conference and reported in Henry Curtis'
“ililanimedia” blog post yesterday:
In our
medical systems we were looking at dead things. We take live things
and kill them and cut them up to understand them and think we now
understand them when there are alive. So we develop all of our
methodologies, our responses, based on what we see after they're dead
rather than alive, so maybe we need to shift the way we research.
We
approach so much of life ass backward.
Like
instead of fielding a candidate to try and beat Mayor Bernard
Carvalho Jr., the ever-vengeful and deep-pocketed Mike Sheehan keeps
pushing the state Attorney General to bust the big guy for taking the fifth during the “fuel gate” inquiries. Even though the AG
clearly doesn't want to touch it, and already bounced it back to
Police Chief Darryl Perry and Prosecutor Justin Kollar, both of whom
declined to pursue it, saying it was a civil matter.
But Mike
and his attorney, Richard Wilson, are still beating on the AG's door,
this time asking the office to “make and file a certificate that
Mr. Carvalho, fka [formerly known as] Mayor Carvalho, refused to
testify two years ago in connection with a fuel audit.” The
certificate is then supposed to be sent to the finance director, who
is appointed by the mayor, apparently to make him stop paying the
mayor's salary.
We
already had a federal judge scold Kauai for its petty political feuds
in Councilman Tim Bynum's lawsuit against the county – another
action that Wilson was involved in. Will the AG issue a similar smack
down over this obvious political vendetta? Aside from the
questionable premise, there's the timing. This happened two years
ago, and they're only now making a stink, when the mayor's up for
re-election?
It's
like a repeat of former Councilwoman Lani Kawahara's tearful and very
public election-year allegations that former Council Chair Kaipo
Asing supposedly had threatened her a year earlier — an incident
that the police initially determined to be unfounded and that she
herself chose not to pursue. It was all bullshit, a stunt contrived
by Lani and Tim to exact revenge on Kaipo, but it worked, and his
years of public service ended in ignoble defeat.
I don't
think the same thing will happen to Bernard, but it makes an ugly process even uglier and discourages people from participating in politics
at a time when we desperately need some new thinking.
I'll leave with you a joke for this Lenten time of year:
I'll leave with you a joke for this Lenten time of year:
An
Irishman goes into the confessional box after years of being away
from the Church.
Inside
he finds a fully equipped bar with Guinness on tap. On one wall
there's a row of decanters with fine Irish whiskey and Waterford
crystal glasses. On the other wall is a dazzling array of the
finest cigars and chocolates.
Then the
priest comes in.
"Father,
forgive me, for it's been a very long time since I've been to
confession, but I must first admit that the confessional box is
much more inviting than it used to be."
"Get
out, you moron," the priest replies. "You're on my side."
It's like a repeat of former Councilwoman Lani Kawahara's tearful and very public election-year allegations that former Council Chair Kaipo Asing supposedly had threatened her a year earlier — an incident that the police initially determined to be unfounded and that she herself chose not to pursue. It was all bullshit, a stunt contrived by Lani and Tim to exact revenge on Kaipo, but it worked, and his years of public service ended in ignoble defeat.
ReplyDeleteThere is much that you people need to learn about the GOBAG.
The Mayor has no real competition. He is doing a good job.
ReplyDeleteThe Council is another story. Why even have a Council? The votes will be 5 to 2, until either Jay or Chock wake up and start voting for the Kauai people.
The other 3 are definitely on some sort of Werner Erhart oblique zeitgeist.
There ain't no Gobags, the Society of Five is is in a celestial embrace of feel gooders, blaming others, passing the buck and smug oratory. No action, but lots of yakkity yak.
Great Gobs of Legal Larceny Batman, this Council continues to approve milyuns of dollahs fer simple l'il lawsuits.
“We are all honorable men here, we do not have to give each other assurances as if we were lawyers.” Puzo
"In our medical systems we were looking at dead things. We take live things and kill them and cut them up to understand them and think we now understand them when there are alive. So we develop all of our methodologies, our responses, based on what we see after they're dead rather than alive, so maybe we need to shift the way we research."
ReplyDeleteSorry. But this quote is absolutely inane. I found no medical or scientific research experience in Mr. Taum's background. This probably explains why he clearly has no idea what he is talking about (on this topic). ALL of our methodologies and ALL of our responses?? Note to Mr. Taum: "the shift" happened at least a generation ago.
Dick and the stooges have their panties in a twist because Bernard chose not to answer questions by the investigator (who is not a county officer, so it appears that the statute doesn't even apply) but have no problem with Shaylene clamming up before the council?
ReplyDeleteKids running to school buses? Oh, come on, Joan! Don't you remember when you were that age and cared little for the environment you found yourself in and viewed daily seemingly ad infinitum? Boring! I think what they're doing is fine as long as they get some dose of what we as adults value on a regular basis so they have it to draw on as they mature.
ReplyDeleteI read your post about the Lani-Kaipo dispute. The last comment was telling:
ReplyDeleteI read the transcript from the July 22, 2009 Council meeting and something stood out:
Mr. Chang: Thank you. Councilmember Kawahara, have you, since the election, met one on one with the Chair and express your concerns
directly to the Chair?
Ms. Kawahara: To tell you the truth, I have a hard time getting us here when we are all here together at the same time, so I sent written communications, so Chair Asing, I was not able to speak with you face to face.
In other words, she didn't speak to Kaipo for seven or eight months as of this meeting and probably still hasn't spoken to him since. Let's face it, she has some issues.
That sounds like maybe she was scared of him?
ReplyDeleteNo, it sounds like she waited to smear him, she was with him every week. Kaipo was treated poorly by Lani.
ReplyDeleteNo, Lani was treated poorly by Kaipo. Stop playing blame-the-victim.
ReplyDeleteLani, a victim, hardly
ReplyDeleteCompared to Kaipo, yah for sure
ReplyDeleteOh right, Lani cozied up to Tim who led her astray. Together they made some people a whole lot of money.
ReplyDeleteHer "fear" was treatable with therapy and medication. Or lessons on how to get along with others - the kind you learn in kindergarten.
ReplyDeleteI was there when it happened. Lani was the victim. Kaipo was an A-hole. He got what he deserved.
ReplyDeleteAnybody seen all the names that have already put in papers to run for Council? Includes Daryl Kaneshiro and looks like somebody with the same name as Chief Perry.
ReplyDeleteGo to the Kauai elections website and you can download the filing report. It's Arryl not Darryl and it looks like the chief is getting ready to go.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.kauai.gov/Default.aspx?tabid=84