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Space Politics Science

Native Hawaiian Panel Withdraws Support For World's Largest Telescope 286

sciencehabit writes: Trustees of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) – a state agency established to advocate for native Hawaiins — voted Thursday to withdraw their support for construction of the Thirty-Meter Telescope (TMT) on the summit of the Mauna Kea volcano. The vote follows weeks of protests by Native Hawaiians who say the massive structure would desecrate one of their most holy places. The protests have shut down construction of the telescope, which would be the world's largest optical telescope if completed. The vote, which reverses a 2009 decision to endorse the project, strikes a powerful if symbolic blow against a project that, for many native Hawaiians, has come to symbolize more than a century of assaults against their land, culture and sovereignty.
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Native Hawaiian Panel Withdraws Support For World's Largest Telescope

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  • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @02:55PM (#49601433) Journal

    More religious whackjobs blocking progress. If they own the land, or represent the majority in a democracy, so be it; otherwise a does of "separation of church and state" would be welcome here. No one should get a free pass on being a religious whackjob simply because they aren't a Christian whackjob.

    • by MrBigInThePants ( 624986 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @03:17PM (#49601531)
      You are wrong. Having seen this in action first hand in my own country I can predict this has NOTHING to do with religion.

      Typically this is more about the gravy not being forthcoming to the local "leaders".
      • That could be part of it. Anyone following the project knows that these protests have been going on for a while at low levels, but didn't really kick up until last month at about exactly the same time as when Canada chipped in $240 million. [www.cbc.ca]

        There is another part though; the Hawaiian sovereignty issue. Of course, that's a bullshit line of reasoning in a lot of ways (as I discuss here [slashdot.org]). Is this a shakedown for money by activist leaders or way of inciting anger for their own political gains? Probably both,

    • More religious whackjobs blocking progress.

      I'm waiting to see if it's really religion-based or just another negotiating (shakedown) tactic. A few million here to promote native cultural issues, a few million there into the ÅOElelo HawaiÊi fund, another few million to the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, and suddenly the spirits agree with the telescope being built, and all is good. Such magic.

    • Actually, they own the land.
      Hawaii got annexed by the USA somewhere around 1900.
      Actually as an american you should at least know the basics.
      In other words they are a sovereign - not so sovereign anymore nation - that got conquered and anexed by the US aggressors. With all kinds of slavery, suppresion amd racial violence, similar versus the blacks or native americans.
      If they would go to an i ternational court they would win any case supporting their secession.

      In our times if a country tries to annex another

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        Whoever has the bigger military owns the land (or gets to say who owns the land if they don't want it). That's the entirety of "international law". Land ownership is similar.

    • More religious whackjobs blocking progress. If they own the land, or represent the majority in a democracy, so be it; otherwise a does of "separation of church and state" would be welcome here. No one should get a free pass on being a religious whackjob simply because they aren't a Christian whackjob.

      Ah, but the only church that anybody wants to separate the state from is the Christian one.

  • Works both ways (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dissy ( 172727 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @02:57PM (#49601443)

    If that is acceptable, what about my claim that science is my religion, and the native Hawaiins are desecrating what I declare as holy land? Will they be forced to stop doing so too?

    Probably not, which is why we shouldn't allow them to stop us for this reason just the same.

  • I'd prefer having the support of local people. However, religious belief too often stands in the way of telescopic investigation of our universe. Perhaps there can be something done so they feel it is part of their culture after all.

    • The TMT people do want the support of the community. They have gone far out of their way to do so, to invest in local education, to invest in cultural affairs, to be respectful of cultural and environmental concerns, ect. The protesters conveniently ignore how much they have done, and misinformation and rumors can be found all over social media.

  • by BenJeremy ( 181303 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @03:17PM (#49601535)

    Peter Brady nods his head sagely....

  • Blaming this on "religion" is a cop-out. They're waving their "religion" in your face because they know you will crawl on your belly over hot glass to avoid "offending" their "native" sensibilities.

  • They also point to management audits from the 1990s and 2000s that found the summit area was being mismanaged by the University of Hawaii and state government and say those issues should be resolved before any more telescopes are built.

    That sounds like a pretty damned good argument to me, by itself. Is the summit area currently being mismanaged? Or were those audits merely cash grabs themselves? Surely someone knows more, given the backgrounds of readers of this site. Unless they've all been scared off by now between beta, auto-playing videos, and slashverdicements.

  • wikipedia states [wikipedia.org]

    The name Laniakea means "immeasurable heaven" in Hawaiian, from lani for "heaven" and akea for "spacious" or "immeasurable". The name was suggested by Nawa'a Napoleon, an associate professor of Hawaiian language at Kapiolani Community College. The name honors Polynesian navigators who used heavenly knowledge to navigate the Pacific Ocean.[3][7]

    And perhaps more importantly, the Nature letter [nature.com] and preprint [arxiv.org]

  • So just close down the the entire project in Hawaii like right now. I am sure that the government and the people of Chile will welcome the jobs and economic spinoffs.
  • A policy of submitting to demands not to build in holy places is an invitation to abused by jerks. In Australia, there's no place you can go where an aboriginal won't say "That's a holy place." Even if they've never been near the place. I think they make it up as they go.
  • by Vinegar Joe ( 998110 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @05:50PM (#49602359)

    In one week the Hawaiians will be begging for the telescope to be built.

  • The mismanagement reports of the 1990s and 2000s existed when the OHA voted in favor of this project in 2009. The size and scope of the telescope hasn't changed since then.

    What is different? Why was this acceptable to them in 2009 but not 2015?

    • Bribes have sort of an expiration date. It's hard to negotiate a new bribe too soon after getting the previous one. The OHA got their concessions in 2009, they feel they can score some more today.

  • Warmth? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Spazmania ( 174582 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @06:37PM (#49602585) Homepage

    Mehana Kihoi. ... âoeWhen you place your hands and your bare feet into the soil, you feel that warmth, you feel her heart."

    Liar. Had you ever placed your hands and bare feet into the soil at 13,000 feet atop Mauna Kea you'd know that the only things you feel are hypothermia and hypoxia. It's friggin' cold up there, and the air is barely breathable.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      Cerro de Pasco [wikipedia.org]

      14,210 ft elevation, pop 70,000, one of many populations this high up.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L... [wikipedia.org]

      • FAR ÃÂ 91.211 Supplemental oxygen

        (1) At cabin pressure altitudes above 12,500 feet (MSL) up to and including 14,000 feet (MSL) unless the required minimum flight crew is provided with and uses supplemental oxygen for that part of the flight at those altitudes that is of more than 30 minutes duration;

        But hey, what does the FAA know about thin air and hypoxia.

  • Most posts here I see are talking about the merits of native title, what it means to be able to claim native title, and who is the native in the first place (Native Title is what land ownership is called in some countries). But really the core point is written write in the summary:

    The vote, which reverses a 2009 decision to endorse the project

    They endorsed the project and now have withdrawn their support after construction has started. Talk about screwing over a major project. Is there any recourse the project has to prevent them from pulling shit like that again? In c

  • Stop all federal funding for new construction projects in all of Hawaii. Cancel everything. Close all federally funded operations. Close Pearl Harbor and move the base back to the mainland. Cut all federal spending for Hawaii, including energy, roads, and education.

    There, now Hawaii is protected.

  • NIMBY's suck farts off dead chickens in August. And if you've ever smelt a rotting chicken in the August heat, you know how revolting that is.

    The job of a NIMBY is to do whatever they can to obstruct progress. Whether they do it to "protect property values", "save the children", or "stand up for our (religious) rights", they all do the same thing in the end: Say "No" without providing any options.

    Every nation in this world is full of conquered peoples. There are more "sacred places" than you can sha

  • On the one hand you have an indigenous population that basically had their land stolen from them and their country coopted by the US.

    Nothing new for the US only it happened a good deal later than usual. But most Americans believe we should be respectful of these people and do our level best to see that we do what we can to make the nastiness of whole situation more bearable. To that end, they were given exclusive control over one of the smaller Islands along with a lot of rights and subsidies etc. Does that

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