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Friends of the Hawaiian Kingdom

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Friends of the Hawaiian Kingdom

To promote a rennaisance of the Hawaiian Kingdom and Hawaiian Culture to be shared by Hawaiians and non-Hawaiians. To explore the concept of Hawaiian National sovereignty now and for the future.

Members: 27
Latest Activity: Aug 30

Discussion Forum

ku ching

u.s. supreme court to hear ceded lands case 2 Replies

Started by ku ching. Last reply by kukuna_o_ka_la Jul 27.

ku ching

Kukakuka!

Started by ku ching May. 25, 2008.

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Shannon J Mewton Comment by Shannon J Mewton on August 30, 2010 at 8:37am
Aloha and mahalo for the links, I will be sure to read them Andrew. I'm not surprised, either, that the U.S. media squashes talk about Hawaiian sovereignty. I don't know where you live, but you rarely read about it in the mainland press. I was just talking to a couple of part-Hawaiian women yesterday who had moved to my part of California from HI as teenagers. They said they loved Hawaii and went back to visit family but no longer had any desire to live there, as there was no work and many problems to overcome. She just smiled when I mentioned the sovereignty issue and seemed skeptical that it would work. I felt bad when they said they moved so far away from home to give themselves and their kids a better life and education. It was a good example of how occupiers divide and destroy civilizations.

Well, onwards and upwards...
Andrew Comment by Andrew on August 29, 2010 at 10:33pm
Aloha Shannon.
This comes as no surprise at all the media appear to encourage outlandish interaction and ideas at times to glean attention.
Last Saturday I had a comment removed from the local Hawaiian media and am unable to post on the said newspaper, of concern is the comment contained no profanities or threats but a mere response to a regular poster with anti-Hawaiian sentiments. Professor Trask has written about widespread censorship in the local U.S. controlled media. In the past with two tourist magazines I have had whole paragraphs deleted and been left with only one single sentence published. Freedom of speech is safeguarded in the U.S. Constitution for an important reason, the level of censorship over there in Hawai'i on the Sovereignty issue is frightening. Here are 3 sites Shannon you may find helpful about Hawai'i and its true history:

(1). www.hawaiiankingdom.org/

(2). http://www.hawaiiankingdom.org/pdf/Continuity_Hawn_Kingdom.pdf

(3). http://www.alohaquest.com/archive/boyle_testimony.htm

-Aloha and welcome to Maoliworld.
Shannon J Mewton Comment by Shannon J Mewton on August 29, 2010 at 6:06pm
I just heard some idiot on the radio proposing that Hawai'i's trash and recycling should be dropped from National Guard planes into one of its active volcanoes. I didn't know if he was trying to be funny but it sounded absolutely disrespectful and repulsive to me, esp. when he snarkily said it could be done with a ceremony to appease Mme Pele...maybe throw in some candles and flowers along with the trash...unbelievable. He never said he was kidding. That's one of many reasons why the US needs to get out of Hawai'i yesterday!!!!
kukuna_o_ka_la Comment by kukuna_o_ka_la on July 24, 2010 at 12:15pm
SaivsHilary.pdf
kukuna_o_ka_la Comment by kukuna_o_ka_la on July 23, 2010 at 11:42am

kukuna_o_ka_la Comment by kukuna_o_ka_la on July 23, 2010 at 11:41am
You see. You have to give Lili’uokalani credit. In one year, 1893, she played a mean hand of cards or a mean game of chess. In just one year she “totaled” the U.S.A. It would take over 100 years for the U.S.A. to be renamed appropriately “The Great Satan”.

But in January of 1893 she side- stepped the U.S. Marines. By Monday morning November 13th of 1893 she could inform Albert Shelby Willis that black- birding pirates of the U.S.A. had gone right ahead and played themselves into situation where the ONLY just solution was their immediate beheading ! Now that’s creditable play. President Grover Cleveland, openly acknowledging JUSTICE, turned right around and let his pirates take the whole United States of America plunging down the maelstrom with them (the pirates).

The Pacific was loaded with scouts. The black- birding pirates (annexatonists) understood the countries they represented perfectly well. The Lorrin Thurstons knew that, if they succeeded in their blackbirding projects, their mother countries would appreciate their daring exploits. President Grover Cleveland came around. Blackbirds were still blackbirds even when they had palaces like I'olani. "Justice" does NOT extend to blackbirds. President Cleveland and the United States of America, "a Christian Nation", plunged headlong with nothing loathe down the path of blackbirding pirates. Their posterity would see nothing wrong at all in testing nukes on blackbirds.

Praise Our Queen Lili’uokalani ! She ranks right up there with Mother Teresa or even The Blessed Virgin Mary. Until November 11, 1917, the day of Our Queen’s passing, the United States of America still had the option of pursuing JUSTICE. By the way, please do not try to qualify this Hawaiian event as “ancient history”. Our Queen Lili’uokalani passed with the satisfaction of knowing that the whole world could see the Luciferian horns protruding from the forehead of the U.S.A. When JUSTICE does come to the Pacific Ocean, there will be beheadings as Our Queen boldly justified. She would not accept the belief that the brown people were put here as toys for the imperial navies.
Anne Punohu Comment by Anne Punohu on July 3, 2010 at 5:02pm
aloha looking forward to sharing my mana'o
J. D'Alba Comment by J. D'Alba on May 30, 2009 at 12:45pm
Genre: Hawai'ian/Legal Drama/Adventure/Fantasy

Logline: A 19th Century Naval Chaplain, who resisted the US takeover of Hawai'i, is reincarnated as a contemporary attorney who is confronted with the same dark energies that originally overthrew the Kingdom of Hawai'i, as he fights against unscrupulous developers to preserve a Hawai'ian family's ownership of land .

Beyond Wailea

Based On A True Story From The Island Of Maui.

By J. D'Alba
814.270.1977
jpulehu@hotmail.com

Knowing of the plight of the Hawaiian culture and the impeding challenge her people are facing with the continued loss of their land that is vital to their existence, a elderly Hawaiian Kapuna summons her family's amakua, the shark, to compel the return of a nineteenth century American Naval Chaplain to aid her people. The naval Chaplain, who has been reincarnated as a contemporary attorney in the midst of a blossoming legal career, finds his life turned upside down when his fiancée finds him in a compromising interlude with his secretary. In his emotionally distraught state he seeks comfort in a French Canadian paramour only to find his plans thwarted by a winter blizzard that strikes Montreal. At the airport he learns that Montreal is inaccessible and the announcement of the final boarding call of a flight to Maui instills in him a sense of déjà vu that compels him to the island of Maui.

Upon landing in Maui he checks into a posh hotel in Wailea, Maui's most upscale resort area when he expresses a desire to the hotel concierge for a memorable experience of the island. The concierge arranges a hang gliding expedition for him from the summit of Haleakala volcano and along the scenically spectacular north shore of Maui's coast. His awareness of this island's incredible beauty compels him to explore Maui's north shore. As he is photographing the coastline a rogue wave sweeps him into the ocean sending him into a panic to survive. During this struggle he experiences inexplicable thoughts of his past life as the Chaplain, as the Chaplain is bound and gagged on a naval freighter. During his near drowning he is approached by the shark who, unbeknownst to the attorney, thrusts him onto the safety of the reef only after the shark bequeaths upon his neck the revered Hawaiian malie lei. The attorney's struggle against near downing, his encounter with the shark, and his being thrust from the water is witnessed by a Hawaiian elder and his grandson who come to his aid and assist him back to health in the company of their ohana (family). The attorney finds himself living in their incredible valley and becomes enamored not only with these beautiful people, their culture, and their way of life, but also with the elder Hawaiian's niece, Moana, with whom he begins a wondrous love affair. Their affair only heightens his appreciation of the beautiful essence of the Hawaiian culture, their social graces, spiritualism, love, gratitude, knowledge, unique philosophical perspectives, and their essential, inextricable bond with the land.

During breakfast one morning Moana reads that an Auntie, deceased decades earlier, is being sued in an action to quiet title to land of which neither Moana nor anyone else in the ohana has any knowledge. The attorney investigates the basis of this legal action, intercedes on behalf of the family, and learns of the tragic history of Hawaii and how the United States of America illegally acquired the once sovereign Kingdom of Hawai'i. He is lost however to explain the connection between the land that is the subject of the lawsuit and the family that has rescued him until he meets the matriarch of the family, Tutu Helen, who unequivocally informs him: "Smythe stole the land!" Knowing the veracity of Tutu Helen's statement he is left with the daunting task of proving this fact in a court of law only to learn firsthand of the unjust treatment of Hawaiians in the American system of justice, and the incredible lengths the powers that be will go to suppress anyone who attempts to help them rectify this injustice. He learns that in a previous lawsuit to deprieve Tutu Helen of land, her opponents went so far as to publish her obituary hoping to prevent her of knowing of their vicious actions.This challenge presents the attorney with utter, hopeless frustration until he is mystically returned to nineteenth century Hawaii that is in the midst of being overthrown by a conspiracy initiated by the American government with the aid of the US naval and marine forces. There, as the naval Chaplain, he witnesses the planned efforts to acquire this paradise from its rightful owners only to find himself bound and gagged on a ship, being keelhauled for his refusal to aid in the unscrupulous conspiracy to overthrow the Kingdom of Hawaii, and steal the land.


With the knowledge he gains from reliving his prior life experience he again is back in court only to find he is without concrete evidence to sustain what he knows to be true. Tutu Helen then directs him to the graves of her ancestors that are situated on property now 'owned' by the aging officer of Hawaii's largest corporate entity, a Hawaiian Sugar Company, and whose son, knowing of this outside Attorney's efforts to expose the century old fraud that enabled his father's corporation to rise to its status as Hawaii's premiere corporate entity, is determined to stop the attorney by any means.

Despite the grave threat to their lives, the Attorney and his lover, Moana, sneak unto the lands of the corporation's leader where they discover the bodily remains of Moana's ancestors exposed on the eroding cliff along the ocean. Removing a tooth from the skull of one the ancestors, the attorney uses it to prove the family's ownership of the land. The Judge is dumbfounded by the Catch-22 he now finds himself in. His dilemma, either refuse to accept the inescapable conclusion that this land is indeed still rightfully owned by this Hawaiian family, and allow these lands to remain held by the sugar company and permit the developers to acquire the land which they seek to quiet title to, or deny the developers lawsuit and return all the land, some two thousand plus acres, to the heirs of the nineteenth century Hawaiians from which it was fraudulently acquired.

In the end Tutu Helen appears near death as the attorney tells her of the Judges decision. The Judge refused to jeopardize his career by perpetuating a fraud that has existed for over a century and he not only denied the attempt by the developers to take the parcels of land they seek but also he returned the two thousand acres of land to this Hawaiian family. The attorney is overcome with distress, as Tutu Helen seems to gasp her last breath of life after learning of the decision. Surrounded by members of her ohana whose emotions over her loss are evident, Tutu Helen stuns them all as she opens her eyes and proclaims. "They said I was dead, but I still live."


The final scene of the movie depicts the mansion once owned by the head of the Sugar Company being bulldozed to the ground and dozens of Hawaiians working to restore the land by planting trees, flowers, and gardens where the mansion once stood.

As this scene concludes the movie fades along with the hauntingly beautiful voice of Hawaiian legendary musician Israel Kamakawiwo'ole:
Cry for the gods,
Cry for the people.
Cry for the land that was taken away.
And then yet you'll find.Hawai'i.
Ua mau Ke Ea Oka Aina Ika Pono O Hawai'i.
(The life of the land of Hawaii is preserved in righteousness.)
ku ching Comment by ku ching on February 19, 2009 at 11:07am
My response to this morning's (Feb. 19) article in the Advertiser - on Mauna Kea legislation -
"Mauna Kea (MK) is a conservation zone - but one that a special interest (astronomy) values. However, the major entity - University of Hawaii/Institute for Astronomy (u.h./IfA) - has been remiss in malama-ing MK - and, in the recent NASA EIS - u.h./IfA has been found to be guilty of allowing the cumulative impact of telescope activities on Mauna Kea to have "substantial, adverse, and significant" impacts. Additionally, u.h./IfA has been found guilty of violations of its lease and has had to pay fines for its different feasances.

Should the fox be given the chicken coop?

BLNR, in violation of Section 17l of Hawaii Revised Statutes, allows the commercialization of MK by international entities who are subsidized by the Kingdom of Hawaii - whose stolen land it is.

Should the National Telescope of Japan - and scopes of many other nations - get a free ride (even though they may be "for profit" entities)? $Millions of ignored rents could make a difference in DOEd's budget plight."
Tane Comment by Tane on January 1, 2009 at 5:30pm
The U.S. pipe dream continues. Such brazenness is to be expected. It's like waving the wand and it all comes true.

Hawai'i should know that this policy includes the Akaka Bill:

American Lutheran Developments in their Historical Context -- Some Major Landmarks
1871
Senate declares that Indian nations will no longer be recognized as independent powers with whom treaties can be contracted. 1871: As part of President U. S. Grant's so-called "peace policy," 71 Indian agencies are assigned to various denominations. This was meant to end corruption in the Bureau of Indian Affairs and assign Christian missionaries the task of working with the tribes. The Lutheran churches were assigned the Sac and Fox Reservation, now the Mesquakie Indian Reservation near Tama, Iowa.

Prepared by the Department for Communication
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
 

Members (27)

ku ching Momi Nalani Janos (Keoni) Samu kukuna_o_ka_la Noelani Duffey-Spikes Michael Lothian Dom Waihili SUZIE KEHAULANI Kamea RJ Mendoza Keliiaumoana Tane HALE O KEAWE-A-HEULU aka: NAIHE Michael Alika Simon Jr. Eloise Littlejohn Donna Burns J. D'Alba Rose Lokenani Chung-Lono John H. Martin, Jr. Paul Basso Andrew Anne Punohu Shannon J Mewton Michael Daniel Medley Ngawai Parata
 
 
 

Ho‘omau 2010

Mahalo for Supporting Punana Leo o Maui
Mahalo to everyone who participated in the auction! Thanks for supporting native language programs!

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