Life Harder Under US Occupation
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In the 1980s, Hawai`i gained the enviable reputation of providing medical insurance to the highest percentage of residents of any state.

Despite higher profits for many businesses, jobs are scarce and most of the available work pays minimum wage or close to it.

In some cases, the lives of the working poor are worse than the unemployed.
Among other things, they don't qualify for state financial assistance or full food stamp benefits.

Today most of Hawai`i island, Molokai, Lana`i and Kaua`i are economic wastelands with little opportunity to make a decent living.

On Kaua`i workers often share apartments or small houses with several other workers because rents are too expensive for one or two individuals to afford.

On every island married couples with children often work two jobs each to make ends meet - if they are fortunate enough to find that many jobs, even at minimum wage.

Hawai`i imports almost all its food from the mainland.

Locally-grown food is expensive due to high land prices where tract homes are built by foreign land speculators.




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  • self sustainable for our families steps beyond the recreational lifestyle of the US and their citizens.  We need to look at ourselves as Pacific Islanders alongside all other PI in the Pacific Ocean. 
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