• Drowning is inevitable • Cowards stomped my ‘No Smart Meter’ sign Drowning is inevitable There is a famous expression: The best swimmers are many times the one who drown. Why? Because they spend a good part of their lives
• Drowning is inevitable • Cowards stomped my ‘No Smart Meter’ sign
Drowning is inevitable
There is a famous expression: The best swimmers are many times the one who drown.
Why? Because they spend a good part of their lives in the water, whereas a non-swimmer is hardly ever in the water.
No matter how many brochures are distributed or how many times you replay an endless loop video of water safety, there will inevitably still be drownings.
Accidents happen, it is part of life, part of the divinity of the spiritual realm. Many believe when it’s your time, it’s your time.
The only way to stop accidental drownings is to not go into the water, however we can cut down on the accidents by a simple remedy that is free to all, common sense.
James “Kimo” Rosen, Kapa‘a
Cowards stomped my ‘No Smart Meter’ sign
The other day I was cutting my front yard grass when I discovered my “NO SMART METER” sign had been literally ripped off the KIUC electric meter, and my plant near the meter had been purposely stomped on.
I could tell my sign hand been ripped off by human hands and not the wind because it was a grommet to wire attachment and would take a hurricane to detach it.
I could tell my plant had been purposely stomped on and broken because of the defined heel print in the dirt made by either a shoe or boot.
The only people who would do this is someone who does not like people whom protest KIUC’s shortcomings in the area of safety, logic, fairness and intellect, and in this case, perhaps, tact, as no telling who the perpetrator is employed/directed by.
I find this incident very, for a lack of better words, brown shirtish in nature, if not mobish or Hitler-ish.
I cannot help but wonder if someone is trying to, perhaps, send a message but lack the capacity to deliver that message in any other way but to make an effort to physically intimidate, which doesn’t work with me.
To the person or persons whom did this I say I am open for business when it comes this kind of action. I can take this to the bridge, so come ahead at your own risk.
Has anyone else had the same thing happen on their property?
Chris Schaefer, Kapa‘a