Oblivion Lies Beyond the Withered Heart

Raphael O'Suna No Comments

Race-baiting is a soul-suspending instigation of hatred, evil, violence, destruction. It is all over the right-wing airwaves.

Some of it is clever, manipulative and deceptive. Some of it is white-hooded and blatant.

It is darkly ironic that those standing behind a cloth flag are sometimes the greatest enemies of its symbolized values. Anyone who traveled through or who lived in the South forty or more years ago, knows what I am talking about.

One must be profoundly unhappy with oneself or one’s station in life, or simply be evil or ignorant, to stir up trouble for personal or political gain. The karma of the hate-monger can be as severe as a brain tumor. There is no slyness which goes undetected by one’s heart.

When one’s soul turns away from one, one has, indeed, reached the outer edges of humanity. Beyond that point, huddle the dwarfs of the spirit. Oblivion lies beyond the withered heart.

– Raphael O’Suna,   Haiku 

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> MAUI TODAY, > Maui Yesterdays No Comments
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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastPress Freedom Day
Day 124 of 2008
242 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY —  Ho’opouliuli: Blackout
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY—  Wan handretklet One hundred
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
 — “Small peper makes the mouth blow.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY —  ”I have opinions of my own - strong opinions - but I don’t always agree with them.” (George W. Bush)

WEB SURF SPOT OF THE WEEK — BioWillie.com
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — Always on My Mind
PODCAST OF THE WEEK — Peace Research Institute
BLOG OF THE WEEK — Willie’s God!  (Texas Monthly Feature - May, 2008)


May 3rd, 1944: For the first time in three years on Maui, you can leave a light on after dark. The Lt. Gen. in charge of the blackout, Robert C. Richardson, lifts the ban. However, you can’t be on the street after 10pm - the curfew remains in effect.


HISTORICAL EVENTS ON THIS DAY — May 3rd

  • 1494: Christopher Columbus first sights Jamaica; he names it “St Iago” 
  • 1662: Royal charter grants Connecticut 
  • 1802 Washington, D.C., was incorporated.
  • 1845: First African American lawyer is admitted to bar passed exams (Macon B Allen) 
  • 1919: America’s first passenger flight (New York-Atlantic City) 
  • 1923: First non-stop transcontinental flight (NY-San Diego) completed 
  • 1943: All war contractors are barred from Racial Discrimination in hiring workers 
  • 1952: First landing by an airplane at the geographic North Pole 

BORN ON THIS DAY — May 3rd

  • 1469: Niccolo Machiavelli, politician/writer
  • 1898: Golda Meir,  4th Israeli PM
  • 1903: Bing Crosby,  singer/actor
  • 1906: Mary Astor, actress 
  • 1919: Pete Seeger, folk singer/huminatarian
  • 1920: Sugar Ray Robinson, middleweight/welterweight boxer
  • 1928: James Brown, singer
  • 1936: Engelbert Humperdinck,singer
  • 1937: Frankie Valli,  singer
  • 1939: Samantha Eggar, actress 
  • 1946: Greg Gumbel, sportscaster
  • 1947: Doug Henning, magician
  • 1950: Mary Hopkin,  singer
  • 1951: Christopher Cross, singer
  • 1971: John Neff, country musician 
  • 1973:  Brad Martin, country singer
  •  1975: Dule’ Hill, actor
  • 1984:  Cheryl Burke, dancer (”Dancing with the Stars”)