Kuleana de Hawai’i ad ipsum

Welcome to Stares at the World, where we can screw up grammar in three languages at a time.

As I’m sure you all know I recently did a couple of interviews with Danny de Gracia, a politician/journalist/literary critic & chef from the State of Hawaii; he’s my second data-point that there’s a new wave of politicians coming, a group of Gen-X/Millennial Men with the shrewdness needed to rule, and the integrity to rule well.

But this post isn’t about him; it’s about Hawaii.

Speaking with him got me curious, so during a slow moment at work I decided to do some research; what I found was utterly fascinating.  Right there on the sharp edge of Fuller’s Dymaxion lies an exciting little Island Paradise with more potential than she realizes.  It really makes me envy some of the people who live there.

So while I’m certainly not an expert, I’m compelled to write something about it – call it the Bird’s Eye View, or Missing the Forest for the Trees; I’m so far away that certain patterns are going to stand out, which could be missed by someone in the midst of it.  My data is sparse enough that I can easily parse it.  And what I see is a land that could easily become a haven for Civlization.

Geography, Climate, and Culture

Right off the bat Hawaii has the best of both worlds; the trade winds give it a mild climate, with a seasonal range between 31 °C to 28 °C (high- to low-80s in Fahrenheit), yet its location on the far tip of the Polynesian plate keeps it safe from the unwashed, fast-breeding, r-type hordes roaming throughout the continents.  Continental cities are inevitably tied to their countries through geopolitics; Hawaii has Pearl Harbor, but aside from that, the island is nothing more than a staging area.

In other words, should things start to turn sour on the mainland, Hawaii will be relatively unaffected.

Next there’s the matter of its low population; at a little under 1.4 million people it’s only slightly bigger than the city I live in.  This is an eminently manageable population, especially considering that many of them are spread out; while Calgary relies upon its infrastructure, Hawaii can suffer a lot of deprivation before things start turning to savagery.  Furthermore, with the climate, there’s no need for heating or air conditioning.

Culturally they’re incredibly mixed – the two largest groups are Asians and Europeans, ticking in at 39% and 25% respectively – and while ethnic heterogeneity usually points towards instability, there are exceptions where things can ‘muddle along’ and turn out okay.  Hawaii seems to be one of those cases.  The key is that there’s no dominant ethnicity; a dominant ethnicity paired with a subversive ethnicity is a breeding ground for Marxists.  But when you have a place as mixed-up and interesting as Hawaii they’re practically forced to find a culture of their own.  Aside from the occasional semi-clownish coup, the racial tensions seem to be rather minimal; or at the very least manageable.  And overall Hawaiian citizens tend to be better educated than your typical American.

So on the ground floor of immutables – population, geography, and climate – Hawaii’s looking pretty good.

And yet economically it’s a complete mess.

Living Beyond One’s Means

Your average Hawaiian resident probably looks around and sees an industrialized, 1st world nation, but when you start looking at the numbers thing don’t add up…

Or rather, they do, but only if you’re paying attention.

The average income of Hawaiian residents is $30,000/year, about 75% of the American average; and yet Hawaiian housing is some of the most expensive in the country.  Meanwhile they have a punitive regulatory code, and the highest state tax per capita.  Government largesse is extensive, with some of the highest spending on schools, and a state sponsored (92%, anyway) healthcare system.

So what’s wrong with this picture?  Why am I criticizing the Nobility of the Liberal Way?  Surely this proves the methods of the Golden One ( who lived there for a few months and now claims their citizenship)!

Two words: tourism & military.

But first let’s deal with an ugly Canard.

Healthcare: not as healthy as you think it is

Liberals love the Hawaiian healthcare system because of the longevity of the citizenry, and the fact that preventative care causes them to spend less on expensive surgeries.

Or does it?

The RAND health insurance experiment is old news in some circles, and Professor R. Hanson has done a far better job of eviscerating the healthcare industry than I could ever hope to:

The bottom line is that thousands of people randomly given free medicine in the late 1970s consumed 30-40% more medical services, paid one more “restricted activity day” per year to deal with the medical system, but were not noticeably healthier!  So unless the marginal value of medicine has changed in the last thirty years, if you would not pay for medicine out of your own pocket, then don’t bother to go when others offer to pay; on average such medicine is as likely to hurt as to help.

He’s written extensively on the subject, so I’ll leave the detail-hacking to him, but what it boils down to is that – for the most part – healthcare really work.  You want to stay healthy?  Then earn enough money to be comfortable, live a low-stress life, get plenty of sun, and ignore any diet advice coming from people in lab coats.

Huh – almost sounds like your typical Hawaiian local, doesn’t it?

I would suggest, based on Prior A: healthcare doesn’t help very much, Prior B: the modern ‘healthy’ diet has caused an obesity epidemic, and Prior C: Hawaiian residents on average eat more traditional diets, with more Vitamin D from sunlight than your typical American, that Conclusion D: The residents of Hawaii are just healthier overall – the money wasted on Doctors has little to do with it.

Moving on:

Massive Investment, Crippling Regulation

Each year Hawaii enjoys a huge influx of Free Money; $12.2 billion from the military, and over $10 billion from tourism: $25 billion in free money each year!  This is the source of the government largesse, not a productive economic base.

Meanwhile they suffer under onerous regulation from the Merchant Marine Act of 1920.

The Merchant Marine Act is a bit of protectionist legislation – which I don’t have a problem with in general (an argument for another time, I suppose) but where it affects Hawaii is the fact that all shipped goods must arrive on the mainland of the United States – San Francisco – before they can be shipped to Hawaii.  An extra surcharge for living so far away is only to be expected, but this double surcharge, effectively shutting down the Asian markets, is crippling.

It should go without saying that industries have built up around this law; institutional momentum and the profit motive are keeping it in place.

Invest in the Future, not the Present

Hawaiian voters should be focused on three things right now:

1. Open up the Merchant Marine Act: Some protectionist legislation benefiting the United States is good; protectionist legislation that benefits California over Hawaii is bad.  The citizenry should be demanding this platform from every politician.

2. Use all that free money while it’s still coming in; economic times being what they are, there’s no guarantee that the tourism industry won’t collapse tomorrow.  Open up the tax codes so that an effective private industry can grow; tourism money is nice, but it makes you reliant on the tourists.  You’re as much a slave to the tourist, as the office worker is to the corporation when the company covers his medical expenses.  Learn to stand on your own two feet; don’t be someone else’s servant!

3. Achieve energy independence: I haven’t found any figures I particularly trust, but it’s obvious that you’re relying heavily on foreign oil.  You guys don’t need much power!  Many of you could go off-grid at home and still live comfortably.

You live in a paradise; you don’t have to survive the Canadian Winter like us Northerners do, and you don’t have to worry about gangs of roaving marauders coming out of Los Angeles.  You should be taking that money and dropping it into solar, wind, geothermal, and nuclear power right now – not paying for healthcare and government brainwashing programs for your children.

Especially nuclear; a couple of solid generating stations could make Hawaii an utterly independent island.

Beautiful countryside always encourages the Liberal in all of us; it makes us feel secure, makes us want to share the wealth with everyone.  Take a tact from a man in a frozen hinterland, where several homeless freeze to death every winter despite our best efforts, and where the ups and downs of the petroleum industry spell have inspired an old Albertan saying:

“Please Lord, just one more boom – I promise not to waste it this time!”

***

Hau’oli La Ho’omaika’i!

23/11/2012 edit: I am told that “Hawaiian” refers to the ethnic natives to the island; the article has been amended to reflect that.

 

Leo M.J. Aurini

Trained as a Historian at McMaster University, and as an Infantry soldier in the Canadian Forces, I'm a Scholar, Author, Film Maker, and a God fearing Catholic, who loves women for their illogical nature.

You may also like...

2 Responses

  1. Keoni Galt says:

    Hmmm…interesting, this “bird’s eye view” from an outsider perspective.

    Let me see if I can help you out a bit with this.

    In other words, should things start to turn sour on the mainland, Hawaii will be relatively unaffected.

    Next there’s the matter of its low population; at a little under 1.4 million people it’s only slightly bigger than the city I live in. This is an eminently manageable population, especially considering that many of them are spread out; while Calgary relies upon its infrastructure, Hawaii can suffer a lot of deprivation before things start turning to savagery.

    Well over 90% of our food and energy is shipped in from the mainland. Something happens on the mainland that interrupts regular shipping, at least our main island, O’ahu, will certainly be affected.

    Of the 1.4 million in the State, @ 1 million live on O’ahu.

    9 days of no food in the stores because of interrupted shipping, I have no doubt things will turn to savagery.

    Everytime we have any sort of potential natural disaster (approaching hurricane, tsunami warning, earthquake-caused power outage), the grocery store shelves are cleaned out in less than a day, and the gas stations sell out all the fuel they can sell.

    This situation is what turned me into a “prepper.”

    Hawaiians on average eat more traditional diets, with more Vitamin D from sunlight than your typical American, that Conclusion D: Hawaiians are just healthier overall – the money wasted on Doctors has little to do with it.

    Bingo! We still have our share of shambling wal martians, and at least on O’ahu, we’ve got fast food joints in every city and town. But even the obese and unhealthy still get a lot of sunlight, and still eat a lot of traditional foods like seafood, that at least mitigate some of the effects of a lot of junk food consumption.

    As for the economy, let me just put all into a neat, easy to understand nutshell: Hawaii politics has been a Democrat stronghold for over 50 years, precisely because the Democrat Party is bought and paid for by the Unions that truly run this State.

    And the unions enforce their control of their cartel powers with an iron fist…with the shipping union (the Steveadores) representing the most powerful. Look up the sordid affair of the now defunct Superferry. As it represented a threat to the shipping business, the unions flexed all their political powers to get it run out of the state on so called environmental concerns.

    The key is that there’s no dominant ethnicity; a dominant ethnicity paired with a subversive ethnicity is a breeding ground for Marxists. But when you have a place as mixed-up and interesting as Hawaii they’re practically forced to find a culture of their own.

    The key thing about Hawaii’s incredibly diverse population is this: overall, we have a culture of assimilation. People are expected to assimilate to the Hawaiian culture…for the lack of a better term, I’ll call it the “aloha spirit.” As a culture, we expect courtesy, friendliness, and an emphasis on family. For instance, we have very bad rush hour traffic…yet no one honks their horns, and most people regularly allow other cars to merge or pass.

    If you get broken down on the side of the road, it’s a virtual guarantee some good samaritan will pull over and offer you some form of help.

    Most ethnicities that come here, eventually assimilate to most of these values and behaviors.

    Oh, and we’re all good natured racists…we just laugh it off and joke at each other’s expense.

  2. Keoni Galt says:

    Now, when it comes to property values and living situations, what you really have is a lot of people that bought houses from the 1950’s to the 1970’s at relatively cheap prices, and then realized huge gains in value after the Japanese fueled real estate boom of the 1980’s.

    What this really means is that while our housing is some of the most expensive, we are also a culture for which multi-generational families all living under one roof. It’s typical for kids to either live with their parents well into their 20’s and 30’s, and a lot of kids usually migrate to the mainland for career opportunities not found in the tourism/service industry.

    We also have massive state Dependence on welfare and housing subsidies that support our matriarchal underclass communities.

    In many ways, at least on O’ahu, we have a very unsustainable economic base.

    The neighbor islands have sparse populations and well developed agriculture, they are not so bad. But even on those islands, the main cities are full of shiftless, crime prone, entitlement spending dependency programs. Democrat liberalism has had a good long run of unchallenged influence in Government and economics, and all of the pathologies that come with it are epidemic.

    If we didn’t have a core culture that encourages assimilation and general good will amongst strangers, visitors and natives alike, I think we’d be a much worse place socially than it is based on the politics and economics.

    Ed: I can’t believe I missed the Unions! I’m kicking myself for not having figured that out. Distressing to hear that there isn’t more agriculture on the islands… good to know that some people know how to hunt wild boar.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.