Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Israel and United States attack Iran

6/16/26 - A comparison of Trump's deal to Obama's (Tanpepper, Wolf, Shapiro)

6/11/26 - Trump says he has settled the war with Iran

5/29/26 - DDID

5/3/26 - viewpoint: Christina Lorey

4/23/26 - Trump issues order to "shoot and kill" any boat putting mines in the Strait of Hormuz

4/8/26 - Iran closes Strait of Hormuz after Israel attacks Lebanon
4/7/26 - U.S. and Iran agree to two week ceasefire
4/7/26 - The beginning of the End Times? (The Other 98%)

4/6/26 - Trump rejects Iran 10 clause response and says Iran could be "taken out"

3/17/26 - Joe Kent, director of National Counterterrorism Center, resigns in protest of the war with Iran war


3/13/26 - Senator Chris Murphy comments on the briefing

3/5/26 - Trump-approved CBS boss going full 'Propaganda-Palooza'

3/1/26 - Robert Reich commentary

Trump says Khamenei has been killed

***

2/28/26 - The United States and Israel launched what President Donald Trump described as “major combat operations” against Iran on Saturday, marking a dramatic escalation in regional tensions. The strikes appeared to target military, intelligence and government-linked sites across the country.

Trump said, “we tried to make a deal,” and accused Iran of developing missiles capable of threatening Europe.

Wednesday, May 06, 2026

Patsy Mink

Twenty schools said no. Patsy Takemoto was 21 years old. Her grades were excellent. She had majored in zoology and chemistry at the University of Hawaii, and she had wanted to be a doctor since she was 4. The reason for every rejection was always the same. She was a woman.

"It was the most devastating disappointment of my life," she said later.

But here's what nobody knew yet. Patsy had been training for this moment her whole life.

She turned 14 the day before Pearl Harbor. On Maui, where her family had lived for three generations, Japanese-Americans were taken in the night. Her father was one of them. He came home the next morning. The Takemotos lived in fear after that, and Patsy watched her father burn his Japanese mementos.

"It made me realize that one could not take citizenship and the promise of the U.S. Constitution for granted," she said.

In 1944, she graduated Maui High School. Class valedictorian. Class president. Captain of a basketball team that was forced to play half-court because someone had decided full-court was "too strenuous" for girls. She was already learning the rules. She was already deciding which ones to break.

After the 20 rejections, she pivoted to law. The University of Chicago accepted her by accident, because they thought Hawaii made her a foreign student. She did not correct them.

She graduated in 1951 and married a WWII veteran named John Mink. They returned to Hawaii. The territory told her she had lost her residency by getting married, so she could not take the bar exam. She challenged the law. She won. She took the test. She passed.

Then NO firm in Hawaii would hire her. Too Japanese. Too married. Too motherly.

So her father helped her set up a practice in 1953. She became the FIRST Japanese-American woman to practice law in the state of Hawaii. In 1964, she was elected to Congress, the FIRST woman of color in U.S. history to win a seat in the House.

Then in 1970, she sat in a House hearing room and listened to woman after woman testify. About medical school quotas of one woman per year, two if they were lucky. About being told they could not be doctors because they had children. About being told the slot was for a man.

She had heard every one of these stories.

She had LIVED them.

She sat down and helped write 37 words. "No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."

Title IX. Signed June 23, 1972.

Before those 37 words, fewer than 30,000 American women played college sports, and fewer than 10 percent of medical students were women. Today, more than 3.4 million high school girls play sports. More than half of American medical students are women. Most of them have never heard her name.

"Her hope was that the next generation would not endure the same obstacles that she had to encounter," her daughter Wendy said.

She died of viral pneumonia on September 28, 2002. She was 74. She was on the ballot for re-election, and she won by a landslide a month after she was buried.

At her funeral in the Hawaii State Capitol, a conch shell sounded and a traditional Hawaiian chant began. About 900 women formed a human lei around her casket and sang her home. "I've never seen so many tears flow from hard-headed politicians," Hawaii historian Dan Boylan said.

That same year, Congress renamed Title IX the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act. In 2014, Barack Obama gave her the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Posthumously. In 2022, her portrait was unveiled at the U.S. Capitol. She had been gone 20 years.

Twenty schools said no to a girl from Maui in 1948. By 1972, she had made it illegal for any school in America to ever say it again.

Some people break barriers. She made the barriers illegal.

Ted Turner

Ted Turner, the media maverick and philanthropist who founded CNN, a pioneering 24-hour network that revolutionized television news, died peacefully Wednesday, surrounded by his family, according to a news release from Turner Enterprises. He was 87.

The Ohio-born Atlanta businessman, nicknamed “The Mouth of the South” for his outspoken nature, built a media empire that encompassed cable’s first superstation and popular channels for movies and cartoons, plus professional sports teams like the Atlanta Braves.

Turner was also an internationally known yachtsman; a philanthropist who founded the United Nations Foundation; an activist who sought the worldwide elimination of nuclear weapons; and a conservationist who became one of the foremost landowners in the United States. He played a crucial role in reintroducing bison to the American west. He even created the Captain Planet cartoon to educate kids about the environment.

But it was his audacious vision to deliver news from around the world in real time, at all hours, that really made him famous – once his idea finally took off.

In 1991, Turner was named Time magazine’s Man of the Year for “influencing the dynamic of events and turning viewers in 150 countries into instant witnesses of history.”

On June 1, 1980, Turner launched CNN, the first 24-hour, all-news cable network.

Turner eventually sold his networks to Time Warner and later exited the business, but continued to express pride in CNN, calling it the “greatest achievement” of his life.

Monday, April 20, 2026

Georgia Ariyoshi

George Ariyoshi, Hawaii’s longest-serving governor and the first Asian-American to serve as governor of any U.S. state, died Sunday night at the age of 100, his family announced today.

“He was surrounded by his wife Jean, daughter Lynn, sons Ryozo and Donn,” said a statement signed by Jean Ariyoshi. “We would like to thank all our friends, family and supporters for all your support and friendship all these years. Governor loves you all.

“Governor sacrificed and worked hard for most of his life to build a better future for the State of Hawaii and its people. Governor Ariyoshi loves you all very much!”

Gov. Josh Green ordered that the U.S. and state flags be flown at half-staff at the Hawaii State Capitol, all state offices and agencies and all Hawaii National Guard facilities, effective immediately and until sunset on the day of his memorial service, which has yet to be announced.

“Governor Ariyoshi devoted his life to Hawaii with humility, discipline and an unwavering sense of responsibility to the people he served,” Green said in a written statement. “He led our state during a pivotal moment with quiet strength and integrity, and his legacy as a trailblazer and public servant will endure for generations. Our hearts are with his family and loved ones.”

Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi called Ariyoshi a mentor and friend who “led with humility, integrity, and a deep sense of responsibility to the people he served.”

“Governor Ariyoshi was a towering figure in Hawaii’s history and a trailblazer whose legacy will endure for generations,” Blangiardi said in a statement. “As the first Japanese American governor in the United States and the longest-serving governor in our state’s history, he led with humility, integrity, and a deep sense of responsibility to the people he served.”

“His steady leadership helped guide Hawai‘i through challenging times, always with a focus on fiscal responsibility, fairness, and opportunity for all.,” the mayor said. “He carried himself with quiet strength and dignity, earning the respect of colleagues and constituents alike.”

George Ryoichi Ariyoshi, who celebrated his 100th birthday on March 12. was born and raised in Honolulu. After graduating from McKinley High School in 1944, he joined the Army and served as an interpreter with the U.S. Army Military Intelligence Service in Japan.

Following his service in Japan, Ariyoshi attended the University of Hawaii and transferred to Michigan State University where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1949. He graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in 1952 and returned to Hawaii.

Ariyoshi entered politics in 1954 when he was elected to the Hawaii Territorial House of Representatives. He moved up to the Territorial Senate in 1958 and continued to serve in the Senate until 1970 when he was chosen to run as Gov. John Burns’ preferred candidate for lieutenant governor.

Burns and Ariyoshi won the election. Ariyoshi became acting governor in October 1973 after Burns became to ill to serve.

Ariyoshi was elected to his first of three full terms as governor in 1974, winning re-election in 1978 and 1982.

As a candidate, Ariyoshi presented himself as working “quietly and effectively” to make Hawaii better for “our children’s children.” As governor he followed policies of fiscal conservatism rather than tax and spend, and successfully guided Hawaii through its first post-statehood recession.

A change made in the state constitution prevented Ariyoshi from running for re-election in 1986, but he remained active in the community after leaving electoral politics. He served as president of the Hawaii Bar Association, on the boards of several Hawaii businesses, and served five terms as chairman of the board of the East-West Center.

Looking beyond the islands and local party politics, he worked quietly and effectively to expand the cultural and economic ties between Japan and Hawaii.

In 2011, Ariyoshi received the Nisei Soldiers of World War II Congressional Gold Medal for his military service. The Japanese government awarded him the Grand Cordon of the Sacred Treasure, and the Emperor’s Silver Cup.

The Governor Ariyoshi Foundation was founded in 2015 as long-term platform for his advocacy of fiscal responsibility, clean tech, ocean-related technology, sustainably, international relationships, and planning a “preferred future” for Hawaii.

Ariyoshi is survived by his wife, Jean Miya Hayashi Ariyoshi, daughter, Lynn, and sons, Ryozo and Donn.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Jesse Jackson

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, one of the world's best-known Black activists who worked alongside Martin Luther King Jr., died at the age of 84.

The icon of the Civil Rights Movement and beyond was remembered by politicians and prominent activists after it was announced he died "peacefully" on Tuesday morning after a long journey with a progressive neurological disease. Jackson was a Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient, a two-time Democratic presidential candidate and a mentor to many civil rights leaders.

"His unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions, and we ask you to honor his memory by continuing the fight for the values he lived by," his family said in a statement.

Tributes to the charismatic movement-builder rolled in from across the political spectrum. Jackson was “a good man" and a "force of nature," President Donald Trump said on social media. Former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama said in a statement that "we stood on his shoulders."

Monday, February 16, 2026

cable news (and comment)

2/16/26 - Anderson Cooper is leaving 60 Minutes
2/16/26 - NewsNation turns right
1/31/25 - Chuck Todd to leave NBC news
1/28/25 - Jim Acosta signs off from CNN / Trump comments
12/19/24 - Neil Cavuto leaving Fox News after 28 years
11/12/24 - Chris Wallace leaving CNN after three years
10/1/24 - Paywall launched on CNN.com
9/26/24 - NewsMax reaches settlement with Smartmatic
9/3/24 - Brian Stelter rejoins CNN
4/25/24 - Toobin, Lemon, Stelter re-appear on CNN
3/26/24 - NBC News drops Ronna McDaniel
3/18/24 - the aftermath: Don Lemon releases Musk interview on YouTube
3/13/24 - Don Lemon says Elon Musk cancelled his show on X, will be on YouTube instead
9/21/23 - Rupert Murdoch steps down as chairman of Fox
6/30/23 - Geraldo says he is leaving Fox News
6/26/23 - Jesse Watters will take Tucker Carlson's primetime slot
6/17/23 - Trump says only "TRUMP" can save Fox News
6/16/23 - Sarah Palin says she got cancelled from Fox
6/16/23 - Biden dictator producer resigns from Fox News
6/7/23 - Chris Licht is out at CNN
5/16/23 - CNN ratings fall below NewsMax
5/9/23 - Tucker Carlson says his show will return via Twitter
4/27/23 - Fox ratings tumble are Carlson exit
4/26/23 - Tucker Carlson breaks silence
4/25/23 - Lemon and Carlson hire the same lawyer
4/24/23 - Fox fired Carlston "with cause", Carlson lawsuit expected
4/24/23 - Right wing backlash against Fox after dropping Carlson
4/24/23 - CNN parts ways with Don Lemon
4/24/23 - Fox News parts ways with Tucker Carlson (Yahoo)
4/19/23 - Fox News facing four more lawsuits
4/18/23 - Fox News and Dominion reach settlement agreement before trial begins
4/11/23 - Judge says Fox News has a credibility problem
3/23/23 - Trump's return to Hannity is a loss for half of Fox News
3/22/23 - Fox News producer files lawsuits against Fox News
3/11/23 - Fox is now trapped in an ever-worsening spiral of lies (Katie Phang)
2/28/23 - Trump says Murdoch is throwing his anchors under the table
2/24/23 - CNN guests say Fox News is in a precarious situation and in real jeopardy
2/20/23 - Don Lemon to participate in "formal training"
2/15/23 - Only 25% of Americans believe that national news organizations do not intend to mislead
2/3/23 - Don Lemon screamed at Kaitlan Collins
1/27/23 - Trump reviews Jessica Tarlov
1/22/23 - Chris Cuomo says he'll "never be what I was" after being fired by CNN
1/16/23 - CNN reportedly considering Jon Stewart or Bill Maher to fill Chris Cuomo slot
12/6/22 - Robin Meade signs off
11/12/22 - Judy Woodruff to leave PBS NewsHour
11/9/22 - Fox & Friends explains why Oz lost (according to the exit polls)
11/3/22 - Shepard Smith cancelled by CNBC
10/21/22 - Newsmax bans Lara Logan after appearance
9/20/22 - Roseanne planning special on Fox Nation
9/6/22 - John Dickerson to host CBS News show that won't air on CBS
9/6/22 - Chris Wallace to return on HBO Max and CNN
9/2/22 - John Harwood leaving CNN
8/18/22 - CNN ends Brian Stelter
8/11/22 - Shannon Bream to take over Fox News Sunday
7/27/22 - Trump threatens to sue CNN
7/27/22 - Chris Cuomo to join NewsNation
3/27/22 - Chris Wallace found it unsustainable to work at Fox News
1/23/22 - Pearls Before Swine
1/17/22 - Rand Paul cancels DirecTV after it drops OANN
1/7/22 - Hannity and Fox face ethical questions after texts to Trump revealed
12/12/21 - Chris Wallace leaving Fox News for CNN+
12/5/21 - Chris Cuomo fired by CNN for helping his brother
10/26/21 - Fox is trouncing CNN and MSNBC in the ratings
8/4/21 - Devin Nunes sues Maddow
6/26/21 - Carlson on Hannity on Carlson?
6/23/21 - Don Lemon punches down at Tucker Carlson
4/12/21 - Fox standing behind Tucker Carlson
4/11/21 - Anti-Defamation League CEO calls for removal of Tucker Carlson
2/11/21 - Gutfeld has evolved
2/9/21 - Kudlow will sort of replace Dobbs
1/20/21 - "Bloodbath" at Fox News

***

Fox News, the top-rated cable channel, has announced its biggest shake-up of its daily lineup in several years — an overhaul that includes shifting one of its marquee news anchors, Martha MacCallum, out of her 7 p.m. spot to make way for an expansion of its prime-time opinion programming.

The move highlights the increasing dominance of conservative punditry at a network that positioned itself at its founding as a “fair and balanced” alternative to what it saw as a liberal drift in other media. Fox has not yet named a permanent host for the 7 p.m. slot and will instead feature “a rotating group of Fox News opinion hosts” in that hour after MacCallum moves to a lower-profile 3 p.m. slot next week. Brian Kilmeade, who co-hosts the “Fox and Friends” morning show, will be up first on Monday.

Rival news network CNN also unveiled a slate of programming changes that includes an expansion of news anchor Jake Tapper’s show and a shrinking of veteran anchor Wolf Blitzer’s.

From October: What happens to Fox News if Trump loses? Rupert Murdoch is prepared.  MacCallum will take the afternoon time slot now held by news anchor Bill Hemmer. Hemmer will return to the morning show, “America’s Newsroom,” which he left to replace Shepard Smith, who abruptly resigned from the network in October 2019. But that morning show will now be two hours instead of three, beginning at 9 a.m., with co-host Dana Perino, the former White House press secretary, who previously hosted a 2 p.m. show.

Fox’s chief White House correspondent John Roberts will leave the beat to anchor a 1 to 3 p.m. news show with Sandra Smith, now the host of “America’s Newsroom”; his replacement at the White House has not yet been named. And Harris Faulkner, another key member of the network’s news division, is being moved from 1 p.m. to 11 a.m. She will remain a lead panelist on the 12 p.m. talk show “Outnumbered.”

Fox News finished 2020 as the most-watched network in cable. But, in the wake of President Trump’s electoral loss to Joe Biden, CNN has been on a major upswing, while Fox’s ratings have experienced some softness.

In the last few months of 2020, CNN attracted more viewers than Fox News between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. in the 25-to-54 demographic, though Fox was watched by more total viewers. In prime time, Fox News edged CNN by 15,000 prime-time viewers in the key demographic over the same time period.

From November: What happens to CNN and MSNBC if Biden wins? It’s complicated.  CNN’s programming changes include an expansion of Tapper’s 4 p.m. weekday show from one hour to two, beginning in April, while Blitzer’s “Situation Room,” now a two-hour show that begins at 5 p.m., moves to a one-hour slot at 6 p.m. His show will air on CNN’s overseas networks, though. And CNN introduced a new delineation of the two anchors’ roles, describing Tapper as the lead for Washington news and Blitzer as a principal for breaking news.

Tapper will also take turns with chief political correspondent Dana Bash in hosting the Sunday morning “State of the Union” show. Abby Phillip will take over the Sunday edition of John King’s “Inside Politics” franchise, hosting from 8 to 9 a.m., beginning Jan. 24. And Pamela Brown will anchor a three-hour news block on Saturday and Sunday mornings.

CNN also announced that chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta, who rose to national attention as a sparring partner of Trump, will become an anchor and take on the new title of chief diplomatic correspondent. Kaitlan Collins will serve as the network’s chief White House correspondent for the Biden administration.

***

[10/25/19] 44 months of Fox News

[9/2/18]  Fox News earns top spot in poll

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Trump administration rejects science

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration on Thursday revoked a scientific finding that long has been the central basis for U.S. action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change, the most aggressive move by the Republican president to roll back climate regulations.

The rule finalized by the Environmental Protection Agency rescinds a 2009 government declaration known as the endangerment finding that determined that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare. The Obama-era finding is the legal underpinning of nearly all climate regulations under the Clean Air Act for motor vehicles, power plants and other pollution sources that are heating the planet.

The repeal eliminates all greenhouse gas emissions standards for cars and trucks and could unleash a broader undoing of climate regulations on stationary sources such as power plants and oil and gas facilities, experts say. Legal challenges are near certain.

President Donald Trump called the move “the single largest deregulatory action in American history, by far,” while EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin called the endangerment finding “the Holy Grail of federal regulatory overreach.”

Trump called the endangerment finding “one of the greatest scams in history,” claiming falsely that it “had no basis in fact” or law. “On the contrary, over the generations, fossil fuels have saved millions of lives and lifted billions of people out of poverty all over the world,” Trump said at a White House ceremony, although scientists across the globe agree that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are driving catastrophic heat waves and storms, droughts and sea level rise.

Environmental groups described the move as the single biggest attack in U.S. history against federal authority to address climate change. Evidence backing up the endangerment finding has only grown stronger in the 17 years since it was approved, they said.

“This action will only lead to more climate pollution, and that will lead to higher costs and real harms for American families," said Fred Krupp, president of Environmental Defense Fund, adding that the consequences would be felt on Americans' health, property values, water supply and more.

The EPA also said it will propose a two-year delay to a Biden-era rule restricting greenhouse gas emissions by cars and light trucks. And the agency will end incentives for automakers who install automatic start-stop ignition systems in their vehicles. The device is intended to reduce emissions, but Zeldin said “everyone hates” it.

Zeldin, a former Republican congressman who was tapped by Trump to lead EPA last year, has criticized his predecessors in Democratic administrations, saying that in the name of tackling climate change, they were “willing to bankrupt the country.”

ICE agent shoots protester dead in Minnesota

[2/12/26] Homan proposes to end Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota

[1/29/26] ICE to shift tactics in Minnesota under Homan

[1/24/26] Federal agents kill Alex Pretti [ Rachel Hurley, Heather Cox Richardson, OIMC ]

***

State and local officials demanded an end to the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota after a federal officer shot and killed a 37-year-old woman in Minneapolis today.

Details remained in dispute, with President Donald Trump saying on social media that the agents had acted in self-defense, while state and local officials described federal accounts of the shooting with terms like “propaganda” and “garbage.” More than 1,000 protesters were gathered at the site of the shooting oWednesday night for a vigil.

Federal officials defended the use of force, saying the woman had “weaponized her vehicle” before being shot. At a news conference, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the woman was “stalking” officers, and that the agent who killed her “used his training to save his life and those of his colleagues.”

Mayor Jacob Frey called the federal officials’ account “bullshit,” describing the shooting instead as “an agent recklessly using power that resulted in somebody dying, getting killed.” Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota posted on social media, “Don’t believe this propaganda machine.”

Connor Janeksela, 30, who lives on the street where the shooting took place, described what he saw: “One of the ICE agents tried to rip her door open, and another one got in front of the vehicle and then shouted, ‘Stop!’ before firing three times within a second of saying, ‘Stop.’”

In his own news conference, the governor said the shooting was predictable. “We have been warning for weeks that the Trump administration’s dangerous, sensationalized operations are a threat to our public safety,” Walz said, adding that it cost a person her life Wednesday.

Saturday, January 03, 2026

USA captures Venezuelan president

WASHINGTON >> ​The U.S. struck Venezuela and captured its long-serving President ‌Nicolas Maduro on Saturday, President Donald Trump said, after months of pressuring him over accusations of drug-running and illegitimacy in power.

Washington has not made such ‌a direct intervention in Latin America since the invasion of Panama in 1989 to depose military leader Manuel Noriega, over similar allegations.

“The United States of America has successfully carried out a large scale strike against Venezuela and its leader, President Nicolas Maduro, who has been, along with his wife, captured and flown out of the country,” Trump said in a Truth Social post.

Ahead of the overnight strike, the U.S. had accused Maduro of running a “narco-state” and rigging last year’s election, which the opposition said it won overwhelmingly. The Venezuelan leader, who succeeded Hugo Chavez to take power in 2013, has said Washington wants control of the South American nation’s oil reserves, ‍the largest in the world.

Venezuela’s government said civilians and military personnel died in the strikes but did not give figures.

Maduro was captured by elite special forces troops, a U.S. official told Reuters. Republican U.S. Senator Mike Lee said Secretary of State Marco Rubio had told him Maduro would stand trial on criminal charges in the United States.

Rubio “anticipates no further action in Venezuela now that Maduro is in U.S. custody,” Lee wrote on ​X.

In the Panama case, Noriega ended up in prison for 20 years.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

politics 2025

1/21/26 - Mark Carney on Canada's path
12/18/25 - Four Republicans force vote on extending Obamacare subsidies
11/13/25 - Government shutdown ends after 43 days
11/9/25 - A few Democrats join Republicans in plan to reopen government
11/4/25 - Dick Cheney dies at 84
9/30/25 - Republicans and Democrats blame each other for upcoming shutdown
9/22/25 - Jimmy Kimmel to return on Tuesday
9/17/25 - ABC pulls Jimmy Kimmel after Charlie Kirk comments
9/10/25 - Charlie Kirk shot and killed in Utah
8/31/25 - Rudy Giuliani hospitalized after car crash
8/1/25 - Ted Cruz rushes to help Elizabeth Warren after fall
1/15/25 - House of Representatives pass bill to ban trans-women from playing in women's sports

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Oahu rail

10/16/25 - Segment 2 opens to public
9/27/25 - Hanabusa resigns from HART board
12/29/24 - HART to request eminent domain for seven properties
8/16/24 - HART awards $1.66B contract for Skyline’s final segment
9/17/23 - HART projects $580 million surplus at completion (next decade)
6/29/23 - Some HART board members say Kahikina could pay greater deference
6/29/23 - The rail doesn't quite stop at Pearlridge
6/25/23 - Rail is finally ready to roll (the first part anyway)
6/17/23 - Rail system is named "Skyline"
6/2/24 - Kahikina's future as CEO in doubt
5/11/23 - First phase to launch on June 30
2/22/23 - Construction on Dillingham scheduled to last through 2026
10/1/22 - FTA approves shorted rail route
9/4/22 - Shortened rail route will mean more traffic in Kakaako
8/30/22 - Rail system moving into trial runs
8/5/22 - Cracks in concrete could delay rail opening
7/12/22 - Former consultant reassigned after raising design issues
6/5/22 - HART submits rail recovery plan to FTA 
3/20/22 - Shorter route could save over $200 million in legal fees
3/16/22 - Blangiardi cuts rail route short
12/5/21 - David Shapiro: HART's continuing free ride
11/21/21 - Rail numbers have been shifty (David Shapiro)
11/18/21 - Rail deficit estimate cut to "only" $2 billion
10/10/21 - Heavyweights in favor of raising hotel room taxes to pay for rail
10/10/21 - David Shapiro: rail leaders need to show that they know what they're doing
6/28/21 - Rail project continues to face uncertainty
5/13/21 - What now?  Replace the wheels?
5/11/21 - Hanabusa declines $924,000 and will serve on HART's board without compensation
4/2/21 - Lori Kahikina Q&A
3/11/21 - Rail project has a $3 billion shortfall with no answers
1/3/21 - All David Shapiro is saying is give Kahikina a chance
12/28/20 - Lori Kahikina named interim chief of rail project
12/24/20 - Robbins leaves with rail line from Kapolei to Halawa scheduled to open in 2021
12/17/20 - Robbins not expected to be renewed
11/20/20 - Robbins finally moving on from P3

11/18/20 - Looking back at the 8/31/2008 Advertiser, the project was due to break ground in December 2009 at a cost of $3.7 billion
11/18/20 - Caldwell says cost of rail up to $11 billion and won't be complete until 2033

11/13/20 - Nevertheless Robbins persists in submitting P3 report
11/1/20 - All Andrew Robbins is saying, is give P3 a chance
10/25/20 - Kirk Caldwell: pulling out of PPP and steps to get back on track
10/25/20 - Editorial: HART must recalibrate
10/25/20 - David Shapiro: a mad rush is imprudent
10/22/20 - HART discussing building rail in phases
10/15/20 - Dennis Callan says they are still real solutions possible

[10/9/20] Caldwell wants to put the heat on Robbins
[10/8/20] How about ending rail at Chinatown?

[5/13/20] First segment opening pushed back to March 2021

[3/4/20] Two new bus routes planned to augment rail system

[2/27/20] Rail contractor snags lines closing Dillingham Blvd.

[12/29/19] Hawaiian names possibilities for train stations [David Shapiro]

[9/9/19] Yamanoha well-suited for HART

[7/14/19] Heidi Tsuneyoshi seeking more information from HART

[5/8/19] FTA insisting city commit $25 million this year before releasing more funds

[4/19/19] City now plans to open segments of rail in 2020 and 2023

[4/14/19] Hart committed to finishing rail to Ala Moana

[4/4/19]  Middle Street better than Ala Moana for transfers [Dennis Callan]

[4/1/19] Stopping rail at Middle Street might save only $450 million

[3/31/19] Lee Cataluna: debacle is right

[1/19/19] HART responds that many of the issues raised by the audit have been addressed and most of the recommendations of the audit have been or are being implemented

[1/18/19] City auditor finds HART violated procurement requirements

[11/7/18] Architects say to change rail route to U.H.-Manoa because of future flooding

[11/2/18] Caldwell signs bill to allow City to help pay for rail

[10/21/18] State audit of rail transit not going smoothly

[3/11/18] Slater and Roth call for rail to end at Middle Street

[10/3/17] Caught this discussion on Olelo on Option 2A which is an alternative street level rail system from Middle Street.  The panel seemed pretty intelligent and experienced.  (but see 2/5/17 and 2/8/17 below)
[9/19/17]  Mufi on Andrew Robbins (page 22)

[9/6/17] City Council votes to extend excise tax surcharge to 2030
[9/6/17] Ige signs into law the $2.4 billion bailout package
[9/2/17] House votes 31-15 in favor of rail deal
[8/30/17] State Senate votes 16-9 in favor for rail bailout bill
[8/29/17] Rail bill passes out of committee 5-4

[8/25/17] House and Senate announce $2.37 billion rail bailout package / yelling ensues, Caldwell walks out of meeting

[8/1/17] Andrew Robbins gets a second chance

[7/13/17] City Council authorizes $350 million of bonds to get rail to Middle Street

[6/20/17] Randall Roth says it's time to cut our losses

[6/20/17] Lawmakers haven’t yet agreed on the details, but leaders in the state House and Senate announced Monday that they plan to hold a special session this summer to try to resolve their impasse over how to provide more funding for the city’s 20-mile rail project.

[6/8/17] Motor vehicle weight taxes, bus fares and parking rates will go up under a 2018 budget package approved by the Honolulu City Council on Wednesday.

The budget package was highlighted by skirmishes over what fees and rates would go up and which would not. The Caldwell administration said “revenue enhancements” were necessary — without raising property tax rates — largely to deal with rising fixed costs and collective bargaining increases, as well the anticipated costs of operation and maintenance of the rail line.

[6/8/17] The Council’s 6-3 decision on Wednesday, which hinged on Councilman Trevor Ozawa’s swing vote, authorizes up to $350 million in city general obligation bonds for rail. Those funds will help cover the contracts to build the system as far as Middle Street, and future general excise tax surcharge dollars are expected to eventually repay the bonds.

Without that authorization Wednesday, work on the transit system’s elevated concrete pathway and its stations would have stalled at Aloha Stadium in early 2018, and the rail agency overseeing construction, unable to pay its bills, would have started shedding staff and trimming its operations to a bare minimum this August, project officials said.

[5/5/17] A divided state Legislature closed out the turbulent 2017 session and headed home Thursday without approving any bill to provide more funding for rail, but Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell said he plans to press lawmakers for a new rail funding agreement that could be ratified in a special session later this year.

In a rare closing-day leadership shake-up, House Speaker Joseph Souki resigned from his post at the request of his colleagues Thursday morning, and House lawmakers voted to elevate House Majority Leader Scott Saiki to the speaker’s job in a final floor session that Souki did not attend.

In the Senate, Ways and Means Committee Chairwoman Jill Tokuda made a tearful speech praising her staff and putting her colleagues on notice that she has further political plans.

Tokuda’s colleagues have agreed to remove her from the powerful Ways and Means post, which controls all tax and appropriations measures in the Senate. Tokuda has described that as a “power grab” related to the sometimes bitter rail debate.

Souki thanked the people of Hawaii and the members of the House in his resignation letter, “especially those who have stood with me through thick and thin.”

He said he regretted that lawmakers were unable to “do the work of the people” by reaching agreement this year on bills to provide billions of dollars in new funding for the Honolulu rail project, and on a bill to allow physicians to prescribe lethal medications to people with terminal illnesses.

The decision to remove Souki didn’t sit well with some lawmakers, including Rep. Marcus Oshiro and Rep. Sharon Har, who called the removal of Souki “unprecedented.”

[5/4/17] Tokuda and Souki to be ousted due to rail

[4/21/17] Cayetano ad urges Trump to withhold funding for Honolulu rail

[2/8/17] At-grade light rail won't work says Krishniah Murray

[2/5/17] Salvage the Rail report touts at-grade rail

[12/25/16 Randall Roth] Rail was supposed to cost $3 billion … then $4.6 billion … then $5.2 billion. The latest official estimate is $8.1 billion … but the city reportedly is thinking about raising it to $9.5 billion.

The city claims that the percentage of commuters who use public transportation will increase from 6 percent to 7.4 percent once rail has been built. But most cities have experienced a decline in bus ridership as money is diverted from the existing bus system to pay for rail operations and maintenance. The combined rate for bus and rail is usually less than was the rate for just the bus.

It’s not too late to convert the existing guideway to use by bus rapid transit. Some of the saved money could then be used to reduce traffic congestion, such as by installing flyovers and bypasses in chokepoint areas like the Middle Street merge; adding new contraflow and bus-on-shoulder options; adding new traffic lanes to existing roads; and expanding Honolulu’s bus system, such as by increasing the number of express buses that go where commuters want to go, rather than eliminating most of them, as is part of the current rail plan.

[12/3/16] Rail price tag could rise to $9.5 billion

[10/28/16] Nohara to replace Hanabusa on rail board
[10/28/16] Interim CEO hired for one year

[10/17/16] Caldwell and Charles Djou disagree over how to pay for rail.

[9/30/16]  Local rail leaders have raised their estimate yet again for how much it will cost to complete the cash-strapped 20-mile transit project, now putting the price tag at more than $8.6 billion.

They’ve also added another year of delay to rail’s schedule, mostly thanks to the ongoing dilemma about how to fund the elevated project’s final leg into town. Rail leaders now estimate that train cars will start running across the full line from East Kapolei to Ala Moana Center starting in December 2025.

Originally, under the city’s deal with federal transit officials, the rail was supposed to cost $5.26 billion. The full line was to start running in January 2020.

[9/29/16] Years before any trains will carry commuters across the island, cracks are forming in the plastic padding used to give the train tracks a level surface, and strands in three of the tendons that help keep the guideway structure in place have snapped apart, according to reports issued by the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation and the rail project’s federal oversight agency.

[9/1/16]  Both remaining candidates for Honolulu mayor are now on the same page, saying the city must build an elevated rail line all the way to Ala Moana Center.

Former U.S. Rep. Charles Djou, who is challenging Mayor Kirk Caldwell’s re-election bid, said Wednesday that the message federal transit officials gave to the city this week requires him to back off his position to seek alternatives to heavy rail to get from Middle Street to Ala Moana.

We have to do rail, we have to take it to Ala Moana,” Djou said. “It has to be elevated, and it has to be heavy rail, period.”

Caldwell and Council Chairman Ernie Martin said Tuesday that Federal Transit Administration leaders are firm that the rail line needs to be constructed to Ala Moana or the city may be in breach of an agreement that gave the city up to $1.55 billion in federal dollars. Also, city leaders were unsuccessful in their attempts to get the FTA to provide more funding to make up a shortfall of up to $2 billion.

Djou’s message through the first three months of the campaign had been that rather than commit to building elevated rail to Ala Moana as supported by Caldwell and former Mayor Peter Carlisle, the city should explore every option from a bus rapid transit system to putting the line at ground level through Kalihi.

But on Wednesday, Djou said he is now willing to consider asking the state Legislature for an extension of Oahu’s 0.5 percent surcharge on the general excise tax — but only if, as mayor, he determines the city has no other alternative.

[8/31/16] City leaders are expected to return to the Legislature this winter to seek an extension of the 0.5 percent general excise tax surcharge for the $8 billion rail project because their efforts to secure additional federal dollars were shot down by top federal transit officials in San Francisco this week.

The request, however, is likely to be met with skepticism by state lawmakers frustrated that they once again are being asked to take the political hit for a project that has climbed in price by more than $2 billion since they agreed two sessions ago to a five-year extension of the surcharge through 2027.

The Federal Transit Administration also made it clear during two days of meetings that halting rail construction at Middle Street — rather than in the Ala Moana area [at least to Aloha Tower], as the city originally planned — is not acceptable, and the agency warned that stopping the line short could jeopardize $1.55 billion in federal grants, city officials said.

City and federal transit officials announced in the spring that building rail now likely will cost a projected $8 billion for the full 20 miles, from East Kapolei to Ala Moana Center, with 21 rail stations. That’s about $2 billion more than the cost estimate made two years ago. Consequently, they said, there would be only enough money to reach the Middle Street station, about 5 miles short of Ala Moana.

Both Mayor Kirk Caldwell and City Council Chairman Ernie Martin said Tuesday they asked FTA officials for additional funding and were told none would be made available.

One bright spot resulting from the talks, city officials said, is an optimistic expectation that the FTA will consider the city’s request to extend the deadline for coming up with a recovery plan for the project funding beyond the current Dec. 31 deadline.

The Honolulu delegation that traveled to the FTA’s western regional office included Caldwell, Martin, Council Transportation Chairman Joey Manahan, Honolulu Authority for Rail Transportation Chairwoman Colleen Hanabusa and HART acting Executive Director Michael Formby.

Leading discussions on the FTA side was Acting Administrator Carolyn Flowers.

Caldwell told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser on Tuesday night, “They said no to any additional dollars under the New Starts program.” He added that the city was told all the money for that program has been committed to other projects.

Martin, in a news release, said the city delegation was told there are 60 other transit-related projects being funded through the program.

Caldwell said this was his third time asking for additional federal transit dollars. “That doesn’t mean I won’t do it again,” he said, adding that the November election and a new presidential administration could bring new opportunities.

“With the end of this cycle, with the new year starting, with a new administration in place and maybe a different makeup in Congress, and a new budget cycle, there’s a possibility, and that’s why I would ask again,” Caldwell said.

In a surprising change in position, Martin said Tuesday he intends to join Caldwell at the Legislature in seeking an extension of the surcharge, especially because the FTA made it clear that pausing the project at Middle Street would be unacceptable and jeopardize the $1.55 billion federal share.

“I’ve been opposed to going back to the Legislature to ask for a further extension of the GET surcharge, but given the FTA’s position, it is clear that we don’t have a choice,” Martin said in a separate statement. “This project is too often viewed as a city issue but it’s a quality of life issue for the people of Oahu who are struggling with some of the worst traffic congestion in the country.”

[8/31/16] http://khon2.com/2016/08/30/fta-on-rail-route-downtown-minimum-ala-moana-ideal/

[8/19/16]  Dan Grabauskas resigns

[8/7/16] Hawaii's is not the only city with rail budget woes

[7/31/16]  Rail’s concrete pathway now snakes more than 8 miles, stretching from East Kapolei almost to Aloha Stadium. Soon, a new construction contract will extend it as far as Middle Street. From there, the rail system’s endpoint, Ala Moana Center, sits 4.3 miles away.

Any solution to keep building toward Ala Moana Center — should city leaders opt to pursue that route — would likely involve a patchwork of funding sources.

[7/8/16] In the latest whistleblower lawsuit to be filed in relation to Honolulu’s rail project, a former Kiewit Infrastructure West Co. manager alleges the firm failed for years to adequately follow environmental laws while building the line’s first 10 miles to Aloha Stadium.

The suit claims that local Kiewit supervisors repeatedly dismissed and downplayed his efforts to keep the firm compliant and that Kiewit violated Hawaii’s Whistleblower’s Protection Act in eventually letting him go. It seeks unspecified compensation for damages.

[6/17/16] Caldwell recommends stopping rail at Middle Street

[4/22/16] As the Honolulu rail agency’s new board chairwoman, former U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa must now help guide the largest public works project in state history as it faces growing financial uncertainty and eroding public confidence.

Hanabusa’s fellow Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation volunteer board members unanimously voted to appoint her to the top post Thursday, the day after Mayor Kirk Caldwell reappointed her to a new term that will last through 2021.

“This decision did not come easily. However, I believe the board is at an important juncture,” Hanabusa said moments after becoming chairwoman. “I am doing it because I feel the board has to be very accountable to the public. I feel that we can work together and do the public’s bidding.”

Their vote came during a spirited, daylong meeting in which board members said that HART employees give them “fuzzy numbers” instead of the budget details they need to provide oversight, called for reforms to give them more authority and met in closed session to evaluate the performance of HART’s embattled executive director, Dan Grabauskas.

Hanabusa will serve the rest of former board Chairman Don Horner’s term, which expires this summer, plus a year after that. Vice Chairman Damien Kim briefly served as interim chairman prior to the vote for Hanabusa. Kim, who serves as business manager and financial secretary for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 1186, is expected to be appointed chairman after Hanabusa.

[4/12/16]  Don Horner, who once oversaw the state’s largest financial institution, will no longer help oversee the state’s largest public works project.

Horner tendered his resignation to Mayor Kirk Caldwell on Monday as the rail agency’s volunteer board chairman, as the transit project faces rising costs and growing uncertainty.

Horner’s move follows several weeks of upheaval for rail management, in which the city’s top elected leaders have repeatedly put in writing their crumbling faith in the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation’s handling of the project, now estimated to cost nearly $7 billion. HART leaders say the skyrocketing costs are mainly due to construction market forces beyond their control.

Horner delivered his resignation letter to Honolulu Hale five days after Council Chairman Ernie Martin called on Horner and HART Executive Director Dan Grabauskas to resign, and several days before a critical report from the city auditor’s office will be released. In a news conference Monday, Caldwell said that he had already planned to ask for Horner’s resignation prior to Martin’s request. Caldwell was out of state on vacation last week and had scheduled to meet Horner upon his return.

“I just want to make absolutely certain that there’s confidence in this project. And I’ve see an erosion of confidence in this project, both by my administration, by the City Council … and by the public at large,” Caldwell said Monday.

In his resignation letter, Horner said “too often in politics, the focus becomes shooting the messenger of unpleasant news rather than collaboratively working on solutions.” In a separate letter responding to Martin’s concerns, Horner praised HART staff and said Martin’s concerns were a surprise “since we had met a few days earlier, and your concern was not discussed.”

Horner retired as CEO of First Hawaiian Bank in late 2011, after being affiliated with the institution for more than three decades. He also served as the bank’s chairman and president.

Martin is Caldwell’s top political rival and considering a mayoral run against him later this year. Caldwell’s predecessor, former mayor Peter Carlisle, appointed Horner to the HART board for the agency’s 2011 inception. Caldwell said earlier this year that his own reputation is on the line with rail.

Thursday, October 09, 2025

Israel attacked by Hamas

10/9/25 - Israel and Hamas agree to phase 1 of peace deal
9/26/25 - Dozens of delegates walk out on Netanyahu's speech at the U.S.
8/25/25 - Israel airstrikes on Gaza hospital kills at least 20 including 5 journalists and 4 health workers
3/18/25 - Israel launches airstrikes breaking ceasefire
1/15/25 - Israel and Hamas agree to ceasefire
9/26/24 - Israel rejects ceasefire and continues strikes in Lebanon
5/6/24 - Hamas agrees to Gaza cease fire, but Israel presses ahead with strikes 
2/7/24 - Netanyahu rejects Hama ceasefire offer
11/24/23 - Hamas frees 24 hostages from Gaza on first day of truce
11/10/23 - Gaza death toll tops 11,000
11/6/23 - Gaza death toll tops 10,000, U.N. calls it a children's graveyard
10/11/23 - Trump is to blame for the situation in Israel (opinion)
10/8/23 - Israel declares war after attack by Hamas

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Russia and Ukraine

9/23/23 - Trump now says Ukraine is in a position to win back the original borders
5/19/25 - After call with Putin, Trump says Russia and Ukraine will start negotiations for ceasefire
4/30/25 - Ukraine signs minerals deal with U.S.
3/27/25 - Zelensky says Putin will die soon
3/18/25 - Russia agrees to limited cease fire
3/18/25 - Ukraine is at fault too (opinion)
3/4/25 - Zelenskyy looks to reconcile with Trump
3/3/25 - Trump pauses military aid to Ukraine
3/2/25 - British Defense Secretary says UK should step up its military support for Ukraine 
2/28/25 - Takeaways from Trump/Vance/Zelenskyy meeting
2/20/25 - Trump calls Zelenskyy a dictator without elections
11/17/24 - Biden to allow Ukraine to use U.S. weapons to strike Russian interior
11/17/24 - Russia pounds Ukraine's power grid in massive air strike
9/26/24 - Biden announces $8 billion in military aid to Ukraine
9/3/24 - Russian missles kill at least 50 in Ukraine military institute
8/14/24 - Ukraine advances into Russia
7/8/24 - Russian missiles strike children's hospital, killing at least 36
6/19/24 - Russia and North Korea sign partnership deal
2/16/24 - Alexei Navalny dies in prison
2/8/24 - Zelenzky fires top general
2/6/24 - Tucker Carlson to interview Putin
10/5/23 - Missile strikes Ukraine cafe killing 51
8/23/23 - Yevgeny Prigozhin reportedly in plane crash with no survivors
7/19/23 - MI6 chief says Putin cut a deal with Wagner to save his skin
7/1/239 - Zelensky claims 21,000 Wagner mercenaries have been killed
6/24/23 - Yevgeny Prigozhin calls off attack on Moscow
6/20/23 - Russia strikes Kyiv as Ukraine counter-attacks
5/31/23 - Drones strike Moscow
3/17/23 - International Criminal Court issues arrest warrant, accusing Putin of war crimes
3/8/23 - Trump tells Hannity how he could have prevented the war
2/25/23 - McConnell says aid to Ukraine is not charity, but a direct investment against Putin's war machine
2/24/23 - Ukraine considering parts of Beijing peace plan
1/9/23 - Russia and Ukraine swap 50 prisoners of war each
12/22/22 - Putin says end to war in Ukraine would involve diplomatic solution
12/21/22 - Zelenkiy and Biden show solidarity at the White House
10/18/22 - Iran to provide missiles to Russia
10/5/22 - Putin annexes Ukraine regions even as Russian forces flee
6/27/22 - Russian missiles hit Ukraine shopping mall
6/1/22 - Allies split on shipping weapons to Ukraine
5/16/22 - Sweden says they will apply for NATO membership, Turkey objects
4/4/22 - Biden says Putin should go to trial for war crimes
3/30/22 - U.S. says Putin is being misinformed by his advisors
3/27/22 - Biden criticized for saying Putin "cannot remain in power"
3/15/22 - Russia sanctions Joe Biden, Hunter Biden, Hillary Clinton
3/15/22 - Fox News cameraman killed in Ukraine
3/11/22 - Zelenskiy says Ukraine has "already reached a strategic turning point"
3/9/22 - China to send aid to Ukraine (but really not very much)
3/8/22 - Biden orders ban of Russian oil imports
3/6/22 - Thomas Friedman sees three scenarios on how the war ends  (Star-Advertiser E4)
3/6/22 - Trump suggests U.S. should diguise jets as Chinese and bomb Russia
3/4/22 - Pence to say there is no room in GOP for Putin apologists
3/4/22 - Lindsey Graham calls for Russians to assassinate Putin / push back
3/2/22 - United Nations votes to reprimand Russia
3/1/22 - Pat Robertson says Israel is next after Ukraine and bring about the End Times
3/1/22 - World Taekwondo strips Putin of honorary black belt
2/28/22 - Switzerland breaks neutrality to sanction Russia
2/26/22 - Opinions of Putin mixed at CPAC
2/25/22 - Xi tells Putin he supports negotiation
2/24/22 - Tucker Carlson criticizes Lindsey Graham on Ukraine too

2/24/22 - KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia launched a wide-ranging attack on Ukraine on Thursday, hitting cities and bases with airstrikes or shelling, as civilians piled into trains and cars to flee. Ukraine’s government said Russian tanks and troops rolled across the border in what it called a “full-scale war” that could rewrite the geopolitical order and whose fallout already reverberated around the globe.

In announcing a major military operation, Russian President Vladimir Putin deflected global condemnation and cascading new sanctions — and chillingly referred to his country’s nuclear arsenal as he threatened any foreign country attempting to interfere with “consequences you have never seen.”

NATO’s chief said the “brutal act of war” shattered peace on the European continent, as the U.S.-led alliance mobilized more troops to move toward eastern Europe.

2/23/22 - Trump praises Putin
2/22/22 - U.S. and Europe slap sanctions on Russia

2/22/22 - Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered troops into two rebel-held regions in eastern Ukraine, after recognising them as independent states.

Russia said the troops have not yet been deployed but will be "peacekeeping" in the regions, which it has backed since 2014.

The US said calling them peacekeepers was "nonsense", and accused Russia of creating a pretext for war.

Several countries have announced sanctions in response.

Ukraine's president said his country was "not afraid of anything or anyone".