Danny De Gracia: The Legislature Needs To Cool It On New Taxes And Regulations
Hawaii lawmakers are acting like the state has money to tax and room to breathe, but we鈥檙e all just gasping for air.
February 6, 2023 · 5 min read
About the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Hawaii lawmakers are acting like the state has money to tax and room to breathe, but we鈥檙e all just gasping for air.
This year鈥檚 legislative session has launched with lawmakers who seemingly have something to prove ideologically.
So far, we have seen bills for Hawaii air travel, micromanagement , more and the possibility of , just to name a few.
Now I鈥檓 sure if this were some high school honor society club for future aspiring government leaders, our legislators would all get first place blue ribbons for being ideal liberals. Please, give them all a round of golf claps because they鈥檙e writing lofty bills trying to implement everything that the ivory tower textbooks say we鈥檙e supposed to do.
There鈥檚 only one problem. This is the real world we鈥檙e living in, and our Legislature is acting like Hawaii is big enough, wealthy enough or economically diversified enough to be so picky and bossy in its regulatory approach to the marketplace.
Hawaii is a tiny archipelago isolated in the middle of the world鈥檚 largest ocean. We host tourists, grow some agricultural products and have, as our state鈥檚 chief export, an exodus of young, smart, talented people to the mainland.
Correct me if I鈥檓 wrong, but I don鈥檛 exactly see Hawaii as one of the nation鈥檚 top economic producers. You don鈥檛 buy Boeing 777s from Hawaii, you fly here in one. Bishop Street consists of some notable financial institutions, but it is not by any stretch a Wall Street, and money always sleeps in Honolulu. We鈥檝e got a great public university, but, come on, do you see them inventing the majority of market-moving, disruptive technologies that are driving this century? I don鈥檛 think so.
A 鈥渞ich鈥 person living in a Hawaii Kai gated area with their cramped 2,000-square-foot house, two $80,000 European luxury cars in the garage and a precocious child who goes to a snobby, overpriced private school is what we like to call in my hometown of San Antonio 鈥渕iddle class.鈥
This state, in truth, consists mostly of people who are barely making by, barely saving any money and who only think they鈥檙e rich but are, with regards to things of actual value, very poor.
And it is from this already overworked, overburdened, overtaxed population that we want to erect a California or Massachusetts-style bureaucracy.
We want to regulate more, tax more, ban more and demand more from everything and everyone 鈥 except, God forbid, our own government. You guys and gals writing all the bills at the Legislature act like this state has money to tax and room to breathe, but let me tell you something, we鈥檙e all gasping for air here.
Just why does everyone in Hawaii want to run for office? It is because everyone here knows that Hawaii is a palace economy, where the only businesses, nonprofits or labor organizations that actually accomplish anything of note are the ones that get tax subsidies, preferential exemptions or contracts from the state or counties.
鈥淪uccess鈥 in Hawaii is the exception, not the rule, and the real rule governing this place seems to quietly be that 鈥.鈥
And this is why when I look at measures like Senate Bill 925, which establishes a wealth tax for 鈥渢he most wealthy,鈥 I worry about the direction Hawaii is going because we all know 鈥渢he most wealthy鈥 never pay taxes to begin with, despite all of the taxes that already exist.
They don鈥檛 pay taxes because they do activities that have the blessings of government to exempt them from taxes.
Instead, laws that give the government power to take a clipboard and assess from A to Z the worth of purportedly 鈥渞ich鈥 individuals end up being used as future precedent to do the same thing to poor people.
You let the government tax 鈥渞ich鈥 people and that will eventually be walked back to where it falls on everyone one day, under the excuse of 鈥渨e need the money to pay for such-and-such project鈥 or 鈥渆veryone just needs to pay their fair share to protect (fill in the blank).鈥
On Friday, my car broke down on the freeway and a local Hawaiian tow truck driver came to assist me. Without me even prompting him, he began to think out loud while working on my car about how everything was more expensive, more inconvenient and more confusing than ever. He also said he felt betrayed by our elected leadership. I couldn鈥檛 argue with him.
Our legislators need to back off and come down from the clouds with their policy mindset. They may think themselves to be mini-members of U.S. Congress, passing important laws, upholding lofty ideals, making ideological history with their black felt tip signature pens. But in reality, they鈥檙e just a gaggle of underpaid, overhyped minor elected officials in the same boat as the rest of us.
Hawaii needs to relax on the regulations, relax on the bans, relax on the virtue signaling and just let people live their lives in peace here. If we want to really increase equity and give people prosperity, we need to stop punishing success, stop thwarting personal ownership and stop acting like we know what鈥檚 best to do with someone else鈥檚 hard-earned money.
That鈥檚 not being a conservative Republican to say these things. That鈥檚 called being an American 鈥 life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is what living here is supposed to be all about.
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ContributeAbout the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Latest Comments (0)
Much like Dave Chappell's comedy, the truth is sometimes raw, but it's still the truth and sometimes you just have to laugh because what else can you do? Great article. And as a side bar, people are happy here because of the simple things in life and the natural beauty of the land, government simply exploits this to their advantage and puts little into preserving it. It shouldn't be all about wealth and "things." Mainlanders and foreigners strive to find the simple life that many of us still enjoy here, but the reality of having and maintaining basic needs today are becoming less a reality and our elected official are directly responsible for continuing to perpetuate a big city government spending on a small town budget.
wailani1961 · 1 year ago
Oh my, alot of truth here. In my 49 years of living here I have seen Hawaii go from a happy, loving place to a stressful existence. We need to manage things here, and help our own citizens go forward. 100% bans on things like tourism, a person renting a room in their own house, in which they live, for however short they choose to, closing down the Superferry retroactively because someone "forgot" to require a certain test, etc., is not helpful, but is taking money from locals, destroying our economy. Just a few angry people getting the ear of a council member has caused a de facto closure of all tour companies. It is now a crime to let any visitor see any beach along the entire coastline from Makapuu through the entire north shore. Despite the fact that 90% of these areas are problem free. We need leaders who have positive ideas, managed answers, and talk to us. Not people who create nothing, but validate their jobs by finding things wrong with anyone creating anything here. Why is there suddenly $1,000,000 to tear down a beloved hike (Haiku Stairs) but only contempt for a non- profit who has stepped up with a management plan to alleviate all neighborhood issues? Hope
Gregory_A · 1 year ago
"But in reality, they芒聙聶re just a gaggle of underpaid, overhyped minor elected officials in the same boat as the rest of us."Well said!Unfortunately, we voters are the folks that keep putting that same gaggle in place.
BigMomona · 1 year ago
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