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WHO WINS IN A FREE HAWAI`I ? - EVERYONE !

One of the biggest lies perpetuated is when Hawai`i achieves nationhood once again it will be at the expense of everyone else.

But no one will be kicked out; their businesses seized or their homes and property confiscated.


Instead, everyone, Hawaiians and all others, will be citizens of the sovereign and independent Nation of Hawai`i.


The Hawaiian Nation included people of many ethnic backgrounds that were loyal citizens before the illegal overthrow and it will be so again.

Think of it this way - Hawai`i will simply undergo a change of management.

The truth is a sovereign Hawaiian nation will need the contributions and talents of all of its citizens to remain viable in the world. Hawaiians would be no better than the very supremacists that overthrew and occupied them were they to divide people by race.


Hawaiians have always been inclusive, not exclusive.


Some say, "but you cannot secede from the US. It's not allowed."


Unlike the southern US states, the Kingdom of Hawai`i and its citizens never agreed to become part of the United States in the first place.


Therefore a move for Hawai`i to secede from the US would be unnecessary and inappropriate.


Much like removing the top coat of paint to reveal the one underneath, the US Congress, after consultation between Hawaiians and the US at the level of state to state, could simply enact a US federal law that dissolves the entity known as the “state government” in Hawai`i.


What would be left in its place is what has existed all along anyway without interruption – the Nation of Hawai`i.

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Makua Valley Military Training

Star Bulletin News Article

By Gregg L. Kakesako

Sunday May 9, 2010

Army chief cites value of Makua for training

New Army Secretary John McHugh supports the continued use of Makua Valley for military training, emphasizing that closing it would mean the 11,000 soldiers stationed here would have to spend more time away from their families preparing for wartime deployments.

McHugh toured a portion of the 4,000-acre Makua Military Reservation by helicopter and truck Friday morning with Lt. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, commander of all Army troops in the Pacific and former commanding general of the 25th Infantry Division.

McHugh said retention of Makua allows the Army to offer the "full spectrum of training" here without having to send soldiers to southern California. "I think it's in the interest of the soldiers, the Army and the United States of America to have these forces continuing to be in position to grow, to be fully trained as they are now to go forward to do the nation's business."

He added that the Army should continue "making every effort and expending those resources to protect the culture, the heritage and the very unique environmental challenges that exist here."

McHugh said 25th Division soldiers now spend several months at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin in the Mojave Desert to complete their training for Iraq or Afghan combat missions.

"Coming out of Hawaii, that's like another deployment," McHugh added. "It impacts very significantly on the amount of time soldiers have to recover and spend with their families."

Mixon said the Army plans an environmental study on converting the valley to "a non-live-fire training range" that would focus on programs dealing with the use of drones, helicopter laser and convoy operations and ways to defuse roadside and homemade bombs.

Since 2001 Earthjustice and Malama Makua, a Leeward Oahu group that believes the valley is scared to native Hawaiians, have been fighting the Army over the use of Makua. No live-fire infantry exercises have been held in the area since 2004 because of the court cases.

Both sides agree that more than 50 endangered plant and animal species and more than 100 archaeological features are found in the valley area.

McHugh said at a Friday news conference that the Army has spent $10 million a year to ensure the safety of the endangered plants and animals and provide access to cultural and historical sites. Proponents have argued that is not enough.

Earlier this year Mixon said the Army plans to spend $37 million to convert Makua Valley into a roadside-bomb and counter-insurgency training center.

"It's obviously an incredible, beautiful part of the island," McHugh told reporters after his first visit to the islands and Makua Valley. "My first impression visually was that the Army has done a more than credible job in preserving its historic nature and preserving its environmental nature."

McHugh said he believes the military can share the valley with the community.

Mixon has said that over the next decade much traditional infantry and artillery training can be shifted to the Big Island's Pohakuloa Training Area.

Makua Valley, with proper funding and support, could become a training center on gathering intelligence, Mixon has said. The center could provide training on homemade bombs used in all parts of the world, especially important given the growing threat in the Philippines, India and the rest of Asia. Soldiers from Pacific basin countries could also be sent here for such training at Makua.

He also said that Makua is a good place to train with unmanned aerial vehicles.

McHugh was in the islands on the last leg of a weeklong visit to Army bases in Japan, South Korea and Hawaii. The former Republican U.S. House member is the Army's 21st civilian leader. He assumed the post in September.

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Associated Press

Sugar plantation, Native Hawaiians in water battle

By AUDREY McAVOY , 05.09.10, 09:15 PM EDT GetAttachment.aspx&hm__qs=file%3de8485cb0-525c-40fc-9228-f1fba8d37665.gif%26ct%3daW1hZ2UvZ2lm%26name%3dNTE2NzY5NjM2MjU1NzY2ZTM3NjQ0MTQxNDM2NTQ2NDMuZ2lm%26inline%3d1%26rfc%3d0%26empty%3dFalse%26imgsrc%3dcid%253a422A301E1F28430EA0A0179E8BBEC710%2540LC&oneredir=1&ip=10.25.146.8&d=d5406&mf=0&a=01_9147af37267e6807dbb65d139ced4e57cae7fdcf149f9a0ff7350c9cf6a0f2a8GetAttachment.aspx&hm__qs=file%3df36afa80-e592-4c58-92d9-ecb4e651ad42.gif%26ct%3daW1hZ2UvZ2lm%26name%3dNTE2NzY5NjM2MjU1NzY2ZTM3NjQ0MTQxNDM2NTQ2NDMuZ2lm%26inline%3d1%26rfc%3d0%26empty%3dFalse%26imgsrc%3dcid%253a70008404E4E042BEB1F1421B4E95FF69%2540LC&oneredir=1&ip=10.25.146.8&d=d5406&mf=0&a=01_9147af37267e6807dbb65d139ced4e57cae7fdcf149f9a0ff7350c9cf6a0f2a8

HAIKU, Hawaii --

Lyn Scott's family has fished in Honopou stream for centuries and tapped its
water
to farm the Hawaiian staple taro on stone-lined terraces built by her
ancestors.

Up the road, Leonard Pagan helps run irrigation systems at Hawaii's last
sugar
plantation. He's the fourth generation of his family to work at Hawaiian

Commercial & Sugar Co., going back to his great-grandfather who
emigrated
from Puerto Rico.

Taro, fish and sugar are all central to Hawaii's rich history and identity. To
thrive
in this corner of Maui, however, they must all be nourished by the same
supply
of water. This has triggered an emotional struggle pitting one of Maui's
biggest
employers - the last representative of Hawaii's once-mighty "King Sugar"
-
against Native Hawaiians fighting to hang on to neglected ancient
traditions.

"They're fighting for their way of life and we're fighting for ours," said Wesley
Bissen,
a 30-year veteran machinist at the plantation, Hawaiian Commercial &
Sugar
Co.

The battle is now in it's ninth year, dating to 2001 when the Native
Hawaiian Legal
Corporation filed a petition asking the state to return water to East
Maui
streams.

In 2008, the state water commission ordered the sugar plantation to restore
water
to 8 streams - including Honopou. But Scott says her family's still not
getting
enough water to fish and farm taro like her ancestors. They're waiting
for the
water commission to respond to a complaint filed by her lawyers.

Scott's counterparts further east along the coast are waiting another decision
from the
water commission in a case that seeks to force the sugar plantation to
restore
water to 19 additional East Maui streams.

HC&S has agreed to restore water to one of the 19 streams. But officials say
the
company would have to shut down if it's ordered to give up more,
sparking mass
layoffs.

"It might be a big company that is controlling the water but it employs 800
little
people. And that makes a big difference," said Pagan, whose family has
worked
for HC&S since the 1800s.

The water commission is expected to announce its decision on the 19 streams
this
month.

One possible compromise, said Chris Benjamin, HC&S general manager,
would have
the plantation restore some water to the streams during the winter while
holding
on to its current diversions during the summer. He said this would allow
the
plantation to continue to access East Maui water when it needs it the
most.

Benjamin said it's hard to say how HC&S would respond if the commission ruled
against
it. "It would depend on what they decide to do."

Sugar plantations began diverting water from the streams running through the
lush
hills and valleys of East Maui in 1876.

Whaling, Hawaii's economic mainstay at the time, was on the decline. Looking for a
new
source of growth, the Hawaiian Kingdom threw its support behind the
nascent
sugar industry. It gave the plantations permission to divert water from
wetter
sides of the Hawaiian islands and channel it to drier plains planted
with
sugarcane.

Sugar prospered across the state, giving plantation owners a prominent role in
running
Hawaii after the U.S.-backed overthrow of the monarchy until statehood
and the
emergence of tourism as an economic force.

On Maui, the legacy of water diversion lives on in 24 miles of ditches and
50 miles
of tunnels that funnel millions of gallons of water each day from East
Maui to
HC&S' vast fields in Central Maui.

Scott, 50, grew up seeing taro sprouting from small patches on her family's
land at the
end of a long, winding dirt road off Maui's Hana Highway.

But the family is now only able to farm nine patches - less than a quarter
of the 40
their ancestors cultivated - because there's not enough water coming
through
Honopou stream. The limited flow stunts the taro's growth, making them
prone to
disease.

Taro is perhaps the most important crop in Hawaiian culture - considered a
relative
and a food staple.

It's used to make poi, a standard part of the traditional diet. And,
according to
legend, the taro plant and the boy who became the first human were born
of the
same parents. This means taro and humans share ancestors in Hawaiian
tradition.

Scott wants her grandchildren to grow up around taro like she did. She says it
will
help them learn who they are, where they come from and grow up proud to
be
Hawaiian.

It's also important her grandchildren are able fish for crabs and fish in the
streams
and ocean like their ancestors. But she says the low water flow means
the fish
aren't plentiful.

"There goes our culture. How are we going to teach our children how to fish if
the fish
aren't there?" Scott said.

Native Hawaiians owning land along the 19 streams awaiting the water
commission's
decision also want to fish.

"Our clients are unable to engage in what was traditionally and customarily
done in
that area," said Moses Haia, another attorney with the Native Hawaiian
corporation. "It's what makes them who they are."

Benjamin, the HC&S general manager, said water commission staff have indicated
the
streams have healthy populations and no species is listed as endangered.

He said restoring water to the streams would help fish populations recover,
but he
urged people to weigh this against the loss of 800 HC&S jobs paying
an
average of $50,000 per year. He warned a plantation's closure would
reverberate
through Maui, where HC&S is one of the largest employers.

"The adverse impact to the public of that would far outweigh any benefit
that's going
to occur as a result of letting water flow to the ocean," Benjamin said.



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May 9, 2010

Aloha Kakou:

I’m searching for Ohana (heirs) of Keli’iKanaka’ole and Kanaka’ole regarding 42 Mahele claims that we have. We have lands on Oahu, Maui, Moloka’I , Hawaii and Kaua’i. Please contact me if you have any genealogy information confirming our connection and to share.

Here is a sample of one of the Royal Patent for Keli’iKanaka’ole signed by King Kalakaua, translated into English.

The Great Seal Patent [or Deed].
OF THE RULER, ACCORDING TO THE MOTION OF THE COMMISSION TO QUIET LAND TITLES


WHEREAS, the Commissioners decided the land titles by means of decree, an authentic claim for
Keliikanakaole, Kuleana Number 7486 in fee simple inside of the place described below.

THEREFORE, by this Great Seal Patent [or Deed], declares KALAKAUA, Monarch by the Grace of God established over the Hawaiian Islands, for all parties, today, for himself and for his successors, granted fee simple land title to Keliikanakaole that entire district at
Puapuaa

2 kona on the island of Hawaii; thus the land sections: Parcel 1, Parcel 2
Within these parcels 1 Acre 610 fathoms more or less. All mineral and metal mining rights are reserved for the Kingdom.

For Keliikanakaole the said land is granted in fee simple or for his heirs, and with his safekeeping;

Furthermore, attached is the Statutory Commission tax which shall be levied for fee simple lands into perpetuity.

And so let it be known, I have signed my name, and with the Great Seal of the Hawaiian Islands, at Honolulu, on this
19th day of February 1878.
By the King,/ signed/ Kalakaua R [Rex]
The Minister of the Interior, signed/ J. Mott Smith

You can email me at aliikapu@yahoo.com and call me on my cell at 808-699-4376.

Mahalo nui,

Robert Ebanez

Keli’iKanaka’ole

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By now many are familiar with the saga of Hawai`i’s stolen ceded lands.

Taken by the outlaw provisional government at the time of the Hawaiian Kingdom overthrow, giving those lands to the US, which in turn the fake state of Hawai`i took in 1959 when Hawai`i supposedly became a state, and the recent Hawai`i and US Supreme Court cases regarding legitimate ownership.


Jon Kamakawiwo`ole Osorio found himself literally the last person on earth legally asserting native Hawaiian and Hawaiian Kingdom rights to these lands.


So we talked with Jon and discovered many astounding facts during our visit – the state’s utter lack of knowledge of the value of the ceded lands and their abysmal management, the real reason why no inventory has ever been done, and Jon’s plans going forward to continue the fight.


With all the ups and downs it’s one amazing ride you won’t want to miss as Jon reveals his quest to protect Hawai`i’s stolen lands in our newest segment this week
on Hawai`i’s award winning Voices Of Truth – One-On-One With Hawai`i’s Future.

MONDAY, May 10th At 6:30 PM
Maui – Akaku, Channel 53

MONDAY, May 10th At 7:00 PM & FRIDAY, May 14th At 5:30 PM Hawai`i Island – Na Leo, Channel 53
THURSDAY, May 13th At 8:30 PM & FRIDAY, May 14th At 8:30 AM - Kaua`i – Ho`ike, Channel 52
SATURDAY, May 15th At 8:00 PM O`ahu, `Olelo, Channel 53
“Last Man Standing – A Visit With Jon Osorio”

What if you suddenly found yourself as the only person left between protecting something and losing it forever? That's Jon Osorio and Hawai`i's stolen ceded lands. Two million acres set aside for native Hawaiians stolen by the US during Hawai`i's illegal overthrow about to be sold because today the state is broke. Will they get away with it? Find out if Jon's the man to stop their plan - Watch It Here


Voices Of Truth interviews those creating a better future for Hawai`i to discover what made them go from armchair observers to active participants. We hope you'll be inspired to do the same.

In addition to the markets outside of Hawai`i we’ve announced over the last few weeks, Voices Of Truth will also soon be airing in
additional cities in Pennsylvania, Maine and Michigan. 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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R U?

ARE YOU PROUD TO BE HERE IN HAWAI'I?
ARE YOU PROUD OF THE HAWAIIAN CULTURE?ARE YOU PROUD OF OUR NA KUPUNA?
ARE YOU HAAHEO TO BE KANAKA MAOLI?R U ??????
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msnbc_ban.gif MSNBC.com

NYT: Poisonous chemicals used to fight slick
Dispersants’ ingredients — ‘proprietary recipes like Coca-Cola’ — are secret
By Elisabeth Rosenthal
The New York Times
updated 2:06 a.m. HT, Thurs., May 6, 2010

As they struggle to plug a leak from a ruptured oil well in the Gulf of Mexico, BP and federal officials are alsoengaging in one of the largest and most aggressive experiments withchemical dispersants in the history of the country, and perhaps theworld.

With oil continuing to gush from the deep well, they have sprayed 160,000 gallons of chemical dispersant onthe water’s surface and pumped an additional 6,000 gallons directly ontothe leak, a mile beneath the surface.

John Curry, director of external affairs at BP, said the company wasencouraged by the results so far. But some environmental groups aredeeply nervous.

“I understand it’s the only thing they can do,” said Paul Orr of the group Lower MississippiRiverkeeper. “But I think it’s vital afterwards to really monitor what’shappening with aquatic life, with oil on the sea floor and things likeoyster beds.”

Even in the best cases, dispersants are applied in what might be termed a lose-lose strategy.Scientists make the calculation that it is better to have the oceanfilled with low concentrations of the dispersant chemicals — which arein themselves mild to moderate poisons — than to have dense oil on thesurface or washing up onshore, places where it is most likely to harmwildlife.

Necessary evil?
And while most environmentalists support the application of dispersants as anecessary evil to limit the damage, some have assailed an industrypolicy that guards their chemical makeup. Keeping the exact mix secretmakes it harder to evaluate the risks to marine ecosystems and to knowwhat side effects to look for as the crisis unfolds.

What is more, the main dispersants applied so far, from a product line called Corexit, had their approval rescinded inBritain a decade ago because laboratory tests found them harmful to sealife that inhabits rocky shores, like limpets, said Mark Kirby, ascientific adviser to the British government on the testing, use andapproval of oil spill treatment options.

But Mr. Kirby added that the finding might have little to no relevance tothe current situation, where the product is being applied in the openocean. While Corexit failed the British government’s limpet test, itpassed its offshore safety tests, Mr. Kirby said. (The dispersant had topass both tests for British waters.)

Still, as the molecules from the 160,000 gallons of dispersant bind with theoil from Deepwater Horizon, the oil drilling rig that exploded on April20, and fan out across the gulf, some groups are fighting for moreinformation about the product’s composition. That amount of dispersantis greater than the entire stockpile kept by oil-producing nations likeNorway.

“We flew over there and saw BP spraying all over the place,” said Frederic Hauge, head of theinternational environment group Bellona, based in Oslo. “We deserve toknow what’s in there.”

Handle with great care
Although the Nalco Company, which makes theCorexit dispersants, posted copies of the safety documents for two ofits dispersants online Wednesday, some of the ingredients are listed as“proprietary.”

The 10-page documents go into detail about compounds that must be handled with great care intheir original form, that should not touch the skin and can damagelungs. Although the documents state that the potential environmentalhazard is “moderate,” they say that when used as directed at sea in therecommended amounts the potential environmental exposure is “low.”

“It’s like any other product,” said Charlie Pajor, a senior manager at the Illinois-based company: “We developedthem and we’re protecting our trade secret.”

Mr. Pajor said that the company increased production over the weekend because it generally stockpiles only a smallamount, Corexit products are generally used in much smaller amounts totreat far smaller spills, he added.

Mr. Pajor said he could not recall a deployment of the product comparable tothe current effort.

Dispersants do not remove the oil from the ocean but instead bind with it and cause oilslicks to break up into tiny droplets that sink and can be “dispersed”by the current. They are particularly effective in treating spills indeep water and far from land, where the current can spread the particlesover a large range, diluting their dangerous effects.

“You’re basically taking the oil and transferring it to other compartments where it won’t do so much damage,” said Mr.Kirby, a team leader at Cefas Lowestoft Laboratory in Britain.

Most dispersants, he said, are a mixture of four to six chemicals that in tandem cause theoil to break up. Roughly 20-odd dispersant products exist, he said, andwhile they have generally similar types of components, they “haveproprietary recipes like Coca-Cola.”

When used out at sea, the products create a toxic plume in the immediate areathat might be dangerous for marine life there, scientists agree, butthey are diluted rather quickly by currents.

Like the United States and Britain, many countries test and approve the products before they are used, determining howtoxic they are when administered in low doses to marine animals likeshrimp.

New products are constantly being developed to be more effective. Still, a few countries forbid their usebecause their long-term effects are somewhat uncertain and many requireprior approval of national officials before deployment.

Leslie Kaufman contributed reporting.

This story, "In Gulf of Mexico, Chemicals Under Scrutiny," first appeared in TheNew York Times.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36981842/ns/technology_and_science-the_new_york_times/


© 2010 MSNBC.com
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DOUBTS PERSIST ON AKAKA BILL

Honolulu Advertiser - April 7, 2010

Hawai'i Republicans are getting increasingly conflicted over the Akaka bill for native Hawaiian political recognition.


Gov. Linda Lingle, who supported the measure for seven years against intense opposition by the national GOP, now opposes it — mainly because a new version unveiled by Hawai'i's Democratic congressional delegates and the Obama administration grants a Hawaiian government sovereign immunity from state laws prior to negotiations rather than after as provided by the previous version.


Lt. Gov. James "Duke" Aiona, a native Hawaiian and the likely Republican candidate for governor in November, made his first major political break with Lingle and is supporting the Democrats' amended bill with reservations.


And now the state GOP's platform committee, which will write the agenda Aiona runs on, is hedging it's longstanding support for the Akaka bill as Republicans prepare for their state convention.


The confusion in the GOP reflects the growing concern in the broader community about what to make of this totally rewritten bill that was sprung by surprise just before House and Senate committee action after months of secret negotiations.


It's clear that the Akaka bill will change life in Hawai'i in profound ways and confer enormous power on a relative few people, but there's been no clear explanation of how it would work, who brokered the new deal and who benefits from the changes.


Nor have there been public hearings in Hawai'i on the changes, and opposition to the bill is growing among both non-Hawaiians who see it as a race-based preference and Hawaiian nationalists who believe it would end any chance of ever achieving true autonomy.


Hawai'i Sens. Daniel Inouye and Daniel Akaka are basically saying, "Trust us," which many are unwilling to accept without more clarity on an issue with so much potential impact on local life and so much opportunity for political mischief....
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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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