Hawaii Puts Astrologers In Charge Of Astronomers

The White Replacement continues… not only our bodies, but our sciences. And not coincidentally, Christ Jesus Our Savior.

A new law is putting astronomy back in the hands of Native Hawaiians

h ttps://www.popsci.com/science/hawaii-policy-transfers-astronomy-control/

By Tatyana Woodall, 27 July 2022

Earlier this month, Hawaiian Governor David Ige signed legislation that transfers control of Mauna Kea—one of two large mountains that dominate the Hawaiian landscape and where some of the world’s most powerful observatories call home—away from the University of Hawai’i and back to Native Hawaiians.

Remember, ye new owners of this valuable property, ten percent to the Big Guy.

The new law declares astronomy as a state policy of Hawaii, which means that in addition to the scientific knowledge it brings, the state sees the field as an important contributor to jobs and the economy.

So then, how many natives does it take to change a light bulb? Or rotate a telescope? We got budgets to write.

It also establishes the Mauna Kea Stewardship and Oversight Authority, an 11-member voting group that will now have majority authority over how the land is managed. According to the bill, the group’s responsibilities will also include building a new framework for the development of astronomy research on the islands, limiting commercial use and activities on Mauna Kea’s land, and requiring the “timely decommissioning” of certain telescopes.

It would be faster to just confiscate the land on behalf of the ungrateful squatters who will probably sell the equipment for scrap then whore themselves to globalists looking for new real estate “investments”.

The governor is expected to select members of the new authority soon: The deadline for the public to submit their names into the application pool for a seat is July 28, but the law includes that the group must include one member who is a “lineal descendant” of a practitioner of Native Hawaiian traditions associated with the mountain, and another who is currently a recognized practitioner of those Native Hawaiian traditional practices. That stipulation is especially important as it’s the first time community experts and practitioners will be able to make those kinds of decisions for their community.

While the University of Hawai’i has until 2028 to officially hand off its management duties to the group, locals like native activist Noe Noe Wong-Wilson are optimistic about the change. She and others note that it feels like policy makers are finally listening to Native Hawaiians’ voices regarding the stewardship and care of their own community.

Translation, No-Wilson-No is first in line for a sinecure even fatter than her. She already helped write the law:

“This is the first time with the new authority that cultural practitioners and community members will actually have seats in the governing organization,” says Wong-Wilson, who is the executive director of the Lālākea Foundation, a nonprofit Native Hawaiian cultural organization. Wong-Wilson, who is a member of the working group that helped develop the bill proposal, says that the choice to bring in people and ideas from all over the community is what helped make the new law a reality.

And does “traditional cultural practitioner” mean what I think it means?

Segue

h ttps://abcnews.go.com/US/sacred-hawaiian-volcano-center-centuries-battle-native-lands/story?id=85005745

Sacred chants recited by elders, like Native Hawaiian cultural practitioner Noe Noe Wong-Wilson, reflect indigenous beliefs and worldviews that go back a millennium.

Yes, it does! The government just favored an establishment of religion. Separation of church and state, hello?

Bueller?

“In our culture, the elements have names and we consider them gods and goddesses, like the rain, wind and snow,” she told ABC affiliate KITV-4’s Lei U’i Kaholokula in the “Soul of the Nation” special “Together As One.”

“Maunakea is one of our most precious and special places, and it cannot be duplicated,” she explained.

Over the past several decades, Maunakea, a dormant volcano on the Island of Hawai’i, has been at the center of a simmering battle between Native Hawaiian activists like Wong-Wilson, who want the mountain protected for spiritual, cultural and ecological reasons, and research universities who see it as a scientifically optimal place to build world-class telescopes.

She’s a witch. You can keep your culture but it’s sad to still be worshiping a lie. The best compliment I ever heard directed at Christianity by an atheist, was a complaint about how completely we erased many of the pagan religions.

When groundbreaking began in 2014 for a fourteenth telescope, known as the Thirty Meter Telescope, Native demonstrators blocked the roads in a series of protests that happened intermittently for five years. During an explosive and emotional protest in 2019, Wong-Wilson was one of 38 native elders who were arrested.

A witch AND criminal! Just a misdemeanor, 30 days/$1k fine, but she refused a plea bargain. If only Christians would uphold the True God as defiantly as Nope-Nope insists upon howling at the moon. We Californians know all about these “indigenous natives protecting their ancestral culture”. Take one guess, just one, what happened the week after Sacramento legalized Indian gambling.

While the controversy over Maunakea represents a textbook case of an indigenous community resisting development on sacred land, it has evolved over the past year into a story about the importance of open communication and inclusion.

End segue

She adds that the law’s mutual stewardship model takes into account all human activities on the mountain, and is designed to help “protect Mauna Kea for future generations,” as Native Hawaiians believe the mountain is a sacred place—a part of their spirituality as well as their culture. But years of mismanagement has created a mistrust in the state’s stakeholders, which included the University and Hawaiian government officials, and deepened a rift between Indigenous culture and western science.

That’s not just a rift. That’s opposing religions. Christianity is getting thrown out the window in order to accommodate known-false religions of Earth worship. Known to be false thanks to… uh-oh… those telescopes her “working group” is soon to be in charge of.

Mauna Kea has been a hot spot for astronomical research since the first large telescopes broke ground on the summit in the early 1970s. The height of the mountain, the torrid atmosphere, and the natural lack of light pollution make the dormant volcano an exquisite location for observing the sky. But Native Hawaiians say that placing too many facilities on the land, including large observatories, draws in activity that puts an immense strain on the environment and its fragile ecosystem. “In Hawaii, there’s always tension about tourism, and overuse of some of our environmentally sensitive spaces for recreational use,” Wong-Wilson says.

Telescopes don’t like to be around crowded, lighted areas and they certainly aren’t used recreationally. This strikes me as a false concern.

In the current land use agreements made by the University, all of the mountain’s telescopes are committed to cease operations and come down by 2033. The TMT could still continue construction until then, but as of now, the new bill includes a moratorium on any new leases or lease extensions. It’s unclear whether that could stymie the TMT’s future science goals

Denial is ugly.

or if the new authority will choose to issue new leases, but Robert Kirshner, executive director for the TMT International Observatory (TIO), says the team behind the observatory supports the new bill.

That is surprising. Continuing construction on something expensive and doomed to confiscation by an activist druid, is an obvious waste of money.

Kirshner is funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, which is listed with the WEF. Gordon is the coiner of Moore’s Law, for you techie readers.

“TIO welcomes this community-based stewardship model for Maunakea’s management,” wrote Kirshner in an email to Popular Science. “We value the respect, responsibility, caring, and inclusivity that this act is intended to foster.” He added that the observatory will work with the new authority to support astronomy and education programs that are in harmony with the culture and environment on the mountain.

Ohhh, right. Original sin. If Mommy Witch wants to worship Ra and Luna, then the men in lab coats will rename the Sun and Moon. Whatever the “goddesses” demand!

Original sin, and WEF paymasters.

3 thoughts on “Hawaii Puts Astrologers In Charge Of Astronomers”

  1. I don’t understand Kirschner. He must have other land lined up for new telescopes. He can’t really believe that getting rid of telescopes is a good way to increase the use of telescopes. Star folks (all white that I know of) love their observatories and would rebel against this. Something isn’t adding up.
    Granted, the star-nuts I know are also completely commie-liberal, but they are broken enough to not have a problem agreeing with the bill and also fighting to keep the telescopes. You know the type, “we love the homeless” while shopping for a home in a gated community.

  2. Will there be any sacrifices to the volcano as part of the Great WOKE Leap Forward?
    Honk, honk!

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