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Kaohi: What is gambling about in Hawaii: Diversity in Mafia (Samoan Mafia, Kanaka Mafia, Taiwan Mafia, Lacud Mafia, Sicilian Mafia etc...) Dont' forget kiddie sexual stuff which is exotic and tropical

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The Downside Of Casinos

Published: Sunday | March 28, 2010
Morrison

Dennis Morrison, Contributor

Based on reports carried in the press, it would appear that the CasinoGaming Act, which was recently passed by Parliament, did not spark strong deba

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Hawai'i Houseless Plan.

Aloha kakou.

Public input is sought this month into the Hawai'i Interagency Council on Homelessness (HICH), eight community sessions are scheduled throughout the islands commencing in Kaua'i on March 16th next. For details of meetings and the HICH dr

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Kaohi: I am super cranky with the Democrat Party especially at the Governor's office--I grew up on Hawaiian Homestead before Statehood and I understood the Republican Party and it's heavy hand...

....on native Hawaiian women and their children.  It took the Democrat Party to stop the abuses.  Not that they were any better, but at least the cruelty stopped! Or, their was a chance of it stopping.

The Republicans their Organic Act and penal co

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Kaohi: More than 3,000 Wind Turbines exist in Palm Springs and each one has a name of an investor embossed on each Wind Turbine. People should take a trip there and check out the Native Americans.

Wind Turbine Generators
Palm Springs Wind Energy
Wind Turbine Generators 
Porterfield/Chickering/Photo Researchers, Inc.
 

Click Here for Palm Springs Windmill Tour Tickets!

n_wind1.jpgIncreasingly popular as alternative sources of energy, wind turbine generators are a type of windmill that pro

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Kaohi: Law of the Splintered Paddle when defined by a law viewer deems it useless. Hawaiians are never static things get passed down. If a native person wants to sit by the road he has the right!

Article in part taken from the "The Hawaii Independent"

All sides agree Bill 54 does little for Honolulu’s ‘homeless’ problem

"The Hawaiian Law of the Splintered Paddle, or Kanawai Mamalahoe, was invoked by several opponents of the measure. The law

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Kaohi: Beverly Ann Deepe Keever, It's taken time for me to read and comprehend this story because it has a devastating effect/affect on those of us that are generational Hawaiians living together!

COVER STORY

Maza Attari [left], who was a seven-year-old resident of the Marshall Islands when the US exploded the Bravo H-bomb, outside his Kalihi home. Unidentified child, 1957, Rongelap repatriation photo by Jack A. Tobin.

Nuclear Guinea Pigs

On

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