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By Poka Laenui


With Bible on hand, pistols in their pockets and troops at the ready, men gathered on the steps of `Iolani Palace on July 4th, 1894. Invoking the name of American liberty, they dismantled the liberty of the people of the Hawaiian nation.

Two separate camps divided Hawai`i's political environment. One, a small minority, held the power of government through the landing of the US military. The second, Hawaiian loyalists, supported their Hawaiian Queen Lili`uokalani.

The first camp wanted annexation of Hawai`i to the US, part of a larger plan to open their sugar to US markets. They sided with American expansionists like John Stevens, US Minister to Hawai`i.

The Hawaiian citizens, according to US special investigator James Blount, were almost to the man, in opposition to annexation.

US troops landed on January 16, 1893, and supported a self-proclaimed “provisional government” the next day.

A hurriedly drafted annexation treaty was sent to the US Senate in February for ratification under Harrison’s administration.

But Grover Cleveland, inaugurated President in March, sent Blount to investigate this Hawaiian affair. Given Blount’s report, Cleveland railed against US conspiracy and withdrew the treaty in December.

Sanford Dole, President of the "provisional" government, was criticized for the PG’s lack of legitimacy. He assembled a convention of 37 delegates, 19 appointed by him, the remainder elected by those who disavowed loyalty to Lili`uokalani and swore allegiance to the provisional government.

Using as their backdrop, the US Independence day celebration, Dole’s group assembled at `Iolani Palace at 8:00 AM, July 4, 1894.

With guns tucked out of public sight, William O. Smith, one of the early conspirators of the group acted as master of ceremony.

Dispensing with the opening prayer, apparently skittish over the proceedings taking place, Smith introduced Dole. Dole, looking down upon their members, proclaimed “the Republic of Hawai`i as the sovereign authority over and throughout the Hawaiian Islands.”

He went on, “And I declare the Constitution framed and adopted by the Constitutional Convention of 1894 to be the constitution and the supreme law of the Republic of Hawai`i, and by virtue of this constitution I now assume the office and authority of president thereof.”

The constitution declared all Lili`uokalani’s government’s lands, waters and citizens as those of the Republic.

While framing their activities around the American principle that the right of governance can be only achieved thru the consent of the governed, the Republic of Hawai`i was declared in just the opposite manner.

No ratification or any consent was given the Republic by Hawaiians.


Hawaiian nationals never consented to any change.


A reading will take place tomorrow at 5 PM at `Iolani Palace and discussion of the events leading up to the proclaiming into existence of the Republic of Hawai`i on July 4, 1894. This event is free and open to the public.

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FREE HAWAI`I TV - "TALKING TRASH"

FREE HAWAI`I TVTHE FREE HAWAI`I BROADCASTING NETWORK"TALKING TRASH" Something's Coming Across The Ocean That's Causing A Commotion.Native People's Land It Will Desecrate & Sad To Say, It's From The Aloha State.Yes, The Key Is, It's From Hawai`i.Watch & Find Out Why We're Talking Trash That's Causing Such A Clash. Then Send This Video To One Other Person Today.
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The United States acquired Hawai`i through force.

Queen Liliu`okalani, Hawai`i's last Queen, was deposed on January 17, 1893, by a group of American businessmen supported by the United States Navy and Marine Corps and diplomatic representatives.


Sovereignty of Hawai`i was allegedly transferred to the US on August 12, 1898 during ceremonies at `Iolani Palace in Honolulu, on the island of O`ahu.


Hawai`i allegedly became a US territory in 1900.


On November 23, 1993, The United States apologized for illegally overthrowing the Kingdom of Hawai`i, and recognized the inherent sovereignty and right of self-determination of native islanders.


Events that were illegal took place between January 17,1893 and August 21, 1959 in order to steal a nation - the Hawaiian Kingdom.


History Clearly Shows The Hawaiian Nation Wasn't Annexed - It Was Stolen
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NATIVE HAWAIIANS AT RISK FOR EARLY DEATH

Throughout their lives, Native Hawaiians have higher risks of death than white Americans, according to a University of Michigan study.

The research is the first known study to assess mortality patterns among Native Hawaiians at the national level, including those living outside the state of Hawai`i.


The study is published in the November 2010 issue of the American Journal of Public Health, online Sept. 16. It was funded by the National Center for Minority Health and Health Disparities, part of the National Institutes of Health.


"Native Hawaiians are far more likely than whites to suffer early death," said demographer Sela Panapasa, an assistant research scientist at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR) and lead author of the article. "Like Black Americans, they are also much more likely than whites to die in mid- and later-life."


Based on data from the US Census Bureau and the National Center for Health Statistics, the study shows that Native Hawaiian infants less than one year old and young people between the ages of 15 and 34 are particularly vulnerable to early death compared with corresponding age groups of white Americans.


"We also found that older Native Hawaiians have higher expected death rates than either Blacks or whites age 65 and over, suggesting that relatively fewer of this group have benefited from the increased longevity enjoyed by the rest of the nation," said Panapasa, who is a Pacific Islander of Polynesian heritage....

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AKAKA BILL WILL DIVIDE HAWAIIANS

Honolulu Star-Advertiser - July 9, 2010

The amendments to the Akaka Bill are ludicrous. Under the amended version, Hawaiians have no control of their national lands or natural resources and they cannot challenge the United States for the illegal overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai`i during 1893.


Hawaiians had better read the updated version of HR.2314 and object to U.S. Sens. Daniel Inouye and Daniel Akaka and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs making crucial decisions relative to their culture without their consent.

The bill will divide the Hawaiian community even more than it is now. It will make it more difficult to claim the crown lands, konohiki lands and the kuleana lands.

I urge Congress not to pass HR.2314 until a true vote is instigated by the Hawaiian community.


Eric Po`ohina

Kailua, O`ahu

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THE FREE HAWAI`I BROADCASTING NETWORK


"USE YOUR SKILL TO KILL THE AKAKA BILL"


We Have Akaka Bill News & There's Not A Moment To Lose.

Dan Inouye's Trying To Get It Passed, So Now's The Time To Oppose It & Fast.

Sign The Anti-Akaka Bill Petition To Show Your Opposition.

Watch This To Discover What Else You Can Do To Help Bid The Akaka Bill Adieu.

Then Send This Video To One Other Person Today.
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Honolulu Star-Advertiser - August 1, 2010

By Jon Osorio

Why should the needs, actions, responses and ultimately the fate of Native Hawaiians concern the residents of this state? Why should Hawaiians not simply be treated as any other failed or failing minority in the United States?

You hear the complaint often enough - Hawaiians aren't going anywhere. We Hawaiians haven't gone anywhere despite almost 90 years of the Hawaiian Homestead Act, and more than 30 years of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. Look at the statistics of arrest and incarceration. Look at the school dropout rate. Look at the miserable economics that seem to hold the native Hawaiian in a grip of mediocrity despite all of the things done for them.

But Hawaiians aren't going anywhere. The sovereignty movement, now more than 20 years old and stronger every year, more than ever seems to be nested in a classical Hawai`i. We Hawaiians insist on learning our language, singing and composing our songs, learning and writing our histories and re-mastering the technologies of navigation, agriculture and aquaculture that once sustained our nation.

Increasingly we believe we should govern ourselves, and why shouldn't we? Ninety years of the Hawaiian Homes Act and 30 years of OHA seem only to demonstrate that neither the US nor the state of Hawai`i can provide homes and work, education and a national and cultural pride that matches what our own kingdom provided in the 19th century.

And besides, this is our country, isn't it? Even people who claim that the kingdom's property is now America's property can scarcely deny that a vocal and active sovereignty and independence movement thrives among our people today.

Ultimately, the call for a just solution to the Hawaiian national claims may need to be framed not simply as the pursuit of social justice and redress for the American theft of the Hawaiian nation and its lands, but as a self-interested and rational acknowledgment that native Hawaiians are struggling to succeed, to live as Hawaiians, not Americans, despite all that has been done to them.

Whether a peaceful and mutually satisfying arrangement can be made between the native people and everyone else living in Hawai`i could depend on how much of a struggle we are forced to endure. And remember, none of us are going anywhere.

Jonathan Kay Kamakawiwo`ole Osorio is a professor of Hawaiian studies at the University of Hawai`i at Manoa, and an advocate for the restoration of Hawai`i's political independence.
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The big push is now on to get the Akaka bill passed in the US senate and signed into law.

Dan Inouye and Akaka know they have a very small window of time in which to push the bill through and onto President Obama’s desk where he will sign it into law.

What are the chances they’ll succeed? What can you do now to help stop them?

Find out this coming Wednesday on Free Hawai`i TV, where we’ll tell you exactly what you can do to help defeat the Akaka bill once and for all.


It may be the most important action you can take all year long – don’t miss it.


Speaking of action, that’s exactly what Joyclynn Costa took all on her own. What she told us she found out about Hawai`i’s laws and lands as a result you may find shocking. See for yourself all this week on Hawai`i’s award winning
Voices Of Truth – One-On-One With Hawai`i’s Future.

MONDAY, July 12th At 6:30 PM
Maui – Akaku, Channel 53

MONDAY, July 12th At 7:00 PM & FRIDAY, July 16th At 5:30 PM Hawai`i Island – Na Leo, Channel 53
THURSDAY, July 15th At 8:30 PM & FRIDAY, July 16th At 8:30 AM - Kaua`i – Ho`ike, Channel 52
SATURDAY, July 17th At 8:00 PM O`ahu, `Olelo, Channel 53
“Who Owns Hawai`I’s Lands? – A Visit With Joyclynn Costa”

When the US took Hawai`i over, what happened to Hawaiian Kingdom law? Did it just evaporate? That’s what Joyclynn Costa wanted to know. So she started her own research project which unearthed some very surprising answers, including who really owns land in Hawai`i today. You’ll be amazed as she reveals what she found in her remarkable one-woman journey of discovery - Watch It Here


Now you can become a fan of Voices Of Truth on Facebook by clicking Here and see behind the scenes photos of our shows and a whole lot more.

Voices Of Truth now airs in Cape Town, South Africa, Sweden and 28 cities across the US.
Check your local listings.

If you support our issues on the Free Hawai`i Broadcasting Network, please email this to a friend to help us continue. A donation today helps further our work. Every single penny counts.

Donating is easy on our Voices Of Truth website via PayPal where you can watch Voices Of Truth anytime.

For news and issues that affect you, watch Free Hawai`i TV, a part of the Free Hawai`i Broadcasting Network.

Please share our Free Hawai`i Broadcasting Network videos with friends and colleagues. That's how we grow. Mahalo.
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La Ho`iHo`i Ea - Sovereignty Restoration Day


Today is La Ho`iho`i Ea - Sovereignty Restoration day in Hawai`i.

It was a wrong made right after five months - the restoration of the Hawaiian Kingdom when forced under British rule in 1843.


In the early 1840s, during the reign of King Kamehameha III, English consul Richard Charlton made outrageous land claims against the Hawaiian people to provoke a British takeover.

At his request, a British war cruiser arrived on Feb. 10, 1843, under the command of Lord George Paulet, who demanded special lands and rights from the king for British subjects.

In order to avoid bloodshed, Kamehameha III ceded his kingdom to Paulet under protest and appealed to Queen Victoria for redress.

British fleet commander Adm. Richard Thomas, enforcing his country's policy that the laws and customs of native governments be treated with courtesy and respect, sailed from Mexico to Hawai`i to remedy the trouble.

On July 31, 1843, Thomas ordered the Hawaiian flag raised and the kingdom restored at a ceremony at Kulaokahu`a - which today is known as Thomas Square named after him.

Kamehameha III proclaimed a 10-day holiday, and throughout his reign, July 31 was celebrated as La Ho'iho'i Ea or Sovereignty Restoration Day.

He also proclaimed the now famous motto, "Ua mau ke ea o ka `aina i ka pono," which means, "The sovereignty of the land is maintained by right behavior."

Join Us All Day Today At Thomas Square In Honolulu To Celebrate. The Public Is Welcome At This Free Event.

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FREE HAWAI`I TVTHE FREE HAWAI`I BROADCASTING NETWORK"QUESTION WITH THE WRONG IMPRESSION" What Do We Lack To Get The Hawaiian Kingdom Back?What Do We Need To Succeed?How Far Do We Have To Go?How About A Question That Gives The Wrong Impression?Watch This & We Think You’ll Agree We Don’t Have To Be This Before Hawai`i’s Free. Then Send This Video To One Other Person Today.
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Today the United States celebrates its independence while preventing Hawai`i from having its own.

But even though the US has been belligerently occupying Hawai`i for over a century, claiming it as part of America, more and more people are awakening to the truth of a different reality.

Joyclynn Costa is one of those who wondered what happened to Hawaiian Kingdom law after the illegal US takeover.

So she quit her job to become a full time, one-woman research project, and found some astonishing information along the way.

We think you’ll be as surprised as we are at what she has to say. See our fascinating visit with her in a brand new show all this week on Hawai`i’s award winning
Voices Of Truth – One-On-One With Hawai`i’s Future.

MONDAY, July 5th At 6:30 PM
Maui – Akaku, Channel 53

MONDAY, July 5th At 7:00 PM & FRIDAY, July 9th At 5:30 PM Hawai`i Island – Na Leo, Channel 53
THURSDAY, July 8th At 8:30 PM & FRIDAY, July 9th At 8:30 AM - Kaua`i – Ho`ike, Channel 52
SATURDAY, July 10th At 8:00 PM O`ahu, `Olelo, Channel 53
“Who Owns Hawai`I’s Lands? – A Visit With Joyclynn Costa”

When the US took Hawai`i over, what happened to Hawaiian Kingdom law? Did it just evaporate? That’s what Joyclynn Costa wanted to know. So she started her own research project which unearthed some very surprising answers, including who really owns land in Hawai`i today. You’ll be amazed as she reveals what she found in her remarkable one-woman journey of discovery - Watch It Here


Now you can become a fan of Voices Of Truth on Facebook by clicking Here and see behind the scenes photos of our shows and a whole lot more.

Voices Of Truth now airs in Cape Town, South Africa, Sweden and 28 cities across the US.
Check your local listings.

If you support our issues on the Free Hawai`i Broadcasting Network, please email this to a friend to help us continue. A donation today helps further our work. Every single penny counts.

Donating is easy on our Voices Of Truth website via PayPal where you can watch Voices Of Truth anytime.

For news and issues that affect you, watch Free Hawai`i TV, a part of the Free Hawai`i Broadcasting Network.

Please share our Free Hawai`i Broadcasting Network videos with friends and colleagues. That's how we grow. Mahalo.
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HAWAIIAN EDUCATOR WINS PRESTIGIOUS AWARD

Doctorate Dissertation Recounts First Encounters Between Nawaiians & Missionaries

Brandeisnow - April, 2010


For the third time in the past decade, a Brandeis doctoral dissertation has been judged the best in the nation by The Society of American Historians.


Noelani Arista, an Irving and Rose Crown Fellow who will be awarded her PhD at the university’s commencement in May, has won the 50th annual Allan Nevins Prize for her interdisciplinary thesis, "Histories of Unequal Measure: Euro-American Encounters with Hawaiian Governance and Law, 1793-1827," which she defended in December.


Arista joins an illustrious cast of past winners, including such luminaries as William Freehling and Mary Beth Norton. She also joins two other Brandeis Crown Fellow winners: Jeff Wiltse, PhD'02, won in 2003, and Jessica Lepler, PhD'07, in 2008.


“I feel very honored to win this distinguished prize, especially because my goal was to be able to write a dissertation about Hawai`i and early encounters between Hawai`i and the US in a way that brought Hawaiian history to the attention of the main stream of American history,” Arista said. “That a dissertation that emphasizes Native (Hawaiian) history was awarded this prize I believe is significant.”


Arista, who currently teaches in the History Department at the University of Hawai`i at Manoa, says it was her academic background in Hawaiian culture and language that made her feel at home at Brandeis. “I felt that Brandeis with its own cultural and historical traditions would be a good fit for me in this stage of my development, and I have found it to be a culturally diverse and rich place of seeking after knowledge, a Hawaiian cultural value known as `Imi Loa," Arista said.


Arista was interested in illuminating this unequal history because she felt that American approaches to the study of Hawaiian history have always been written in English language sources and methodological assumptions. It was her goal to draw upon both English and Hawaiian sources to tell a different story about the transformation of Hawaiian government during this period.


“I argue that Hawaiians have their own conceptualization and reality when it comes to history and the interpretation of events, and also make the point that not only linguistic, but cultural literacy is central to telling this history well,” Arista said.

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WERE HAWAIIANS THE ONLY ONES WRONGED?

WERE HAWAIIANS THE ONLY ONES WRONGED?The forceful takeover of the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1893, adversely affected a country’s government, its lands and its citizens, not only the members of a single ethnic group.It was the Hawaiian Kingdom — a nation — that was taken, not the aboriginal people — the kanaka maoli (what the US and the State of Hawai`i insist on calling, “Native Hawaiians.”)Yes, kanaka maoli were harmed by the loss of their nation, but so were many non-aboriginal subject/citizens of the Hawaiian Kingdom: Asians, Caucasian, Polynesians and so forth.This is a crucial point. When a nation is stolen, all the citizens of that nation are deprived of their country, not only the aboriginal people.Both occupying governments, the US Federal and its puppet, the fake state of Hawai`i either assert or presume in their laws and policies, that the takeover of 1893 affected only “Native Hawaiians.”By purposefully limiting their culpability to “Native Hawaiians,” the US carefully conceals the true scope of the problem, presenting it as a domestic, localized, racially defined problem, rather than the violation of the unalienable rights of the citizens of a recognized sovereign foreign nation.
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SHAKING IT IN HALEIWA!!!

Mahalo to Waialua Community Association for allowing AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND HOMELESS ALLIANCE to use their gym for outreach service. AHHA provides service (employment, housing, financial referrals, etc.) to houseless population on the Northshore, Oahu every Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m..

I work with great people who does outreach regardless if rain or shine. Our work never ends, however the smile on their faces keep us in touch with reality because I or you can be one paycheck away from being homeless too!

keapoi namakaeha

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There's no need to create a new government when a perfectly good and lawful one — the Hawaiian Kingdom — continues to exist.

Although it has been greatly impaired by unlawful suppression and layers of fraud, the sovereignty of the Hawaiian Kingdom was never lawfully extinguished.

Therefore, there is no justification to contrive a new government to replace the Hawaiian Kingdom unless the people, the lawful subjects/citizens, called Hawaiian Nationals, decide they want to alter or change their government.

No one other than Hawaiian Nationals can make that determination — not the US government or foreign US citizens residing in Hawai`i, or the fake State of Hawai`i, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, or the Akaka Bill’s proposed phony Native Hawaiian Governing Entity.

Because the Hawaiian Kingdom is in continuity, there is no lawful way to alter or replace that existing government except through the processes provided in the existing lawful constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom.

Prior to the Hawaiian Kingdom being taken over by insurgents during the illegal US invasion in 1893, Hawai`i had already been functioning for decades as a nation-state under one of the best constitutions in the world.

The United States’ prolonged occupation does not change the fact that the constitutional government of the Hawaiian Kingdom, the one in place from 1840 to 1893, is still the one and only lawful and indisputable government for the Hawaiian Islands.

The United States is a usurper, and has no lawful jurisdiction in Hawai`i.


Since the Hawaiian Kingdom was never extinguished, its constitution, laws, statutes and policies are still intact.

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THE FREE HAWAI`I BROADCASTING NETWORK


"THEY SAID NO TO THE OVERTHROW"


It Happened In A Big Way This Last Saturday After The Parade On Kamehameha Day.

What You Could See On The Ground All Around Was Enough To Astound.

Thousands Of Names Whose Aims Were An Admonition From A Long Ago Petition.

What Was On Display With A Warning For Us Today?

Watch To See What They Found That Was So Amazingly Profound.

Then Send This Video To One Other Person Today.
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