Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Musings: Huh?

Last night I saw an alignment of the golden crescent moon and brilliant Venus, which reminded me of everything that is bigger and more beautiful than the tawdry world of politics. Then this morning, I read an article that helped me make sense of what's going on:

A UK, Canadian and Italian study has provided what researchers believe is the first observational evidence that our universe could be a vast and complex hologram.

So what might this mean for our perception of “reality?”

I dunno, but I think the Star-Advertiser has lost touch with it:

WTF?

Meanwhile, in that parallel universe known as the state Legislature, the Senate Agriculture and Environment Committee passed some pesticide bills championed by the anti-GMO folks. As committee Chair Sen. Mike Gabbard observed:

“It's important to continue this conversation. As you can see, so many people testified. There was a lot of community interest in this bill."

Uh, hello, they were flown in to testify, Mike. Because the anti-GMO groups have big bucks to orchestrate this kind of dog and pony show, none of which they disclose. Think of it as a sort of shadow lobbying force giving an outsized voice to the less than 1% of the state's population it represents. 
But if you looked at those in attendance, and read the submitted testimony — at least half of which was the canned variety — people who actually live near agricultural areas were sorely lacking.

Aside from Waimea's Klayton Kubo, who comes in handy because he's kind of brown, a color sorely lacking among the anti-GMO crowd, and can be counted upon to utter such platitudes as:

"There is no good poison. There is no good poison."

Yes, the always profound Klayton was there at the hearing, along with Gary Hooser, Fern Rosenstiel, Felicia Cowden — you know, the folks who can't get elected to office on Kauai, but still make like they're speaking for the people.

Mason Chock, meanwhile, took a tip from the Hooser handbook, using Council letterhead and staff to prepare his personal testimony.

But hey, if the state wants to blow $3 million funding the recommendations of the Joint Fact Finding Group on Kauai ag pesticides, go for it. Let the lawmakers answer to the voters for their budget decisions, especially the stupid ones. Like creating a position to run a Korean Natural Farming pilot program to see if it's the miracle cure for all those nasty diseases and pests, like coffee berry borer, coqui frogs, fireweed, ringspot virus, etc. Never mind that it's totally unproven BS "scientific evidence of the benefits of KNF has been limited."

As Sarah Styan — one of three JFFG members who dropped out because the group's bias was so entrenched — noted in her testimony (emphasis in the original):

Having participated in the year plus-long review of all data, reports, interviews, field visits, and other information, I would like to make it very clear that the report recommendations were actually written in August of 2015, well before the group even completed its investigation and report.

When the JFF group completed the draft report, I raised the issue that the previously drafted recommendations did not match our findings; however, the facilitator Peter Adler insisted that we had agreed to the recommendations months ago and they would not be revisited or changed to accommodate what the group had learned. This was extremely disturbing.

The JFF group also received a lot of feedback from the community and experts when the draft report was released for public comment. Many reviewers noted that the recommendations were not consistent with the findings of the report. Among these were the Hawaii Department of Health, as well as the Hawaii Department of Agriculture. Despite this feedback, much of which was from experts in the fields of health, agriculture, epidemiology, and scientific research, Mr. Adler and some of the JFF participants did not want to change the recommendations to ensure that they were consistent with the findings. This was alarming since participants were previously promised that relevant comments from experts and the public would be taken into consideration and the report would be modified accordingly.

As you consider this bill, I hope that you will take the JFF report and recommendations for what they are -- a vehicle for the pre-ordained and unsupported recommendations of its biased membership -- rather than what they should have been -- a good-faith effort to determine facts and develop recommendations to assist our community in making sound and well-informed policy decisions.

Kawika Winter, who also served on the JFFG, submitted his own testimony:

With my name and my intergrity [sic] I stand behind the conclusions and recommendations of the JFF report. I emplore [sic] you all do do whatever you can to enacts [sic] its recommendations via this bill and beyond.

Of course, after appearing in that propaganda film “Aina,” Kawika's name and integrity are worth about as much as his spelling.

To be fair, Gabbard isn't the only one easily suckered these days. We also had Hooser gushing over Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook — and, no, Gary, I don't have numerous fake accounts that I use to stalk you. That's just another one of your many lies. I don't have any fake FB accounts. But you have myriad enemies, and they send me stuff:

Wow. I am impressed. While he will still no doubt take plenty of shots from plenty of people on this, I am impressed by the thoughtful remarks and thorough explanation he has provided. And...you know I think he might have actually written this letter himself. I understand he has legions of writers, pr people, lawyers etc...but the letter feels genuine and heartfelt to me. He admits he made a mistake and wants to make it right. So many others in his position would just try to bull their way through, come hell or high water. Mr. Zuckerberg seems different and seems to realize Kauai is different and that the flexing of money and muscle is not pono. 

Oh, yeah, I'm sure Z took time out of his busy day to pen a heartfelt exclusive mea culpa to TGI. And no doubt he's gonna do a big kumbaya with the kuleana owners — hey, maybe he can hire Peter Adler to help out! Yes, he made a mistake by filing lawsuits, so now he'll just quietly pay people money to go away. Do you really think he's going to let people like Dustin Barca cruise around his estate, claiming they're guests of the kuleana kids?

Because Kauai isn't different — money talks, and big money talks really persuasively. 

But the funniest part was the bit about how “the flexing of money and muscle is not pono.” Once again we are reminded that Hooser and the antis are immune to irony and devoid of introspection.

Returning to that bizarre S-A report on tourism numbers, Sen. Laura Thielen is beginning to glimpse the glaringly obvious, as revealed in an email:

It seems like tourism is not a growth sector, in large part because the per person spending has been trending down, when accounting for inflation.  So we’re in a vicious cycle where we need more people to come to Hawaii just to maintain the same revenue, in real dollars.  Of course there are cyclical ups and downs, but what I’m seeing from UHERO is that when adjusted for inflation, it’s mainly a downward or flat trend.

When I speak to economists, they tend to say we need to keep adding visitors, because even if it’s not a growth sector, it’s still such a large sector that letting it go flat would create problems.

So here’s my first question.  Are economists focused too narrowly on the fiscal benefits/costs of tourism, and not looking hard enough at the qualitative externalities of the industry?  Granted it’s hard to quantify qualitative impacts.  But 9+ million visitors a year certainly have qualitative impacts, especially on the tourist-popular communities.

Ya think? And this only now occurred to you, after years in the governor's office and Lege? OMG. 

22 comments:

  1. Who the heck cares about what Klayton Kubo says or does? He's a clown, he's Gary Hooser's poster boy along with MMA wannabe and Clueless farmer Barca. Kubo is an embarrassment to the Westside Community don't speak for us, you don't represent no one but yourself and Hooser.

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  2. Thank you for printing Dr. Styan's comments.

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  3. Zuck likely gonna buy Andrade's share once he gets it - leading to the same result.
    OPA lost another prosecutor this week.
    Kauai is freezing.
    Tulsi went to Syria - wow.

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  4. @11:26am....yep, he's a lone wolf on the west side....don't know how true it is, but the settlement he opted not to sign regarding the dust lawsuit, he was able to get his own settlement for more money....talk about playing the system....like i said, don't know how true that is...by the way, he dislikes hooser

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  5. 12:13 During Bill 2491 him and Hooser were butt buddies, make up your mind what you like Kubo? U in or you out?

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  6. What a shit show the Bill about Korean Natural Farming is - (SB160). ~$70k down the tubes for a year of some uneducated (read 'experienced' in KNF) korean natural farming person to 'coordinate' something about KNF? How about give an extra $70k to HDOA or as UH grants to refine 'natural' pest control methods in a way that the best science supports? Let the experts decide. People would need to create a logical proposal to get the funds... instead, the Leg (Ruderman) will try to waste money on a process that has little scientific support, and break just about every food safety law the the State and Fed has enacted.

    Sure, give me a year salary, and I'll coordinate information of every food safety best practice that is violated by growing microbes in a rotting slurry and spray it back on crops I intend to sell. I'll be done in a week.

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  7. Leave Klayton alone. He is free to do what he wants to and why don't some of you have the guts enough, like he does, to testify and be upfront about who you are. Yes, he doesn't care for Hooser, so no go making up things you people don't know. Also, so what if he is who he is, at least he speaks up from his gut and lays it on the table. You make fun of him, but he is braver than most of us!!!!!!

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  8. The collective thought (Gary, Dustin, the Babes and the rest): Lemme see, what has a bigger impact on Hawaii's environment, tourism or pesticides/gmos? Hmmmm? Oh great voice in the wilderness, please speak to me. Let me divine the answer so that I know what to do.

    Great voice in the wilderness: Well, since most of you were tourists or the spawn of tourists, go whine about gmos.

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  9. LOVE this blog!

    It cracks me up but it also makes me so mad reading about what goes on with our taxes. This is what I work so hard for?

    Unbelievable that the bill to implement the unjustifiable JFF recommendations passed its first committee yesterday. Let's hope the money committee dumps it. I can think of much better uses for 6 MILLION DOLLARS ($3 million each year for two years).

    What is wrong with our leadership to even consider this?

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  10. No can handle the end of pesticides is coming soon you cry babies? From one brown local

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  11. Kubo! Why he speaks. There's cows now above his house. So why he still yapping about chemicals.

    Braddah's a hypocrite. Painter / chemical applicator. Oh yeah water paint. Can't leave him alone, the dust days is over. STFU, even he has to move on. But he's got nothing else to do.

    Kubo clowning. Still hanging with the missionaries. Kubo, have the missionaries pay for your move to your higher class town. Tell them reward you for being the poster boy.

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  12. With record numbers of tourist arrivals, why does so much of our infrastructure suck so bad?

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  13. Simple, because the state collects and keeps all but a very small percentage of the TAT, leaving the counties to not really benefit from the huge influx of visitors. I recognize the economy is built on the tourists, but that money does not adequately fund roads or parks and other expenditures.

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  14. It hurts the county of Kauai when we have to pay 1.2 million dollars for a few golfers that go and play at the wailua golf course on the citizens money. The county of Kauai must raise the fees and make it self sufficient instead of trying to sell booze on the recreational luxury course that's paid for by all of the residents for a certain few that get to enjoy not working and instead playing.

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  15. 7:05 a.m. I'm 8:45 p.m. That's what I said!!!!

    Tell me who died from pesticides! I'll tell you who the hell died from DRUGS! Your friends, my friends people we know and their families.

    Kubo has to smell cow shit from now on, and hear the cows go mooooo! now he going bitch about the smell and the noise and flies. Plus, the bacteria levels in that river going even higher.

    Better yet! tell the dairy to move to Makaweli, more acres to rotate on, irrigation possibilities. Oh, that awesome smell coming back to the west side. Awesome! (sarcasm)

    Again, Kubo no need make like he scared of pesticides. He don't have that issue anymore. bullshit has to move on with his life.

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  16. This is a really excellent choice for the communities and Island of Kauai. He's a good man and a great police officer. If the people only knew about the KPAL scandal.

    Anthony Morita is new community relations sergeant

    Jenna Carpenter - The Garden Island Updated: 10 minutes ago

    LIHUE — Law enforcement isn’t just about patrolling streets and arresting suspects. It’s also about fostering strong relationships between tho…

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  17. Hooser is such a kiss ass, he thinks The Zuk is gonna buy his BS and fund him. Ha!

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  18. 7:03
    Wailua Golf Course is a county park.
    If you charge the other parks what their costs are....maybe Wailua can pay more. A park is a park is park.

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    Replies
    1. BS it's a golf course but nice try. So stupid!

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  19. Tourism's up and you wonder why the roads are still junk? That's because a recent report of the nation's county salaries showed that, at and average of $60,000/year, Hawaii's county employees are the highest paid in the nation; sixth highest when the cost of living is if figured in. 6th highest in the nation!!! Now we know why there's no money for anything else.

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  20. $800 per month divided by 30 days = $26.67 per day in the food concession. This is like one more tourist to play at the golf course a day. What does it take to have more golfers on the course? Lower rates maybe one reason. How low? Low enough to get 10 to 20 more golfers on the course each day. Raising rates means less visitor golfers. A great golf course with no golfers is a park.

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