Friday, August 3, 2018

Vol VII No. 714 Part 2



While some are protesting the use of "No Aloha Poke" in the name of a Chicago restaurant, there are still a shortage of doctors and services on the Big Island. People die! Where's the outrage or the topic of a protest.
Kanaka are forced to leave to seek proper medical attention - where's the outrage?
Kanaka are forced to move away because they can't afford the cost of living - where's the outrage?
...
Kanaka can't afford to get their teeth fixed and can't afford dentures, but OHA donates $$ to political PACS instead of helping na kanaka so their health will improve. Where's the outrage?
People die while on Hawaiian Home Lands List and when a new administration is appointed, they start a new list. Those who were at the top of the old list are now behind those on the "new" list. Why no outrage there?
Queen Emma's Trust was hijacked. Where's the outrage?
People living in low income housing can't grow food or have gardens - where's the outrage?
VA in Hawaii denies life saving services to kanaka and veterans - where's the protest?
There are no in-patient dialysis beds on Big Island sufficient to meet the needs - instead taxpayers medi-vac them to Oahu at a cost of $27 - 48K per trip. the cost of dialysis machines is about $3 and up to 45K). Where's the outrage?
Kanaka and people in Hawaii often work 2 - 3 jobs and still can't find affordable rents or housing prices. Many working are homeless. Where's the outrage?
The OHA and Rail Audits have stalled - where's the outrage?
Hawaii County gave it's management between 22 and 37% raises (some raises are $37K) while talking about the need to increase our taxes. Where's the outrage?
Some kids have no shoes - they receive donated slippas from people - where's the outrage?
Kanaka who can prove they have an interest in land via Kingdom and Patents (not warranty deeds) are arrested trying to access their own properties. Where's the outrage?
The state wants to segregate the kanaka on it's terms - where's the outrage.
Grubbers destroy sacred and ancient sites in Hawaii in favor of development - where's the outrage?
Public buildings are built on burial sites - where's the outrage?
but...God forbid someone 4000 miles away has a restaurant with the name "Aloha" in it.
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Camille Brown I feel you on all the above aunty๐Ÿ’”my pu’uwai stay some sore. Get plenty things right now that is so disheartening and heartbreaking๐Ÿ’”. I keep praying for answers๐Ÿ™for ALL of it!
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Reply10h
Maria Taylor I don't want to offend, but it just seems very odd. See my other post and it will explain why I thinking this is manufactured.
Manage


Reply9h
Camille Brown Maria Taylor You didn’t offend aunty. There’s so much chaos, so much pain, so much disrespect and disregard now for a lot of things. I’ve been observing, watching, praying and it’s just overwhelmingly sad how bad everything has gotten. No even have aloha here anymore. I don’t know what happened to this island, where all the entitlement stuff came from, the disrespect towards our own, and just the plain no even care kine. I agree with what you wrote, because most will leave home to search for better reasons to make a living, live reasonably, enjoy life and live with aloha and share how we were taught elsewhere. I’m saddened to see home disrupted, corrupted, and overtaken. I’m hurt for those who get taken advantage of at home by foreigners and those that are caught up by those that have no faith. I’m distraught by those that tarnish the aloha because of entitlement attitudes and heartbroken for those who have tried to fight for what’s rightfully theirs and no one will listen. I will just continue praying๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™
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Reply9h
Ku'ulei Perez We may not be in outrage but we do feel something and more than a few of us are doing something, I may suffer my personal pains and need, but my kahea is for all our people and being outraged demands what? How should we think like the po'e haole in the U.S. and rage in protest? How we feel or think is none of their business, we know we got to do something and many of us are doing something not just shouting in outrage of the wrongs that we had to live through all these 100 plus years. I may not like what is going on but should I shout at my brother and demand he do something? or should I do my part weather in a big or small way to change things, many are, so what more should we do? to look like we are doing something in the eyes of those who think we are so incapable, I want to understand that, so much is wrong and has been wrong, and if we are a people who are spiritually connected then is it not the will of KeAkua that matters most, is it not his will that shall be done? is he not our redeemer in his time? I am sorry if my reaction offends, but it offends me and maybe others for people to think that we do not care of are not trying to do something. Is it not we the kanaka that are living through the suffering watching all the people who are so smart taking leadership positions here in Hawaii and not doing right by us still. When we become an undivided nation again, then all can be made right, but until then we have to connect with each other as a family, seek the truth, help the brain washed understand that, and until we walk the same path together and stop picking on your neighbor or ohana for things they have no control over yet. It is all a waste of energy needed to unite ourselves. Many of us remain here despite, we did not leave our homeland seeking a better life for ourselves and do not blame others for doing so, but we chose to remain to protect and be vigilant in our kuleana, many kanaka are doing something despite the hardship for our good, if we would just look with the eyes of seeing and not with they eyes of wanting. I say this with sadness but remain in aloha for the good of us all. my mana'o
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Reply5h
Amelia Gora Hi Maria n Jack! we will be able to help soon.... exciting info found and moving on it...….will let you folks know..aloha
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Reply1m

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Posted by HuffPost
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"No family should have to go through this."
Barbara Ruhland lost her husband, who was a farmer for decades, to suicide. As farmers face stress and anxiety stemm...ing from growing financial struggles in their industry, Ruhland hopes sharing her family's experience will help others going through a similar struggle (via Road Trip: Listen To America)
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Amelia Gora probably another reason is that their crops are killed off from the extermination sprays from the Haarp projects? https://www.bing.com/videos/search...

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