Willie Freed!

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastKwanza:12/26-01/01
Day 361 of 2009
4 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Ahi: Fire
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY Paia: Fire
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY Fire will never say that it has had enough.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “He knows who says: we do not know.” - Upanishads



Today thru January 3rd: Maui Film Festival’s First Light Screenings

Lilauea image courtesy of MyHawaii.net

Christmas Day: Whale Freed - A rescue team working on Christmas Day removed rope and debris from an entangled humpback whale off West Maui. More >

December 27th, 1850: The Hawaiian Fire Department is established

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Jaws Goes Off at Peahi

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastBoxing Day
Day 360 of 2008
5 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Ho‘okaumaha: Ruthless
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY Nabaut: Around
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY He is ruthless, with the hands of a gale.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “Gentlemen do not read each others’ mail.” - Henry L. Stimson



Yesterday: Jaws Giant Xmas Waves - Large and dangerous surf hit Maui’s north shore Christmas Day, luring some daring tow-in surfers as well as hundreds of people who made their way down the rutted Peahi dirt road to watch. More >

Today thru January 3rd: Maui Film Festival’s First Light Screenings

Claus Spreckles and his railroad

December 26th, 1908: The Hawaiian Sugar King Claus Spreckles dies at the age of 80. Spreckles, of course, gave his name to Sprecklesville, an area on Maui’s northshore that Claus called home for two decades. He battled with the other sugar cane family, the Baldwins,  all through his life here, with rare success. He built the Kahului railroad system to haul his cane to port, and lost it to the Baldwins. He built ditches to bring water to his cane fields, which he eventually ended up selling to the Baldwins.

He also bought and ran the Pacific Commercial Advertiser, which became the Honolulu Advertiser newspaper. His conservative, pro-monarchy stance made him very unpopular with business, which of course saw the islands as a great place to pilage for their own ends without local interference, and Claus ended up selling the paper as well.

On the other hand, he was ruthless in business, and fought local farmers and planters on Maui. After 20 years of his virtual dictatorship of the sugar industry, several planters broke free and formed a consortium business – what is today known as Hawaii Cane & Sugar (HCS), which, surprise surprise, is owned by the Baldwin company.

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Celebrate Paganism

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastGod of the Sun Day
Day 359 of 2008
6 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Mele Kalikimaka: Merry Christmas
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY Krismas: Christmas
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY No one has ever died for the mistakes he made; only because he did not repent.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “Ridicule is the best test of truth.” - Lord Shaftesbury



December 25, 325 (or thereabouts): The Roman Emperor Constantine (actually rhymes with Constant Whine) holds the Council at Nicaea with Christian leaders of the day.

Recycled Christmas Tree Until 312, the Roman empire had been ruled by four Emperors who split it into four parts, one of which was ruled by Constantine’s father, Flavius (a good and in many ways a noble historical figure).  When the emperors began to die, Constantine decided it would be best if the empire was again united, and that he should be the one emperor. This was a gutsy and risky decision, as Constantine only had his father’s power base from which to launch his campaign, and civil war.

Ever shrewd, Constantine announced that from that point on, Christians, far from being persecuted, would be allowed to practice freely and without harm in his part of the world, and any part which fell under his control (pretty important, that last bit. It’s like running for president today and suddenly declaring yourself against a woman’s right to choose, to win the fundamentalist vote.). This won him a lot of votes with the “roman mob,” many of whom had converted to Christianity during the past 300 years.

In a battle in 312 to unite the empire, Constantine, who was a strong worshiper of the Sun God, claimed to see a cross (or Labarum symbol) in the sunlight; he had his soldiers put the symbol on their shields, and he won a victory as the underdog. Henceforth, Constantine declared himself a Christian, though he never took sacraments, and continued to worship the Sun God until shortly before his death.

After the war, in 325, the reigning bishops meeting at Nicaea argued about damn near everything.  Whether Jesus was a man with godlike powers, or a god who took human form or wasn’t divine but acted divinely, as if they knew any of it. They established rules in what became known as the first Ecumenical Council, a council to determine what people should think and how they should act as true Christians.

It was here that Christian beliefs were first formally written (I believe in one god, the father almighty, maker of heaven and earth ….), which is recited to this day in the Roman Catholic Church as the Apostle’s Creed. They also once and for all established the concept of the Trinity. Yeah, there’s one god, but really there are three, including Jesus and the Holy Ghost. (The 1964 Vatican Council decided that “ghost” was a scary word and changed it to the Holy Spirit.) So, no, we’re monotheistic, honest, but Jesus was a god and the Holy Ghost isn’t his brother but … well, it’s a MYSTERY, dammit!

Desperate times call for crazy beliefs and this was one of those times.

One of their first actions after the council ended was to take pledges from everyone to uphold these new rules,  called the Nicene Creed. Any “Christian” who didn’t take the pledge was excommunicated, and usually slaughtered after torture. So much for Christian tolerance. (During these years, the bishop of Constantinople was twice excommunicated and reinstated, depending on who was meeting and what rules were decided. These were wacky times.)

One decision made was that Jesus’ birthday would be celebrated on December 25 of each year because that was the official Praise the Sun God Day anyway. In addition, it was officially declared by the bishops (with loads of help from Constantine, and the bishops knew which side their host was buttered on) that the day of rest and praise each week for the Christian god would be Sun Day.

Constantine ruled as one emperor until 337, when he grew very ill. Knowing his time to be short, on his deathbed, Constantine called in a priest and was baptized a Christian. Wily to the end, the emperor chose the one sacrament that wipes every misdeed and mortal sin from one’s soul in a flash, no waiting necessary, no praying needed. Extreme Unction and it was automatic. The laundry list of his crimes including genocide, uxoricide and filicide, was forgiven and he was free to enter the Christian heaven, if such existed.

After his death, Christians began a 200-year reign of torture and terror for pagans. Anyone refusing to take the Nicaean oath was stretched, boiled, broken and busted, before being murdered. Constantine had ordered toleration for pagans as he had for Christians, but his edict could only be enforced as long as he was alive.

From there, things just got worse, of course. Christians stole the christmas trees and gifts from pagan rituals of Scandanavia (somewhere around 700 CE), and made them their own. They cobbled together an ugly mass of ritual and lies (um, no Jesus wasn’t born in Bethlehem) to finally make what has been since the 20th century a mass market of commerce and greed, and the occasional 24-hour ceasefire in whatever wars are going on, many of them waged by, surprise, Christians.

How the 18th century Christian missionaries indoctriated native Hawaiians into such a “creed” is anyone’s guess, but the natives have sure bought it. To this day there is just one synogogue on Maui. Oh, and by the way, this explains why the Christian sect Jehovah’s Witnesses does not celebrate Christmas — as their literature says, it’s a pagan holiday.

Hey, happy holidays to all you pagans out there!

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Between Kingdoms, The Bridge Remains Closed

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By Raphael O’Suna

Living in the forest seemed to concentrate and focus my energies. I seemed to be wiser and more aware. To others, I may have seemed odd, strange, eccentric.

I felt as if I were better able to find and discern truth as a long-term forest dweller. But for the sceptics among you, there is a tradition–a history of reports–concerning what I am about to tell you.

Over the centuries people have noticed that animals would come out of the forest and congregate around homes and farmhouses on Christmas Eve.

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Death to the News

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastNat’l Eggnog Day
358 of 2009
7 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Nupepa: Newspaper
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY Niuspepa: Newspaper
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY “To be continued, according to the newspaper.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “A good newspaper is a nation talking to itself.” - Arthur Miller


Kukoa newspaperDecember 24th, 1927: The Hawaiian language newspaper “Kuokoa” dies. First published in 1861, it had for nearly three decades the greatest circulation of any newspaper in Hawaii. The Kuokoa was purchased by the Honolulu Advertiser in 1898. The first two decades of the new century saw drastically declining readership with the advent of English, and the paper was deemed financially unsound in 1927.

HISTORICAL EVENTS ON THIS DAY

  • 1814: The Treaty of Ghent is signed in Belgium, ending the War of 1812
  • 1865: Several Confederate veterans form a private social club called the Ku Klux Klan in Pulaski Tennessee
  • 1871: Giusseppi Verdi’s “Aida” premieres in Cairo Egypt to celebrate the opening of the Suez Canal
  • 1914: The first air raid on Britain is made during World War I when a German airplane drops a bomb on the grounds of a rectory in Dover
  • 1943: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appoints General Dwight David Eisenhower to be the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces
  • 1948: A family takes up residence in the first U.S. house that is completely solar heated (Dover Massachusetts)
  • 1964: Shooting begins on “The Cage” (the pilot for “Star Trek”)
  • 1991: Mikhail Gorbachev resigns as head of the Soviet Union
  • 1992: With less than one month left in office, President George Bush pardons former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and five others in the Iran-Contra scandal
  • 2002: Laci Peterson was reported missing from her Modesto, Calif., home, by her husband, Scott, who was later convicted of murdering her and their unborn son.
  • 2004: The international Cassini spacecraft launched a probe on a three-week free-fall toward Saturn’s mysterious moon Titan.

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Sweet Old Days

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastFritters Day
Day 357 of 2009
8 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Makana: Gift
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY —K’Den: Agreed
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — E ho’a’o no i pau kuhihewa“Try to end the panic.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “When a man says he approves of something in principle, it means he hasn’t the slightest intention of putting it into practice.” - Otto von Bismark

Sugar mill circa Civial War timesDecember 2, 1802: The first sugar mill, made of a stone mill and a boiler, is brought to Maui by John White, a man who had spent most of his life in China. White originally came to Maui to trade sandlewood, and built the mill as an after thought.In the 1700s, native Hawaiians planted sugar cane on the banks of taro patches as a part of their food supply.The Hawaiian, Historical Society reports that as an itinerant sugar maker, the sugar miller set up his works, ground cane, made sugar from the juice, and divided the products, sugar and molasses, equally with the suppliers of cane.The Hawaiian sugar industry expanded to become the dominant segment of the Hawaiian economy by the time of the Civil War in the United States, and was number one industry until supplanted by the tourist industry in the 1960s.Pictured: A sugar mill circa the Civil War times. EVEN

Don’t Kill a Tree for Jesus

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastInt’l Arbor Day
357 of 2009
9 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — La‘au: Tree
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAYDiwai: Tree
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY “The branches grow because of the trunk.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “He that plants trees loves others beside himself.” - Thomas Fuller


A tree grows on Maui

Today, nothing untoward seemed to happen in Maui’s history. The sun shone down on the emerald green valley isle, ringed by 83 beaches. No ship sank, no one was murdered, no one was lost at sea, or on a hike. No one of any importance visited us, and no one of any importance left in a huff. Today is one of those sunny, gusty Maui days that just is — so enjoy it while it’s around. 2009 could produce some drastic changes in our easy-going island lifestyle. And while you’re at it, plant a tree.

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Winter Solstice 2009

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastWorld Underdog Day
356 of 2009
10 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Leka: Letter, missive
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAYPas: Letter
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY “The silent messenger.” (A letter)
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY “The most important thing to do in your life, is to not interfere with somebody else’s life.” - Frank Zappa



WINTER SOLSTICE: 6:47am
Shortest day of the year. First day of Winter in the Northern Hemisphere.

Today thru January 3rd: Maui Film Festival’s First Light Screenings An envelope postmarked December 21, 1850, the first day of operation for the Honolulu Post Office

December 21st, 1850: By Royal decree, the Hawaiian Post Office opens its doors, and it costs 42 cents to mail a letter to the mainland – one more penny than it does today.

Until the decree, postal delivery was handled by business or private people — and it wasn’t that private.  Nothing really stopped people from reading your mail – not unlike the current administration’s war against privacy. For your money, you got the postmaster’s word that he’d give it to the first reliable sea captain he could, a captain who promised to deliver the letter to the San Francisco Post Office as soon as possible. Only one letter with the opening day postmark is known to exist today.

If you wanted to mail a letter within the Kingdom, it cost you ten cents.Truthfully, both amounts sound low, but for the times, they weren’t.  For example, using the consumer price index, 42 cents in 1850 would be worth $11.19 cents, and 10 cents is $2.66.

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