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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastHIV Testing Day
Day 179 of 2008
187 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — ‘Ano o ka nohana: Environment
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Bus: Countryside
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “Where were you when the rain poured?”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “We are far more concerned about the desecration of the flag than we are about the desecration of our land .(Wendell Berry)


WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein’s Website
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — I’m Voting Republican
NETCASTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein Audio | Gore Vidal’s Article of Impeachment
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — Hawaii Canines

TODAY: Hawai’i First in Nation to Require Solar
This landmark legislation (Act 204) to require solar on new homes would not have passed without community support. But Governor Linda Lingle is threatening to veto three key environmental bills.
  • Electronic Waste Recycling - SB 2843 establishes a much-needed electronic waste (e-waste) recycling program.
  • “Right to Dry” Clothesline Bill - SB 2933 allows the use of clotheslines anywhere-including in community associations where restrictive covenants sometimes prohibit them.
  • Invasives Prevention Funding - HB 2843 increases critical funding for the prevention of invasive species.
Contact Governor Lingle at 808-586-0034 or governor.lingle@hawaii.gov ASAP (before Friday, July 4), thank her for supporting the Solar Roofs bill, and ask that she let the measures below become law.
BORN ON THIS DAY - June 27th
1846: Charles Stewart Parnell, Ireland nationalist
1869: Emma Goldman, anarchist/publisher
1880: Helen Keller, blind-deaf author/lecturer
1927: Bob Keeshan, aka Captain Kangaroo/Clarabelle
1938: Bruce E. Babbitt, former governor of AZ
1942: Bruce Johnston, rocker
1966: J.J. Abrams, writer/producer
1975: Tobey Maguire, actor
1991: Madylin Sweeten, actress

EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 27th
1542: Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo departs from the port of Navidad Mexico, leading the first European expedition to explore what is now the west coast of the United States
1838: Queen Victoria is crowned
1844: Joseph Smith, founder of Mormonism, is killed (Carthage IL)
1846: Smithsonian Institution established
1847: Telegraph wires connect Boston and New York
1950: President Truman orders Air Force and Navy troops into the Korean conflict after the U.N. calls for assistance for South Korea
1950: The U.S. sends 35 military advisers to South Vietnam
1954: CIA-sponsored rebels overthrow the elected government of Guatemala
1955: The first automobile seat belt legislation is enacted (Illinois)
1969: The birth of the homosexual rights movement: police raid the Stonewall Gay Bar in Greenwich Village NY (about 400 to 1,000 patrons riot against the police for 3 days)
1973: John W Dean tells the Watergate Committee about the “enemies list” of the Nixon White House
1986: The World Court rules that U.S. aid to the Nicaraguan Contras is illegal
1990: Salman Rushdie, condemned to death by Iran, contributes $8,600 to help their earthquake victims
2007 Former Treasury chief Gordon Brown became British prime minister, succeeding Tony Blair.

U.S. Presidents - Martin Van Buren

Maui Curmudgeon, U.S. Presidents 2 Comments

By the Maui Curmudgeon (8th in a 43-part series)

How do the U.S. Presidents stack up? I thought I’d find out by reading biographies of all 43 presidents, in the order of their administrations. Here are briefly the pros and cons of my discoveries, the interesting bits, and how I’d rank him. For comparison, I give you the 1982 Murrary-Blessing ranking, a survey of hundreds of leading historians who ranked each president by number. This survey is the gold standard of presidential rankings and is most cited when this kind of thing needs bringing up in media.

MARTIN  VAN BUREN: 1837-1841 ~ 8th U.S. President

Martin van Buren - 8th US presidentA man of prodigious accomplishments, Van Buren was the country’s first self-made man to become president. Born of poor tenant farmers, Van Buren used his tenuous links with propertied rich friends (the New York Van Nesses) to gain entrance into law school where he eventually repudiated them. He was off, and before he was finished he would become known as “the little magician.”

Contemporaries of his, those with well-known names and fat wallets, people like Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, coveted the presidency, but only Van Buren won it. He had worked his way up from law school, to a lucrative practice in New York, then as a New York Senator and Governor. Under Jackson, he was Minister to Great Britian, and Jackson’s vice-president during the second term. Jackson adored Van Buren, and respected his amazing ability to work bureaucracies to accomplish tasks, which is why Jackson held onto him, and even endorsed him as his successor, when Van Buren often didn’t like Jackson’s practices. Read the rest…