Now that Hawaii Dairy Farms has pulled its EIS, opponents are slathering at the opportunity to drive a final
stake through the heart of the project.
Though HDF issued a press release
vowing “we're not giving up,” it's unclear whether it actually
can answer the concerns raised by the Office of Environmental Quality
Control. One thing, however, is clear: it would be virtually
impossible for a non-philanthropic entity to engage in this lengthy, costly,
contentious process. So if this project dies, it's unlikely we'll see
any new dairies in Hawaii — especially the small ones about which
opponents rhapsodize.
And that will suit many just fine, even
as they continue to preach the hollow doctrines of food security and
sustainability.
Perhaps an operational missile
interception site will be more to their liking than the “industrial
agriculture” they revile. No nasty flies, pesticides or manure to
worry about. And it sounds like Schatz and Tulsi are down for it.
Despite all the anti-ag activism, I'm
beginning to think that it might actually be possible to feed Hawaii,
seeing as how the antis have very low standards when it comes to
locally grown produce:
Now that's some sorry ass lettuce. But
hey, if she's happy with it....
After catching flack for pursuing
legislative bills that harm farmers, Hawaii Center for Food Safety
has changed its messaging, if not its actual strategy or goals:
Meanwhile, CFS continues to ignore the
fact that homeowners misusing pesticide products are the real, true
problem. After all, they caused nearly all the school evacuations,
and they are the reason why Oahu's urban streams have the highest
pesticide levels in the Islands. Shoots, even the pesticides
supposedly found in hair samples taken from Malia Chun's kids came
predominantly from domestic sources.
Rep. Lynn DeCoite, a Molokai Hawaiian
homestead farmer and vice chair of the House Agriculture Committee,
touched on this point in a Maui News commentary:
Punish those that do wrong. I fully
agree with that. Fine them — fine everyone who breaks the rules.
But if the evacuations of schools were caused by pesticide use by
homeowners, then why are we turning the blame on others?
In order to keep our communities safe,
we need to know who and what to keep them safe from. And it is the
responsibility of everyone in a community to know how to use
pesticides safely. This is why I feel these regulations should apply
to everyone.
For this bill [HB 1571], and many like
it, the real focus should be education and prevention. Let’s not
jump the gun. This could be the difference between our food being
sustainable or not.
I continue to be fascinated by the
process of idealizing and romanticizing agriculture and
sustainability in Hawaii. It's led to some really amazing revionist
history and super creative alternative facts, while deifying demagogues. Most recently, we see this dynamic at
play in a short film eulogizing Molokai. The narrator intones:
Molokai is now positioned to chart the
way forward for the planet by developing new models of sustainability
based on the indigenous wisdom of ancient Hawaii.
Really? Is anyone anywhere actually
looking at Molokai as the model for anything? If the planet's future depends on Molokai charting the way, we're really fucked.
The piece prominently features Molokai
activist Walter Ritte, who is slated to be the subject of his very
own documentary by the same filmmaker. It includes Walter's unintentionally amusing comment:
And then we have these outside forces
coming in and they want to change things.
Funny to hear Walter grouse about that,
seeing as how much money he's raked in from the “outside forces”
funding Hawaii SEED. These same “outside forces” have also
bankrolled AINA, Poisoning Paradise, Island Earth and the other
anti-GMO, back to the 'o'o videos circulating among the “aloha
aina” crowd, which is itself comprised largely of “outside
forces” who moved to Hawaii looking for their little piece of
paradise.
Of course, Walter has his cash cow —
and in upcoming days I'll be delving deeper into the money that's
flowing into the Hawaii anti-GMO movement. So why should he be
concerned about destroying economic opportunities for his fellow
Molokai residents, many of whom are acutely aware of the reality that
the seed companies, government jobs and welfare are the three largest
“employers?” As this Hawaii Business report noted:
“There was always something else.
When pineapple closed, the resorts were there. When the ranch closed,
Monsanto was still there. There was always an answer. We don’t have
the answer now.”
—Kimberly Mikami Svetin, Store owner
Guess she hasn't heard that Walter's got it all nailed down.
11 comments:
Hope Walter is claiming all his secret income and gift neighbor island trips on his IRS tax filings.
And has anyone checked to see if he's been registering as a lobbyist? Cause he sure meets the criteria for a lobbyist. Or maybe like Babe against Biotech Nomi Carmona, who was finally busted, he doesn't think the rules apply to him.
they don't plan to sell the milk on Kauai anyway
That's not true. It will be bottled on Oahu and sold on Kauai.
Ew gross... old pasteurized milk. Ew and ew
Yes, you just stick to the really old, twice pasturized milk from the mainland. Or better yet, your highly processed milk alternatives, also shipped with a high carbon footprint from the mainland.
Maybe they should use the Julian Date system for milk like they do for eggs. Distinguishes between the pack date and "use by" date.
Putting Walter in charge of anything is like putting him in charge of the Fire Department or irrigation.
Wasn't the big fist the prior director of the Office of Environmental Control? I see his fingerprints all over this. Hooser, that buggah. His reach is long.
"If the planet's future depends on Molokai charting the way, we're really fucked."
LOL!!! Good one!
Still waiting for Civil Beat to report on the dairy EIS situation. Silence is getting loud.
Improving the outlook for "The Welfare Island" would be most welcome. Somehow, I'm not sure Ritte and his groupies can pull it off.
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