So
weird, how Hawaii researchers go to great trouble and expense to
again confirm what has been known for decades — feral cats and rats
prey heavily on ground-nesting birds — yet so little is
being done to address it.
So
weird, how Terry Lilley continues to make totally bogus claims, yet
is still treated as a credible source on coral disease by our local
newspaper. Most recently, Lilley boldly — and falsely — stated that Waipa Foundation had released “tons of toxic mud” into Waipa Stream and “illegal
digging at Waipa is killing the corals” on Waikoko reef. In fact, Waipa has all its permits for the new building under construction there, and a recent check by the state Department of Health found
no violations. What's more, 10 years of water
monitoring show Waipa estuary is significantly cleaner today than it
was a decade ago, due at least in part to better land management
activities implemented by Waipa Foundation.
So
weird how Kauai County has a revered governing document known as the
charter, but like our planning department, it functions only on a
complaint basis. In other words, if you're upset that former Planning
Director Ian Costa executed a landowner-friendly agreement without
the mayor's signature, or that former first deputy prosecutor Jake
Delaplane got his job even though he didn't have the required
experience, you have to make a complaint to the Board of Ethics and
wait months for a decision that most likely will amount to nothing,
or perhaps a slap on the wrist. So what, really, is the point of
having a charter when it can be violated pretty much with impunity?
So
weird, how biotech scientists are mutating animals in a supposed
search for the cause of Alzheimers, Parkinson's, cancer, when those
diseases may well be caused by the chemicals, particularly those
found in RoundUp, that are used so heavily on the biotech crops that
were supposedly developed to solve the world's food woes, as this research paper convincingly argues.
So
weird, how we're playing God, when we don't even fully understand
this beautiful, complex planet and remain largely in denial about the
havoc we're wreaking upon it with so many of our clever inventions. Speaking of
which, the European Union has approved a two-year restriction on
using three neonicotinoids — pesticides made
by Bayer and Syngenta, and implicated in the decline of
honeybees — on flowering crops. As the Independent reports:
The
issue has fiercely divided the scientific community.
Professor
Lin Field, head of biological chemistry and crop protection at
Rothamsted Research, said he feared the decision was based on
"political lobbying" and could cause governments to
overlook other factors contributing to declining bee numbers, such as
climate change and viruses spread by mites.
But
Dr Lynn Dicks, a research associate at the University of Cambridge,
said that despite the contradictory studies, the EU was right to err
on the side of caution. "This is a victory for the precautionary
principle, which is supposed to underlie environmental regulation,"
she said.
So
weird how we get all cautious about liquids on airplanes and bike
helmets and second-hand smoke while ignoring or downplaying all the social degradation and environmental contamination generated by what we now deem “progress.”
So
weird how dandelions, once cherished as a nutrient-dense springtime green, are
now considered a scourge to be poisoned by those who instead purchase
pre-chopped iceberg lettuce bagged in plastic and multivitamin pills.
So
weird how the state “improves” the Kalalau Trail, which
encourages more clueless hikers to use it, and then completely fails
to manage it, but freaks out when people who should never be there do use it and get
hurt. Kauai firefighters are now getting up to three rescue calls per
week from the trail, which puts their lives unnecessarily at risk. As KITV reports, the state is looking to adopt more controls, like perhaps
limiting the number of visitors in the park and on the trail —
hello! — and stationing a ranger at the trailhead to dissuade dummies. Kauai Fire Capt.
Sam Lee Jr. is quoted as saying:
“All
it really takes sometimes is somebody to warn somebody, hey, just be
careful and maybe we can save somebody.”
If
only. I don't know about you, but I've warned countless tourists
about the dangers of waves, reefs, trails, sun, dogs, what have you.
And invariably the response is some version of piss off, beat it,
mind your own business, I know what I'm doing.
So
weird, that human propensity to ignore clear warnings, engage in foolish behavior, and then cry, "save me!"
our politicians (i.e. the 'merrie mayor') only care about themselves and getting re-elected to serves themselves and their friends.
ReplyDeletewe, as citizens, are screwed.
3 calls a week to save tourists?! I hope these tourists get charged each time and not the Kauai taxpayer.
ReplyDeleteSo weird?
ReplyDeleteNo mystery!
FOLLOW THE MONEY, POWER, GREED, AND INFLUENCE.
No mystery what so ever. Pretty plain and simple.
Let's clean it up. All we have to do is keep track of this column. I'm sure the bibliography contains all the ugly dirt.
Weirdly, Syngenta is coming your way... Syngenta moving Oahu research operations to Kauai http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/blog/morning_call/2013/04/syngenta-moving-oahu-research.html?ana=RSS&s=article_search&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+bizj_pacific+%28Pacific+Business+News+of+Honolulu%29
ReplyDeleteJoan
ReplyDeleteSo what can we do when the Ethics Commission makes a decision based on legal advice they sought but none was ever given? Basically lied in commission decision letter?
Public document proves this.
there really is nothing more amusing that reading the minutes to the ethics commission because it continues to contain a seemingly unending supply of violations of ethics and yet there are never any employee dismissals (firings) of the violators...EVER.
ReplyDeleteYou don't think you can have a permit (and an inspection) and still cause damage? Digging a little deeper here would be appropriate, Joan. The reefs are dying and Lilley deserves thanks for outing this disease. Trashing him when the real issue is the reefs is not productive.
ReplyDeleteYes, you can have a permit and inspection and still cause damage, but that was not the case here.
ReplyDeleteI did dig into this, much deeper than Terry did, and I found his accusations were wrong.
Just because Terry "outed" the reef disease doesn't give him license to make wildly false claims. And unfortunately, this isn't the first time.
SYNGENTA RESEARCH COMING TO KEKAHA!
ReplyDeleteOMG!!! Don't they hear us?!
SYNGENTA RESEARCH COMING TO KEKAHA!
What do we do next?!
Its really sad that the state DNLR officers do nothing but sit there steroid bodies in there shiny trucks and do nothing time and time again, while KFD does all there work on the trail!They should be out on the trail it is there job!
ReplyDeleteIt's also very sad that the DOH is slowly eliminating its vector control branch in favor of a hire-as-needed operation with private companies to control rats. Right now, vector control on Kauai works only on mosquitoes.
ReplyDeleteDandelions are essential in the treatment of liver diseases and many others.
ReplyDeleteMy mother used to pick dandelion ʻweedsʻ from our front yard in Maryland and steam them and serve them. Her mother, my grandmother, was a Swedish doctor.