Monday, May 6, 2024
More
    Home Blog Page 1921

    Seeking Nominations for Best, Worst Legislators

    I would like to ask your assistance in helping the Hawaii Pro-Democracy Initiative with input on legislative awards that we plan to present for the 2003 Session.

    The HPDI awards program is intended to organize citizen evaluations of the session — how well legislators conducted themselves as lawmakers in a democracy, and what positive and negative good government proposals they considered and/or passed.

    We ask you to submit award suggestions by replying to this email message. Suggestions submitted by the most people will be considered and finalized by HPDI Directors. Award ideas may come from the media, gavel-to-gavel coverage on cable TV, discussions with friends, first-hand experiences, or check out the awards we gave last month at https://www.newhawaii.org (Bouquets & Buckets Mid-Session Awards).

    The awards will be presented in two categories, with positive & negative award sub-categories: legislative process (pro-democracy and anti-democracy awards) and good government reforms (pro-reform and anti-reform awards).

    In the legislative process category, we will give awards for pro-democracy and anti-democracy actions and behavior that occurred during the session. The good government reform category includes good and bad legislative proposals for ethics, open government, public access, elections and campaign reform.

    Also, please forward this message to others who might want to vote for the awards. Thank you.

    ”’Robin Loomis is the president of the Hawaii Pro-Democracy Initiative.”’

    The United Nations is Rapidly Making Itself Irrelevant

    The United Nations is in the process of making itself irrelevant. It has spent the last 12 years drawing lines in the sand and telling Iraq’s Saddam Hussein that he had better not cross them. Each time, Saddam crossed the newly drawn line and laughed at the UN. And each time, the UN drew a new line, but did nothing about the previous violations.

    The fact that the UN’s credibility is now on life support does not mean the UN has never accomplished anything or that it cannot achieve something of value in the future. Reform is always possible. The UN may be able to aid refugees or help fight disease in the third world. However, it is not clear that other organizations with similar funding couldn’t do better.

    But, when it comes to the war on terrorism, the UN is diminishing itself. If the UN continues on its current path, it will write its own obituary. The League of Nations suffered a similar fate some 60 years ago — dying of self-inflicted wounds to its credibility.

    The reasons for UN’s lack of credibility are numerous, but three of the most significant factor include: (i) the UN operates on a false premise, (ii) the UN is profoundly confused and rudderless, and (iii) the UN has become a forum for second-rate nations to bash America.

    First, the UN operates on the false premise that all nations are equal. However, some nations are outlaws and rogues. Some are upstanding international citizens. And many fall somewhere in between. Yet, the UN pretends that all nations are equal.

    For example, the US recently lost its seat on the UN Human Rights Commission. This UN commission is now chaired by Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya — a terrorist nation with a shocking human rights record. This is like asking a Klu Klux Klan Grand Wizard to chair the Equal Opportunity Commission. But to the UN, it is progress.

    Second, the UN has become so perplexed by the “complexities” of the war against terrorism that it cannot figure out who to support. The UN says it wants Saddam to disarm. Yet, the UN is unwilling to do anything to further its stated goal.

    The UN argues that the inspectors need more time — while ignoring the fact that Saddam only agreed to the inspector’s return because he did not want the U.S. Armed Forces to return. Saddam is playing the UN for fools as he plays cat and mouse games with inspectors and hopes that the same UN luminaries who thought Libya should head the Human Rights Commission will protect him from accountability and call for more delays.

    Third, the UN has become a platform for wannabe nations to denounce the US and blame the world’s problems on America. Worse yet, this anti-American forum is disproportionately paid for by US taxpayers. Almost one-fourth of the UN’s general revenues come from the US. The U.S.’s share of peace keeping expenses is even higher. The remaining 190 member nations of the UN split the remaining costs.

    For this hefty investment, we are treated to the spectacle of Libya, Iraq, North Korea, Iran, and others moralizing about America’s shortcomings. Yet, the US is the one stabilizing force for democracy and long-term peace in the world today.

    If the UN doesn’t fully reform its operations and bolster its credibility, it will suffer a quick death of irrelevancy just as the League of Nations did. Wouldn’t it be a strange twist of fate if Saddam’s last victory were the demise of the UN?

    ”’George C. Landrith is the president of Frontiers of Freedom Institute.”’

    Federal Investigation of Forbes Cave Artifacts 'Repatriation' From Bishop Museum-Plus Review of review of NAGPRA, Kennewick Man, Mokapu Bones, Honokahua Bones, Bishop Museum Kaai Theft, Providence, Museum Spear-Rest Repatriation

    The Forbes Cave artifacts controversy is heating up again. The federal NAGPRA Review Committee, under the authority of the National Parks Service and Department of Interior, will hold its semi-annual meeting in St. Paul, Minnesota May 9-11. The Forbes Cave controversy will be the focal point of the meeting. NAGPRA is the acronym for the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990, and subsequent revisions.

    In year 2000 Bishop Museum worked closely with one claimant, Hui Malama, to turn over the artifacts to them quickly and secretly, before other claimants could present their cases. It is questionable whether Hui Malama should have received all, or indeed any, of the artifacts. There are also rumors that some of the artifacts may have been sold rather than re-buried in a cave, or may have been reburied but then stolen due to (intentionally?) poor security at the cave. The artifacts would probably fetch many millions of dollars if sold in the often shady antiquities markets. Claimants who feel the law was broken have complained to the NAGPRA Review Committee, which has agreed to hear testimony from all sides.

    It is important for the public to give careful thought to the philosophical, moral, and political issues involved. We must weigh the rights of ancestors, and their bones and spirits, to be left in peace; the property rights of lineal descendants to control disposition of bones and artifacts of their own family members; and the rights of future generations of ethnic Hawaiians and of the general public to learn about Hawaiian culture and to be inspired by studying and seeing ancient remains and cultural artifacts.

    Some would compare the recent looting of the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad (April 2003) with the removal from Bishop Museum of the Forbes Cave artifacts (2000) and the kaai (1994). In both Baghdad and Honolulu priceless ancient artifacts have been taken out of museums by small groups of people for their own reasons, in violation of due process, thereby destroying important parts of cultural heritage and depriving current and future generations of knowledge and inspiration. The difference between Baghdad and Honolulu is the difference between cultural manslaughter and cultural murder — the theft of the kaai from Bishop Museum in 1994 and the removal of the Forbes Cave artifacts from Bishop Museum in 2000 were both carefully premeditated. The 1994 theft must have had the assistance of museum employees, while the artifact removal in 2000 was accomplished with the assistance of many museum personnel, from top to bottom of the staff hierarchy, who cooperated with a group of claimants favored because of their political connections and their radical views on re-burial. Scientists and cultural preservationists might consider groups like Hui Malama to be very much like looters, because they are stripping valuable artifacts out of museums and leaving bare shelves behind. But groups like Hui Malama, of course, would argue that the artifacts were originally looted from the caves where they rightfully belonged, by archeologists barely distinguishable from grave-robbers, and that Bishop Museum was in possession of stolen property which has now been “liberated” and repatriated.

    The looting in Baghdad was done in a lawless situation, in the exuberance of the moment following the overthrow of the murderous tyrant Saddam Hussein. It was similar to the spontaneous looting in Paris and St. Petersburg during the French and Russian revolutions, and to a lesser extent the looting of ‘Iolani Palace during the Hawaiian revolution of 1893. Indeed, every year we see small versions of recreational looting and exuberant lawlessness in the cities whose sports teams win national titles in hockey, football, and baseball. If cultural heritage was killed in Baghdad, it was manslaughter without malice of forethought. But in the case of Bishop Museum (both the 1994 kaai theft and the 2000 Forbes Cave artifacts repatriation), what happened was premeditated, first degree cultural/historical murder. The looted artifacts in Baghdad go back 7000 years, and are important parts of the heritage of the entire world. By contrast the Honolulu artifacts go back only a few hundred years in a local population that goes back less than 2000 years, and might seem significant only to a localized culture. But Bishop Museum is as important to preservation of Hawaiian history and culture as the Iraq National Museum is to preservation of the history of Mesopotamia and Babylon, and preservation of the history of the world’s invention of writing, accounting, codified law, and the wheel. The cultural heritage of Hawaii is located almost entirely in Hawaii, does not go back nearly as far as Iraq, and has relatively few examples confined to a very few publicly available cultural sites and museums. Thus, the security of cultural artifacts at Bishop Museum is extremely important to the preservation of Hawaiian heritage.

    In 1994 two kaai were stolen with no attempt to make it look like due process had been followed. The thieves apparently conspired with one or more Bishop Museum staffers, since the “break-in” happened after closing hours, the security alarms remained silent, and there was no breaking of exterior or interior doors, locks, or storage cabinets.

    But in 2000 the cultural murder (of the Forbes Cave artifacts) was accomplished by using some due-process elements of the NAGPRA law as accomplices. NAGPRA provided an appearance of due process for competing claimants, lulling them into a false sense of security, up until the moment when the museum suddenly took a drastic action to short-circuit the process. NAGPRA provided a myriad of regulations which allowed the museum to stall competing claimants by insisting they dot the i’s and cross the t’s. NAGPRA regulations allowed the museum to make a “loan” of the artifacts to its favored claimant, Hui Malama, probably knowing that the “loaned” artifacts would never be returned (since the clearly expressed primary purpose of the Hui Malama organization has always been to secretly re-bury bones and artifacts and even to destroy photographs of them). NAGPRA regulations allowed both Bishop Museum and Hui Malama to keep secrecy regarding exactly what had happened, and to maintain that secrecy even years later. Such secrecy adds to an overall suspicion that Hui Malama and the museum could perhaps have conspired to “liberate” the Forbes Cave artifacts for re-burial by making a “loan” that both sides knew would never be returned. It is interesting that Hawaii Senator Dan Inouye, as chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, played a major role in creating NAGPRA. Inouye’s staff members, and federal funding he shepherded through Congress, have played important roles in Bishop Museum and Hui Malama. Unsuccessful claimants for Forbes Cave artifacts had no such financial or personnel relationships with the Senator’s staff.

    NAGPRA was written in a way to allow acknowledged tribal council leaders to speak on behalf of small, homogeneous, federally recognized Indian tribes. But there are 400,000 ethnic Hawaiians of widely disparate viewpoints, who are fully integrated in communities where most residents have no Hawaiian blood, and where the group is not federally recognized and has no acknowledged leadership. Thus it is grossly inappropriate to allow one small group of cultural and political radicals to speak on behalf of the entire ethnic group. Also, NAGPRA is heavily weighted in favor of tribal groups against the interests of scientists, museums, and the general non-Indian population. But in Hawaii, the Hawaiian culture is the core of what makes Hawaii distinctive for all Hawaii’s people, and many who have no Hawaiian blood participate actively in Hawaiian culture; thus, the general population should have a strong voice in helping to decide what happens to Hawaiian cultural artifacts.

    The organization known as Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawaii Nei, headed by Edward Halealoha Ayau, has become very powerful in controlling the “repatriation” and re-interment of ancient Hawaiian bones and artifacts. It played a role in the writing and enactment of the NAGPRA law, partly because its leadership had important political connections with the office of U.S. Senator Dan Inouye, who is Chairman (or ranking member) of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs whenever the Democrats (or Republicans) are in control of the Senate. Those political relationships have continued for at least fifteen years, and are still in play today. Hui Malama also gets hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants, partly because of those same political connections. But its leadership, operations, and budget are shrouded in mystery and secrecy, despite laws that require such matters to be open to regulatory and public scrutiny. It is unclear what Hui Malama does with the enormous amounts of money it gets, and also unclear what happens with all the bones and artifacts it “repatriates.” Some of those artifacts would be extremely valuable if sold in the (often shady) antiquities markets.

    Hui Malama also sees itself as asserting political sovereignty on behalf of all ethnic Hawaiians. It clearly places the interests of the “Lahui” (racially-defined “nation”) far above the interests of individuals or families who may be lineal descendants. The organization’s Web site states, “Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawaii Nei believes that in order for Native Hawaiians to firmly and with focused movement (onipaa), realize their future, we must amongst other responsibilities, take appropriate care of the past by reestablishing and strengthening the ancestral foundation. It is through this important foundation, that our house (our future) will be built. Hui means all of us, especially the original citizens of our great nation.” Elsewhere, discussing the Mokapu bones, the Hui Malama Web site says, “How can the Hawaiian nation heal itself from the wounds of Western contact when such actions have included inflictions that served to undermine the very foundation of its families?” Thus, Hui Malama is (ab)using religious beliefs held by a few radicals to demand political power that would affect all ethnic Hawaiians and, indeed, all the people of Hawaii. This attempt to theocratize and balkanize Hawaii in some ways resembles what the Ayatollah Komeini did to Iran and what the Taliban did to Afhganistan.

    It should be noted that Hui Malama has met with strong opposition from some recognized ethnic Hawaiian cultural leaders. For example, Rubellite Kawena Johnson was a claimant opposing Hui Malama for control of the Mokapu bones; Herb Kawainui Kane was a claimant competing against Hui Malama for control of the Forbes Cave artifacts; and both Ms. Johnson and Mr. Kane publicly opposed Hui Malama’s assertion that the Providence Museum Spear Rest was a manifestation of the living spirit of a warrior. In an article in the Honolulu Advertiser of March 29, 2000, Herb Kawainui Kane wrote about Hui Malama’s plea to the NAGPRA committee demanding repatriation of the Providence Museum spear-rest: “In the absence of evidence, an emotional appeal was made, calculated to arouse sympathy from the American Indian majority on the review panel, and included highly inventive metaphysical statements. This is the kind of hogwash by which NAGPRA, a noble effort, has been corrupted. Those responsible will incur the rage of future generations of Hawaiians who have been denied access to the treasures of their past.”

    In addition to the Bishop Museum controversies involving the kaai and the Forbes Cave artifacts, there are other well-known NAGPRA-related controversies in Hawaii. The unearthing of 1600 sets of remains at Mokapu (Kaneohe, Oahu) occurred mostly before 1940, and almost entirely before NAGPRA was enacted in 1990; but NAGPRA has been used to demand repatriation of those bones from Bishop Museum for reburial at Mokapu. About 900 sets of bones were unearthed at Honokahua (Kapalua, Maui) during preliminary excavations for the Ritz Carlton Hotel. The entire Honokahua controversy began and was resolved from 1986 to 1989 before NAGPRA was enacted (Hui Malama got established in response to this controversy). The 1998 repatriation of a spear-rest from Providence Museum (Rhode Island) was probably the most straightforward application of the NAGPRA law among all these controversies. Nevertheless, the spear-rest was returned to Hawaii only after OHA “donated” $125,000 to the Providence Museum to settle a lawsuit by the museum against OHA and NAGPRA which threatened to invalidate the NAGPRA law unless a settlement was reached. More recently, the Kennewick Man controversy (Washington state) has directed major attention to NAGPRA throughout the U.S. and the world.

    And now a federal investigation of the Forbes Cave controversy is under way that will be the focus of the semi-annual meeting of the NAGPRA review committee in St. Paul, Minnesota May 9-11, 2003. Portions of the complaint filed by an unsuccessful Forbes Cave claimant, together with descriptions and analysis of all the above controversies, can be found at a large Web page:

    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/nagprahawaii.html

    Federal Investigation of Forbes Cave Artifacts ‘Repatriation’ From Bishop Museum-Plus Review of review of NAGPRA, Kennewick Man, Mokapu Bones, Honokahua Bones, Bishop Museum Kaai Theft, Providence, Museum Spear-Rest Repatriation

    The Forbes Cave artifacts controversy is heating up again. The federal NAGPRA Review Committee, under the authority of the National Parks Service and Department of Interior, will hold its semi-annual meeting in St. Paul, Minnesota May 9-11. The Forbes Cave controversy will be the focal point of the meeting. NAGPRA is the acronym for the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990, and subsequent revisions.

    In year 2000 Bishop Museum worked closely with one claimant, Hui Malama, to turn over the artifacts to them quickly and secretly, before other claimants could present their cases. It is questionable whether Hui Malama should have received all, or indeed any, of the artifacts. There are also rumors that some of the artifacts may have been sold rather than re-buried in a cave, or may have been reburied but then stolen due to (intentionally?) poor security at the cave. The artifacts would probably fetch many millions of dollars if sold in the often shady antiquities markets. Claimants who feel the law was broken have complained to the NAGPRA Review Committee, which has agreed to hear testimony from all sides.

    It is important for the public to give careful thought to the philosophical, moral, and political issues involved. We must weigh the rights of ancestors, and their bones and spirits, to be left in peace; the property rights of lineal descendants to control disposition of bones and artifacts of their own family members; and the rights of future generations of ethnic Hawaiians and of the general public to learn about Hawaiian culture and to be inspired by studying and seeing ancient remains and cultural artifacts.

    Some would compare the recent looting of the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad (April 2003) with the removal from Bishop Museum of the Forbes Cave artifacts (2000) and the kaai (1994). In both Baghdad and Honolulu priceless ancient artifacts have been taken out of museums by small groups of people for their own reasons, in violation of due process, thereby destroying important parts of cultural heritage and depriving current and future generations of knowledge and inspiration. The difference between Baghdad and Honolulu is the difference between cultural manslaughter and cultural murder — the theft of the kaai from Bishop Museum in 1994 and the removal of the Forbes Cave artifacts from Bishop Museum in 2000 were both carefully premeditated. The 1994 theft must have had the assistance of museum employees, while the artifact removal in 2000 was accomplished with the assistance of many museum personnel, from top to bottom of the staff hierarchy, who cooperated with a group of claimants favored because of their political connections and their radical views on re-burial. Scientists and cultural preservationists might consider groups like Hui Malama to be very much like looters, because they are stripping valuable artifacts out of museums and leaving bare shelves behind. But groups like Hui Malama, of course, would argue that the artifacts were originally looted from the caves where they rightfully belonged, by archeologists barely distinguishable from grave-robbers, and that Bishop Museum was in possession of stolen property which has now been “liberated” and repatriated.

    The looting in Baghdad was done in a lawless situation, in the exuberance of the moment following the overthrow of the murderous tyrant Saddam Hussein. It was similar to the spontaneous looting in Paris and St. Petersburg during the French and Russian revolutions, and to a lesser extent the looting of ‘Iolani Palace during the Hawaiian revolution of 1893. Indeed, every year we see small versions of recreational looting and exuberant lawlessness in the cities whose sports teams win national titles in hockey, football, and baseball. If cultural heritage was killed in Baghdad, it was manslaughter without malice of forethought. But in the case of Bishop Museum (both the 1994 kaai theft and the 2000 Forbes Cave artifacts repatriation), what happened was premeditated, first degree cultural/historical murder. The looted artifacts in Baghdad go back 7000 years, and are important parts of the heritage of the entire world. By contrast the Honolulu artifacts go back only a few hundred years in a local population that goes back less than 2000 years, and might seem significant only to a localized culture. But Bishop Museum is as important to preservation of Hawaiian history and culture as the Iraq National Museum is to preservation of the history of Mesopotamia and Babylon, and preservation of the history of the world’s invention of writing, accounting, codified law, and the wheel. The cultural heritage of Hawaii is located almost entirely in Hawaii, does not go back nearly as far as Iraq, and has relatively few examples confined to a very few publicly available cultural sites and museums. Thus, the security of cultural artifacts at Bishop Museum is extremely important to the preservation of Hawaiian heritage.

    In 1994 two kaai were stolen with no attempt to make it look like due process had been followed. The thieves apparently conspired with one or more Bishop Museum staffers, since the “break-in” happened after closing hours, the security alarms remained silent, and there was no breaking of exterior or interior doors, locks, or storage cabinets.

    But in 2000 the cultural murder (of the Forbes Cave artifacts) was accomplished by using some due-process elements of the NAGPRA law as accomplices. NAGPRA provided an appearance of due process for competing claimants, lulling them into a false sense of security, up until the moment when the museum suddenly took a drastic action to short-circuit the process. NAGPRA provided a myriad of regulations which allowed the museum to stall competing claimants by insisting they dot the i’s and cross the t’s. NAGPRA regulations allowed the museum to make a “loan” of the artifacts to its favored claimant, Hui Malama, probably knowing that the “loaned” artifacts would never be returned (since the clearly expressed primary purpose of the Hui Malama organization has always been to secretly re-bury bones and artifacts and even to destroy photographs of them). NAGPRA regulations allowed both Bishop Museum and Hui Malama to keep secrecy regarding exactly what had happened, and to maintain that secrecy even years later. Such secrecy adds to an overall suspicion that Hui Malama and the museum could perhaps have conspired to “liberate” the Forbes Cave artifacts for re-burial by making a “loan” that both sides knew would never be returned. It is interesting that Hawaii Senator Dan Inouye, as chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, played a major role in creating NAGPRA. Inouye’s staff members, and federal funding he shepherded through Congress, have played important roles in Bishop Museum and Hui Malama. Unsuccessful claimants for Forbes Cave artifacts had no such financial or personnel relationships with the Senator’s staff.

    NAGPRA was written in a way to allow acknowledged tribal council leaders to speak on behalf of small, homogeneous, federally recognized Indian tribes. But there are 400,000 ethnic Hawaiians of widely disparate viewpoints, who are fully integrated in communities where most residents have no Hawaiian blood, and where the group is not federally recognized and has no acknowledged leadership. Thus it is grossly inappropriate to allow one small group of cultural and political radicals to speak on behalf of the entire ethnic group. Also, NAGPRA is heavily weighted in favor of tribal groups against the interests of scientists, museums, and the general non-Indian population. But in Hawaii, the Hawaiian culture is the core of what makes Hawaii distinctive for all Hawaii’s people, and many who have no Hawaiian blood participate actively in Hawaiian culture; thus, the general population should have a strong voice in helping to decide what happens to Hawaiian cultural artifacts.

    The organization known as Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawaii Nei, headed by Edward Halealoha Ayau, has become very powerful in controlling the “repatriation” and re-interment of ancient Hawaiian bones and artifacts. It played a role in the writing and enactment of the NAGPRA law, partly because its leadership had important political connections with the office of U.S. Senator Dan Inouye, who is Chairman (or ranking member) of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs whenever the Democrats (or Republicans) are in control of the Senate. Those political relationships have continued for at least fifteen years, and are still in play today. Hui Malama also gets hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants, partly because of those same political connections. But its leadership, operations, and budget are shrouded in mystery and secrecy, despite laws that require such matters to be open to regulatory and public scrutiny. It is unclear what Hui Malama does with the enormous amounts of money it gets, and also unclear what happens with all the bones and artifacts it “repatriates.” Some of those artifacts would be extremely valuable if sold in the (often shady) antiquities markets.

    Hui Malama also sees itself as asserting political sovereignty on behalf of all ethnic Hawaiians. It clearly places the interests of the “Lahui” (racially-defined “nation”) far above the interests of individuals or families who may be lineal descendants. The organization’s Web site states, “Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawaii Nei believes that in order for Native Hawaiians to firmly and with focused movement (onipaa), realize their future, we must amongst other responsibilities, take appropriate care of the past by reestablishing and strengthening the ancestral foundation. It is through this important foundation, that our house (our future) will be built. Hui means all of us, especially the original citizens of our great nation.” Elsewhere, discussing the Mokapu bones, the Hui Malama Web site says, “How can the Hawaiian nation heal itself from the wounds of Western contact when such actions have included inflictions that served to undermine the very foundation of its families?” Thus, Hui Malama is (ab)using religious beliefs held by a few radicals to demand political power that would affect all ethnic Hawaiians and, indeed, all the people of Hawaii. This attempt to theocratize and balkanize Hawaii in some ways resembles what the Ayatollah Komeini did to Iran and what the Taliban did to Afhganistan.

    It should be noted that Hui Malama has met with strong opposition from some recognized ethnic Hawaiian cultural leaders. For example, Rubellite Kawena Johnson was a claimant opposing Hui Malama for control of the Mokapu bones; Herb Kawainui Kane was a claimant competing against Hui Malama for control of the Forbes Cave artifacts; and both Ms. Johnson and Mr. Kane publicly opposed Hui Malama’s assertion that the Providence Museum Spear Rest was a manifestation of the living spirit of a warrior. In an article in the Honolulu Advertiser of March 29, 2000, Herb Kawainui Kane wrote about Hui Malama’s plea to the NAGPRA committee demanding repatriation of the Providence Museum spear-rest: “In the absence of evidence, an emotional appeal was made, calculated to arouse sympathy from the American Indian majority on the review panel, and included highly inventive metaphysical statements. This is the kind of hogwash by which NAGPRA, a noble effort, has been corrupted. Those responsible will incur the rage of future generations of Hawaiians who have been denied access to the treasures of their past.”

    In addition to the Bishop Museum controversies involving the kaai and the Forbes Cave artifacts, there are other well-known NAGPRA-related controversies in Hawaii. The unearthing of 1600 sets of remains at Mokapu (Kaneohe, Oahu) occurred mostly before 1940, and almost entirely before NAGPRA was enacted in 1990; but NAGPRA has been used to demand repatriation of those bones from Bishop Museum for reburial at Mokapu. About 900 sets of bones were unearthed at Honokahua (Kapalua, Maui) during preliminary excavations for the Ritz Carlton Hotel. The entire Honokahua controversy began and was resolved from 1986 to 1989 before NAGPRA was enacted (Hui Malama got established in response to this controversy). The 1998 repatriation of a spear-rest from Providence Museum (Rhode Island) was probably the most straightforward application of the NAGPRA law among all these controversies. Nevertheless, the spear-rest was returned to Hawaii only after OHA “donated” $125,000 to the Providence Museum to settle a lawsuit by the museum against OHA and NAGPRA which threatened to invalidate the NAGPRA law unless a settlement was reached. More recently, the Kennewick Man controversy (Washington state) has directed major attention to NAGPRA throughout the U.S. and the world.

    And now a federal investigation of the Forbes Cave controversy is under way that will be the focus of the semi-annual meeting of the NAGPRA review committee in St. Paul, Minnesota May 9-11, 2003. Portions of the complaint filed by an unsuccessful Forbes Cave claimant, together with descriptions and analysis of all the above controversies, can be found at a large Web page:

    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/nagprahawaii.html

    Grassroot Perspective – April 30, 2003-Summary of the Bush Administration's Savings Proposals; Death and Taxes; It's the Science, Stupid

    0

    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Summary of the Bush Administration’s Savings Proposals

    The Bush Administration has proposed two expanded savings incentives as
    part of its FY 2004 budget. The first creates Lifetime Savings Accounts
    (LSAs) and Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) that will allow every
    American to contribute with no limitations based on age or income
    status. The second proposal creates Employer Retirement Savings Accounts
    (ERSAs) to promote and vastly simplify employer sponsored retirement
    plans by consolidating 401(k), SIMPLE 401(k), 403(b), and 457
    employer-based defined contributions accounts into a single type of plan
    that can be more easily established by any employer.

    Lifetime Savings Accounts (LSAs)

    Lifetime Savings Accounts (LSAs) can be used for any type of saving.
    LSAs will help millions of Americans save in one tax favored account for
    any purpose, including their children’s education, a new home,
    healthcare needs, or to start their own business. The new LSA will allow
    an individual, regardless of age or income, to contribute $7,500 a year
    and make penalty free withdrawals at any time – with no holding period.
    Like current law Roth IRAs, contributions will not be deductible but
    earnings will accumulate tax-free, and distributions will be tax free as
    well. The $7,500 contribution limit would be indexed for inflation.

    Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs)

    Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) can be used only for retirement
    saving. The new RSA will improve and simplify savings opportunities for
    all Americans by consolidating traditional IRAs, nondeductible IRAs and
    Roth IRAs, each of which has a confusing and different set of rules
    regarding eligibility and tax treatment, into one account with rules
    similar to current law Roth IRAs. Up to $7,500 (in addition to amounts
    contributed to an LSA) could be contributed to an RSA. Like current law
    Roth IRAs, contributions would not be deductible but earnings will
    accumulate tax free. Distributions after age 58 would be tax free. The
    $7,500 contribution limit would be indexed to inflation.

    Employer Retirement Savings Accounts (ERSAs)

    Under the Bush proposal, Employer Retirement Savings Accounts would be
    established which can be sponsored by any employer. Currently, there are
    multiple tax-preferred, employer-based retirement savings accounts with
    similar goals but different rules regulating eligibility, contribution
    limits, tax treatment and withdrawals restrictions. 401(k), thrift,
    403(b), and governmental 457 plans as well as SARSEPs and SIMPLE IRAs
    would be replaced by the new ERSA account.

    ERSA will follow existing rules for 401(k) plans, but these rules will
    be greatly simplified. Top heavy rules will be repealed. The definition
    of compensation and the minimum coverage requirement will be simplified.
    Nondiscrimination requirements for ERSA contributions will be satisfied
    by a single test. The amount that an employee will be able to contribute
    to an ERSA will be $12,000 (increasing to $15,000 in 2006). Once an
    employee reached age 50, a catch-up contribution of $2000 (increasing to
    $5,000 in 2006) would be permitted.

    For more information about President Bush’s savings proposals, contact
    the Saving Coalition at https://www.savingscoalition.org

    – Death and Taxes

    Tax his cow, tax his goat,
    Tax his pants, tax his coat,
    Tax his crop, tax his work,
    Tax his tie, tax his shirt.

    Tax his tractor, tax his mule,
    Teach him taxes are a rule,
    Tax his oil, tax his gas,
    Tax his notes, tax his cash;

    Tax him good and let him know,
    After taxes he has no dough.

    If he hollers, tax him more;
    Tax him ’til he’s good and sore.
    Tax his coffin, tax his grave,
    Tax the sod in which he lays.

    Put these words upon his tomb:
    “Taxes drove me to my doom.”
    And after he’s gone, he can’t relax;
    They’ll soon be after his Inheritance Tax!

    — Anonymous

    Quoted from 60 Plus Association Brochure https://www.60plus.org

    ”Roots (Food for thought)”

    – It’s the Science, Stupid

    By Charli Coon

    It’s not gaining a lot of attention — the Senate wants to pass it without
    so much as holding hearings — but a part of the energy legislation now
    working its way through Congress would commit energy producers to
    attacking a problem that almost certainly doesn’t exist.

    The bill now in the Senate calls for the Department of Energy to award
    “transferable credits” to energy companies that voluntarily reduce
    emissions of carbon dioxide. In other words, companies that reduce
    carbon dioxide emissions now will earn “credits” they can “trade in” if
    Congress-as many suspect-later imposes mandatory caps on CO2 output.
    Trouble is, carbon dioxide emissions don’t hurt the environment. And
    government regulation-once introduced into the industry through this
    initiative-figures only to become more onerous as time goes on.

    At the heart of the debate is whether CO2, a byproduct of the
    hydrocarbon fuels that supply 84 percent of all U.S. energy, causes
    “global warming.” Many of those who claim the earth is warming and that
    the activities of man are to blame, say carbon dioxide emissions from
    energy plants set the chain of events into motion. They claim CO2
    “traps” heat from the sun near the surface of the earth, which leads to
    a warmer planet and other consequences.

    One problem: Science stubbornly refuses to validate these claims. For
    instance, decades have passed since use of fossil fuels expanded to the
    point where they should’ve been able to affect temperatures in the
    troposphere — the area one to five miles above the earth’s surface where
    greenhouse gases are allegedly trapped.

    But those who have studied the troposphere, such as Sallie Baliunas, an
    astrophysicist who works with the Washington-based George C. Marshall
    Institute and other organizations, say the temperature in the 1- to
    5-mile area above the earth’s surface has not increased. Last year,
    because of these findings and others that cast doubt on the notion that
    man’s use of fossil fuels causes the earth to warm dangerously, 17,000
    scientists from around the nation signed a document expressing their
    doubts about this notion and the entire approach recommended in the
    Kyoto Accords.

    Carbon dioxide is a staple of life. Humans exhale CO2 with every breath.
    Some scientists even suggest that the increases in carbon dioxide caused
    by fossil-fuel use have contributed as much as 10 percent to increases
    in farmland productivity.

    In 1997, the Senate voted 95-0 against the Kyoto Accords or any other
    energy agreement that forces huge reductions in so-called greenhouse
    gases on Americans but requires nothing along those lines from
    developing countries, such as China, India and Brazil. Over the next 15
    years, these nations will become the largest generators of such gases.
    Yet lawmakers now seem bent on saddling our nation with energy
    regulations that sap economic power but do nothing to help the
    environment. Safe, affordable, consistent energy supplies are the
    bedrock for America’s economy. We depend on coal for a third of this
    energy.

    Because coal is the most carbon-intensive fuel, this bill would decimate
    it as an energy source, cause price spikes in natural gas and other
    fuels that would have to replace coal, and throw America’s energy
    situation into crisis, according to Marlo Lewis Jr., a senior fellow at
    the Competitive Enterprise Institute. All for a “solution” that solves
    nothing.

    What’s puzzling about this is that the Bush administration, which made
    such a public display of disassociating itself from Kyoto soon after
    assuming office, now appears ready to accept equally harmful provisions
    in domestic legislation.

    Worse yet, it stands ready, in effect, to endorse the claim that CO2
    causes global warming, even though no proof exists that man-made
    activities, such as increased dissemination of CO2, have caused this.
    Sign on to this, and the Bush administration can expect not praise for
    its concern for the environment but criticism for making its
    requirements “voluntary”-which is true in name only-and hounding to make
    even more economically devastating anti-energy concessions in the name
    of further reducing so-called greenhouse gases.

    Senators do feel a certain amount of pressure to pass some sort of
    energy bill to provide a blueprint for America’s future. But the
    pressure should be to get it right. Imposing Kyoto on ourselves-after
    rightfully refusing to do it on the world stage-does not qualify as
    right.

    Charli Coon is an energy and environment analyst at The Heritage
    Foundation (www.heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research
    institute.

    Above is quoted from the Heritage Foundation http;//www.heritage.org

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “It’s a senseless murder because of this stupid cigarette law. That’s
    the reason this guy was killed.” — Tony Blake, whose brother Dana Blake
    was stabbed to death trying to enforce New York City’s smoking ban at
    the nightclub where he worked.

    Quoted from reason express@reason.com 4/15/03.

    “That no free government, or the blessing of liberty, can be preserved
    to any people but by a firm adherence to justice, moderation,
    temperance, frugality, and virtue, and by frequent recurrence to
    fundamental principles.” — George Mason, Virginia Declaration of Rights
    [1776]

    “When all government, domestic and foreign, in little as in great
    things, shall be drawn to Washington as the center of all power, it will
    render powerless the checks provided of one government on another and
    will become as venal and oppressive as the government from which we
    separated.” — Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Charles Hammond [1821]

    ”’Edited by Richard O. Rowland, president of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii. He can be reached at (808) 487-4959 or by email at:”’ mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com ”’For more information, see its Web site at:”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org/

    Grassroot Perspective – April 30, 2003-Summary of the Bush Administration’s Savings Proposals; Death and Taxes; It’s the Science, Stupid

    0

    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Summary of the Bush Administration’s Savings Proposals

    The Bush Administration has proposed two expanded savings incentives as
    part of its FY 2004 budget. The first creates Lifetime Savings Accounts
    (LSAs) and Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) that will allow every
    American to contribute with no limitations based on age or income
    status. The second proposal creates Employer Retirement Savings Accounts
    (ERSAs) to promote and vastly simplify employer sponsored retirement
    plans by consolidating 401(k), SIMPLE 401(k), 403(b), and 457
    employer-based defined contributions accounts into a single type of plan
    that can be more easily established by any employer.

    Lifetime Savings Accounts (LSAs)

    Lifetime Savings Accounts (LSAs) can be used for any type of saving.
    LSAs will help millions of Americans save in one tax favored account for
    any purpose, including their children’s education, a new home,
    healthcare needs, or to start their own business. The new LSA will allow
    an individual, regardless of age or income, to contribute $7,500 a year
    and make penalty free withdrawals at any time – with no holding period.
    Like current law Roth IRAs, contributions will not be deductible but
    earnings will accumulate tax-free, and distributions will be tax free as
    well. The $7,500 contribution limit would be indexed for inflation.

    Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs)

    Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) can be used only for retirement
    saving. The new RSA will improve and simplify savings opportunities for
    all Americans by consolidating traditional IRAs, nondeductible IRAs and
    Roth IRAs, each of which has a confusing and different set of rules
    regarding eligibility and tax treatment, into one account with rules
    similar to current law Roth IRAs. Up to $7,500 (in addition to amounts
    contributed to an LSA) could be contributed to an RSA. Like current law
    Roth IRAs, contributions would not be deductible but earnings will
    accumulate tax free. Distributions after age 58 would be tax free. The
    $7,500 contribution limit would be indexed to inflation.

    Employer Retirement Savings Accounts (ERSAs)

    Under the Bush proposal, Employer Retirement Savings Accounts would be
    established which can be sponsored by any employer. Currently, there are
    multiple tax-preferred, employer-based retirement savings accounts with
    similar goals but different rules regulating eligibility, contribution
    limits, tax treatment and withdrawals restrictions. 401(k), thrift,
    403(b), and governmental 457 plans as well as SARSEPs and SIMPLE IRAs
    would be replaced by the new ERSA account.

    ERSA will follow existing rules for 401(k) plans, but these rules will
    be greatly simplified. Top heavy rules will be repealed. The definition
    of compensation and the minimum coverage requirement will be simplified.
    Nondiscrimination requirements for ERSA contributions will be satisfied
    by a single test. The amount that an employee will be able to contribute
    to an ERSA will be $12,000 (increasing to $15,000 in 2006). Once an
    employee reached age 50, a catch-up contribution of $2000 (increasing to
    $5,000 in 2006) would be permitted.

    For more information about President Bush’s savings proposals, contact
    the Saving Coalition at https://www.savingscoalition.org

    – Death and Taxes

    Tax his cow, tax his goat,
    Tax his pants, tax his coat,
    Tax his crop, tax his work,
    Tax his tie, tax his shirt.

    Tax his tractor, tax his mule,
    Teach him taxes are a rule,
    Tax his oil, tax his gas,
    Tax his notes, tax his cash;

    Tax him good and let him know,
    After taxes he has no dough.

    If he hollers, tax him more;
    Tax him ’til he’s good and sore.
    Tax his coffin, tax his grave,
    Tax the sod in which he lays.

    Put these words upon his tomb:
    “Taxes drove me to my doom.”
    And after he’s gone, he can’t relax;
    They’ll soon be after his Inheritance Tax!

    — Anonymous

    Quoted from 60 Plus Association Brochure https://www.60plus.org

    ”Roots (Food for thought)”

    – It’s the Science, Stupid

    By Charli Coon

    It’s not gaining a lot of attention — the Senate wants to pass it without
    so much as holding hearings — but a part of the energy legislation now
    working its way through Congress would commit energy producers to
    attacking a problem that almost certainly doesn’t exist.

    The bill now in the Senate calls for the Department of Energy to award
    “transferable credits” to energy companies that voluntarily reduce
    emissions of carbon dioxide. In other words, companies that reduce
    carbon dioxide emissions now will earn “credits” they can “trade in” if
    Congress-as many suspect-later imposes mandatory caps on CO2 output.
    Trouble is, carbon dioxide emissions don’t hurt the environment. And
    government regulation-once introduced into the industry through this
    initiative-figures only to become more onerous as time goes on.

    At the heart of the debate is whether CO2, a byproduct of the
    hydrocarbon fuels that supply 84 percent of all U.S. energy, causes
    “global warming.” Many of those who claim the earth is warming and that
    the activities of man are to blame, say carbon dioxide emissions from
    energy plants set the chain of events into motion. They claim CO2
    “traps” heat from the sun near the surface of the earth, which leads to
    a warmer planet and other consequences.

    One problem: Science stubbornly refuses to validate these claims. For
    instance, decades have passed since use of fossil fuels expanded to the
    point where they should’ve been able to affect temperatures in the
    troposphere — the area one to five miles above the earth’s surface where
    greenhouse gases are allegedly trapped.

    But those who have studied the troposphere, such as Sallie Baliunas, an
    astrophysicist who works with the Washington-based George C. Marshall
    Institute and other organizations, say the temperature in the 1- to
    5-mile area above the earth’s surface has not increased. Last year,
    because of these findings and others that cast doubt on the notion that
    man’s use of fossil fuels causes the earth to warm dangerously, 17,000
    scientists from around the nation signed a document expressing their
    doubts about this notion and the entire approach recommended in the
    Kyoto Accords.

    Carbon dioxide is a staple of life. Humans exhale CO2 with every breath.
    Some scientists even suggest that the increases in carbon dioxide caused
    by fossil-fuel use have contributed as much as 10 percent to increases
    in farmland productivity.

    In 1997, the Senate voted 95-0 against the Kyoto Accords or any other
    energy agreement that forces huge reductions in so-called greenhouse
    gases on Americans but requires nothing along those lines from
    developing countries, such as China, India and Brazil. Over the next 15
    years, these nations will become the largest generators of such gases.
    Yet lawmakers now seem bent on saddling our nation with energy
    regulations that sap economic power but do nothing to help the
    environment. Safe, affordable, consistent energy supplies are the
    bedrock for America’s economy. We depend on coal for a third of this
    energy.

    Because coal is the most carbon-intensive fuel, this bill would decimate
    it as an energy source, cause price spikes in natural gas and other
    fuels that would have to replace coal, and throw America’s energy
    situation into crisis, according to Marlo Lewis Jr., a senior fellow at
    the Competitive Enterprise Institute. All for a “solution” that solves
    nothing.

    What’s puzzling about this is that the Bush administration, which made
    such a public display of disassociating itself from Kyoto soon after
    assuming office, now appears ready to accept equally harmful provisions
    in domestic legislation.

    Worse yet, it stands ready, in effect, to endorse the claim that CO2
    causes global warming, even though no proof exists that man-made
    activities, such as increased dissemination of CO2, have caused this.
    Sign on to this, and the Bush administration can expect not praise for
    its concern for the environment but criticism for making its
    requirements “voluntary”-which is true in name only-and hounding to make
    even more economically devastating anti-energy concessions in the name
    of further reducing so-called greenhouse gases.

    Senators do feel a certain amount of pressure to pass some sort of
    energy bill to provide a blueprint for America’s future. But the
    pressure should be to get it right. Imposing Kyoto on ourselves-after
    rightfully refusing to do it on the world stage-does not qualify as
    right.

    Charli Coon is an energy and environment analyst at The Heritage
    Foundation (www.heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research
    institute.

    Above is quoted from the Heritage Foundation http;//www.heritage.org

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “It’s a senseless murder because of this stupid cigarette law. That’s
    the reason this guy was killed.” — Tony Blake, whose brother Dana Blake
    was stabbed to death trying to enforce New York City’s smoking ban at
    the nightclub where he worked.

    Quoted from reason express@reason.com 4/15/03.

    “That no free government, or the blessing of liberty, can be preserved
    to any people but by a firm adherence to justice, moderation,
    temperance, frugality, and virtue, and by frequent recurrence to
    fundamental principles.” — George Mason, Virginia Declaration of Rights
    [1776]

    “When all government, domestic and foreign, in little as in great
    things, shall be drawn to Washington as the center of all power, it will
    render powerless the checks provided of one government on another and
    will become as venal and oppressive as the government from which we
    separated.” — Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Charles Hammond [1821]

    ”’Edited by Richard O. Rowland, president of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii. He can be reached at (808) 487-4959 or by email at:”’ mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com ”’For more information, see its Web site at:”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org/

    From Allowances to Bribes

    0

    “Suzanne Gelb Image”

    ”Allowance – How Much?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    I want to give my 8-year-old an allowance because it would be a good way to teach him to be money conscious. I don’t know how much a good amount is. What would you recommend?

    Saving

    Dear Saving:

    I am against allowances for children. This can foster a tendency to expect handouts during their lives and then they do not really learn to earn what they want or need. To me, an allowance, if you can call it that, can be appropriate when a child does something or is compensated for doing something out of the ordinary such as washing the car for dad, or painting the trash can — in other words, something other than the regularly assigned chores. This is the money that they save to put toward something that they want (as opposed to need), such as a walkman or a toy.

    One parent taught his 9-year-old to save by opening a savings account in the child’s name and encouraging him to deposit in it the money that he saved from doing extra chores. “This is how you can save toward what you want to buy,” he explained to his son. “This is earned money from doing extra things.” Children should not be compensated or bribed into doing chores, homework and sharing the responsibility of the upkeep of the home. If a child, on his/her own volition, takes on a special project, then compensation can be awarded. Other than that, to me an allowance is nothing more than a bribe.

    ”Bribes – How to Stop Them?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    My wife has started rewarding our kids when they do chores by giving them money. I see this as a bribe; she calls it their allowance. How can I make it clear it her that paying our kids to do chores is more like a bribe than an allowance?

    Frustrated

    Dear Frustrated:

    The Q & A above, addressed to “Saving,” offers an explanation as to my opinion about bribes. I will reiterate that in my opinion, bribes are unhealthy because they tend to foster immoral behavior.

    ”’Suzanne J. Gelb, Ph.D., J.D. authors this daily column, Dr. Gelb Says, which answers questions about daily living and behavior issues. Dr. Gelb is a licensed psychologist in private practice in Honolulu. She holds a Ph.D. in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Human Services. Dr. Gelb is also a published author of a book on Overcoming Addictions and a book on Relationships.”’

    ”’This column is intended for entertainment use only and is not intended for the purpose of psychological diagnosis, treatment or personalized advice. For more about the column’s purpose, see”’ “An Online Intro to Dr. Gelb Says”

    ”’Email your questions to mailto:DrGelbSays@hawaiireporter.com More information on Dr. Gelb’s services and related resources available at”’ https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii's Political Arena

    0

    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”Long-Term Tax May Be Terminal, Thanks to Senate”

    Both Houses in the Hawaii State Legislature will meet today, on the 59th day of the 60-day session, to review and vote on final forms of bills.

    But one of the most controversial and damaging bills to pass both Houses — imposing a monthly long-term care tax on the majority of Hawaii’s public between the ages of 25 and 99 — may not pass the Senate this session.

    While the majority of Democrats in the House have pushed this legislation, the Senate has been cooler to the idea, and some Democrat Senators are looking for an out to passing the largest-ever tax increase in the state — especially when Hawaii already has the fourth-highest taxes in the nation.

    That is partly because the public continues to step up the pressure, and call, fax and email legislators to tell them of their opposition to the idea. The governor, who says she plans to veto the measure, also has encouraged the public and her supporters to call their legislators and lobby against the tax increase.

    The “out” some Democrat senators are seeking may have come last Friday night. A question of procedure arose when the Senate may not have properly adjourned Friday, giving the long-term care tax proposal the required 48 hours prior to voting today.

    Some insiders believe the Democrats, who never like to vote anything down or take part in vigorous debate in support of tax and spending ideas, would be extremely relieved if the procedural issue will be raised, and they don’t have to vote on the measure. They also are strategizing if it will be politically wise to call a special session, after the governor vetoes the measure, to override her veto. They will need two-thirds of the legislators in both House to agree to an override.

    If the procedural issue is raised, the Senate has options. The bill can be recommitted for next year, be allowed to die or voted on Thursday, May 1, the final day of the session. If it does not pass this year, the proposal will still be alive next year because the Legislature operates on a two-year cycle.

    The proposal, which includes a tax of between $10 and $25 per month per person will go into a newly created special fund, be managed by yet another new government agency, and require the hiring of even more government workers to create a system to subsidize long-term care for those who have not saved or bought insurance for their later years. Those who are truly destitute are already cared for in their later years with taxpayer funds.

    With this plan, after individuals are vested for 10 years and are qualified by a board to receive the funds, they will be issued up to $70 a day for their long-term care. Of course long-term care costs much more than $70 per day — even now — but there is no plan as to where the rest of the money will come from.

    Many senior citizens on a limited income are realizing they too will have to pay until they die, turn 99 years old, or need long-term care themselves.

    Young couples, just starting a family, also are upset, not wanting to have their limited income spent on subsidizing the long-term care of people who don’t plan for their later years and who are not truly needy.

    Rep. Bud Stonebraker, R-Hawaii Kai, who is opposed to the plan, pleaded with his fellow House members to kill the proposal and “not take food out of the mouths of his children” — including one baby who is on the way.

    The private insurance industry and the people employed in that industry are angry about the proposal too, saying the government plan will kill off the private industry in Hawaii rather than encourage people to take the initiative to take care of themselves.

    ”Senate Democrats Disappointed with Governor’s Thumbs Down to HTA Appointee”

    Gov. Linda Lingle did not opt to appoint Ben Kudo to the Hawaii Tourism Authority — a move that disappointed some Democrat leaders in the Senate.

    Kudo, nominated by Gov. Benjamin Cayetano last year after he received the names of three candidates from the Senate majority, has served as an interim appointee since 2002.

    Senate Vice President Donna Kim, D-Kalihi, says much like the way that Lingle was upset after Senate Democrats voted down two of her appointees for the University of Hawaii Board of Regents Friday, Senate Democrats were disappointed when the governor opted not to appoint Kudo again, as was required because of the timing of the appointment last year.

    The governor told Kim and other Democrats in the Senate that she wanted to appoint someone with more industry experience. Kim believes Kudo has that experience.

    In the editorial published yesterday — “This Sucks” — one of the theories explored as to why the Senate Democrats voted down Shelton Jim On and Edward Sultan, was in retaliation by Senate Democrats against the governor for turning down their choice for the HTA board.

    Kim, who could not be reached for comment before the story was published, denied the connection and told HawaiiReporter.com this kind of reporting does not help relations between her and the governor.

    ”Honolulu City Council to Hold Budget Hearing Tomorrow”

    The Honolulu City Council will hold a budget hearing tomorrow beginning at 4 p.m. to get the public’s input on proposed tax and fee increases put forth by Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris.

    The mayor is proposing the highest-ever property tax increase in the city’s history to balance the city’s budget. He also is proposing to raise user fees in virtually every division of city services.

    The mayor is under fire from some council members and citizens who are concerned over the mayor’s spending habits that have drained special funds, extended the city’s credit nearly to the 20 percent debt ceiling regulated by the city charter, and left the city facing a huge debt.

    City Councilmember Charles Djou, who is strongly opposed to any tax increase, says the mayor is proposing to increase city spending by 5.5 percent next year. He says if the mayor is willing to cut his increase to the budget by just 2 percent, the tax increase will not be needed.

    The mayor says cutting his increase will leave the city in a precarious position.

    Those wanting to submit testimony to the City Council can fax it to 527-6888. They can also sign up to give testimony at the city clerks office located on the second floor of City Hall on Punchbowl Street.

    ”Chuck Norris Gives Governor Kudos for Attacking Rumors of SARS in Chinatown”

    In a recent speech to the members of Small Business Hawaii, Ted Liu, director of the Department of Business Economic Development and Tourism said Hollywood Celebrity and Martial Arts Expert Chuck Norris is in Hawaii working on his latest television series.

    Norris, who talked with the governor the day she ate at six restaurants in Chinatown to support the merchants and put an end to the rumor that patrons of Chinatown restaurants could be exposed to the “mystery” illness, SARS, which has infected more than 5,000 people worldwide, says he was impressed with the governor’s support of business and public relations tactics.

    ”Erin Brockovich is Coming to Hawaii”

    Erin Brockovich, made famous in the award-winning movie starring Julia Roberts, will be in Hawaii on June 22 to speak to the American Businesswomen’s Association-Imua Chapter.

    Brockovich, who will be celebrating her birthday on the day of the speech, will speak for about an hour on the toxic tort case she headed that resulted in a record-breaking settlement of $333 million for 634 plaintiffs in Hinkley, CA.

    The superstar, who is launching her own television series, and is the author of a book entitled “Life’s a Challenge, but You Can Do It,” has ties to Hawaii. The law firm she works for is involved in a lawsuit over water quality in Central Oahu.

    Her law firm also plans to open a branch in Hawaii.

    The public is invited and can purchase tickets for $75 to attend the luncheon program by calling 545-1909 or by logging on to https://www.erinbrockovich.wallstreetwebmasters.com

    Companies also are welcome to sponsor the event at various levels ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per sponsorship, in kind or in cash. Haimoff and Haimoff Jewelers, The Hilton Hawaiian Village, The Four Seasons Resort in Maui, The Downtown YWCA, Hawaii Woman Magazine, Fingerprints Print Shop, Small Business Hawaii and HawaiiReporter.com have already signed up as sponsors.

    ”’To reach legislators, see: “Representatives at a Glance” and “Senators at a Glance””’

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii’s Political Arena

    0

    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”Long-Term Tax May Be Terminal, Thanks to Senate”

    Both Houses in the Hawaii State Legislature will meet today, on the 59th day of the 60-day session, to review and vote on final forms of bills.

    But one of the most controversial and damaging bills to pass both Houses — imposing a monthly long-term care tax on the majority of Hawaii’s public between the ages of 25 and 99 — may not pass the Senate this session.

    While the majority of Democrats in the House have pushed this legislation, the Senate has been cooler to the idea, and some Democrat Senators are looking for an out to passing the largest-ever tax increase in the state — especially when Hawaii already has the fourth-highest taxes in the nation.

    That is partly because the public continues to step up the pressure, and call, fax and email legislators to tell them of their opposition to the idea. The governor, who says she plans to veto the measure, also has encouraged the public and her supporters to call their legislators and lobby against the tax increase.

    The “out” some Democrat senators are seeking may have come last Friday night. A question of procedure arose when the Senate may not have properly adjourned Friday, giving the long-term care tax proposal the required 48 hours prior to voting today.

    Some insiders believe the Democrats, who never like to vote anything down or take part in vigorous debate in support of tax and spending ideas, would be extremely relieved if the procedural issue will be raised, and they don’t have to vote on the measure. They also are strategizing if it will be politically wise to call a special session, after the governor vetoes the measure, to override her veto. They will need two-thirds of the legislators in both House to agree to an override.

    If the procedural issue is raised, the Senate has options. The bill can be recommitted for next year, be allowed to die or voted on Thursday, May 1, the final day of the session. If it does not pass this year, the proposal will still be alive next year because the Legislature operates on a two-year cycle.

    The proposal, which includes a tax of between $10 and $25 per month per person will go into a newly created special fund, be managed by yet another new government agency, and require the hiring of even more government workers to create a system to subsidize long-term care for those who have not saved or bought insurance for their later years. Those who are truly destitute are already cared for in their later years with taxpayer funds.

    With this plan, after individuals are vested for 10 years and are qualified by a board to receive the funds, they will be issued up to $70 a day for their long-term care. Of course long-term care costs much more than $70 per day — even now — but there is no plan as to where the rest of the money will come from.

    Many senior citizens on a limited income are realizing they too will have to pay until they die, turn 99 years old, or need long-term care themselves.

    Young couples, just starting a family, also are upset, not wanting to have their limited income spent on subsidizing the long-term care of people who don’t plan for their later years and who are not truly needy.

    Rep. Bud Stonebraker, R-Hawaii Kai, who is opposed to the plan, pleaded with his fellow House members to kill the proposal and “not take food out of the mouths of his children” — including one baby who is on the way.

    The private insurance industry and the people employed in that industry are angry about the proposal too, saying the government plan will kill off the private industry in Hawaii rather than encourage people to take the initiative to take care of themselves.

    ”Senate Democrats Disappointed with Governor’s Thumbs Down to HTA Appointee”

    Gov. Linda Lingle did not opt to appoint Ben Kudo to the Hawaii Tourism Authority — a move that disappointed some Democrat leaders in the Senate.

    Kudo, nominated by Gov. Benjamin Cayetano last year after he received the names of three candidates from the Senate majority, has served as an interim appointee since 2002.

    Senate Vice President Donna Kim, D-Kalihi, says much like the way that Lingle was upset after Senate Democrats voted down two of her appointees for the University of Hawaii Board of Regents Friday, Senate Democrats were disappointed when the governor opted not to appoint Kudo again, as was required because of the timing of the appointment last year.

    The governor told Kim and other Democrats in the Senate that she wanted to appoint someone with more industry experience. Kim believes Kudo has that experience.

    In the editorial published yesterday — “This Sucks” — one of the theories explored as to why the Senate Democrats voted down Shelton Jim On and Edward Sultan, was in retaliation by Senate Democrats against the governor for turning down their choice for the HTA board.

    Kim, who could not be reached for comment before the story was published, denied the connection and told HawaiiReporter.com this kind of reporting does not help relations between her and the governor.

    ”Honolulu City Council to Hold Budget Hearing Tomorrow”

    The Honolulu City Council will hold a budget hearing tomorrow beginning at 4 p.m. to get the public’s input on proposed tax and fee increases put forth by Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris.

    The mayor is proposing the highest-ever property tax increase in the city’s history to balance the city’s budget. He also is proposing to raise user fees in virtually every division of city services.

    The mayor is under fire from some council members and citizens who are concerned over the mayor’s spending habits that have drained special funds, extended the city’s credit nearly to the 20 percent debt ceiling regulated by the city charter, and left the city facing a huge debt.

    City Councilmember Charles Djou, who is strongly opposed to any tax increase, says the mayor is proposing to increase city spending by 5.5 percent next year. He says if the mayor is willing to cut his increase to the budget by just 2 percent, the tax increase will not be needed.

    The mayor says cutting his increase will leave the city in a precarious position.

    Those wanting to submit testimony to the City Council can fax it to 527-6888. They can also sign up to give testimony at the city clerks office located on the second floor of City Hall on Punchbowl Street.

    ”Chuck Norris Gives Governor Kudos for Attacking Rumors of SARS in Chinatown”

    In a recent speech to the members of Small Business Hawaii, Ted Liu, director of the Department of Business Economic Development and Tourism said Hollywood Celebrity and Martial Arts Expert Chuck Norris is in Hawaii working on his latest television series.

    Norris, who talked with the governor the day she ate at six restaurants in Chinatown to support the merchants and put an end to the rumor that patrons of Chinatown restaurants could be exposed to the “mystery” illness, SARS, which has infected more than 5,000 people worldwide, says he was impressed with the governor’s support of business and public relations tactics.

    ”Erin Brockovich is Coming to Hawaii”

    Erin Brockovich, made famous in the award-winning movie starring Julia Roberts, will be in Hawaii on June 22 to speak to the American Businesswomen’s Association-Imua Chapter.

    Brockovich, who will be celebrating her birthday on the day of the speech, will speak for about an hour on the toxic tort case she headed that resulted in a record-breaking settlement of $333 million for 634 plaintiffs in Hinkley, CA.

    The superstar, who is launching her own television series, and is the author of a book entitled “Life’s a Challenge, but You Can Do It,” has ties to Hawaii. The law firm she works for is involved in a lawsuit over water quality in Central Oahu.

    Her law firm also plans to open a branch in Hawaii.

    The public is invited and can purchase tickets for $75 to attend the luncheon program by calling 545-1909 or by logging on to https://www.erinbrockovich.wallstreetwebmasters.com

    Companies also are welcome to sponsor the event at various levels ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per sponsorship, in kind or in cash. Haimoff and Haimoff Jewelers, The Hilton Hawaiian Village, The Four Seasons Resort in Maui, The Downtown YWCA, Hawaii Woman Magazine, Fingerprints Print Shop, Small Business Hawaii and HawaiiReporter.com have already signed up as sponsors.

    ”’To reach legislators, see: “Representatives at a Glance” and “Senators at a Glance””’

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    Economics is Not Subject to the Whims of Man

    Economics is not subject to the whims of man. It is field governed by a set of laws as absolute as the laws of gravity or thermodynamics. It is these laws that those in government routinely seek to violate without consequence, who are then surprised when the result is adverse consequences.

    Hawaii is unique and this has given rise to a fallacy that is slowly destroying the economy here. This fallacy is translated into tax policy, and that policy impoverishes the very businesses that, in total, make up the economy of this state. This fallacy can be stated as follows: The taxes paid by tourists don’t hurt local business and is “free money” because it is paid those same tourists, instead of local residents.

    Even those who in principle know better still commit this fallacy from time to time. Thus we have Governor Lingle proposing an airport departure fee, with the justification that almost everyone else is does it, and since it charges tourists as they are leaving it can’t be detrimental to the economy. It isn’t a tax, it’s just a little fee to help fund the airports.

    To understand why this is damaging to local businesses you have to put yourself in the place of the tourist. A family planning a trip to the Islands is, nine times out of ten, on a budget. They have saved for a year or longer for their trip and have a limited budget that they must adhere to in order to be able to afford their sojourn into paradise. They have a finite pool of money from which to pay for everything associated with their trip.

    The plane tickets will be purchased before the trip, so the damage of the departure tax to the budget will already have been done, not afterward as some think. For a family of four this will mean somewhere between $14 and $20 less for their trip.

    Big deal, what’s $15, you say?

    That’s a couple hamburgers at the local burger joint. Maybe an air mattress to float on in the surf at Waikiki. A beach towel here or a six pack of soda skipped there. It could be anything. The one thing certain is, it will result in that much less being spent at commercial establishments. It is that much less income for a private enterprise. It is that much less revenue available to keep local businesses afloat. Multiply that times a million tourists and it is the difference between profitability and bankruptcy.

    This is why arguments that the local residents don’t pay the majority of a increase of the General Excise Tax or a 1 percent city tax are dead wrong. The local businesses pay the cost in terms of products not sold and services not rendered, because the tourists