Monday, April 29, 2013
THE LONELY GURGLE
THE LONELY GURGLE: Anyone who
has perused this space recently would think that the spate of 11
drowning on Kaua`i this year and the tourism industry's tepid
response is an obsession of ours worthy of Melville novel.
Well, dial 1-800-Ishmael. It's
apparently been left to us to point out the less-than-in-your-face
visitor industry tactics that have not only failed to make tourists
sit up and take notice of the fact that DEATH AWAITS YOU OFFSHORE- or
even on the edge of it in a few cases- but have actually obscured the
dangers that await visitors in the water, fearing that an effectively
alarming effort would cause visitors to stay away in droves.
But this past week or so our in-box has
been inundated by readers from Florida to Seattle with copies of an
article
actually calling out local efforts to play down the dangers of the
ocean.
So what local publication was it that
had the guts to publish a piece that challenges the number one
private enterprise in the islands and was so shocking it got picked
up across the nation?
The answer? There wasn't a one... a
local one at least.
Rather, it was from the Associated
Press (AP) wire service, a national- indeed international-
enterprise. The article didn't even have a "dateline"
indicating it could have been written anywhere.
Now that the cat is out of the bag on
the mainland it has apparently become almost impossible for our
"newspaper of record"- The Honolulu Star-Advertiser- to
ignore that side of the story after running half a dozen "they're
doing all they can" pieces.
Today they published-
behind their "pay-wall" no less- not a local
investigative no-holds-barred expose of the way the tourism industry
is murdering tourists for money but the week-plus-old AP piece that
everyone except Hawai`i denizens has been seeing for more than a
week.
Of course not to be outdone, Civil
Beat, the on-line competitor to the S-A, posted a link to a copy of
the AP piece from "News12" in Brooklyn, NY... as part of a
blog
post in which a dozen other links to local news items appeared.
We previously written a series
of posts, detailing, among other things, the slick and
particularly un-scarry "oh by the way- don't drown" video
produced by Mr. Tourism, former Councilmember and still TV star
Dickie Chang and gushingly supported by both the Kaua`i Visitors'
Bureau and the Kaua`i Ocean Safety Council as well as other tourism
industry big-wigs.
Our basic contention
has been that, as we said in early March,:
The message we're getting (from the
tourism industry and kow-towing "ocean safety" crowd) is
"we're doing all we can and we're going to do more to make sure
we send a non-threatening, non-scarey message."
Somewhere there's a disconnect here
because wherever we go all we hear is people saying that the tourism
industry is responsible and needs to change the content of their
warnings, not just put up more and bigger TV screens at the airport
baggage claim showing beautiful ocean scenes and a whispered
voice-over saying "please try to be careful."
The old "if in doubt, don’t
go out" adage is obviously not working. Is it to the point where
we need ads with pictures of the bloated corpses of drowning victims
with something like "The ocean is a killer- this could be you"
written across them?
Is it possible to go too far in the
other direction? Probably. But the answer to sending out an
ineffective message is not to simply make sure that message is
repeated more often in more places.
As to the AP article itself it achieves
many of its goal through understatement. But this quote from State
Rep. Tom Brower (D, Waikiki-Ala
Moana-Kakaako) is shocking for the fact that he actually gave voice
to what we've been assuming all the other mucky-mucks are thinking.
According to the article:
Some legislators think the proposed
video might unnecessarily raise fears or hurt the state's idyllic
reputation among tourists.
"You don't want to be on a
plane and see people getting eaten by sharks..." He added that
ocean safety education is important, but "you don't want to beat
people over the head with it."
No- better they die than not come, eh
Tom?
He's not alone. The AP goes into detail
about how the legislature did do something- they passed a non-binding
resolution politely asking the airlines to play that half-hearted
"nothing to see here" Chang video.
While some airlines hemmed and hawed
and basically said "you first" to each other, they couldn't
even get a comment out of the rest as to why they won't play it
on-board their flights and have left it for Kaua`i County to play it
in the Lihu`e airport baggage-claim area- where tourists always want
to linger and watch videos instead of grabbing their bags and getting
the hell out of there and into the ocean... where they can
drown-in-peace.
There has been a respite in the
drownings of late- apparently even the tourism industry’s best
efforts couldn't keep visitors from hearing about this year's ocean
die-in.
But the all-powerful grip of the
visitor industry on matters of life and death remains the county's
dirty little "pay no attention to the man behind the screen"
official state secret that will undoubtedly take more lives once the
current hub-bub dies down.
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3 comments:
Visitors and travelers don't always know that they're actually kind of spaced out when they travel. Even though it's obvious that they come here to space out. They may get intoxicated or in an enchanted place in their mind or exhausted from working just to go on vacation. They don't need gory pictures, just the facts. People die on vacation, by falling off cliffs, jumping off cliffs into water and swimming. I don't think we are that special. People die on vacation all over the world. Some peoples souls may come to die in paradise they should know these things, along with the fact our island is sprayed
with pesticides and we have open air experimental GMO engineering.
Andy,why aren'y you submitting this stuff to TGI? Even if you don't care for them at least your great column will be reads by many more than just your blog.
"Everyone always has someone to blame for their mishap, people need to take responsibility, it's not the state or county's fault when someone drowns. I am guessing almost every accidental death by a tourist results in some sort of lawsuit. Families of the diseased victims will say it's the States or Counties fault for not posting a sign, it's the visitor guide for telling people to go to dangerous spots... Who's fault is it when you run into a tree? It ain't the tree's fault. People need to accept responsibility and use common sense.
On the north shore of Maui, I constantly see clueless visitors going out (shakily) on their unfamiliar windsurf boards or SUP in conditions that are dangerous.
I usually try to diplomatically say, "it's not really a good day to go out - kinda dangerous" but since I'm holding a paddle in my hand and going out myself, they rarely believe me :-)
But there's a big difference between an experienced paddler who is ma'a to the area and a beginning SUPer or windsurfer blithely taking off over the reef to danger.
We are all the time rescuing these guys who even when their lives are in danger, absolutely REFUSE to believe it!
So many times we've had people out beyond the reef in big surf, clinging to their windsurf equipment as darkness falls, refusing to leave it.
We have to be blunt with them. "Either you let us take you in and lose your equipment or we'll leave you here and you'll lose your equipment AND your life."
It puts us in danger when they dilly dally and hesitate. But they still absolutely refuse to believe they're in danger of losing their life.
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