Hawaii Tribune-Herald-opinion

Listed below are several editiorial/opinion pages posted to the “Hawaii Tribune-Herald.”

Opinions expressed in these editiorials are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect the position of this blog.

Content and Source:  https://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/category/opinion/their-views/

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiinewsdigestonline.com).

Trump frees the Jan. 6 criminals: Pardoning the Capitol rioters is bad for democracy

President Donald Trump was so very wrong to grant clemency to every convicted criminal who sacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 in pursuit of his incendiary lie that the 2020 election was stolen from him. The horrific violence of that day was all about Trump, who ignited the fire, but each person who followed him and then broke the law bears their own responsibility. His presidential pardons and commutations for his loyalists unjustly lifts that responsibility.

Trump returns to make good on promises

President Donald Trump delivered a direct, to the point speech from the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol that made it precisely clear what he intends to do over the next four years, starting immediately, to fix what he called a “crisis of trust” in government.

The Constitution outranks all: Trump’s executive order revoking birthright citizenship is meaningless

Donald Trump on Monday took an oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States” and then promptly broke that oath by seeking to revoke the first sentence of the 14th Amendment: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

The untold costs of AI

Artificial intelligence has been heralded as a technological revolution that will transform our world. From curing diseases to automating dangerous jobs to discovering new inventions, the possibilities are tantalizing. We’re told that AI could bring unprecedented good — if only we continue to invest in its development and allow labs to seize precious, finite natural resources.

Immigrants fill the birth dearth: US population will crater without newcomers

In an updated projection, the Congressional Budget Office moved up its estimate for when deaths will outpace births, putting that event horizon only eight years away, in 2033. That would mean a country suffering from the particular malaise that’s afflicted Japan, Norway, the U.K. and elsewhere: an aging population with a dwindling worker base, essentially an economic ticking time bomb. But our saving grace is immigration and the Golden Door must be kept open.

Regulatory thicket will dog victims of California fires

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, desperate to appear as if he’s leading on the wildfire debacle, now tacitly admits that his state’s onerous regulatory apparatus represents an obstacle to blaze victims hoping to eventually reclaim their lives. Rather than a total overhaul, though, he prefers to nibble around the edges.

Jack Smith’s final word: The special counsel’s pursuit of Trump’s election crimes ran out of time

With the public release of former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report to Attorney General Merrick Garland, the saga of Donald Trump’s federal prosecution for election interference has come to an end, less than a week before he’s sworn in to a second term. That it was short-circuited before trial is partly the fault of Garland, who waited nearly two years after the horrific Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a Trump-stoked mob to appoint Smith.

Irwin: ‘Building their lives and their characters’

Life is a series of moments: some happy, some funny, some frightening, some sad. As I grow older, I find that certain moments stand out in my mind. There are the seminal moments, of course: exchanging wedding vows, attending funerals, walking across the stage at commencement. These kinds of things are usually easy to remember, but I am more taken by memories of smaller moments. I am sure a psychologist or neurologist could explain why we remember what we do, but I actually like the wonder and serendipity of it all.

The $2 trillion home insurance nightmare is getting even worse

On top of the human tragedy they’re still inflicting, the Los Angeles wildfires are exposing a gap between what people thought their homes were worth and what they’ll actually get from insurance companies when those houses have been reduced to ash. Potentially thousands of homeowners are learning it won’t be nearly enough.

Trump’s delight in disruption threatens the economy

Just how far President-elect Donald Trump will press his promises on trade and economic policy once he takes office is hard to say. One thing is already apparent: The harms won’t be limited to the direct consequences of his actual policies. Even if his commitments in the end amount to little, they’re already burdening companies, unsettling financial markets and confounding prudent monetary policy.

Produce the WTC documents: Decades of hiding the truth must end

The heroes and victims of 9/11 who are suffering terrible and sometimes lethal medical problems from exposure to the toxic cloud that arose when Al Qaeda terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center have a right to know what City Hall knew decades ago about the environmental risks from Ground Zero. Any records being held by New York City and its agencies must be disgorged.

Wildfires come with the wildness that draws us to Los Angeles

Los Angeles is a topographical wonderland. Mountains loom in the distance. Hillsides and canyons are the refuge of hikers and dog-walkers. Beaches and bluffs above the coastline beckon. Into this wilderness we have threaded our neighborhoods and streets, not to mention freeways, making it a mix of the wild and the urban. We are the only megacity in the world that has mountain lions roaming the streets; only Mumbai and its leopards even compare. Here, mountain lions mostly hide during the day but come out at night, caught on doorbell cameras’ video slinking into backyards and hopping fences.

Facebook’s about-face on speech: Mark Zuckerberg sways with the political winds

Mark Zuckerberg can do with his social media giant Meta as he pleases and he aims to please the prevailing views of the federal government. The return of Donald Trump to the White House coincides with the naming of key Trump ally and UFC CEO Dana White to its board and abruptly deciding to move away from using fact-checking partners to combat the spread of disinformation and loosened its hate speech rules and also scrapping DEI programs. We don’t see how this will improve the experience for the billions of users.


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kh6jrm@gmail.com

I am the retired news director of Pacific Radio Group stations on the Island of Hawaii. I am a retired Lt. Col., USAF Reserve. I am a FCC-licensed Amateur Radio Operator, holding the Amateur Extra Class License. I am a substitute teacher for the state of Hawaii Department of Education.

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