Monday, January 11, 2021

Aloha Stadium shutdown and where the UH football team will play

 I hate it when I have ideas for a blog post, but by the time I get to blogging about it, my ideas become obsolete.

Last month, it was announced that the Aloha Stadium was shut-down for good, no longer usable due to the lack of funds to keep it maintained while we continue to wait forever for the new stadium to start being built. 

There was talk of having the UH football games played on Maui since they have the next largest stadium in the Hawaiian islands. (Maui War Memorial Stadium)


Kyle Chinen and Allyson Blair, “Hawaii Football Team Searching for New Home Following Aloha Stadium Shut Down,” Hawaii News Now, December 17, 2021, https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2020/12/17/uh-football-looks-new-home-after-aloha-stadium-shut-down/.

State Sen. Glenn Wakai said the university will have to make some very difficult decisions in the coming months.

“If I were at the table, I would suggest taking some of these games to the neighbor islands,” he said.

Wakai called it a unique opportunity to cultivate Hawaii’s fan base, and it’s one that has been done before.

In 2001 the Warriors held their season opener at Maui’s War Memorial Stadium. But critics say that idea might not be as simple as it seems, arguing that opponents could object to playing if the field is not up to Division I standards.


I thought that was a good idea. I totally agreed with having UH football team play a game on Maui, the Big Island, and Kauai as well. That way, the game is accessible to people who don't live on Oahu. It would be a morale boost if the people living on the other islands have a chance to watch Hawaii's team play on their island.

I was also thinking it would be a good idea to also have the games played in areas of Oahu that are far from the UH-Manoa campus and Aloha Stadium. I was thinking of having those games played in the high school stadiums of Kahuku, Waianae, or Mililani. Their high schools usually have good teams with players recruited by many colleges. 

Bringing the game to different parts of Hawaii would be a great way to not only bring the game to people who usually can't go the distance to the game but also reignite the passion for the team! Maybe families in those areas can bring their kids to the games and those kids could become passionate UH fans. This passion might even get the most athletic of those kids to choose UH over the other colleges that might be recruiting them.

I was going to blog all that today, but before I had the chance to blog about it, it was announced that the UH football team will play their games on the on-campus facility where they usually practice. 


Jackson Moore, “Hawaii to Play Home Games at On-Campus Ching Athletic Complex,” 24-7 Sports, January 11, 2021, https://247sports.com/college/hawaii/Article/Hawaii-Aloha-Stadium-football-Clarence-TC-Ching-Athletics-Complex-Rainbow-Warriors-UH--159045666/.

With the future of Aloha Stadium in doubt, Hawaii Athletics announced Monday that the department will begin preparations to play their home football season at the on-campus Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex for the next three years. The 2,500 capacity venue is a drastically different setting than the former home of the NFL Pro Bowl, though UH has a list of upgrades set to take place this offseason.

The checklist of upgrades to the stadium includes increased seating capacity, new turf, a new scoreboard, a new speaker system, an upgraded press box, and "other amenities needed to host Division I college football games." The eventual capacity numbers are yet to be announced.


The good news for me is that I can just walk to the games. I live within walking distance from the UHM campus.  No need for a long bus ride to & from the game. No need to be stuck in traffic for me. 


But dammit, it would've been great if my earlier ideas of bringing the games to different parts of Hawaii would've been a reality!


 

Friday, January 01, 2021

Science Fiction Music

 The new year starts with some great new music you can immerse yourself into.


It is "Science Fiction Music: an instrumental album" by Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior!



Here is the official album description!


Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior grew up with brothers who loved science fiction movies. He watched a few science fiction movies but eventually lost interest in watching films on a consistent basis. (ooh, the blasphemy). However, he did gain an interest in electronic music, many of which have a science fiction vibe.

With advances in digital musical technology  Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior created an amazing collection of instrumentals combining the sounds of various electronic music genres (ie. techno, house, trance, deep dub, dubstep, ambient, dancehall & more) to make an epic instrumental album of amazing science fiction music!

=========

The tracks were made using the Magix Music Maker softwares (Music Maker Jam, Music Maker Live 2016, Music Maker 2020). The artist has bought the Audio Pro Unlimited & commercial license to professionally sell tracks made with Music Maker softwares!


All images & tracks copyright to Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior!


Here are the track listings


1.       Cubes Floating Through Space

2.       The Giant Space Station

3.       Cyborgs Dancing at a Factory

4.       Action Figure Speed Chase

5.       Action Figure Speed Chase (marching drums remix)

6.       Frog Troops on the March

7.       Robot Tiger Warriors on the March

8.       Acid Centipede

9.       Bassy Sound Adventures

10.    Ai Ai

11.   Robot Party on a Tropical Night

12.   Bright Raindrops at Night

13.   Icy Eruptions at Night

14.   Mysterious Night Lights

15.   Slow Oval UFO


-----

As you infer from the track titles, the tracks will give you a vibe of being immersed in a world of many things associated with science fiction: outer space, robots, and the mysterious occurrences! 


The album is being distributed by CD Baby!

You can download either the entire album or individual tracks  via 

iTunes

Amazon (you can buy the physical CD or download here too)


you can also buy the CD directly from me via eBay

(note: since my previous albums, users are no longer able to buy directly from the online stores of CD Baby or Google Play)


the tracks are also available for streaming via Spotify, Apple Music, Soundcloud, Deezer, iHeart Music & much more


So many options to access my music :)


I am planning to make music videos for each track using still images (sorry, no big budget videos) but I'm unable to give you a timeline of when that will be. When I have time, I'll post them. This might take months.


========

The future

So now that I got my 2nd electronic music album out of the way, my next project will be my 2nd hip-hop instrumental album "Urban Honolulu Jams 2". I don't have a timeline of when that will be completed, though I have already made a few tracks. 

After that, maybe a vocal album? I haven't wrote a full song in years, and some of what I wrote is obsolete in that they're a reflection of who I was, not who I am now.   Making a vocal album will be years in the making.






My 1st blog post of 2021

 Everybody seems so excited to leave 2020 behind and is ready for a more optimistic 2021!

As for me, I'm walking in 2021 with some caution.

In the last few months, I have been blessed to be working a seasonal position at Macy's.  Seasonal is the keyword here and while I have expressed in continuing on after the holiday season, I am still waiting for the official word.

My previous job from a year ago was as a school library assistant. I have no interest in restating why I left that position (read my previous posts), but I'm definitely looking forward to returning to the library life once the pandemic and hiring freeze ends. However, I just saw a Facebook post from my former classmate from UHM's Library & Info Science (LIS) program stating that after so many temp jobs, he's giving up finding library work in Hawaii and is planning to move to the continent.  

This past semester was the 1st one since 2005 in which I wasn't working in a school. I did reapply for positions, but nothing so far. 


========== 

And of course, Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior has some new music out (the subject of my next blog post) and hopefully, it generates more interest in my music catalogue and I get some additional revenue. 

Hearing about the decline of the library & music industries sometimes makes me feel I was born in the wrong era, but then I realize that while the internet is blamed for both declines, it also provides me the opportunity to sell my music far beyond where I can physically go, as well as the opportunity for the words on my blog post to do the same. 

I'm definitely dealing with the midlife crisis (I just turned 40 last year) which seems to come with more pessimism than I normally express.  At the same time, I have to be honest with myself without being an energy vampire draining other people's energy with any pessimism I may express.

Who knows, maybe 2021 will be a time for great & appropriate opportunities that could bring me to 2022 with more optimism. 

You can help by searching for music by Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior and buy some tracks 😉


Thursday, December 31, 2020

My final blog post for 2020

 2020 is coming to a close and it's a major one for the history books!

Most of us entered 2020 thinking it's going to be another normal year with challenges to face and goals to accomplish. 

However, the coronavirus crisis took over the world bringing a lot of our lives to a halt.

At first, I thought the coronavirus crisis was blown out of proportion. That was until late March when everything in Hawaii was shutdown (except essentials). Around that time, I was reading about how Italy was dealing with the coronavirus and it made me realize this coronavirus crisis is much worse than the other epidemics (ie SARS, ebola, H1N1) whose predicted path of doom didn't get as widespread as predicted.  This is a whole new world.

After that, I was always wearing a mask and (since late August), always wearing a face shield too! I'm not taking any chances! 




For more on my thoughts on the coronavirus crisis

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/03/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis.html
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-2.html
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-3.html 
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/05/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-4.html 
https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/05/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-5.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/05/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-6.html



At the start of the year, I was still employed as a Library Assistant at Kalākaua Middle School. The schools were shut down when Spring Break came around and it was like a paid vacation for me.  However, I did leave at the end of the Spring semester, as I noted in this blog post.   https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/08/restrain-this.html  


Though my future seemed uncertain, I was blessed with some opportunities. I did a temp job inspecting ballots being printed for the Primary & General Election.  I did similar temp jobs in the past for the primaries in 2016 & 2018. This time, I did both primary & general. Also, this time, even though there were more younger co-workers, they seemed more mature than past co-workers who had their own maturity issues. 

I actually applied to do more election work, to help at the voter service center for the general election, but by then it was too late.

But I did have another opportunity to do another job that I've done before. I got hired to do seasonal work at Macy's, this time doing hi-touch point cleaning (basically wiping doors, elevators, escalators, and fixtures) and re-organizing items on the selling floor.  I expressed interest in continuing work there past the holiday season. 

With both the ballot inspection and the Macy's jobs, I have been blessed to work around people with basic people skills and who give clear instructions. Sad to say, it wasn't the case for the school library job that I left.  Oh well, can't win them all. 


-----

This year, I did some face some health challenges.


For one, I did get ill at the start of the year with the flu. I was absent from work the first week the students arrived back to school for the Spring 2020 semester.


Then in August, I sprained my ankle

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/08/sprained-ankle.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/08/recovery-from-ankle-sprain.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/09/update-on-my-ankle.html


And with the decrease in active movements since the ankle sprain, I gained weight.  Also, in December, I took a blood test, and the results showed my cholesterol is higher than normal. Based on my age, the doctor wrote in the email that nothing will be prescribed for now, but if my cholesterol level doesn't improve, I might need medication. 


And talking about my age, this was the year I turned 40. No longer a young man, but not yet at retirement age. It's the mid-life crisis.  

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/10/im-4-decades-old.html

I'm now 40 years old - YouTube


---------


As for other world events going on this year, we are blessed to see America's experiment with Donald Trump as president to be over! 

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/11/brief-statement-on-presidential.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/11/us-national-election-analysis.html


And in Hawaii, most of the 98.5 Wake Up Crew was finally fired from their radio show.

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/11/fire-985-wake-up-crew.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRNFAXocmHc


This along with the George Floyd protests (blog post here) and the #metoo movement put the world on notice that the old ways of bullying just aren't going to be tolerated anymore. 

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/12/bullies-get-dunked-on.html


========

In years past, I used to do a year-end blog post listing all the songs I liked. I stopped doing so for a while due to the amount of time it took.


I do have a short list of some classic songs from this year. This by no means a list of every song I liked, just some that stood out from the rest. 


Weeknd "Blinding Lights"

Doja Cat "Say So"

Doja Cat (w/Gucci Mane) "Like This"

Justin Bieber (w/Quavo) "Intentions"

Thundercat (w/Ty Dollar $ign and Lil B) "Fair Chance"

21 Pilots "Level of Concern"

Dua Lipa "Don't Start Now"

Dua Lipa (w/DaBaby) "Levitating"

DJ Regard "Ride It"

Benee (w/Gus Dapperton) "Lonely"

24K Goldn (w/Ian Dior) "Mood"

Arizona Zervas "Roxanne"

Lady Gaga (w/Arianna Grade) "Rain on Me"

Jodin Sparks "Red Sangria"

Monica (w/ Lil Baby) "Trenches"

Ava Max "Kings & Queens" 

Saweetie (w/Jhene Aiko) "Back to the Streets"

Harry Styles "Adore You"

StJhn "Roses (Imanbek Remix)"

Ariana Grande "34+35"


And speaking of music, Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior released 1 album (Naptime Music) and 1 single (Spooky Abandoned House)


The "Naptime Music" album was scheduled for release in March 2020 before knowing that would be when the coronavirus crisis would shut nearly everything down.  

It was also when my distributor CD Baby shut down its online store while still distributing to other online outlets. 

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/03/cd-baby-closes-online-store-still-doing.html

Since then, all of Pablo the Mad Tiger Warrior  albums are available on CD via Amazon and can be downloaded via iTunes.


As for my new music, at the start of 2021, my new instrumental album "Science Fiction Music" will be available online. 

A great way to start the new year.


Good luck with 2021!



2020 memorials

 Earlier this year, I have written the following blog posts on prominent people who have passed away this year.


On NBA's David Stern & Kobe Bryant:   https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/02/david-stern-and-kobe-bryant.html


On Rock & roll guitar legend Eddie Van Halen:   https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/10/eddie-van-halen.html


On political & economic thinkers Walter Williams & Dick Rowland:   https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/12/remembering-advocates-for-economic.html

And on some people known in Hawaii (willie Talamoa, Raymond Perty, Willie K, Kaulana Pakele): https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/09/notes-on-recent-deaths.html

----------

I also wrote a few blog posts on people I have known in my personal life

Lu-Ann Aguilar  https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/08/in-memory-of-lu-ann-aguilar.html

Anson Hokama: https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/06/in-memory-of-anson-hokama.html 



======


And now for the people I haven't got around to blogging about but still deserving of some recognition



Ruth Bader Ginsburg (aka RBG)

RBG was a Supreme Court justice since 1994. Before that, she was a lawyer specializing in gender equity cases. 

RBG was appointed by Bill Clinton, a Democrat, and sided with liberals in most cases. However, she was also known for being friends with a more conservative Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. 

RBG was still in the Supreme Court at an age when her peers would've been retired. Due to her age and the increasing polarization of USA politics, many hoped she could live until after Trump's presidency ends. But it was not meant to be.

I wish our Constitution would've had term limits for Supreme Court justices, like maybe 10 years at most. That way, RBG would've been long retired, and people wouldn't have pinned their hopes on someone to remain alive at an old age just because they fear the current president would appoint someone they don't like. 


learn more at

https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/09/18/breaking-news/supreme-court-says-justice-ruth-bader-ginsburg-has-died-of-metastatic-pancreatic-cancer-at-age-87/


===============


John Lewis

John Lewis was a civil rights activist turned politician! He went from demanding the right for African-Americans to vote to being elected to Congress as a representative. 

In 1965, at the age of 25, John Lewis took part in a voting rights protest over Selma bridge where he was brutally beaten by the police to the point that his skull fractured.  

Later that year, the Voting Rights Act became law, which gave equal voting rights to all regardless of race. 

In 1981, John Lewis was elected to Atlanta's City Council. Five years later, he was elected to Congress, in which he remained until his death.

While he was a Democrat, he was respected by politicians from both major parties (with exceptions being Donald Trump, who doesn't respect anyone who doesn't kiss his ass).

Lewis was also a major inspiration to the modern-day activists to which he says "make good trouble".

learn more at 

Rep. John Lewis, iconic civil rights leader, dies at 80 | Honolulu Star-Advertiser

John Lewis Was an American Hero Who Battled State Racism – Reason.com

John Lewis, Hero of Liberty | Cato Institute


--------

Herman Cain

I did note his death on the blog post "This blog is to document my thoughts as I'm living, not when I'm dead" due to the strange circumstance of his Twitter page being used to comment on events after he died, and even more bizarre, doubting the seriousness of the coronavirus from which he died.

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/09/this-blog-is-to-document-my-thoughts-as.html 

Herman Cain was an entrepreneur known mostly for his time as a CEO of Godfather Pizza. 

Back in 2012, he did run for president, attempting to get the Republican nomination to run against Barack Obama. It would've been interesting to see 2 African-Americans from the 2 major parties competing in the general election.

I did like Cain's idea of the "9-9-9 tax plan" as well as his idea that we should make all laws to being only 3 pages long. I commented on that issue from this blog post from 2012.

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2011/06/your-senator-doesnt-want-to-read-bill.html

However, his presidential campaign did get cut short when sexual harassment allegations became public. He decided to pull back to protect his family from more news coverage of those scandals.

Fast-forward to 2020, he was known for attending Trump rallies without wearing a protective mask during the coronavirus crisis.  That decision cost him his life as he passed away from the virus just weeks after attending the rally in Tulsa. 



 Little Richard

Little Richard was one of the early kings of rock & roll. While that genre is commonly associated with the electric guitar, Little Richard's instrument was the piano.  While the piano is usually associated with someone sitting down, Little Richard will play it not just standing up but jumping around with great energy and excitement. 

As he got older, he transitioned to mostly playing gospel music, but his legend as a pioneer of rock & roll was already cast in stone! 

His popularity came around the same time as the civil rights movement.  Though he wasn't part of the marches, his popularity did scare white supremacists angry that some European-American girls were partying to his music. 

He was also unashamed of some of his feminine traits, which scared those who demand that all males conform to hyper-masculinity.

Homophobic rapper Lord Jamar claimed that white record executives made Little Richard less masculine implying that it was because white America wasn't ready for a masculine black superstar. While I doubt America at the time was ready for someone like DMX or 50 Cent,  I don't think Little Richard needed to be told to be less masculine, he was who he was whether anybody liked it or not. After all, he did start his career in playing in drag shows and gay bars! 


learn more about Little Richard's legacy at

https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/05/09/breaking-news/little-richard-rock-n-roll-pioneer-dies-at-87/


--------------------

Chadwick Boseman

One of the greatest actors of his era! He was known for portraying prominent African-Americans in biopics about James Brown, Thurgood Marshall, and Jackie Robinson. But it was the fictional character of Marvel's "Black Panther" that made him an international superstar. 

Whereas there has long been concern about stereotypical roles being given to African-American actors, Boseman has been blessed to play dignified roles to widespread acclaim. 

Even while making all those movies, Boseman has been privately been dealing with cancer. His cancer diagnosis wasn't public until his death in August.


learn more at:                                        https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/08/28/features/black-panther-star-chadwick-boseman-dies-of-cancer-at-43/


John Thompson

John Thompson was the coach of Georgetown University's men's basketball team.   He was the first African-American coach to lead his team to an NCAA championship back in 1984.

He coached future NBA players like Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning,  Dikembe Mutombo & Allen Iverson.

His team's merchandise became a part of hip-hop culture, with people wearing them even far away from the university's campus in Washington DC! 

While he lobbied the university to allow for players who don't meet the school's admission standards, he did demand that his players take academics seriously. He would tell them "“Don’t let eight pounds of air be the sum total of your existence”

He was also unafraid to confront drug dealers who had contact with his players.  This was during the crack era when gang violence was at its peak.  
Learn more about the incident at 


and learn more about Thompson's legacy at 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/john-thompson-death-georgetown-coach/2020/08/31/cd8f4846-eb69-11ea-ab4e-581edb849379_story.html


-----

Diego Maradona

Diego Maradona was the futbol (soccer) legend from Argentina, bringing World Cup championships to his country in 1986.

That championship came partially due to "The Hand of God" when his hand touched the ball before it scored to goal against England.  This was a few years after Argentina went to war over the nearby British territory, the Falkland Islands. The British won that war! So the game came with the hype similar to the USA vs Soviet Union rivalry in the Olympic games during the Cold War. 

For a short, stocky guy, Maradona could make move with the balls you wouldn't expect from a guy with his built. 

However, his built came with problems later in life as he gained a lot of weight. He also had a drug addiction for which he was expelled from his last World Cup in 1994. 

He did coach Argentina's team for the 2010 World Cup. 

This year, Maradona died from a heart attack. He had tributes from all over the world, though there was a protest against one of them due to his past domestic abuse allegations.


Learn more about Maradona's legacy  at

https://www.espn.com/soccer/argentina-arg/story/4244900/argentina-legend-maradona-dies-at-60 


Dave Zirin on the political side of Diego Maradona

https://www.edgeofsports.com/2020-11-25-1575/index.html

https://www.edgeofsports.com/2020-11-30-1576/index.html


=====

Alex Trebek


Alex Trebek was the host of the popular TV game show "Jeopardy". 

The show was unique in that the contestants had to answer in the form of a question. Also, the tune that was played while the contestants were thinking of their answer was classic. 

Trebek also hosted the National Geographic Bee

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/5/130522-national-geography-bee-alex-trebek-2013-jeopardy/


(note: I won my elementary school's Geography Bee but couldn't go beyond state's. It would've been interesting to meet Trebek at nationals) 


For all the talk about "TV is making our kids dumber", it was wonderful to see shows like Jeopardy that make intellectual knowledge fun.


Trebek was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2019, but he still kept his "Jeopardy" gig until the very end, when he passed away in November. He was 80 years old. 

Learn more at https://www.cnn.com/2020/11/08/entertainment/alex-trebek-jeopardy-host-death-trnd/index.html


===

Florian Schneider

Florian Schnedier may not be a household name, but his group Kraftwerk had a gigantic impact on the music we listen to today.

Kraftwerk started in Germany in the 1970s and was one of the pioneers of electronic music. Their music was a preview of what was possible in the world of sound. 

Their music was sampled by many hip-hop artists (most famously by Afrika Bambataa's "Planet Rock") and influenced a long list of genres and sub-genres including (but nowhere limited to)  techno, EDM, new wave, industrial metal, house, trance, ambient, dubstep, and much much more. 

While his music created and influenced a lot of celebrities, Schnedier preferred to remain behind the scenes.

He died in March at the age of 73. 

Learn more at https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/06/world/florian-schneider-kraftwerk-music-intl/index.html


=====

Sean Connery

The Scottish actor was famous for his role in the early James Bond movies.

But there was much more to his career. He was also part of the "Indiana Jones" series, played King Richard in the "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves" and was a Russian submarine commander in the "Hunt for Red October".

In most of his roles, he was the fearless, ruthless character with a special appeal for the ladies. He was even named "Sexiest Man Alive" by People Magazine when he was age 59. (note to my 40-year-old self: you still got time)


Connery was 90 years old when he died on Halloween. 


learn more at https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/10/31/breaking-news/sean-connery-the-original-james-bond-dies-at-90/


=========

David Dinkins

Dinkins was the first African-American mayor of New York City. His term was from 1990-1993.

He was known as a calming presence n a city that had a reputation of high crime and lots of racial tensions.  The Crown Heights riots occurred in 1991 after crowds reacted to a Jewish driver who ran over & killed an African-American child. It took a while to get the riots under control. 

It was this issue that helped Rudy Giuliani defeat Dinkin's attempt at re-election in 1993, paving the way for Giuliani to be the city's first Republican mayor in decades.

Despite the publicity of the riots, the overall crime rate of the city was already declining near the end of the Dinkins term, but the general public wasn't interested in hearing any of that.  People only tend to believe crime is declining only after it happened for several years straight. By then, Giuliani was in office long enough to receive all the credit for what started under Dinkins. 

learn more at https://www.cnn.com/2020/11/24/us/david-dinkins-new-york-city-mayor-dies/index.html

-----

Andre Harrell

Andre Harrell was a record label executive, best known for his time at Uptown Records, a record label that specialized in R&B and hip-hop. The label was at its peak in the early 90s with Heavy D, Father MC, Soul for Real, Mary J Blige and Jodeci. Sean Combs (aka Puff Daddy aka Diddy) was an intern before starting Bad Boy Records.

Harrell was later an executive for Motown Records.

Before being an executive, Harrell was part of a rap group Dr Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde, which was one of the earliest rap groups to perform in business suits, something that was later copied by artists on Uptown & Bad Boy. 

learn more at                                         https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/hip-hop/9374701/andre-harrell-dead-uptown-records-59


-------

Ganxsta Ridd 


Ganxsta Ridd was a member of the Boo-Ya TRIBE, a Samoan gangsta rap group from California.  They were one of the earliest Polynesian rappers to get some level of fame in the world of hip-hop.

Like the Roots, the Boo-Ya TRIBE played their own instruments, mostly making funk and rock tracks. 

The Boo-Ya TRIBE collaborated with many artists including but not limited to Ice-T, B-Real, Eminem, Layzie Bone, Lady of Rage, Mack 10, and W.C.  They also had some rap-rock collabos with Faith No More, Transplants, as made their own rap-metal songs in the album "The Angry Samoans". 




Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Remembering the advocates for free market economics

 In the last few weeks, 2 advocates of pro-capitalist thought has passed away - Walter Williams and Dick Rowland.

In the era when the younger generation is more fascinated by socialism, and when capitalism's reputation is tainted by association with over-rated real estate mogul and failed soon-to-be-ex-president Donald Trump, people need reminders on the positive sides of capitalism. 


Walter Williams



Walter Williams was an economics professor at George Mason University, and an author of many books & articles challenging the radical left narrative on economics, racism, education & more. 

Walter Williams grew up in the same housing project as Bill Cosby in Philadelphia in the 1930s & 1940s. Despite growing up in a more segregated time, both have defied the "woke" radical left narrative that "everything is the fault of the white man" and that it's somehow "racist" to hold African-Americans to the same standards as European-Americans. 

 (Though in Cosby's case, he was exposed as a major hypocrite in that he was preaching to young African-American males to "pull your pants up" while he was pulling down the pants of women who were in no position to consent). 

Williams was no stranger to being discriminated against as he told stories of being attacked by racist police officers and defying racist officers while he was in the military.

He also wrote a book "South Africa's War Against Capitalism" in 1989 to describe the allegedly "anti-communist" apartheid put regulation after regulation to strangle entrepreneurship in the indigenous African communities there. 


In 1989 the Cato Institute and Praeger published Walter’s book South Africa’s War against Capitalism. In it he showed, with detailed economic and historical analysis, that South Africa’s apartheid regime was not “capitalist,” as its critics often believed. Rather, “South Africa’s apartheid is not the corollary of free‐​market or capitalist forces. Apartheid is the result of anticapitalistic or socialistic efforts to subvert the operation of market (capitalistic) forces.”


However, Williams got massive hate from the "radical left" for pointing that not all disparities are due to discrimination. 



He also criticized public schools for being too lenient on misbehavior for fear of being called "racist" for giving strict discipline to African-American students. 



"The Secret Shame" report didn't say why the black/white achievement gap was smaller in conservative cities compared to their progressive counterparts. But permit me to make a suggestion. An Education Week article reported that in the 2015-16 school year, "5.8% of the nation's 3.8 million teachers were physically attacked by a student." The Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics and the Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics show that in the 2011-12 academic year, there were a record 209,800 primary- and secondary-school teachers who reported being physically attacked by a student. A National Center for Education Statistics study found that 18% of the nation's schools accounted for 75% of the reported incidents of violence, and 6.6% accounted for half of all reported incidents. These are schools with predominantly black student populations. My guess is that part of the reasons black academic achievement is greater in conservative cities is that schools are less tolerant of crime whereas schools in progressive cities make excuses.


and this


For most people, education is one of the steppingstones out of poverty, and it has been a steppingstone for many black people. Today, decent education is just about impossible at many big-city public schools where violence, disorder, disrespect and assaults on teachers are routine.

The kind of disrespectful and violent behavior observed in many predominantly black schools is entirely new. Some have suggested that such disorder is part of black culture, but that is an insulting lie.

and this

That behavior and conduct is relatively new. Meet with black people in their 70s or older, even liberal politicians such as Charles Rangel (age 90) and Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson (85), Alcee Hastings (83) and Maxine Waters (82). Ask them whether their parents would have tolerated their assaulting and cursing of teachers or any other adult


==========


Williams also questioned  the need for the minimum wage policies that supposedly help low-income minorities


Supporters of a $15 minimum wage are now admitting that there will be job losses. "Why shouldn't we in fact accept job loss?" asks New School economics and urban policy professor David Howell, adding, "What's so bad about getting rid of crappy jobs, forcing employers to upgrade, and having a serious program to compensate anyone who is in the slightest way harmed by that?" Economic Policy Institute economist David Cooper says: "It could be that they spend more time unemployed, but their income is higher overall. If you were to tell me I could work fewer hours and make as much or more than I could have previously, that would be OK."

What's a "crappy job"? My guess is that many of my friends and I held the jobs Howell is talking about as teenagers during the late 1940s and '50s. During summers, we arose early to board farm trucks to New Jersey to pick blueberries. I washed dishes and mopped floors at Philadelphia's Horn & Hardart restaurant, helped unload trucks at Campbell Soup, shoveled snow, swept out stores, delivered packages and did similar low-skill, low-wage jobs. If today's arrogant elite were around to destroy these jobs through wage legislation and regulation, I doubt whether I and many other black youths would have learned the habits of work that laid the foundation for future success. Today's elite have little taste for my stepfather's admonition: Any kind of a job is better than begging and stealing.


Walter Williams also noted that the profit-motive of capitalism actually has some positive effects for us

from John Stossel
If pursuing profit is greed, economist Walter Williams told me, then greed is good, because it drives us to do many good things. “Those areas where people are motivated the most by greed are the areas that we’re the most satisfied with: supermarkets, computers, FedEx.” By contrast, areas “where people say we’re motivated by ‘caring’” — public education, public housing etc. — “are the areas of disaster in our country.... How much would get done,” Williams wondered, “if it all depended on human love and kindness?”


Star Parker on William's thoughts on the "morality of markets"   https://townhall.com/columnists/starparker/2020/12/09/dr-walter-williams-prophet-of-freedom-n2581244

He spoke about "the morality of markets." He put it this way in one interview: "The areas that we have the greatest satisfaction or the fewest complaints are places like the supermarket or the clothing store, or in computers or cell phones. And what's the motivation of the producers? It's for profit. But look at the areas where we are dissatisfied -- it's public education, it's the city sanitation department, it's the public transportation, it's the motor vehicles department. Look at the stated motivation in these areas: it's where there is caring but where there is no profit motive."

The profit motive, he continued, "forces the producer to try to find what people want, and to produce what they want. At the same time, it forces them to provide human wants in a way that economizes on the usage of scarce resources." 





Walter Williams also questioned the anti-gun agenda


What about the availability of guns? It turns out that for most of our history, a person could walk into hardware and department stores or a gun store, virtually anywhere in the United States, and purchase a rifle or pistol. The 1902 Sears mail-order catalog had 35 pages of firearm advertisements. Other catalogs and magazines from the 1940s, '50s and '60s were full of gun advertisements directed to both youngsters and parents. "What Every Parent Should Know When a Boy or Girl Wants a Gun" was published by the National Shooting Sports Foundation. Another magazine advertised "Get This Cowboy Carbine with Your Christmas Money." Just a few states even had age restrictions for buying guns. Private transfers of guns to juveniles were unrestricted. Often a 12th or 14th birthday present, from a father to his son, was a shiny new .22 caliber rifle.

Today, there is far less availability of shotguns, rifles and pistols than any time in our history. That historical fact should raise the question: Despite the greater accessibility to guns in previous decades, why wasn't there the kind of violence we see with today's far more restricted access to guns? Have rifles and pistols changed their behavior from yesteryear and they are now out committing mayhem and evil? To answer in the affirmative can be dismissed as pure lunacy. Thus, if guns haven't changed, then it must be that people have changed. Half-witted psychobabble such as stopping children from playing schoolyard games like cops 'n' robbers and cowboys 'n' Indians won't do much. Calling for more gun restrictions, gun-free zones and other measures have been for naught.

We must own up to the fact that laws and regulations alone cannot produce a civilized society. Morality is society's first line of defense against uncivilized behavior. Moral standards of conduct have been under siege in our country for over a half a century. Moral absolutes have been abandoned as guiding principles. We've been taught not to be judgmental, that one lifestyle or set of values is just as good as another. We no longer hold people accountable for their behavior and we accept excuse-making. Problems of murder, mayhem and other forms of anti-social behavior will continue until we regain our moral footing.


All of this might be a shocker if the only suggested reading on race relations, crime & economics you hear about are books by left-leaning authors like  Ibram Kendi or Michael Eric Dyson. This is not to dismiss all of their insights (some of which is valuable), but to note that they have nowhere near the monopoly on African-American thought. 

Williams passed away on 12/2/2020 at the age of 84. 

 

tributes to Walter Williams

his daughter Devon Williams: A Eulogy for My Father, Walter E. Williams (townhall.com)


by Thomas Sowell: https://townhall.com/columnists/thomassowell/2020/12/02/walter-e-williams-19362020-n2580965

by Larry Elder:  https://townhall.com/columnists/larryelder/2020/12/10/remembering-walter-williams-friend-and-mentor-n2581298

by Star Parker: https://townhall.com/columnists/starparker/2020/12/09/dr-walter-williams-prophet-of-freedom-n2581244

by Nick Gillespie:  https://reason.com/2020/12/02/i-just-do-my-own-thing-walter-williams-rip/


=========================


Dick Rowland



Dick Rowland was the founder of the Grassroot Institute, a libertarian think-tank in Hawaii.  This organization writes articles from a free-market perspective and many times opposes the latest policies of our mostly Democrat state government. 

 I mostly love the Grassroot Institute for opposing the Jones Act, the federal law that requires that all ships to goes between US ports must be American ships. This stupid law makes imports & the cost of living even more expensive than just merely because of long-distance shipping and our limited land availability.  This stupid law also hurts us in emergencies since it prevents non-US ships from going between US ports to deliver needed supplies. Also, no US ship has been able to deliver natural gas from Alaska to Hawaii.




Rowland moved to Hawaii from Texas when he was in the military in the 1970's. He later became an insurance executive here and a member of Hawaii's Libertarian Party.  He started the Grassroot Institute to promote libertarian-leaning thought beyond just running candidates for office. He was also a co-founder (along with the more conservative Malia Zimmerman) of Hawaii Reporter, an online news & opinion website.

(note: some of my writing appeared on Hawaii Reporter, though it's been years since I last had contact with them)


I did meet Rowland a few times since I had friends who were associated with the Hawaii Libertarian Party.  He did try to recruit me to be involved with Grassroot Institute, but I had other things going on, plus one of my friends claimed that Rowland didn't pay him what he was owed. 

Rowland spent the last few years of his life in Alabama where he lived until he died at the age of 90 on 11/28/2020.