What the TMT Controversy is Really About

All the controversy about the Thirty Meter Telescope is not about the TMT. What it’s become is a convenient vehicle for focusing on the Hawaiian sovereignty movement, and on the University of Hawai‘i not doing a good job in the past of caring for the mountain.

When celebrities got involved and the TMT subject went viral, it galvanized the energy of the younger folk. These folks were only in middle school when the TMT project started, so there is a very steep learning curve.

Over the last seven years, the TMT has gone through all the legal requirements and the judge ruled that it is the telescope project can begin construction.

Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz says that in order for a project to be sustainable, it needs to be socially, environmentally and economically sustainable. The TMT fulfills all these requirements.

I think people have the erroneous view that the TMT is a big, investor-owned, money making corporation. It is not. It’s a non-profit organization and Henry Yang, its president, doesn’t even draw a salary. He does it because he knows it will bring benefits to our community.

I recognized this from early in the project and it’s the reason I’m such a supporter of the TMT. I’m also a big supporter of the TMT’s THINK education fund, which will allow our youth to dream big.

The problem with dreaming small is that your dreams might come true.

We want our keiki to feel proud of themselves. We want them to dream big!

2 thoughts on “What the TMT Controversy is Really About”

  1. Right on the kinipopo!
    However May 11th might bring bigger problems. The threat is now the table. “Justification” is rediculous! It’s the responsibility of the “protestors” to back off and not cause serious problems. Trying to lay the blame on TMT is not going to work. TMT is not doing anything illegal. The road is a public road for use by anyone with biz on the mauna.

  2. Kilauea is Pele’s hale. Mauna Kea is Poliahu’s hale. This is where these protester/protectors are getting their religion wrong. There are many things they are saying that are totally wrong, much of the Hawaiian religion they are voicing is Christian contaminated. Where the TMT committee went wrong is not facing the religion directly. The Hawaiian culture is the Hawaiian religion and the Hawaiian religion is the Hawaiian culture. This should not be difficult to understand but many people seem to get things all mixed up. The first step is all parties realize the observatories are heiaus supported by the kahuna of Mauna Kea.

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