DOES THE U.S. HAVE A MONOPOLY ON LOVE OF COUNTRY?












In 1993, the United States admitted in US Public Law 103-150 that it violated its own Constitution, its treaties and international law by perpetrating an outrageous armed theft of the
Kingdom of Hawai`i and the forced American citizenship of Hawaiian national citizens.


The US recognized in 1894, and again in 1993, that the Kingdom of Hawai`i has a right to exist.


The Hawaiian Nation has a right and obligation to enact and dictate land laws which prevent the selling of its lands to foreign speculators at prices which deny native nationals from living on their own home islands at an affordable price.


The Hawaiian nation has a right and obligation to protect and defend the quality of life, land, water, ocean and air.

The Hawaiian nation has a right and obligation to its citizens to provide the best in education, health care and housing.


We Love Our Nation As You Love Yours -
Would You Like It If Your Land Was Stolen?
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Comments

  • I am a halole from the mainland, who loves Hawaii, and would like
    to comment that no one American, or group can honestly say they love their
    country more than another. Whenever I hear the term "patriotic" banded about
    by the Tea Party, and others, it's as if they say unless you "think" like us, you cannot
    possibly love America, or be a good citizen. That is wrong thinking.
  • ALOHA Kakou, If Americans Loved their Love Ones more then they Hate the people of Iraq, they would not be at WAR with the World.
    Long Live The Hawaiian Kingdom, o Pomaikaiokalani, Hawaiian Kingdom National Royalist 1993
  • ALOHA Kakou, e Hawaii,
    The "Only Nation" that recognizes and protects the rights of its native nationals. That "Only Nation" is the Hawaiian Kingdom nation of Queen Liliuokalani.
    This is why in 1993 I renounced my citizenship to the United States and went home to the Hawaiian Kingdom nation of Queen Liliuokalani.
    It has not been an easy path for me to travel on as a Hawaiian Kingdom National Royalist since my renouncement of my American Citizenship. It is a path that I will continue for the rest of my life.
    It is the path not only of my will, but the path of my Grandmother. The path that she lived and raised me. It was her path as my Kupuna and now is my path as a Kupuna.
    KEKAPUKAINOHEA, o Pomaikaioklani, Hawaiian Kingdom National Royalist 1993
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