Lol, I just think Hawaii residents are capable of evolving past the point of establishing social dominance through beefing. I do agree that adding legal concealed carry to the mix makes monkey dances much more dangerous--but that's the whole point.
I think monkey dances used to be less dangerous as people back then were probably more averse to taking someone's life.
I don't have a link to the actual study, but back before the WWII era (?), the US Army found that their soldiers at war were purposely missing their enemies because they didn't want to take another person's life. The US Army realized that they had a problem, so they had to institute a system that desensitizes the soldiers and take away the internal blocks that made soldiers hesitate in shooting the enemy.
Unfortunately, this same desensitization techniques that the US Army used on the soldiers are now also being used on our kids both through violent imagery on TV or with violent computer games. Since this has been happening for many generation, I believe we have several generations of kids and young adults now that have little or no inhibition in taking someone's life.
I don't want to paint too broad a stroke but some of these guys are probably serving as soldiers and LEOs now. I can understand why for soldiers as soldiers are meant for offense. But LEOs are meant for defense and for keeping the peace. Kinda concerning when a LEO's first thought (and not the last option) to a situation is to shoot the suspect instead of talking to them first. Maybe this is not true so much in Hawaii, but perhaps it explains the 100+ bullet holes on the two ladies blue truck mistaken by LAPD for Dorner's truck.
One thing for sure, this desensitization makes our criminals more dangerous.
When the internal blocks against taking someone's life are removed from kids and young adults these days, doesn't that create a more dangerous society?
[edit] just so you know I am not making this up, here is an article on this written by retired US Army Lt Col Dave Grossman titled "Trained to Kill":
http://www.killology.com/art_trained_methods.htm