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    Anti Second Amendment Bill Threatens Rights of Thousands of Hawaii Residents

    There are a number of bills introduced in the state Legislature this year that threaten the Second Amendment rights of all of Hawaii’s citizens who wish to exercise their right to bear arms.

    One bill is particularly disturbing — Senate Bill 1372 creates a “big net,” which attempts to catch a broad list of industries and individuals who pose no threat to nation, state, community, or individual safety or security.

    Of great concern is the effect the bill will have on individual gun owners who participate in the recreational activity of “reloading ammunition.” As an individual who participates in this sport, this bill would subject me and thousands of others who participate, to the extreme and unnecessary burden of obtaining a permit. The bill also allows invasion of privacy and initiates the “slippery slope” of innocent residents becoming felons simply because they may forget to report their inventory quarterly.

    A second problem with this bill imposes itself on the safety classes conducted by LIFE, a non-profit organization made up of NRA certified firearms instructors who volunteer their time to provide safety classes designed to meet current law regarding the acquisition of firearms. The goal of LIFE is to teach the basic skills and shape the attitudes necessary for owning and using a firearm safely, but classes includes “live fire.” As a result, I’d be required to provide commercially manufactured ammunition to my students and all students who are exploring the possibility of acquiring firearms must obtain a permit prior to participating in class.

    This legislation could work if the language in the bill was changed to either modify the definition of “explosive” to exclude small arms ammunition and components (gun powder is physically and chemically defined as a propellant, not an explosive), or SS396-9 (h) modified to also exempt individuals who purchase or use commercially manufactured small arms ammunition or components for sporting or recreational use.

    However, as this bill stands now, it dictates an extreme and inappropriate penalty for law-abiding citizens who only desire to exercise their constitutional rights under the Second Amendment, with no risk or threat to others.

    ”’Mr. Mark Plischke is the president of Lessons in Firearms Education, a non-profit organization made up of NRA certified firearms instructors who volunteer their time to provide safety classes designed to meet current law regarding the acquisition of firearms. Mr. Plischke can be reached at PO Box 25271, Honolulu, HI 96825, (808) 396-LIFE”’

    Affirmative Action Gone Berserk-Racial Entitlement Programs in Hawaii, and the Attempt to Defend Them

    While the rest of America struggles with the issue of affirmative action or racial preferences in employment and college admissions, Hawaii has a decades-long tradition of racially exclusionary government and private entitlement programs for ethnic Hawaiians.

    There are probably more than 170 such programs, worth several billion dollars. These programs have become entrenched over the years, spawning large bureaucracies and government fiefdoms. The racial spoils system is a way of life in Hawaii politics. Each year the state government eagerly hands out tens of millions of dollars of public money to quasi-autonomous government agencies (Office of Hawaiian Affairs and the Department of Hawaiian Homelands) which, by law, give benefits only to the favored race. Thus Hawaii has a government sanctioned hereditary elite, and balkanization continues at an accelerating pace.

    Some ethnic Hawaiians now view themselves as primarily Hawaiian and only secondarily American (if at all). Some go further and seek to re-establish all Hawaii as an independent nation, in which there would be three classes of people: those with any degree of native ancestry would be first-class citizens with full voting and property rights; those who lack native ancestry but take an oath of allegiance to Hawaii and forswear any other citizenship would become second class citizens with limited voting rights, and property rights limited to non-native areas; and all others would be resident aliens with no voting rights and severely restricted property rights.

    Thus Hawaii has become the laboratory where political scientists can observe the natural progression from racial preferences and affirmative action, to racial entitlement programs, to government-sponsored racial separatism, to demands for ethnic nationalist sovereignty and independence.

    But defenders of unity and equality are fighting back. The first big victory was the U.S. Supreme Court Rice v. Cayetano decision in February 2000, which desegregated the right to vote for trustees of
    the state government Office of Hawaiian Affairs (the agency was founded under segregationist rules in 1980 requiring that only racially-defined Hawaiians could vote for trustee, run for trustee, or receive handouts). Half a year later the U.S. District Court in Honolulu ruled in Arakaki v. Hawaii that candidacy for OHA trustee could not be racially restricted; and that decision was upheld on December 31, 2002 by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. Several other lawsuits have been filed and are now pending, seeking to dismantle OHA and other racial entitlement programs on the grounds that racial restrictions on who can receive benefits are unconstitutional.

    Meanwhile the Hawaii state Legislature every year enacts numerous new racial entitlement programs and provides ever-increasing funding for continuing programs, even while cutting the budgets of schools, health clinics, welfare and environmental programs that serve all people without racial restriction. Such laws are passed faster and more numerously than lawyers can challenge them. A system previously established, successfully challenged, and now being re-established, permanently funnels millions of dollars each year to racial entitlement programs from the revenues produced by the government lands. The percentage of gross revenue allocated to OHA probably exceeds 100 percent of net income from government lands after capital and operating expenses; thus, taxpayers pay all the expenses but all the income goes to racially exclusionary programs. Hawaii’s new governor, Linda Lingle, has worked hard, together with the Office of Hawaiian Affairs and leaders of the Legislature, to set up an automatic, routine system whereby ceded land revenues will permanently and automatically be funneled, to the Office of Hawaiian Affairs behind the scenes, without any need for annual legislation (or public scrutiny).

    The lawsuits against the entitlement programs have created fear among the bureaucrats who run them and the established power structure of the state. The only way to save the existing system is to get Congress to pass a law creating a phony Indian tribe for ethnic Hawaiians. If Hawaiians could get federal recognition as an Indian tribe they could legally have government sponsored racial entitlement programs, and elections restricted to voters and candidates of the favored race. Supporters of the Native Hawaiian
    Recognition bill have tried to pass it since summer of 2000. They came very close to succeeding through stealth and deception, but failed when opponents discovered what was happening.

    The Native Hawaiian Recognition bill is unconstitutional. It seeks to overturn a Supreme Court decision by creating a phony Indian tribe out of thin air. Real Indian tribes were historically composed of separate and distinct people living apart from the surrounding non-Indian population, who continuously maintained their social cohesiveness, and who have a tribal government that exercises substantial authority over its members. Ethnic Hawaiians meet none of those requirements. Congress can recognize genuine tribes, but it has no Constitutional authority arbitrarily to convert a racial minority into an Indian tribe for the purpose of preserving racial entitlement programs. If such a thing is allowed to happen in Hawaii, it can happen elsewhere. For example, using the argument that they
    are indigenous, people of Mexican ancestry living in Texas and California, who have an Aztec ancestor, could demand federal recognition as the Nation of Aztlan and might even try to secede from the U.S.

    Following is a more detailed explanation of some of these points, with numerous references to Web pages that provide documentation and further explanation.

    ”Expanded Explanation, With Extensive References to Further Detailed Explanations”

    While the rest of America struggles with the issue of affirmative action or racial preferences in employment and college admissions, Hawaii has a decades-long tradition of racially exclusionary entitlement programs for ethnic Hawaiians. There are probably more than 170 such programs, worth several billion dollars. These are not merely preference or affirmative action programs — they are absolute government entitlements excluding all persons who are
    not of the favored race. For a list of many of the Hawaii programs and their dollar amounts, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/listhawnentitlements.html

    Long ago the idea was to rehabilitate a dying race of native Hawaiians by offering land leases at one dollar per year for homesteads or farming. The land was not given in fee-simple for fear the uneducated, destitute recipients would sell it and squander the proceeds. 80 years later a new Hawaiian Homelands housing development overlooking downtown Honolulu offers dollar-a-year land leases where fire department captains and managers of brokerage houses who have the right racial heritage build homes valued at nearly $400,000. Thus we see that many of these
    “poor, downtrodden” Native Hawaiians are quite wealthy
    yet continue to receive government racial entitlements.
    https://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/2001/Jan/28/128localnews12.html

    The formerly dying race has multiplied ten-fold during the first century of American sovereignty in Hawaii, from fewer than 40,000 in 1900 to more than 400,000 in year 2000. About 240,000 live in Hawaii, comprising about 20 percent of the state’s population, while
    the remaining 160,000 are scattered throughout the other states. For a spreadsheet of the state-by-state population of Native Hawaiians, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/population2000.html

    In recent decades the Hawaiian racial entitlement programs have become more numerous and far more lucrative. Anyone with one drop of native Hawaiian blood qualifies for most of these programs, and many programs do not require proof of financial need. An
    enormous bureaucracy has become entrenched consisting of government agencies, tax-exempt charitable foundations, and for-profit corporations operating as service providers and contractors. Virtually every large company, law firm, and bank in Hawaii, as well
    as some on the mainland, has interlocking directorates or on-going relationships with ethnic-Hawaiian-serving institutions. Perhaps that helps explain why the Hawaii Legislature so eagerly gives money to the semi-autonomous branch of state government called Office of Hawaiian Affairs, which by law can provide benefits only to ethnic Hawaiians. Hawaii’s very “liberal” political establishment strongly supports the existence and expansion of these entitlement
    programs. To read some of the outrageous bills in the 2003 Legislature, and the testimony written in opposition by defenders of equality under the law, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/hawnbillsleg2003.html

    Two recent surveys show that both ethnic Hawaiians and those with no native blood share similar priorities in life, and similar views on what purposes government policies and expenditures should be trying to accomplish. Education, health, housing, environment, and traffic congestion are seen as more important issues for government, and more worthy reasons for possible tax increases, than “native
    rights” or “Hawaiian sovereignty” or building an ethnic Hawaiian nation. Both ethnic Hawaiians and non-Hawaiians share these opinions with approximately the same ranking of priorities.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/prioritieshawnonhaw.html

    Yet both the Legislature and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs give top priority to issues like ceded land revenues for OHA, defending native rights, and supporting the Native Hawaiian Recognition bill to establish ethnic Hawaiians as a federally recognized Indian nation. That’s because enormous amounts of money and power are at stake. It is also because the generous people of Hawaii, filled with aloha for
    Hawaiians and their culture, have made a racial group into a sentimental symbol or mascot (whether or not the members of the group wish to be treated that way).
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/hawnsasmascots.html

    The main arguments offered in support of the Native Hawaiian Recognition bill are based on claims of victimhood, racial debt, and the need for restitution, reparations, reconciliation, and self-determination. The politically correct ideology says that Native Hawaiians are a poor, downtrodden group who need these entitlements; and that “their” nation was overthrown in 1893 by an armed invasion by U.S. Marines in support of greedy white businessmen, and their culture and language was suppressed.
    Thereafter Hawaii was “illegally” annexed to the U.S. and the “Native Hawaiian lands” were “stolen.” Thus the theory is that Native Hawaiians are owed enormous racial reparations, and the entitlement programs are just a down-payment on that. As indigenous people they also have a right to self-determination, to form their own nation and govern themselves. However, the real motivation for the Akaka bill is simply greed and power, and the bill is fundamentally race-based. For example, the nation whose monarchial government was
    overthrown by an internal coup in 1893 had thousands of members with no native blood, including many elected members of the Kingdom legislature and nearly all appointed members of the cabinet. Thus any reparations for the overthrow of the monarchy, or for an allegedly illegal annexation to the U.S. more than a century ago, would be owed to all Hawaii’s people. To debunk the claims about indigenous rights, self-determination, victimhood, illegal overthrow of the monarchy, illegal annexation, and the need for
    reparations; and to understand that the Akaka bill is primarily about race, money, and power, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/AkakaRaceNotNation.html

    The greed of the recognition bill is the desire to maintain and expand the lucrative entitlement programs in the face of court challenges that they are unconstitutional. The bill is also a quest for power
    — a desire to solidify and further entrench the bureaucracies which claim to serve those poor, downtrodden Hawaiians. The Rice v. Cayetano decision clearly stated that “Native Hawaiian” is a racial
    designation, not a political one. Therefore everyone understands that all the racial entitlement programs will eventually be ruled unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment equal protection clause. The only way to salvage those programs is to create a phony Indian
    tribe and give it federal recognition. The tribe is entirely based on race, unlike the real Kingdom of Hawaii that once existed as an independent nation in which many elected legislators and most appointed members of the Royal cabinet had no Hawaiian blood.
    (How many Indian tribes have most of their chiefs being non-Indians?) For information on the full partnership between native Hawaiians and Euro-Americans throughout the Hawaiian Kingdom period, see:
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/fullpartners.html

    The “tribe” being created in Senator Akaka’s bill is not a re-establishment of a real tribe that somehow faded away or was overwhelmed; rather, it is an invention out of thin air, to preserve racially exclusionary entitlement programs that otherwise would
    be unconstitutional. It is affirmative action run amok. It is an extreme example of what happens when well-meaning people give affirmative action to help some poor downtrodden people, who then get accustomed to the benefits, demand more and more, and come to see themselves as forever deserving of entitlements and
    even deserving of independent sovereignty itself. The racial entitlement programs are so firmly entrenched in Hawaii that the entire political establishment of both parties fears to lose them; therefore, the establishment strongly supports the Akaka bill. But
    that bill would be very bad for Hawaii. The precedent it would set would be bad for all of America, Most ordinary people of all races, including ethnic Hawaiians, do not support racial separatism.
    Needy people should get government help based on need alone. Wealthy people, including wealthy Native Hawaiians (of whom there are many, including most supporters of the Akaka bill), do not need and should not receive government entitlement programs even if they have that magical Hawaiian blood. For some important reasons why this bill should be opposed by people from other states outside Hawaii, in their own best interests, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/AkakaOtherStatesOppose.html

    Affirmative action over time leads to the entrenchment of programs that come to be seen as entitlements. Large bureaucracies are established. Money and power flow there. Some ethnic Hawaiians
    have come to identify themselves primarily with their race rather than with their citizenship as Americans. Some Hawaiian activists see America as their historical enemy — a colonial power illegally
    occupying the native homeland, suppressing the native culture. Racial separatism in the form of a race-based nation-within-a-nation is seen by many activists as only the first step toward the expulsion
    of the U.S. from Hawaii. The resulting independent nation would encompass all the Hawaiian islands, where ethnic Hawaiians would hold guaranteed racial supremacy because of “indigenous rights.” For more about this underlying unity of purpose between racial
    separatism and ethnic nationalism in Hawaii, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/sepnatcommoncore.html

    And for a description of the fundamental principles of
    unity, equality, and aloha for all, see
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/principles.html

    For a complete history and thorough analysis of the Native Hawaiian Recognition bill, see:
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/OpposeAkakaBill.html

    For up-to-date general-interest information
    created to help the media and general public, see:
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/medianotes.html

    ”Congressional Leaders, Attorneys and Scholars Explain in Heavily Documented Detail Why the Native Hawaiian Recognition Bill is Unconstitutional, Would Set a Bad Precedent for the United States, and Would be Disastrous for Hawaii”

    For those interested in Congressional commentary on this bill, and heavily documented legal analyses of why the Native Hawaiian Recognition bill is unconstitutional, why reparations for Native Hawaiians would be inappropriate, and why there is no entitlement to racial ownership of the public lands of Hawaii or the revenues derived from them, see the following:

    In July 2001 Chairman Sensenbrenner of the House Judiciary Committee wrote a letter to Speaker Hastert asking that the bill should be killed, or else should be referred to his Judiciary Committee to hold hearings on its unconstitutionality.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/AkakaSensenbrenner071901.html

    In December 2001 a very strongly worded and lengthy analysis of the bill was done by Lincoln Oliphant on behalf of Senator Craig for the Senate Republican Policy Committee. That analysis was successful in alerting Republican Senators, who prevented a last-minute stealth maneuver by Senator Inouye.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/oliphantcraig120601.html

    Attorney Paul M. Sullivan wrote a detailed point-by-point legal analysis of the primary version of the Native Hawaiian Recognition bill in the 107th Congress: S.746 and H.R.617
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/AkakaSullivan040601.html

    Attorney Paul M. Sullivan published an article in the Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal of July, 2002 analyzing the Rice v. Cayetano decision as applied to the Native Hawaiian Recognition bill. Mr. Sullivan also described the relevance of the Mancari and Sandoval cases regarding the lack of a true tribe of Native Hawaiians, and the inability of the bill to survive the strict scrutiny test mandated by the Adarand decision.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/sullivanaplpj070102.pdf

    Attorney Patrick W. Hanifin published an article in the Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal of July, 2002 describing Hawaii’s race-based government agencies OHA and DHHL. He described the Rice decision
    and its progeny lawsuits Arakaki1, Arakaki2, Barrett, and Carroll. He explained why the Akaka bill is entirely racial and not based on being a tribe, or descent from Hawaiian Kingdom subjects, or a
    hereditary claim for stolen lands or sovereignty, or claims to political control of culture and language, or claims to being a separate nation.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/hanifinaplpj070102.pdf

    Attorney Patrick W. Hanifin published “Hawaiian Reparations: Nothing Lost, Nothing Owed” Patrick W. Hanifin in Volume XVII, No. 2 of the Hawaii Bar Journal, 1982. This lengthy, heavily documented 21-year-old article explores all aspects of claims that Native Hawaiians are owed reparations for the overthrow of the monarchy and for the ceding of lands to the United States; it is transcribed on the Internet at:
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/hanifinreparations.html

    Attorney Patrick W. Hanifin published “To Dwell on the Earth in Unity: Rice, Arakaki, and the Growth of Citizenship and Voting Rights in Hawaii” In Spring, 2002 issue of the Hawaii Bar Journal, Vol. V,
    No. 13, pp. 15-44. The article is a thorough examination of the history of citizenship and voting rights throughout the history of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Republic, Territory, and State. It shows that at no
    time have citizenship or voting rights ever been limited exclusively to native Hawaiians, and that the Akaka bill would impose a racial balkanization of citizenship rights entirely inappropriate to this
    history.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/HanifinCitizen.pdf

    Attorney H. William Burgess was lead attorney in Arakaki vs. State of Hawaii, also known as Arakaki1. This lawsuit desegregated candidacy for trustee of Office of Hawaiian Affairs. It affirmed that all registered voters regardless of race have a right to run for trustee, and voters are entitled to a full range of candidates for whom to vote, unrestricted by race. Legal documents and analysis are provided.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/arakaki.html

    Attorney H. William Burgess is lead attorney in Arakaki v. Cayetano, also known as Arakaki2. This currently pending lawsuit challenges both the Office of Hawaiian Affairs and the Department of Hawaiian
    Homelands as being unconstitutional. Legal documents and analysis are provided.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/arakaki2ohadhhl.html

    A thorough analysis of the ceded lands issue is
    available at
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/cededlands.html

    H. William Burgess and Sandra Puanani Burgess published an article on the history and analysis of a ceded lands lawsuit OHA v. State of Hawaii in the July 2001 issue of the Hawaii Bar Journal.
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/burgesscededhbj0701.html

    One reason offered to justify passing the Akaka bill is a series of claims that Native Hawaiians have been historically victimized, and their culture and language were suppressed. There are many victimhood claims in the “findings” section of the bill. One claim repeatedly asserted is that the Hawaiian language was made illegal by the revolutionary government following the overthrow, and remained illegal for several decades. That particular claim
    has been thoroughly researched and found to be false. See
    https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/hawlangillegal.html

    ”’Kenneth R. Conklin, Ph.D. can be reached at”’ mailto:Ken_Conklin@yahoo.com ”’His Web site is”’ https://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty

    Strong, Effective Hawaii Public Education System Vital to Hawaii Economy

    ”’Public Education Policy”’ comprises the single most important aspect of efforts to ensure Hawaii’s long-term economic development

    Grassroot Perspective – Feb. 14, 2003-Environmental Apocalypse Now?; Freedom Trumps Smart Growth; Is Rail Transit a Success Story

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    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Environmental Apocalypse Now?

    Thirty years ago, the international best-selling book THE LIMITS TO
    GROWTH created a stir with its seemingly scientific prediction that
    ecological catastrophes would soon bring about the Apocalypse —
    unless stringent policies were adopted immediately to save humankind from the ravages of overpopulation, natural-resource depletion, pollution, and related maladies.

    Although some parts of the world subsequently have suffered from
    famine and deadly pollution (significantly, these disasters occurred
    where private-property rights were weak or non-existent),
    environmental apocalypse never materialized on a worldwide scale. In the past three decades, however, the countries that have been under the policy sway of environmental doomsters the most — the developed countries — have seen relative economic decline.

    Have the environmentalists’ predictions of economic decline become a self-fulfilling catastrophe?

    That’s the question economist Craig S. Marxsen ponders in the winter
    2003 issue of THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW, the Independent Institute’s peer-reviewed quarterly, edited by Robert Higgs.

    Marxsen reviewed several academic studies on the economic impact of environmental regulations and conducted a few of his own. For
    example, based on a study that concluded that environmental
    regulations reduced U.S. manufacturing productivity by 11.4 percent
    below what it could have been by 1986, Marxsen estimated that the
    regulations reduced output 22.35 percent below what it otherwise
    would have been in 1990. Consequently, real GDP “probably could have been 20.65 percent higher than it actually was in 1990, ceteris
    paribus.” Fortunately, an influx and foreign capital and women into
    the workplace since the early ’70s “obscured the economywide
    stagnation of U.S. multifactor productivity from 1973 to 1995.”

    What’s the bottom line, according to Marxsen? “Ecocatastrophism
    [Marxsen’s term for the environmental-doom viewpoint] dangerously
    weakens economic performance in several ways and therefore might
    bring about a persistently declining global standard of living that
    would create a debacle not unlike the very one of the catastrophists
    fear.”

    In short, “Environmental Apocalypse Now” may not be coming soon to a theater near you, but “E.T.” [Economic Tumble] has been having a long run below our field of vision.

    See “Prophecy de Novo: The Nearly Self-Fulfilling Doomsday Forecast,” by Craig S. Marxsen (THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW, Winter 2003) https://www.independent.org/tii/content/pubs/review/tir73_marxsen.html

    For more on environmental policy, see:

    A POVERTY OF REASON: Sustainable Development and Economic Growth, by Wilfred Beckerman, see
    https://www.independent.org/tii/catalog/cat_poverty.html

    CUTTING GREEN TAPE: Toxic Pollutants, Environmental Regulation and the Law, edited by Richard L. Stroup and Roger E. Meiners https://independent.org/tii/content/briefs/BriefCuttingGreenTape.html

    Above article is quoted from The Independent Institute https://www.independent.org Lighthouse January 12, 2003

    ”Roots (Food for Thoughts)”

    – Freedom Trumps Smart Growth

    Urban policy expert says sprawl improves lifestyle

    Proponents of urban “smart growth” initiatives espouse policies that excessively restrict the rights of citizens, a nationally known demographic and transportation expert says.

    “I am operating from the perspective that freedom is good,” said Wendell Cox, an urban policy consultant and scholar who represents several state policy think tanks and foundations.

    Cox spoke at a luncheon Thursday for the Research Triangle Chapter of the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties.

    Cox has analyzed urban growth issues in cities throughout the United States and in foreign countries. His years of study have led him to the conclusion that unless there is a material threat to other individuals or the community, people should be allowed to work or live where they want.

    Cox said smart-growth policies that overly restrict land use and manage urban growth infringe unnecessarily upon property rights and overall freedom. He explained that supporters of growth limitation hate sprawling developments of “ticky-tack” houses; complain about “automobile dependency;” and want strip commercial and “big box” retail development restrained.

    “They are looked at as inherent evils,” Cox said.

    He said sprawl opponents “have in mind a more European type of place” in which downtowns bustle and residents live in greater concentrations near urban centers. Such growth controllers hold up Portland, Ore., as their “nirvana.” Cox said Portland is almost universally recognized as the U.S. leader in anti-sprawl policies.

    Such land planning emphasizes mass (usually rail) transit over highway construction, construction only within smart-growth boundaries around a city, increased urban density, preservation of open (agricultural and
    forested) spaces, and rationing of home ownership through zoning regulations, impact fees, and taxation.

    Despite the efforts of smart-growth advocates, Cox said, “Urban densities are declining all over the world,” even in Portland and European cities such as Paris. He showed demographic examples and photographs of Paris’s sprawl and multiple strip-mall developments. Portland is not what it claims to be, Cox said, because it is one of the most sprawling cities in the western United States.

    Smart growth’s land use and planning is irrational, leading to disastrous consequences for the quality of life, Cox said. Smart-growth policies lead to less home affordability because of oppressive regulation, and home ownership is higher where sprawl is greater, he said.

    – Is Rail Transit a Success Story

    As cities debate the addition of light rail to their transit systems, it may be worthwhile to consider its success where systems are already in place. With the release of the 2000 Census data, such an evaluation of light rail is possible. What the data reveals is that in cities with major rail lines, transit ridership is either declining significantly or increasing only slightly. This is the case regardless of whether a city has had rail lines for some time, as with Atlanta or Washington, D.C., or has installed lines recently. San Diego began rail service in 1981 and Denver in 1994.

    Between 1990 and 2000, the share of people traveling to work on public transit was flat or fell in major metropolitan areas. The decline in public transit’s share of people going to work fell 22.5 percent in Atlanta and 18.4 percent Washington, D.C..

    San Diego’s public transit system gained 2.6 percent and Denver gained 2 percent. Dallas undertook a major transit investment to open three light-rail lines and one commuter rail line in the last decade, yet ridership declined by 23 percent from 1990 to 2000.

    Light rail’s difficulty in reversing the trend away from transit may be due to the fact that it is usually focused on downtown.

    Population and employment growth have shifted outside the downtown core. According to one estimate, on average, 90 percent of employment occurs outside city centers.

    Light rail also faces competition from less-expensive options such as carpooling and telecom-muting. Also, telecommuting made significant gains in market share in nearly every major metropolitan area from 1990 to 2000. Washington, D.C.’s grew by 20 percent, Denver and Dallas by 30 percent, and Atlanta’s by nearly 56 percent.

    Policy Note, November 2002, Buckeye Institute

    Above articles are quoted from Carolina Journal Weekly Report for Executives (tcroom@johnlocke.org).

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “It is indeed probable that more harm and misery have been caused by men determined to use coercion to stamp out a moral evil than by men intent on doing evil.” — Friedrich A. Hayek

    “History shows that great general prosperity occurs only where something approaching a free economy has been reached, and that prosperity always diminishes as government economic regulation increases. A free economy alone offers unlimited opportunity to all.” — Thomas Barber

    ”’See Web site”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org ”’for further information. Join its efforts at “Nurturing the rights and responsibilities of the individual in a civil society. …” or email or call Grassroot of Hawaii Institute President Richard O. Rowland at mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com or (808) 487-4959.”’

    Wanted Fugitive: Ronald Ken Dufrene

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    CrimeStoppers, the Maui Police Department, and the Honolulu Police
    Department want the public’s assistance in locating Ronald Ken Dufrene.

    Dufrene is wanted for a $20,000 contempt warrant issued on Jan. 28, 2003, in Maui when he failed to appear in court. Dufrene is under indictment for eight cases including identity theft, theft, burglary, forgery, and unauthorized control of a propelled motor vehicle.

    Dufrene placed a rental ad in a neighbor island publication and is wanted for questioning for a similar series of cases that occurred this past week in Hawaii Kai. Dufrene is a surfer and may be staying in Hawaii Kai or the North Shore.

    Anyone with information about this suspect, may call Detective Robert Cravalho directly at 529-3873 or anonymous calls may be made to CrimeStoppers at 955-8300, *CRIME on your cellular phone. Free cellular calls are provided by AT&T, Nextel Hawaii, and Verizon Wireless Hawaii.

    Suspect’s Description:

    *Ronald Ken Dufrene, aka David Aaron Taub, Allan Terence Hamlin, Jeff Lansford, et al.

    *Caucasian male, 30

    *6′, 170 lbs., athletic build

    *Dark brown wavy hair, brown eyes

    Honolulu CrimeStoppers Inc., will pay a cash reward of up to $1,000 for information which results in the arrest of a wanted person or the solving of case(s) reported to CrimeStoppers Honolulu Inc. All calls are confidential. Do not approach any suspect. All suspects and wanted fugitives should be considered armed and dangerous. All calls are confidential and anonymous. Persons who participate in the crime, or are victims of the crime are ineligible to receive CrimeStoppers rewards. Be a CrimeStopper and call the hot line at 955-8300 or *Crime on your cellular telephone.

    Access the CrimeStoppers Web site at https://www.crimestoppers-honolulu.org or the Student CrimeStoppers Web site at https://www.studentcrimestoppers.org

    An Interpretation of Valentine's Day

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    “Suzanne Gelb Image”

    Dear Readers:

    Over the next few months I will supplement my answers with self-help materials. A supplement for today’s comments can be found in my book “Welcome Home. A Book About Overcoming Addictions” (p. 80 “Valentine’s Day – a gift of love.”) For more information, visit my Web site at https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    ”Dr. Gelb Says … Happy Valentine’s Day”

    Dear Readers:

    About all that many of us understand about Valentine’s Day is that we get bombarded, or at least we hope to get bombarded, by pretty red hearts, flowers and boxes of candy, mostly chocolate of course, in all kinds of heart shapes that can be imagined. Sometimes some of us take the candy out of the heart shaped box and put it in a square box and pass it on to a loved one or friend. Of course, we use some brand name candy box so we can disguise what is often inexpensive Valentine’s candy, often bought at the last minute from the grocery store. That being said, the history of Valentine’s Day is also interesting. There are numerous legends and interpretations of what this day symbolizes, and I decided to share one of my favorites with you, which goes like this . . .

    In about the year 270 A.D. Claudius-II, the Roman Emperor forbid soldiers to marry because he believed that they would not fight well if they had loved ones waiting for them at home. The Emperor’s “logic” was that an emotionally attached soldier would not put himself in harm’s way like an unattached soldier would. St. Valentine, who was a priest near Rome at the time, saw how traumatic the Emperor’s edict forbidding marriage was to young lovers and, considering God’s law more powerful than Caesar’s law, he married the young couples in secret.

    The Emperor learned of this and had Valentine arrested. But because he was impressed by Valentine’s commitment to his principles, Claudius II tried to convert Valentine to the Roman gods, acceptance of which would spare him from execution. Valentine would not yield and in fact he tried to convert the Emperor, knowing what the consequences for his noncompliance would be. Valentine was executed on Feb. 24, 270. While he was in prison he healed his jailer’s blind daughter via his faith, restoring her sight. It is also said that he also may have fell in love with her. Shortly before he was executed, he sent her a farewell message, signed “From Your Valentine.”

    Thereafter, Valentine became a Patron Saint of an annual festival where on Feb. 14 young Roman men gave women they admired and wanted to court a handwritten greeting of affection. These cards were identified as St. Valentine’s cards and spread with Christianity, to the point where Valentine’s Day is now celebrated worldwide.

    My wish is that people could maintain the joy and fondness that they exchange during these Valentine’s Day moments and continue to express this warm sharing every day, much like Christmas where many enjoy the cheer and the camaraderie of the season. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could extend these kinds of positive feelings into our lives on a daily basis?

    ”’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

    An Interpretation of Valentine’s Day

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    “Suzanne Gelb Image”

    Dear Readers:

    Over the next few months I will supplement my answers with self-help materials. A supplement for today’s comments can be found in my book “Welcome Home. A Book About Overcoming Addictions” (p. 80 “Valentine’s Day – a gift of love.”) For more information, visit my Web site at https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    ”Dr. Gelb Says … Happy Valentine’s Day”

    Dear Readers:

    About all that many of us understand about Valentine’s Day is that we get bombarded, or at least we hope to get bombarded, by pretty red hearts, flowers and boxes of candy, mostly chocolate of course, in all kinds of heart shapes that can be imagined. Sometimes some of us take the candy out of the heart shaped box and put it in a square box and pass it on to a loved one or friend. Of course, we use some brand name candy box so we can disguise what is often inexpensive Valentine’s candy, often bought at the last minute from the grocery store. That being said, the history of Valentine’s Day is also interesting. There are numerous legends and interpretations of what this day symbolizes, and I decided to share one of my favorites with you, which goes like this . . .

    In about the year 270 A.D. Claudius-II, the Roman Emperor forbid soldiers to marry because he believed that they would not fight well if they had loved ones waiting for them at home. The Emperor’s “logic” was that an emotionally attached soldier would not put himself in harm’s way like an unattached soldier would. St. Valentine, who was a priest near Rome at the time, saw how traumatic the Emperor’s edict forbidding marriage was to young lovers and, considering God’s law more powerful than Caesar’s law, he married the young couples in secret.

    The Emperor learned of this and had Valentine arrested. But because he was impressed by Valentine’s commitment to his principles, Claudius II tried to convert Valentine to the Roman gods, acceptance of which would spare him from execution. Valentine would not yield and in fact he tried to convert the Emperor, knowing what the consequences for his noncompliance would be. Valentine was executed on Feb. 24, 270. While he was in prison he healed his jailer’s blind daughter via his faith, restoring her sight. It is also said that he also may have fell in love with her. Shortly before he was executed, he sent her a farewell message, signed “From Your Valentine.”

    Thereafter, Valentine became a Patron Saint of an annual festival where on Feb. 14 young Roman men gave women they admired and wanted to court a handwritten greeting of affection. These cards were identified as St. Valentine’s cards and spread with Christianity, to the point where Valentine’s Day is now celebrated worldwide.

    My wish is that people could maintain the joy and fondness that they exchange during these Valentine’s Day moments and continue to express this warm sharing every day, much like Christmas where many enjoy the cheer and the camaraderie of the season. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could extend these kinds of positive feelings into our lives on a daily basis?

    ”’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

    Legislative Hearing Notices – Feb. 14, 2003

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    The following hearing notices, which are subject to change, were sorted and taken from the Hawaii State Capitol Web site. Please check that site for updates and/or changes to the schedule at https://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/site1/docs/hearing/hearing2.asp?press1=docs&button1=current Go there and click on the Hearing Date to view the Hearing Notice.

    Hearings notices for both House and Senate measures in all committees:

    Hearing

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB81 RELATING TO ACUPUNCTURE. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB311 RELATING TO PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS, ARCHITECTS, SURVEYORS, AND LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB623 RELATING TO DENTISTRY. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB775 RELATING TO PHARMACEUTICAL BENEFIT MANAGEMENT COMPANIES. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB925 RELATING TO DENTISTRY. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1077 RELATING TO CONTINUING EDUCATION FOR INSURANCE LICENSEES. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1313 RELATING TO THE EXAMINATION FOR LICENSURE AS A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1314 RELATING TO PSYCHOLOGIST LICENSING REQUIREMENTS. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1484 RELATING TO OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1549 RELATING TO PUBLIC ACCOUNTANCY. CPH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB958 RELATING TO THE PRACTICE OF PHARMACY. CPH/HTH

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB399 RELATING TO THE COMSTAT PROGRAM. JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB610 RELATING TO INDIVIDUAL CLAIMS RESOLUTION UNDER THE HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS TRUST. JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB770 RELATING TO UNION ORGANIZING. JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1351 RELATING TO BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR ADULT SERVICES PROGRAMS. JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1499 RELATING TO THE UNIFORM INFORMATION PRACTICES ACT (MODIFIED). JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1499 RELATING TO THE UNIFORM INFORMATION PRACTICES ACT (MODIFIED). JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1514 RELATING TO FORFEITURES. JHW

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB703 RELATING TO LAND USE. WLA

    2/14/03 9:00 AM SB1559 RELATING TO THE HAWAII RIGHT TO FARM ACT. WLA

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 10:00 AM SB376 RELATING TO ART. SAT

    2/14/03 10:00 AM SB376 RELATING TO ART. SAT

    2/14/03 10:00 AM SB641 RELATING TO CONTRACTORS. SAT

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB9 RELATING TO EDUCATION. ECD

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB1053 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR PLANS FOR HE`EIA KEA BEACH PARK. ECD

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB1433 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS WITHIN THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. ECD

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB1450 RELATING TO STATE ENTERPRISE ZONES. ECD

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB1527 RELATING TO A CONSTRUCTION RESOURCES RESEARCH CENTER. ECD

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB1648 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR THE HAWAII STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION. ECD

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB724 RELATING TO THE KANEOHE BAY REGIONAL COUNCIL. ECD/SAT

    2/14/03 10:30 AM SB1704 RELATING TO A FILM PRODUCTION/POST PRODUCTION/HAWAIIAN CULTURAL AND EDUCATIONAL FACILITY AND WAREHOUSE WITHIN OR NEAR HEEIA STATE PARK. ECD/SAT

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 1:00 PM SB140 SD1 RELATING TO HIGHER EDUCATION. EDU

    2/14/03 1:00 PM SB1073 RELATING TO TEACHER SALARIES. EDU

    2/14/03 1:00 PM SB559 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII AT HILO. EDU/WLA

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB9 RELATING TO EDUCATION. EDU

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB61 RELATING TO HUMAN RESOURCES. EDU

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB668 RELATING TO A CENTER FOR NURSING. EDU

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB1433 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS WITHIN THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. EDU

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB1527 RELATING TO A CONSTRUCTION RESOURCES RESEARCH CENTER. EDU

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB668 RELATING TO A CENTER FOR NURSING. HTH

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB61 RELATING TO HUMAN RESOURCES. LBR

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB770 RELATING TO UNION ORGANIZING. LBR

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB779 RELATING TO THE EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM. LBR

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB1371 RELATING TO THE CONFIDENTIALITY OF CONSULTATION REPORTS. LBR

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB1373 RELATING TO STAFFING FOR FEDERALLY FUNDED PROGRAMS. LBR

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB235 SD1 RELATING TO GOVERNMENT. TMG/WLA

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB1175 RELATING TO ANIMAL QUARANTINE. WLA/TMG

    2/14/03 1:15 PM SB1531 RELATING TO ANIMAL QUARANTINE. WLA/TMG

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB463 RELATING TO KAHO`OLAWE ISLAND RESERVE. TMG

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB1402 RELATING TO THE IN-BOND CONCESSION AT STATE AIRPORTS. TMG

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB1478 RELATING TO AIRPORT CONCESSIONAIRES. TMG

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB1608 RELATING TO PUBLIC ACCESS. TMG

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB473 RELATING TO HALFWAY HOUSES. TMG/HMS

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB684 RELATING TO PARKING FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES. TMG/HTH

    2/14/03 2:45 PM SB690 RELATING TO ELECTIONS. TMG/SAT

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1372 RELATING TO EXPLOSIVES. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1374 RELATING TO THE STATE FIRE COUNCIL. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1464 RELATING TO THE COUNTIES’ EMINENT DOMAIN POWERS. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1468 RELATING TO RESIDENTIAL LEASEHOLDS. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1472 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR A NATIONAL KOREAN WAR MUSEUM IN HAWAII. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1479 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR VETERANS CEMETERIES. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1521 RELATING TO THE COUNTIES’ EMINENT DOMAIN POWERS. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1560 RELATING TO PROPERTY LEFT IN A DANGEROUS CONDITION. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1636 RELATING TO PUBLIC AGENCY MEETINGS AND RECORDS. TMG

    2/14/03 3:15 PM SB1639 RELATING TO THE SEARCH AND RESCUE REIMBURSEMENT ACT. TMG

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

    Honolulu Advertiser Editorial Doesn't Get to Root of Problem

    0

    The Honolulu Advertiser editorial (1/5/03) “City Council must set fresh budget plans” is a step in the right direction but doesn’t go to the root of the problem.

    The statement “

    Honolulu Advertiser Editorial Doesn’t Get to Root of Problem

    0

    The Honolulu Advertiser editorial (1/5/03) “City Council must set fresh budget plans” is a step in the right direction but doesn’t go to the root of the problem.

    The statement “