天美视频

Ku驶u Kauanoe/Civil Beat

About the Author

Danny de Gracia

Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views. You can reach him by email at dgracia@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .


Police presence is only a small part of addressing our island鈥檚 problems. We need to think about how all of us fit in to making a more connected, safer Oahu.

A few days ago, a few friends of mine told me they were worried about coming to my side of Oahu because of the crime and violence here. I had to immediately remind them that while there have been several highly publicized violent incidents here, there was no reason to fear having to spend time here or worry about being personally targeted.

It dawned on me in that moment however that communities can get neglected and bad situations can entrench because we sometimes have an expectation that only bad things will happen in certain places, and we should just stay away from there.

Over time, others around us start to think and feel the same way, and a pattern develops where reform cannot occur because people either avoid the place that needs it or assume it鈥檚 a lost cause altogether. We stop taking pride in a community, we start dehumanizing people as statistics, and then this leads to situations getting worse and things getting uglier and uglier.

Think of it this way: Say that you鈥檙e chewing gum, and decide to spit it into a foil wrapper, and now you need to throw it away. If you鈥檙e in the middle of a clean, beautiful place outdoors with no garbage can, would you throw the trash on the ground? Most people would probably say no. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 throw this on the ground,鈥 you might think to yourself, 鈥渋t wouldn鈥檛 be right.鈥

But say you鈥檙e standing instead in a landfill, where all around you there is trash, grime, unmentionables and swarms of flies orbiting around you. Does throwing something on the ground seem so unreasonable when there is already so much on the ground already? Who would notice, if you did?

Our communities can slowly over time accumulate crime, violence, poverty and social disparities in the same way. Once we start to avoid dealing with some problems, we get more problems and more problems until we find ourselves surrounded by them. So with this allegory in mind, as Oahu ponders how to address things like crime and violence, we need to start looking holistically about how we can get from where we are to where we want to be.

Typically, the most common response to an outbreak in crime is to call for heightened police presence and to look at how many officers we have on the force as a deterrent. This 鈥渂oots on the ground鈥 approach is a reasonable short-term reaction, but it doesn鈥檛 remedy the reasons that crime may be occurring.

Worse yet, over a protracted period of time, having large concentrations of police in a given area can have unintended consequences where residents feel they are being over-surveilled and intimidated by authoritarian power dynamics,  in 1971.

What is needed more than boots on the ground is for everyone to have a stake in the outcome of a community and its residents. But there鈥檚 a couple of things that make it difficult to get people to engage.

Missing Support At Home

Forbes recently reported about the rise in America of聽聽鈥 that is, an increase in personal estrangement 鈥 where people out of resentment, shame, or persecution can鈥檛 (or won鈥檛) communicate with each other. This is a serious problem. If you have a disordered relationship with your family, you鈥檙e more likely to respond in a disordered way to everyone else.

We have known for hundreds of years that every successful community begins with strong families. If the family structure is being eroded by resentment, poor problem-solving skills, fear of abandonment, abuse, and so on, the community structure will likewise erode. 

The west side of Oahu needs the attention of more than just the police if we’re going to reduce crime and violence. (Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat/2015)

This is an area where charitable nonprofits and religious organizations need to step up for all of Oahu. We need to teach people how to be good to themselves and others, because if you are not at peace with yourself, you can鈥檛 be at peace with others. In my observation, Oahu has become extremely toxic in recent years where many people are angry, anxious, frustrated and not everyone has a healthy remedy for expressing or resolving these feelings. 

Environmental Impacts On Behavior

We also need to take into consideration how surroundings affect people鈥檚 emotions and behavior. The first thing I would do if I were the chief of police would be to go to places with high levels of crime and look at the built environment to take notes. In several cities around the United States,  that adding green spaces 鈥 parks, trees, beautified areas 鈥 resulted in less crime and better self-reported mental health.

If I鈥檓 living in a place where there鈥檚 trash everywhere, the sidewalks are shattered and unwalkable, abandoned cars are everywhere and wild grass is growing out of control in state- or city-owned areas, that鈥檚 going to have an impact on how I feel all day long. One of the reasons we need to pay attention-to-detail to community appearances is they have a nexus to mental health. If people feel like they鈥檙e living in a run-down, beat-up, forgotten place, that will impact how they behave in that environment.

Temptations To Quit On Others

Most important of all, we have to resist the temptation to think in silos and have the approach of 鈥測ou stay in your area, I鈥檒l stay in mine, what happens there is of no concern to me.鈥 Oahu is a small place and we can鈥檛 afford to think in terms of factional geography. The reality is that quitting is exactly what bad people want us to do, and abandonment is all that underserved people have ever experienced others doing to them. Dilemmas are designed to make you quit, but enlightenment says “I’m going to stay because this is important.”

The health, wellness, and success of everyone, everywhere on the island impacts us all, as we learned from the experience during the Covid-19 pandemic. One of my good Native Hawaiian friends reminded me the other day that the word 鈥減ono鈥 is best translated not so much as 鈥渞ighteousness鈥 but rather things being set in the correct state or place as they should be. The correct place for all of us here in Oahu is where we are needed most. 

There are far too many people who read news, react to news, and just say 鈥渢sk, tsk, tsk鈥 with a smug attitude that it鈥檚 too bad others don鈥檛 have their act together. No, we all need to ask ourselves what can we offer to the parts of Oahu that are underserved or unstable right now?

Maybe that means we volunteer to do a community safety walk in an area we don鈥檛 live in to help others keep watch. Maybe that means we assist in graffiti or trash cleanup. Or maybe it means we make sure that invisible people become visible again by restlessly advocating for their help.

No matter what, however, we need to understand that crime and violence are fruits of a tree of disparity and injustice that needs to be uprooted with the collective efforts of all of us. I hope and pray that in the days and weeks to come, we can all humble ourselves to be problem-solving volunteers, and not just observers of crime and violence.


Read this next:

Denby Fawcett: These Chairs Started Out As Pearl Harbor Scrap Metal. Some Now Sell For $35,000


Local reporting when you need it most

Support timely, accurate, independent journalism.

天美视频 is a nonprofit organization, and your donation helps us produce local reporting that serves all of Hawaii.

Contribute

About the Author

Danny de Gracia

Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views. You can reach him by email at dgracia@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .


Latest Comments (0)

There are many facets to the current West side problems, most are socio-economic related. You can not ignore the effects of poor home dynamics for the children that are left to outside influences and little good adult supervision and guidance. Bad outcomes breed more bad outcomes. There are plenty of good people that live West and I would hope a minority that are opposite. As you state, the whole community must be lifted up in order for the stragglers to get on board.

wailani1961 · 4 months ago

Great article! Unfortunately though, there is only the tree of good and evil. Children are taught this from birth. Parents are responsible to teach their children to not kill, steal or destroy and choose good. If the child has not been taught this, hopefully the child will surround himself with good friends, teachers, community, church to help teach or mentor him. So he will want to do good despite his surroundings. And when good instead of evil lives inside of a persons heart芒聙娄.that gum wrapper will be thrown in the trash regardless of the environment. The tree of good or evil lives in everyone芒聙娄.politicians, leadership, managers, teachers, criminals, pastors, doctors, lawyers, students, parents, etc. And everyone is responsible to choose which one of these fruits live in their hearts. The Bible says it best芒聙娄.."You shall know them by their fruit!"

Littlejackie122 · 4 months ago

The points laid out are as obvious as they are nebulous. I doubt anyone across the state would be opposed to anything recommended. Clean streets, well maintained green space, useful infrastructure, effective social safety nets, good schools, stable families, etc. But the neglect of these areas is a symptom of an ineffective political system. Many if not all of our government obligations are handled on levels that are not responsive to localized problems. You want to increase funding in underserved schools? Improve classrooms westside? Cool, all you have to do is navigate state DOE and State government. You want to clean streams and or illegal dumps in Haleiwa? Sick, I hope you can interest city officials who are in charge of the entire island. State government handles issues that would be better served by city governments. City governments in tern are in charge of issues that would be more effectively handled by neighborhood boards. If you芒聙聶re governor how much weight would you give to issues of neighbor islands? If you芒聙聶re mayor of Honolulu and Oahu why pay attention to west side? There was a movement to break off Kaneohe and Kailua from Honolulu, we should look at that more.

Comeon · 4 months ago

Join the conversation

About IDEAS

IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.

Mahalo!

You're officially signed up for our daily newsletter, the Morning Beat. A confirmation email will arrive shortly.

In the meantime, we have other newsletters that you might enjoy. Check the boxes for emails you'd like to receive.

  • What's this? Be the first to hear about important news stories with these occasional emails.
  • What's this? You'll hear from us whenever Civil Beat publishes a major project or investigation.
  • What's this? Get our latest environmental news on a monthly basis, including updates on Nathan Eagle's 'Hawaii 2040' series.
  • What's this? Get occasional emails highlighting essays, analysis and opinion from IDEAS, Civil Beat's commentary section.

Inbox overcrowded? Don't worry, you can unsubscribe
or update your preferences at any time.