What A Day - Maui Residents Flee Deadly Fires
Episode Date: August 10, 2023Raging wildfires on the Hawaiian island of Maui have killed six people and displaced thousands more. Hundreds of homes and businesses have been destroyed as well, including within the historic town of... Lahaina.Leaders of eight South American countries that share the Amazon rainforest wrapped up a two-day summit in Belem, Brazil yesterday. By the end of the gathering, the group – known as the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization, or ACTO – adopted a “new and ambitious shared agenda” to protect the rainforest, but it fell short of demands from some environmentalists and Indigenous groups.And in headlines: Ecuador presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was assassinated Wednesday, the Biden administration released new rules to restrict U.S. investments in certain high-tech industries in China, and six Idaho college professors and two teachers’ unions sued the state over a law that limits public funds for abortion-related speech.Show Notes:Help those affected by the fires in MauiMaui Mutual Aid Fund - https://www.bit.ly/mauimutualaideHawai'i' Community Foundation Maui Strong Fund - https://www.hawaiicommunityfoundation.org/maui-strongFundraiser for Pūnana Leo o Lāhinā whose school site at Waiola Church, which burned down: https://www.instagram.com/p/CvvWWoqSl9V/Fundraiser for Nā ‘Āikane O Maui Cultural Center, which burned down: https://www.instagram.com/p/CvvJeNzy2WM/?img_index=1 What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, August 10th.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Travelle Anderson.
And this is What A Day, where we hope whoever won the $1.58 billion lottery jackpot in Florida is trans.
Yeah, I just want that to make Rhonda Santis as mad as humanly possible.
And then maybe you can have a little bit of the leftovers, whoever won, to get the fuck out of Florida.
Feels like that might be useful.
Absolutely.
On today's show, your takeaways from the recent summit to protect the Amazon rainforest.
Plus, reporters found a memo that lays out the plot by Trump's team to use fake electors to
steal the 2020 election.
But first, raging wildfires on
the Hawaiian island of Maui have killed six people and displaced thousands more. As of our recording
time at 9.30 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday, the fires are still ongoing, so the full extent of the damage
is not yet known. But hundreds of homes and businesses have been destroyed, including within the historic town of Lahaina,
which is home to much of Maui's tourism, as well as thousands of residents.
This is Clint Hansen, a resident of Kihei,
who is driving around the island trying to help people,
describing the destruction to MSNBC from his car.
It's really kind of shocking to think about the places where you grew up to just no longer
exist, to be fearful about your friends, whether or not they're still alive because you can't
communicate with them. Watching footage of people burned alive in the streets and people panicking
for their lives as they drive through flashpoints where if they were to step out of the car,
there's very little chance of them surviving.
Take a deep breath there. So what more can you tell us about the evacuation and rescue efforts?
The fires and the road closures have trapped residents and tourists alike, forcing some on the island's western side to flee by swimming into the Pacific Ocean where they were rescued
by the U.S. Coast Guard. So, so bad,
moving so quickly and so catastrophic that these people are forced to jump into the ocean just to
avoid this fire, which is wild to even think about. According to the island's mayor, over 2,100
people were in evacuation shelters and an additional 1,800 sheltered overnight on Tuesday
in Maui's airport.
And news outlets say that six fire victims were flown into the neighboring island of Oahu,
and some of them are burn patients in critical condition.
Yeah, some of the photos and videos from Maui, they look devastating as well,
like a scene out of a movie.
What more do we know about all of this? Yeah, so there's no official count yet for the number of structures destroyed by these fires.
But Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz said on X, once known as Twitter, that Lahaina is, quote,
almost totally burnt to the ground. Here is another clip from Richard Olsten, who works
in helicopter tours in Maui. He describes what he and his team saw
yesterday morning to the local Kiss FM radio station. Take a listen. There's hundreds of homes
burned to the ground, hundreds of people that are displaced with no place to go. But the place
literally looked like a war zone, like it had been bombed. I mean, the structures, there's just
nothing left. All the front street is gone. The harbor, the boats are burned down to the water.
Yeah, it's sounding like complete devastation there.
What do we know about how this fire started in the first place?
So there are no reports yet about what exactly started the blaze,
although the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization notes that humans are responsible for over 98% of the wildfires in
the state. So we will stay tuned for any more details that we get in the coming days there.
Also though, climate change has made the state much more prone to wildfires in recent years.
Hawaii is typically known for its tropical climate, but leading up to this, Maui has actually
been extremely dry with much of the western side
of the island, which is where these fires are, experiencing drought conditions. That, coupled
with strong winds from Hurricane Dora, which is moving across the Pacific Ocean hundreds of miles
to the south of Hawaii, has fueled these fires and allowed them to move extremely quickly. The fires
also took out cell service and 911 service on many parts of the island.
So you have this very terrifying, very quickly changing situation,
coupled with extreme communication difficulties beyond anyone's wildest nightmares, really.
Hawaii's governor, Josh Green, said that it's almost certain that the cost of the damage from these wildfires
will be in the billions of dollars. Yesterday, FEMA's regional administrator authorized the use
of federal funds to help Hawaii fight the fires. The winds have also gone down a bit, so hopefully
that will help as well. But the scenes from the island are just truly, truly devastating. What
once was known as paradise around the world is really just apocalyptic.
Yeah. And for our listeners, wherever they are, what might be the best way for them to help
locals? It's a good question. I'm glad you asked. So we are including a list of resources,
including the Maui Mutual Aid Fund in our show notes. If you're able to contribute,
it is so desperately needed by so
many at this time. You know, contributions to these people on the ground is a way to ensure
that this help will get to people as fast as possible. And of course, you know, many people
here have lost their homes, their livelihood, and they'll need shelter as the island rebuilds. So
now is not the time to plan leisure travel to Maui. Obviously, you wouldn't do it
in the midst of the fires. But in the coming days, weeks, months, when the spotlight is off Maui,
but they are still recovering and still need time and space, don't plan your vacation. Don't
take the precious hotel rooms, food, and resources that are needed by local people at this time. That is just
something really important to keep in mind. This will be a process that will take a lot of time.
Absolutely. And thank you for that, Priyanka. Staying with some environmental news,
the summit has wrapped between leaders of the eight South American countries that share the
Amazon rainforest. They met in the Brazilian city of Balem over the last couple days,
and their goal, as we've mentioned on the show before,
was to come up with a list of unified policies and measures
to stop the destruction of the rainforest,
which, according to Al Jazeera, is, quote,
a crucial buffer against climate change
that experts warn is being pushed to the brink of collapse.
Here's Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da
Silva speaking at the summit, translated by Sky News. It has never been so urgent to resume and
expand this cooperation. The challenges of our age and the opportunities that arise demand joint
action. So this group is known as the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization, or ACTO,
and includes leaders from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname,
and Venezuela. By the end of their summit yesterday, they did adopt a, quote,
new and ambitious shared agenda, but it stops short of what some environmentalists and indigenous
groups had hoped
for. Got it. Okay, so before we get into that, I would love if you could break it down for us.
What exactly was agreed to at the summit? Yeah, so the group's final joint declaration,
which they're calling the Ba Lam Declaration, is a nearly 10,000-word roadmap of sorts that
aims to protect the Amazon. They asserted indigenous rights and
protections while also agreeing to cooperate on water management, health, common negotiating
positions at climate summits, and sustainable development. They also established a science
body to meet annually and produce reports about the Amazon, similar to the United Nations
International Panel on Climate Change. And then there's an alliance for combating forest destruction that was also created.
But that alliance doesn't involve any actual specific goals.
Each country has been left to pursue their own goals, which is one of the many things
that environmentalists are up in arms about.
Got it.
I mean, very easy to see why anything short of a strong, explicit commitment here is disappointing.
It's hard to hold people to if you don't actually state what you're being held to.
So can you remind us what is at stake with the rainforest and its future and just why this is so important?
As we've covered on the show before, the effects of climate change are literally everywhere and it's getting worse by the day. Between that and human
cause destruction, up to 20% of the Amazon rainforest has disappeared in the last 50 years.
And because it's so bad, there really needs to be significant sweeping commitments worldwide
to minimize the severity of what could happen. For example, Brazil has already pledged to end illegal deforestation by 2030.
Activists wanted all of the ACTO countries to commit to the same, and they also wanted the
countries to adopt Colombia's pledge to halt new oil exploration. Some of their other gripes
include there not being a shared fixed deadline by which to end illegal gold mining in the region,
and the group also failed to establish
as a shared goal having zero deforestation by 2030. Got it. Okay, so definitely some
disappointments. What exactly does it say that the activist and indigenous groups' demands
weren't fully met here? Well, it says that the commitment to combating climate change,
you know, isn't as strong as perhaps it should be, and that the group isn't fully aligned on some of those key issues I just mentioned.
Especially since, for added context, this is only the fourth time in the ACTO's 45-year history that they've even met, and this week's meeting was the first convening of the group in 14 years. That said, the group is hoping that the Balem Declaration will be a shared call to
arms of sorts for the major United Nations climate conference known as COP28 happening in November,
especially as the declaration also calls on wealthier nations to help fund some of these
efforts to protect the Amazon, since the Amazon is such a vital resource for the entire globe.
As Bolivian President Luis Arce said,
Of course, we will be staying on the climate change beat because it's super necessary.
But that is the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
An opposition candidate in Ecuador's upcoming presidential election was assassinated yesterday.
Fernando Villa Vicencio, who was fiercely anti-corruption, was shot dead at a political rally at a school north of the country's capital, Quito.
But at the time of recording, it was not yet known who killed him. The first round of a presidential election is set to take place on August 20th, just 10 days from now. President Guillermo Lasso said he has called an urgent meeting to discuss the killing. He wrote
on Twitter, now called X, quote, my solidarity and condolences to his wife and his daughters
for his memory and his fight. I assure you that this crime will not go unpunished.
We have two updates on Trump's attempt to overturn the 2020 election.
First, it was revealed yesterday that prosecutors working for special counsel Jack Smith
were granted a search warrant to look into Trump's Twitter earlier this year.
The warrant is part of the investigation into Trump's attempt to overturn the 2020 election, but it's currently unknown what prosecutors are specifically looking
for. Some experts speculate that the prosecutors will focus on non-public aspects of the account,
such as drafts that were never publicized. The prosecutors received permission from the judge
to not reveal the warrant to Trump to prevent Trump from potentially destroying evidence. Twitter disapproved of the decision to keep the warrant a secret and did not
comply with court orders until three days after the deadline, resulting in a $350,000 fine for
the company. And for the other update, last week's indictment revealed a previously unseen memo from
the Trump campaign that outlines a three-pronged plan to
prevent Joe Biden's victory on January 6th. The letter, which was written by Trump lawyer Kenneth
Cheesebrough in December 2020, featured a plot that would, quote, buy the Trump campaign more
time to win litigation that would deprive Biden of electoral votes and or add to Trump's column.
I too am curious.
I would love to see the drafts, please.
Whether or not they find relevant things
to their investigation,
I hope they just release whatever he had
because I'd love to know what didn't make the cut
for his Twitter.
Because a lot of things shouldn't have.
Did, right.
What was he like?
No, can't do this.
Right.
Where are his boundaries at?
Would love to know. Bet there are zero. But anyways.
The Biden administration released new rules yesterday to restrict U.S. investments in certain high tech industries in China as a way to protect national security.
Investments between the two countries fell sharply the last several years.
But U.S. venture capital and private equity firms continue to seek out
chances to invest in China's booming tech sector. Biden's restrictions specifically target that.
Emily Benson from the Center for Strategic and International Studies told the New York Times
that, quote, there is mounting evidence that U.S. capital is being used to advance Chinese
military capabilities and that the U.S. lacks a sufficient means of combating this
activity. China has made its frustrations with this decision known, but Biden officials have
defended it, saying that these restrictions are all about protecting national security
and not aimed at damaging the Chinese economy. California Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein
was hospitalized for a short time Tuesday afternoon after a fall, according to a spokesperson.
Feinstein had a, quote, minor fall in her San Francisco home where she tripped over a chair
in her kitchen. She suffered no injuries, thankfully, but was taken to the hospital
out of an abundance of caution and remained there for an hour or two until her scans came back clear.
It's the latest incident in a series of health issues for the Senate's oldest member.
Let us remind everybody, she is 90 years old, so not a problem for anyone's grandparents,
you know, your run-of-the-mill citizen.
But between that and her many health troubles, just a cause for concern among many.
Concerns for Feinstein's health and ability to serve in Congress have grown recently,
and even some House Democrats have called on her to retire,
citing that her extended medical absence earlier this year
slowed the process of confirming judicial nominees,
which is a very real and tangible consequence.
She relied heavily on her staffers to carry out duties
while she recovered from a severe case of shingles from February until May. Senator Feinstein is a trailblazer, an icon really, and she, like every
90-year-old that is living, deserves the time and space to recover from these things, deserves some
time to relax. Yes. Doesn't have to do it on the floor of the U.S. Senate. Retirement. Retirement
sounds nice. Listen, if I'm still working at 90, something is
wrong. Yeah, it's bad. Don't do that. Rappertory Lanes was sentenced to 10 years in prison for
shooting Grammy winner Megan Thee Stallion in the foot in 2020. Lanes was found guilty of three
charges in December of last year, including assault with a semi-automatic firearm, illegal
possession of a firearm, and discharging a gun with gross
negligence. The shooting happened back in July of 2020 after they left a party at Kylie Jenner's
home. The two artists got into an argument, and as Megan walked away, Lanes shot at her feet and,
according to Megan's testimony during the trial, shouted at her to dance. She was later hospitalized
and underwent surgery. At Tuesday's sentencing, Lane said to the judge that the plaintiff was his friend and, quote,
someone I still care for to this day.
Ew.
Megan was not in court for the sentencing, but in a written statement said, quote,
for once, the defendant must be forced to face the full consequences of his heinous actions and face justice.
A thousand percent.
Megan is in the right here.
Tory Lanez, disgusting human being,
as is everybody who was supporting him
and like trashing Megan, who was shot.
And also, little focus on detail here.
Why is Kylie Jenner throwing a party in July of 2020
when all of us were fucking scared we were gonna die?
I don't know.
Just asking the questions here.
Well, you remember the celebrities weren't following all of the rules because they, you know, had money.
Right.
And access to all of the things that they needed.
So they weren't hoarding toilet paper like everyone else.
If you remember that.
All too well, sadly. And finally, in Idaho, six college professors and two teachers unions sued the state on Tuesday to challenge a law that they argue violates their First Amendment right to academic speech.
At issue is the No Public Funds for Abortion Act, or NPFAA, a 2021 law which prohibits the use of public funds to, quote, promote or counsel in favor of abortion. Public employees
who break that law could be fired, fined, imprisoned, and required to repay any quote
unquote misused funds. The lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Idaho argues that the law is quote,
simultaneously sweeping and unclear and quote, violates the First Amendment by banning academic speech that
could be construed as supporting abortion. The case includes a Boise State University professor
of social work and five University of Idaho professors who teach political science, philosophy,
American literature, and journalism. Because of the law's vague terms, the suit says that
educators in the state have already changed or removed course
materials, and one professor said that they did so out of fear of prosecution. The plaintiffs in
the case are asking the court to declare the law unconstitutional under the First and Fourteenth
Amendments and to bar its enforcement as it relates to discussions about abortion in the
classroom. Yeah, I've been saying since I graduated high school that I was at a disadvantage
because of how horrible South Carolina's education system is. And now with all of these new rules
popping up in various different places, I'm concerned about the future, Priyanka.
Yeah. The kids aren't going to be getting even the horrible education that I got. They're getting
worse. On one hand, it's like a little egalitarian, like everyone's getting a shitty education that I got. They're getting worse. On one hand, it's like a little egalitarian,
like everyone's getting a shitty education that's not sufficient. But like, I don't think this is
what we were going for. Absolutely not. We were trying to rectify that. Absolutely not. And those
are the headlines. One more thing before we go. If you're like most Americans, your top two concerns
are one, the right to an abortion being taken away by a
radical GOP party, and two, beer getting warm too quickly. Right. The Cricket Store's Bros for Ro
collection can kill both those birds with one stone, and that stone is a koozie. No matter
your gender, you can say, hell nah, bro, to restrictions on abortion access with bros for road tees, pint glasses, and koozies.
Check it out at Cricut.com slash store.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, lend a hand to those in Hawaii, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just memos by Team Trump like me, well, today's also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe.
I'm Trevelle Anderson.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And why can't we win the lottery?
Seriously, I can't think of a more deserving duo.
I could do a lot of things with $1.6 billion, okay?
Yeah, you know how many dates of Taylor Swift and Beyonce we could go to with $1.5 billion?
See the whole tour.
Every city.
I'm traveling with Beyonce.
Okay?
It's you, me, and Blue Ivy just at every stop.
Well, today's a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Our show's producers, Itzy King-Denia, Raven Yamamoto, and Natalie Bettendorf are our associate producers.
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