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Hello again from the ongoing climate crisis!
Kaniela Ing is a Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) organizer and former state legislator who now works as the national director of the Green New Deal Network. Kaniela joins us just days after a fire ripped through the island of Maui, decimating the town of Lāhainā and killing a yet unknown number of people. (10:40) Kaniela tells us about his relationship to the affected area and community; (13:55) the systemic causes of this tragedy, including aging infrastructure, theft of land and water, and climate change; and (24:25) what needs to happen to both support people in acute crisis and put those same people at the center of our fight for a better world.
In this episode, we ask:
Is this a climate turning point in Hawaiʻi?
Why is a narrative of resistance, not resilience, more appropriate to this moment? What is the role of Native people in this resistance?
For more:
* Donate to the Maui Fire Relief + Recovery Fundraiser
* Watch Kaniela’s interview with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!
* Listen to a parallel TTSG discussion about Guam with writer Julian Aguon, from March 2021: Loving Guam, fighting empire
Subscribe on Patreon or Substack to support the show and join our Discord community. You can also follow us on Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter, and email us at [email protected].
By Time To Say Goodbye4.5
410410 ratings
Hello again from the ongoing climate crisis!
Kaniela Ing is a Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) organizer and former state legislator who now works as the national director of the Green New Deal Network. Kaniela joins us just days after a fire ripped through the island of Maui, decimating the town of Lāhainā and killing a yet unknown number of people. (10:40) Kaniela tells us about his relationship to the affected area and community; (13:55) the systemic causes of this tragedy, including aging infrastructure, theft of land and water, and climate change; and (24:25) what needs to happen to both support people in acute crisis and put those same people at the center of our fight for a better world.
In this episode, we ask:
Is this a climate turning point in Hawaiʻi?
Why is a narrative of resistance, not resilience, more appropriate to this moment? What is the role of Native people in this resistance?
For more:
* Donate to the Maui Fire Relief + Recovery Fundraiser
* Watch Kaniela’s interview with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!
* Listen to a parallel TTSG discussion about Guam with writer Julian Aguon, from March 2021: Loving Guam, fighting empire
Subscribe on Patreon or Substack to support the show and join our Discord community. You can also follow us on Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter, and email us at [email protected].

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