Thursday, April 16, 2015

Importance of Social Media

Let my facebook post say it

 


Some wonder why I bother with social media and blogging! My answer is that if you ain't telling your story, someone else will tell your story! You want that?
Here's someone who learned it the hard way, the TMT spokesperson
“I’ve known for a while that our Facebook page needed updating and it seemed like at the time, there were so many other more important things to do than update a Facebook page,” she said.
In the past few weeks, she has realized how many people social media can pull in, dwarfing the reach of local public hearings. Dawson now plans to hiring a college intern to handle the social media for the telescope.
“We will not drop that ball again,” she said.


The article being shown in that post can be accessed at

Here's more quotes from that article

Sandra Dawson has handled community outreach for the TMT in Hawaii for seven years. At age 66, she’s not very familiar with sites like Twitter and Instagram and hasn’t relied on social media for community outreach in the past.
Instead, she has focused on getting to know people on the Big Island personally by serving on the local Chamber of Commerce, joining the Merrie Monarch parade and attending local events such as the school robotics tournament.
“I’ve known for a while that our Facebook page needed updating and it seemed like at the time, there were so many other more important things to do than update a Facebook page,” she said.
In the past few weeks, she has realized how many people social media can pull in, dwarfing the reach of local public hearings. Dawson now plans to hiring a college intern to handle the social media for the telescope.
“We will not drop that ball again,” she said.
Gwen Woltz, co-founder of the local social media firm Wahine Media, doesn’t have an opinion on the Mauna Kea controversy. But she said it’s a clear indication of the power of social media.
While hashtags like #TMTshutdown helped unify the opposition to the telescope, the delayed response shows a lack of planning on the part of the telescope proponents, she said.
“They certainly didn’t plan for the worst and now they’re kind of seeing the results of that,” she said. “That’s unfortunate because maybe they do have some awesome things to say and maybe it could have been different if they had a more proactive approach.”

This is the age of social media! This is the age where people can just post a picture to their smartphone and make it go worldwide in an instant! 

If you're doing any project that could be controversial, ALWAYS be prepared for battle! Your opponents will show no mercy!  Their followers will tweet to their friends and then what? What are you going to do? When are you going to strike back? The longer you wait, the more it seems like you got something to hide! 
 
Always be ready to tell your story!

Write a blog, and write as much as you can!

Use your blog posts to back you up just in case someone says something inaccurate about you or something you are passionate about!

If you have video capabilities, use that too! That way, those who can't (or don't want to) read and can hear from you!

After all, it is you who has to tell your story! Nobody else!


Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Mauna Kea

Whether the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) goes up or not, it doesn't really affect me much! Life will go on either way!

Yeah, it might see millions of light years away, but most of us are just concerned about what's going on here on Earth!

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Whatever side you on, you need to deal with the facts instead of just mindlessly repeating cliches!

It is NOT being built on burial sites or on any former temples!

It is in a barren part of the mountain,  and environmental studies showed little risk to acquifiers!

The approval process has been going on for 7 years and was open to public input this whole time!
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Much of the opposition has to do with a mostly non-Hawaiian entity making decisions on what to do with Hawaiian land!   The issue is magnified  because Mauna Kea has spiritual meaning to the Native Hawaiians.
However, not all Native Hawaiians oppose the telescope! Within every ethnic group, people will interpret their traditional beliefs differently!

I don't think a telescope would be placed on Mt Fuji or Mt Sinai due to the sacredness of those mountains! So the opponents do have a point with this one! 

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However, I think with all the opposition (plus viral tweets from Jason Momoa and Nicole Scherzinger), I really do think it's either TMT will be the last telescope built OR the last telescope has already been built and the TMT will be just a pipe dream!



Learn more by checking out Chloe Fox's  "Everything You Need To Know About The Viral Protests Against A Hawaii Telescope" on Huffington Post
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/13/hawaii-telescope-protests-tmt-mauna-kea_n_7044164.html


That article shows multiple sides of the issue, with respect towards the  grievances of the  telescope opponents, but also stating that some of the common cliches are just false!