NATIONAL GUARDS PERSONNEL IN THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS
Review by Amelia Gora (2020)
The National Guards set up was planned by Sanford B. Dole and Friends, treasonous persons in the Hawaiian Islands.
The following articles were found on the Chronicling America website which the Library of Congress maintains. Information was submitted by various Universities, colleges, etc.:
National Guards Positions- Four companies @ up to 100 each
Note:
The army developed by Sanford B. Dole, Soper, and Friends was to pirate, pillage, innocent kanaka maoli who operated with the 1850 Treaty of the Hawaiian Kingdom and the United States.
Sanford B. Dole began to write about the "last of the Kamehameha's" in 1874.
The Kamehameha's are and remain parties to the 1850 Treaty of Permanent Friendship and Amity which was signed and ratified by both Kamehameha III and U.S. President Zachary Taylor with Congress.
Parties to the 1850 Treaty was Kamehameha III - Kauikeaouli, his heirs, and successors.
His heirs, and successors are only Kamehameha's Royal Family.
U.S. President Zachary Taylor was also party to the Treaty.
The Treaties are the supreme law of the land, and the Judges were to recognize it as well according to Article 6 of the U.S. Constitution - 1787.
The Treaty of 1850, Article XIV documents what to do with pirates, pillagers, thieves, etc.
Sanford B. Dole and Friends were pirates, pillagers, thieves, etc.
They were guilty of conspiracies and documented under the Hawaiian Kingdom/ Kingdom of Hawaii laws as well.
Sanford B. Dole and Friends failed to follow rule of law, the U.S. Constitution, the 1850 Treaty, and International Laws of Vattel, etc.
The pictures of the National Guard was shared on Facebook from one of our friends are shown below
The National Guard was an illegal setup by those who desired to take over a neutral, f
friendly non-violent nation which was part of the family of nations since 1841.
aloha.
Replies
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Reference:
Vattel's International Law from a XXIst Century ...
The Law of Nations - Wikipedia
1. ^ Le droit des gens ou Principes de la loi naturelle appliqués à la conduite et aux affaires des nations et des souverains. Tome 1 / par M. de Vattel, Londres : 1758 via Gallica; Le droit des gens ou Principes de la loi naturelle appliqués à la conduite et aux affaires des nations et des souverains. Tome 2 / par M. de Vattel, Londres : 1758 via Gallica
Vattel's International Law from a XXIst Century ...
No other scholar has so deeply influenced the development of international law or shaped the doctrinal debates as Vattel. More than 250 years after its publication, his Law of Nations has remained the most frequently quoted treatise of international law. Vattel's International Law from a XXIst Century Perspective explores the reasons behind the extraordinary authority of Vattel and analyses its continuing relevance for thinking and understanding contemporary international law.
Emer de Vattel - Wikipedia
Emer (Emmerich) de Vattel (25 April 1714 – 28 December 1767 ) was an international lawyer. He was born in Couvet in Neuchâtel (now Switzerland) in 1714 and died in 1767. He was largely influenced by Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius. He is most famous for his 1758 work The Law of Nations. This work was his claim to fame and won him enough prestige to be appointed as a councilor to the court of Frederick Augustus II of Saxony.
Vattel’s Law of Nations and the U.S. Constitution – The ...
Emmerich de Vattel | Swiss jurist | Britannica
Emmerich de Vattel, (born April 25, 1714, Couvet, Neuchâtel, Switz.—died Dec. 28, 1767, Neuchâtel), Swiss jurist who, in Le Droit des gens (1758; “The Law of Nations”), applied a theory of natural law to international relations. His treatise was especially influential in the United States because his principles of liberty and equality coincided with the ideals expressed in the Declaration of Independence.
Emmerich de Vattel, The Law of Nations (1758)
Aug 07, 2015 · Vattel’s ultimate aim was to produce a treatise on international law that could provide practical guidance. The book was written specifically for statesmen, as outlined in the Preface: “The law of nations is the law of sovereigns. It is principally for them and …
The Use of Vattel in the American Law of Nations ...
23 Emer de Vattel, The Law of Nations: Or Principles of the Law of Nature Applied To the Conduct and Affairs of Sovereigns, preliminaries, §6, at 50 (1st Am. ed. 1796). 24 3 Vattel, supra note 1, preface, 12a. 25 Id., at 10a. 26 Id. at 9a–10a.
The Law of Nations (Natural Law and Enlightenment Classics ...
The Law of Nations was a monumental contribution to international law and to political economy. Vattel developed a theory of the cultural, political, and economic conditions necessary for a viable system of international justice, and his principles of how civilized nations should conduct themselves toward other nations and their citizens provide essential contextualization for eighteenth-century thought.
Amazon.com: The Law of Nations (9780865974517): Emer de ...
The Law of Nations was a monumental contribution to international law and to political economy. Vattel developed a theory of the cultural, political, and economic conditions necessary for a viable system of international justice, and his principles of how civilized nations should conduct themselves toward other nations and their citizens provide essential contextualization for eighteenth-century thought.
The Law of Nations, Or, Principles of the Law of Nature ...
Vattel’s defense of a natural law of nations together with his insistence on state sovereignty earned him a reputation for incoherence, the view of Kant, or, as many international law theorists writing after the First World War maintained, for being an unconditional supporter of reason of state who “disguised his evil intentions through words of sublime charity.”16 Although in The Law of Nations Vattel dealt with this …
the entire post is at: https://theiolani.blogspot.com/2020/10/hawaiian-kingdom-facts-shari...