Frankly we haven't exactly been the President of the Kimo Rosen
Fan Club over the years. We don't think we've even read one of his
columns. Ever since he was virtually the only one on Kaua`i riding
the Superferry bandwagon his markedly wise-ass-settler views have
been widely viewed as insulting to the host culture and local
community.
But all schadenfreude aside it's outrageous that he has not only
been forced
to apologize for an innocuous "joke" on Facebook but
the local newspaper has taken his weekly column away from him after
he wrote that the “(b)est thing we could do is get 1,000 gallons of
gas and burn it down,” referring to the old ruins of the Coco Palms
hotel- a day or so before fire destroyed it.
The paper has announced that "Rosen was a contributing
columnist for The Garden Island. His column has been
suspended in light of recent events."
They say the only sin in crafting a joke is not being funny. We're
sure we've been guilty of that but we can't help thinking "there
but for the grace" of whatever-it-is that bestows grace. Had we
been the one caught in the wheel of unfortunate timing we'd have
probably told the press to shove it and hung out "Psychic For
Hire" shingle.
But then telling the the local paper to shove their column is
something we've never had the distinct pleasure of doing, having been
pen-sona non grata there since the day legendary editor Jean Holmes
retired.
Rosen has apparently chosen to grovel, quoted by the paper as
saying:
“It was coincidence and eerie timing that the Coco Palms would
go up in flames after making the comment,” Rosen wrote in a
statement. “I have learned from my mistake and will not be
commenting anymore on any Facebook pages besides those I know
personally. I am thinking of not commenting and just sticking to the
“Like” button. I am truly sorry, especially to (Coco Palms
care taker) Mr. Bob Jasper. I would never consider such an evil act
as arson. The irony is I hate fireworks and anything that has to do
with fire. I consider myself an honest man and could never live with
myself if I was ever part of anything so destructive...
“I have learned and hope to pass this on to everyone, that words
are powerful and should be measured carefully,” he wrote. “Mahalo
for giving me this space to express myself. Thank you TGI and
my apologies to the Mr. Bob Jasper and the Coco Palms community.”
It's not like he pulled a Donald Sterling... or for that matter a
Ben Cayetano who was chastised
by Dave Shapiro today for using the phrase "let's call a spade a
spade" in referring to President Obama's Syria policy- also on
Facebook.
Rosen simply gave voice to what 99% of Kaua`i residents have
thought on one occasion or another, as he pointed
out the day before in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.
Having not come across one person who doesn't think it was arson,
that apparently makes everyone just as "guilty" as Rosen
although what it is we're guilty of isn't quite apparent.
The fact is that arson by the owners seems unlikely since the fire
is going to add a huge expense to any dismantling effort since the
asbestos removal phase is going to be that much costlier of a
nightmare... although a Star-Advertiser story
says that Jasper told them that the elements that were destroyed in
the blaze- apparently the lagoons building, offices and breezeway-
were to be preserved in the latest attempt to eventually reopen the
resort... the first time such details have been "revealed."
Many had assumed the place would have been be razed and replaced
but the old original Iniki rebuilding ordinance- which was extended
yet again by the Kaua`i County Council last year just for the current
iteration of the rebuilding effort- would seem to restrict that and
actually pertains to structures that were destroyed "50% or
less."
How that affects the current plans is probably going to take a
team of lawyers to figure out.
We can't say we'll miss Kimo's weekly non-sequitors and banal
banter. But then we wouldn’t miss anything important if today's
"all-the-news about churches, dogs, jogging and the Rotary Club,
all-the-time" from a bunch of misinformed malahini were to
disappear either.
Although, as has been the case with the current iteration of the
local Kaua`i newspaper, less is seemingly more, Kimo might just have
been the most informative and witty thing in the paper.
No comments:
Post a Comment