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Just arrived in Honolulu. Many of the people here believe Pele is angry, causing the volcanic eruptions in Hilo. Many also believe in the sacredness of Mauna Kea, where there are now many large observatories. Controversy has arisen over whether to allow another observatory to be built on this sacred ground. I keep thinking, this is not the first time relegion and magical thinking has delayed scientific progress. Sigh......

AstroLou 5 June 3
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0

I can think several moments were scientific progress slowed down Mankind. Don't ask me, look it up, research it.

Well, over all, scientific progress means adding information, knowledge, and understanding to the database of humanity. The quest to know what is out there, where we came from, are we alone, is as old as human history. Science - the process of critical evaluation and assessment, stands alone, by far, as our best chance to answer these questions. For most of human history, the planets were deities. Now we know they are other planets bound by the same laws of physics as the Earth. For most of human history, illness was caused by evil spirits or angry gods. Now we know they are caused by pathogens challenging the body's defenses. Scientific progress brought us out of the dark ages of ignorance and fear and will continue to light the way to real understanding of the universe and our place in it.

@AstroLou Scientific Progress got us to this moment on history were the Stockpile of Nuclear Weapons is Large enough to Destroy life on earth SEVEN TIMES!

0

I feel that once religion is mentioned the argument is over and the side that uses it is in the wrong. That being said I do not count indigenous people's beliefs as religion, not in the same realm as organized religion. I have to be careful here as these are loaded terms and not every one has the same experience with these ideas as I have. There is a plethora of differences between these two realms and choosing to put them under the same label is just incorrect. Organized religion exists for power and wealth, indigenous peoples are just trying to understand the world and their experience within it. The Hawaiians should be able to do what ever they want, I would hope the telescopes would be a small part of any changes they would want to make. Just an opinion.

1

Who ever wants to argue for a particular point is either going to use religion as a good or bad thing determined by their point of view.

6

Let me address a few misconceptions I'm seeing in your responses... NASA is not part of the military. It has its own mission (which is exploration and discovery) and line item budget. Mauna Kea is a long since extinct volcano and so is a safe place to put an observatory. There are not lots of places to put observatories. Mauna Kea possesses unique attributes that put it in the top few great locations in the world for observational astronomy.

1

Active volcano is scientific progress...the emissaries of this great biosphere is alive and well. Entropy....

9

The mountain IS angry and can only be appeased by sacrificing an old man with orange skin and small hands.....where oh where shall we find such a person?

@goldenvalleyguy because Rosie isn't screwing up what's left of this country as a whole... Just the small immediate area she occupies... lol

@goldenvalleyguy Because I used to work for her! LOL but seriously, she's not the worst of the worst right now.... 😉

1

Cant we appease them by some human sacrifices, like D-list celebs?

@Bierbasstard Yeah that sort of thing but with D-list celebs like reality tv show people. Have a cull.

I think that the most famous Hawaiian would be an appropriate sacrifice. It would certaintly be a fitting cap to his political legacy.

@bigpawbullets No not Magnum !!!!

@MissKathleen, @bigpawbullets Since one of your suggestions is treasonous and I am unsure if conspiracy to kill a former president counts as treason under US law. (They are still called Mr President) Which carries the death penalty I presume. You would both have to be tied to said former west wing resident, as you pushed them in. So does that change your mind any?
What I propose is a big brother in reverse. As each housemate is evicted , down they go till the gods are appeased.

@273kelvin
Ha. Ya got me.

4

That land belongs to the indigenous peoples. The U.S. uses the islands for a strategic military purpose. Who is this corporation ?... you call science. NASA operates under the military budget. This is because they are military, not civilian. We have plenty of places we can place an observatory. Let those peoples be.

Etre Level 7 June 4, 2018

This.

Wrong on multiple counts. First, NASA is an independent executive agency. It's not part of the Department of Defense, it has its own budget directly allocated by Congress, and its operations are explicitly civilian, not military.

Also, the land on which the observatories sit is owned by the state of Hawai'i, which leases it to the University of Hawai'i, which in turn manages and sub-leases the site. It's neither owned nor operated by either NASA or the DoD.

Finally, although there are other places to locate observatories, the peak of Mauna Kea is arguably the best location on earth for ground-based astronomy due to its elevation, isolation, seismic stability, and aridity, plus the US's political stability.

As others have pointed out, military activities in space are the province of the military; NASA's mission is strictly civilian. I think a lot of people assume that NASA is in charge of anything being sent into space, but it's not. The confusion may be partly that NASA and the military often use the same launch vehicles / systems (which are developed by private industry and sold to civilian AND military customers).

Although the land on which the observatory exists is state-owned, the general feeling in the Islands is that the US improperly appropriated land, culture, and a lot of other things from the indigenous peoples and so the reason some credence is being given to the claims of sacredness for the site as well as desire for input of indigenous citizens, is based on that. While I personally feel that religion is being used as a wedge by some people who probably don't seriously follow the old religions very much and are looking for political advantage, and that to the extent their beliefs are sincerely held they are doing society more harm than good -- it is nevertheless laudable that the government is not simply running roughshod over the locals, even though they legally could.

@mordant
Well their you go, a professionalist.. i am not an astronomer... and Im pretty sure Nasa gets funding from DOD. I will recheck ... and yes i understand the placement. However said, peoples and said cultures have rights, and science should take a back seat to this one and find some other place, like space.... respect, honor, dignity, even if the indigenous lower conscious beings deserve a say when it comes to their home land. We have done enough in the name of Science and War.

Thank you not trying to be disrespectful.

@Etre "Professionalist" ... you just taught me a new word! "A person that supports a professional attitude". Thanks for the complement. I think. But just so you know ... I did not think of you as being unprofessional. Misinformed perhaps, as we all are from time to time. This professional included 😉

@cmadler Sorry. The so-called "State of Hawaii" is the trustee of the public trust of the subject lands - held in trust for the (Hawaiian) public AND for the betterment of native Hawaiians. The "state" does not OWN the land.

See Section 5🌼 of the Hawai'i Admission Act -
f) The lands granted to the State of Hawaii by subsection 🍺 of this section and public lands retained by the United States under subsections ☕ and 🍸 and later conveyed to the State under subsection 📧, together with the proceeds from the sale or other disposition of any such lands and the income therefrom, shall be held by said State as a public trust for the support of the public schools and other public educational institutions, for the betterment of the conditions of native Hawaiians, as defined in the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, 1920, as amended, for the development of farm and home ownership on as widespread a basis as possible for the making of public improvements, and for the provision of lands for public use.  Such lands, proceeds, and income shall be managed and disposed of for one or more of the foregoing purposes in such manner as the constitution and laws of said State may provide, and their use for any other object shall constitute a breach of trust for which suit may be brought by the United States.  The schools and other educational institutions supported, in whole or in part out of such public trust shall forever remain under the exclusive control of said State;  and no part of the proceeds or income from the lands granted under this Act shall be used for the support of any sectarian or denominational school, college, or university.

@cmadler Sorry. The so-called "State of Hawaii" is the trustee of the public trust of the subject lands - held in trust for the (Hawaiian) public AND for the betterment of native Hawaiians. The "state" does not OWN the land.

See Section 5🌼 of the Hawai'i Admission Act -
f) The lands granted to the State of Hawaii by subsection 🍺 of this section and public lands retained by the United States under subsections ☕ and 🍸 and later conveyed to the State under subsection 📧, together with the proceeds from the sale or other disposition of any such lands and the income therefrom, shall be held by said State as a public trust for the support of the public schools and other public educational institutions, for the betterment of the conditions of native Hawaiians, as defined in the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, 1920, as amended, for the development of farm and home ownership on as widespread a basis as possible for the making of public improvements, and for the provision of lands for public use.  Such lands, proceeds, and income shall be managed and disposed of for one or more of the foregoing purposes in such manner as the constitution and laws of said State may provide, and their use for any other object shall constitute a breach of trust for which suit may be brought by the United States.  The schools and other educational institutions supported, in whole or in part out of such public trust shall forever remain under the exclusive control of said State;  and no part of the proceeds or income from the lands granted under this Act shall be used for the support of any sectarian or denominational school, college, or university.

@mkeaman
I knew the Hawians had rights. It was a Kingdom.

@Etre The problem is that the Hawaiian people opposed annexation - that helped to stop it in Congress. The necessary 2/3 vote wasn't forthcoming. However, some folks came up with an Annexation Resolution instead of the necessary Treaty - realizing, for instance, that a resolution is a domestic document and has no force of law outside the boundaries of the sponsoring country. For just about a hundred years, the Hawaiian folks, after being brainwashed by the educational system, and deception of all kinds, finally started realizing that they were duped - and that they were actually occupied. At this time, a rigorous anti-occupation movement has started and a re-independence movement is happening.

@mkeaman i knew there were some efforts to gain independence, which I fully support.

3

Unfortunately, humans are just animals. Not all dogs are smart, and neither are all humans. Some of us just learn better than others, I suppose.

7

There may be a vary good reason NOT to build them other then religion. Like a highly active volcano for one. Most religions have taboos in place for a reason. " It angers the gods to build here" can easily be translated to. "Dont build here you idiot it's not safe."

Mauna Kea is a dormant volcano. It last erupted about 3,500-6,000 years ago, and is not expected to erupt again within the next several centuries.

@cmadler the Guatemala's Fuego volcano showed no warning signs before it killed at least 25 this weekend.

@Shelly_Y Volcán de Fuego has been erupting nearly continuously for the last 16 years, and regularly erupted for centuries. It's not at all comparable to Mauna Kea; a better comparison for Volcán de Fuego is Kilauea, which has erupted fairly steadily for 35 years now.

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