- By John Webster
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March 27, 2022
- 2
Most of us in America have watched the events unfolding in Ukraine with disgust and revulsion. Ironically, this numbing avalanche of destruction and slaughter comes at a time when our own angst is already high due to the countless attempts to erode the very democracy we all claim to hold so dearly.
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- By John Bickel
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March 13, 2022
- 8
Who gave women the right to vote first, Hawaii or the United States? The answer is probably the kingdom of Hawaii, in the 1840 Constitution, as it used a gender neutral term.
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- By Jean Evans
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March 13, 2022
- 6
American Association of University Women (AAUW) research shows that the national gender pay gap has unfortunately remained relatively steady over the past several years, with women making about $0.83 for every $1 that non-Hispanic white men earn. The wage gap is even greater for most minority women.
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- By Jean E. Rosenfeld
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March 6, 2022
- 5
Some years ago, I had the privilege of teaching a UCLA class that was paired with a class at University of California-Riverside taught by professor Ivan Strenski, who holds the chair in religious studies there.
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- By Richard Hornik
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Feb. 27, 2022
- 12
As Europe plunges into its first major armed conflict in 75 years, one of the most unsettling elements has been the calls from otherwise sensible people to give Russia’s Vladimir Putin at least some (or all) of what he wants, including a new cordon sanitaire of neutral, non-NATO states on his western border.
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- By Ashton Cudjoe and Deloris Guttman
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Feb. 13, 2022
- 5
Today, we want to share the ways in which people of Africana heritage have helped shape the culture and character of Hawaii for centuries. To recount the history of Black people in the Islands is to recount the history of Hawaii itself.
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- By Jim Shon
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Feb. 6, 2022
- 1
Looking ahead, through an ideal political lens: It’s a year from now. New governor, new Legislature.
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- By Cynthia Thielen
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Feb. 6, 2022
- 2
Legislators need in-person public participation at the state Capitol probably more than the public needs legislators at this time.
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- By Briana Harmon
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Feb. 6, 2022
- 9
The winner-take-all system we currently use in our elections forces voters to simply pick one candidate.
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- By Col. Ann Wright (retired)
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Jan. 30, 2022
- 66
We’ve seen this before. The U.S. creates a situation, digs in its heels and makes ultimatums — and tens of thousands die.
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- By Josh Stanbro
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Jan. 23, 2022
- 1
When you make a New Year’s resolution to lose weight, the scale doesn’t lie.
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- By Clint Churchill and Brian Barbata
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Jan. 23, 2022
- 11
Climate change is real, as should be obvious to all of us. But we take exception with the proposition that the people of Hawaii need to “sacrifice,” as the headline on a recent commentary by John Kawamoto stated (“Climate change requires shared sacrifice,” Island Voices, Star-Advertiser, Jan. 5)
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- By Helen Cox Kalaheo and Susan Gorman-Chang
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Jan. 23, 2022
- 16
The Hawaii Tax Review Commission recently recommended that Hawaii implement a carbon fee and dividend to reduce the burning of fossil fuels, which would in turn reduce the devastating effects of climate change.
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- By Aviam Soifer and Mark Bohnhorst
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Jan. 16, 2022
- 14
Given that a clear majority of Republican voters believe that Joe Biden’s presidential victory last year was fraudulent, it is no surprise that Republican-controlled state legislatures are enacting laws that change how votes are cast and counted.
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More than 350 high school students — in the Center for Tomorrow’s Leaders program from across the state — wrote a response to the prompt, “Tell a local lawmaker: What is the one thing that must change in order for you to picture yourself having a good future in Hawaii?”
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- By Star-Advertiser staff
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Dec. 19, 2021
The just-passed 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), a $768 billion bill, is now awaiting President Joe Biden’s signature. In the annual defense bill are policy reforms such as on military sex assault and handling of the Red Hill fuel tanks; plus provisions focused on Hawaii and the wider Pacific, including some $465.5 million for military construction projects here.
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During their Nov. 15 virtual summit, President Joe Biden told his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, that he “strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.
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- By Charles Gillman
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Dec. 5, 2021
The National Park Service (NPS), Department of the Interior, apparently doesn’t remember the “Day of Infamy” at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial (PHNM) very well nor has any desire to improve that situation — despite having the assets, real estate and funding to do so.
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