A done deal

By
|
Posted on Jan 22 2009
Share

I am not surprised to learn that President Bush approved the marine monument. I’ve always suspected from the beginning that the monument is not for conservation, but for homeland security, military use and the enhancement of President Bush’s image. I especially do not believe the statements of Council of Environmental Quality chair James Connaughton and President Bush that the native islanders’ (Chamorro and Refalawash) concerns will be protected. The marine monument was a done deal from the beginning. Pew was only used, for over two years, to pave a pathway for President Bush to approve the marine monument. Chairman Connaughton and his group knew of Pew’s propaganda, but were never present to lend a helping hand, not until just a few months ago. It’s a very well executed plan!

I also do not believe Pew and their proponents when they profess that designation of the monument is in the best interest of the native islanders, and that we shouldn’t let it pass us by. “A win-win situation, job opportunities, we will be known all over the world, become rich and famous,” etc, etc… I’ve heard these types of remarks from “salesmen” too many times before! I also know that it has misled lots of people, including our leaders, both local and federal.

I am equally disappointed by our elected leader’s lack of a strong united stand in protecting what is rightfully ours. A third of our ancestral land and ocean represents a big chunk that has been taken away from our already small islands. Perhaps we have forgotten the teachings of our ancestors that the land, ocean, and our people will always be our most precious natural resources. Our islands are but a grain of sand in the middle of the ocean, and our resources are different from those of the continental United States and other big countries. The exploitation of natural gas, oil, minerals, diamonds, gold, etc., are contrary to the teachings of our ancestors and these activities contribute a lot to global warming. They even kill and destroy each other for such things!

Is it true that the federal government will return our submerged lands should we agree to the marine monument? Returning something that is ours in exchange for something that is also ours? Did our elected leaders fall for this, or is it the same old federal government’s pathetic attitude where they made themselves believe that one size shoe fits the whole world? It seems to me like, “in search of weapons of mass destruction.”

The 1906 Antiquities Act that President Bush utilized should be stricken from the book. It’s an outdated and very inhumane Act. I still can’t bring myself to believe that, with a stroke of the President’s pen, an area will become a monument without consultation or due regard to the people there, especially to those that will be affected the most. Needless to say, human rights, be it native islanders, American Indians, or others, must be respected.

The manner in which the marine monument proposal was presented to us has been especially insulting for me, to our traditional leaders, and was very disrespectful to the Association of Pacific Island Legislature, Micronesian Chief Executive Summit, Guam Fisherman’s Co-op, 29th Guam Legislature, Rep. Madeline Bordallo, and others that stood firm with us in our belief in protecting what is rightfully ours. I do not believe that the Native Islanders are so arrogant not to share whatever small resources they may have. I believe that all we wanted to say was which resource should be shared and how much.

Our relation with the United States under the Covenant is that we’re neither a state, union, territory, but we are in a “political union” with the United States. Does the 1906 Antiquities Act apply to us under this relationship since we are not a territory of the United States?

I guess whatever questions we may ask, our plans for our islands will no longer be valid since they’re in the hands of the federal government. Perhaps the new administration will listen to our concerns.

[B]Lino M. Olopai[/B] [I]Chalan Kanoa, Saipan[/I]

Disclaimer: Comments are moderated. They will not appear immediately or even on the same day. Comments should be related to the topic. Off-topic comments would be deleted. Profanities are not allowed. Comments that are potentially libelous, inflammatory, or slanderous would be deleted.