Nobody can talk about climate change if you intentionally bury the science.
zoobaloo · 13h ago
Having grown up in Hawai'i, I know both people who worked in the observatories (or who reserve time on its telescopes for academic work), as well as people who have opposed the continued growth of facilities on the mountain.
While this became a salient topic in the media during the proposed TMNT telescope construction, there's an angle to all this that has been lost in the national media. Some of the voices quoted as opposed to development tended to be the loudest, and in my opinion least reasonable, ones. These arguments tended to hinge on Native Hawaiian identity politics and cultural grievances - while there might be something there, such statements could come across as close-minded, and I think they mischaracterized the debate as about science and progress versus NIMBYism and indigenous rights.
The more legitimate concern has been the State of Hawai'i's general mismanagement of development on the mountain, and the failure of its relevant Board of Trustees to fulfill their contractual obligations. Many private/public construction projects in Hawai'i have the unfortunate tendency to turn into haphazard federal cash grabs: the exploding costs and years-behind-schedule rail system in Honolulu is a good example, and there's a fair argument to be made that the thirteen telescopes on Mauna Loa have followed a similar pattern. Some of these were legally supposed to have been cleaned up years ago.
As mentioned, I know people who've used some of the telescopes for research and I don't think many people in the islands question the value or substance of their work. I also personally prefer it to local government's addiction to developing tourism. At the same time, I think there's a fair debate that's less "we don't like scientists," and more "please clean up your old messes like you promised."
This is all tangential to TFA, and I doubt the current federal administration cares about it. I'll still be curious to see how this plays out. Pulling funding could hurt efforts to responsibly steward the site, which would be bad. At the same time, it could discourage the Board of Trustees from continuing to chase the next federal money hose opportunity in a questionably sustainable way.
In an ideal case, those involved will find a way to continue pursuing research, while those managing the site will pursue a more organized, transparent, and responsible development plan for the land in question.
java-man · 14h ago
We are witnessing gradual destruction of the United States. Unfortunately, nothing will change before the country is in ruins, much like Germany and Japan in 1945.
nxobject · 13h ago
Ironically, much of the ascent of America after WWII had to do with being the only intact industrial power, which we then plowed into science and technology research. It’s a pity we don’t recognize that in our historical narratives - rather than just “we did the right thing during World War II”.
JumpCrisscross · 5h ago
> rather than just “we did the right thing during World War II”
This is now a debated point in MAGA!
givemeethekeys · 13h ago
The people of Hawaii will
Be happy - a positive move.
djmips · 10h ago
I can guess why but to be sure what do you mean?
OutOfHere · 9h ago
It's not a positive move for anyone, whether for anyone in Hawaii or otherwise. Hawaii is not immune to climate change.
OutOfHere · 9h ago
I think we should ideally have a global CO2 sensor network that anyone can feed into. It could even store data on a blockchain if that helps.
CamperBob2 · 15h ago
There has to be a way to stop these people.
Here's a "climate pledge" for you, Jeff: undo some of the damage you did by supporting Trump by endowing a trust to keep this facility operational and collecting data for another 65+ years.
mandeepj · 15h ago
Midterms!! Or hope those cheeseburgers will do their magic sooner rather than later.
anakaine · 12h ago
Lets see if they don't get delayed to deal with some crisis or another first.
While this became a salient topic in the media during the proposed TMNT telescope construction, there's an angle to all this that has been lost in the national media. Some of the voices quoted as opposed to development tended to be the loudest, and in my opinion least reasonable, ones. These arguments tended to hinge on Native Hawaiian identity politics and cultural grievances - while there might be something there, such statements could come across as close-minded, and I think they mischaracterized the debate as about science and progress versus NIMBYism and indigenous rights.
The more legitimate concern has been the State of Hawai'i's general mismanagement of development on the mountain, and the failure of its relevant Board of Trustees to fulfill their contractual obligations. Many private/public construction projects in Hawai'i have the unfortunate tendency to turn into haphazard federal cash grabs: the exploding costs and years-behind-schedule rail system in Honolulu is a good example, and there's a fair argument to be made that the thirteen telescopes on Mauna Loa have followed a similar pattern. Some of these were legally supposed to have been cleaned up years ago.
As mentioned, I know people who've used some of the telescopes for research and I don't think many people in the islands question the value or substance of their work. I also personally prefer it to local government's addiction to developing tourism. At the same time, I think there's a fair debate that's less "we don't like scientists," and more "please clean up your old messes like you promised."
This is all tangential to TFA, and I doubt the current federal administration cares about it. I'll still be curious to see how this plays out. Pulling funding could hurt efforts to responsibly steward the site, which would be bad. At the same time, it could discourage the Board of Trustees from continuing to chase the next federal money hose opportunity in a questionably sustainable way.
In an ideal case, those involved will find a way to continue pursuing research, while those managing the site will pursue a more organized, transparent, and responsible development plan for the land in question.
This is now a debated point in MAGA!
Here's a "climate pledge" for you, Jeff: undo some of the damage you did by supporting Trump by endowing a trust to keep this facility operational and collecting data for another 65+ years.