Healani Sonoda-Pale shared a link.
WOW! Mahelalani Richardson that is probably the worst quote out of context yet I've seen from Kealoha Pisciotta. Kealoha was trying to say that that its crazy they would spend 8.5 million on a private entity. Period. The way you constructed this made it unclear where Kealoha stood. 'A'ole PONO. While King is allowed to elaborate and finish his sentence on his position which is a false narrative. #HawaiiNewsNow #UnbalancedReporting
Hawaii expended near $8 million to act as a private security contractor/enforcer for a foreign development and they have laws denying Hawaii School Students from getting school lunches???
This is just a prime example of how screwed up our government is when it comes to taking care of our people, SHAME on IGE, the LEGISTLATURE's, and the SCHOOL BOARD!!!
Hawaii’s current law only allows schools to deny access in certain, specific circumstances: 1) after the first 21 days of school, and 2) seven days after a second attempt at notifying parents of the unpaid meal debt. Outside of those circumstances, schools are legally permitted to deny students from getting school lunches.
This is just a prime example of how screwed up our government is when it comes to taking care of our people, SHAME on IGE, the LEGISTLATURE's, and the SCHOOL BOARD!!!
Hawaii’s current law only allows schools to deny access in certain, specific circumstances: 1) after the first 21 days of school, and 2) seven days after a second attempt at notifying parents of the unpaid meal debt. Outside of those circumstances, schools are legally permitted to deny students from getting school lunches.
Kanoe Love to Oʻahu Kiaʻi Happenings
Joshua Lanakila Mangauil in Waimanalo, you’re amazing! Mahalo for everything you do!
This is really upsetting!
Paul Neves is with Theresa Keohunani Taber.
Please share this with everyone...
On the morning of Saturday September 28th between 6:30 and 7:00 AM, beachside across the street from Seaside Restaurant in Ke...aukaha, my life was threatened while walking my dog. A gun was aimed methodically and purposefully right at me, within 8 feet of my face. At that very moment, I thought I would be shot and killed. I remember his face, the barrel of the gun and his dead eyes. I will never forget.
On the morning of Saturday September 28th between 6:30 and 7:00 AM, beachside across the street from Seaside Restaurant in Ke...aukaha, my life was threatened while walking my dog. A gun was aimed methodically and purposefully right at me, within 8 feet of my face. At that very moment, I thought I would be shot and killed. I remember his face, the barrel of the gun and his dead eyes. I will never forget.
Those of you who know me, know that I have been outspoken on political, cultural and spiritual issues all my life, and especially in Hawai'i. You also know that I am not afraid to die for what I believe in and that I will not be threatened or intimidated. I will continue to follow the call of Ke Akua and that is my refuge, purpose and mission in life.
The shooter left after my yelling and screaming back at him. After a long five seconds his car fled the scene. The police were timely and I am following up with them. I have shared this terrible incident with my ohana and close friends. I also am seeking professional help to deal with it.
I share it with you because it is healing for me and to make you aware of a danger that does exists in our community. I am asking you to pray (PULE) for me and other innocent people who have been traumatized or threatened in their lives.
Never leave your home or loved ones without saying to them, "I Love You". I have learned that valuable lesson! I got this my friends.
God bless you...See You On The Mauna... Kumu Paul Neves
DO NOT LIKE THIS POST, READ IT AND SHARE IT!!! KP
See MoreThe shooter left after my yelling and screaming back at him. After a long five seconds his car fled the scene. The police were timely and I am following up with them. I have shared this terrible incident with my ohana and close friends. I also am seeking professional help to deal with it.
I share it with you because it is healing for me and to make you aware of a danger that does exists in our community. I am asking you to pray (PULE) for me and other innocent people who have been traumatized or threatened in their lives.
Never leave your home or loved ones without saying to them, "I Love You". I have learned that valuable lesson! I got this my friends.
God bless you...See You On The Mauna... Kumu Paul Neves
DO NOT LIKE THIS POST, READ IT AND SHARE IT!!! KP
Kaipo Kekona
Preping for this Unity March! Feeding for free is part of our traditions and customs here at Na Aikane O Maui. See you all Saturday Oct.5th Ka ala ka Mo'i aka "Front St." Marching to the Kingdoms Capitol.
Cookie Akau Gaspar shared a link.
State Attributes of the Hawaiian Kingdom
Posted on February 22, 2014
The Hawaiian Kingdom received the recognition of its independence and sovereignty by joint proclamation from the United Kingdom and France on November 28, 1843, and by the United States of America on July 6, 1844.
...Continue Reading
Posted on February 22, 2014
The Hawaiian Kingdom received the recognition of its independence and sovereignty by joint proclamation from the United Kingdom and France on November 28, 1843, and by the United States of America on July 6, 1844.
...Continue Reading
WIPED OUT AGAIN at Warrior Printing! Hope you were able to get your shirts. See you tomorrow at the “Kūkahi-Together We Rise” March for Mauna Kea starting at Ala Moana Park @ 2 pm. There some pre orders that weren't picked up. #MaunaMajority
Healani Sonoda-Pale
WIPED OUT AGAIN at Warrior Printing! Hope you were able to get your shirts. See you tomorrow at the “Kūkahi-Together We Rise” March for Mauna Kea starting at ...Ala Moana Park @ 2 pm. There some pre orders that weren't picked up WARRIOR PRINTING WILL BE OPEN SATURDAY 8am-12 for preorder pick ups. #MaunaMajority
Nani Ome shared a live video.
14,241 Views
Kiaikekahaukani is at Bachman Hall.
Today marks the 4th anahulu (or 40 days) of students at UH-Mānoa protesting UH’s mismanagement of Mauna a Wākea. The Kū Kiaʻi Mauna occupation of Bachman Hall i...s on-record the lengthiest sit-in ever conducted at the University of Hawaiʻi since they first opened their doors in 1907. A mixture of students, faculty, staff and community members have been ensuring that ceremony is hosted three times a day at our kuahu that was raised in 2015. @ Bachman Hall
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Kepakemapa 30, 2019
WHAT happened to JOBIE ?
GOVERNOR IGE appointed TYLER IOKEPA GOMES as DEPUTY to the CHAIRMAN of the DHHL
...
WHAT happened to JOBIE ?
GOVERNOR IGE appointed TYLER IOKEPA GOMES as DEPUTY to the CHAIRMAN of the DHHL
...
Gov. David Ige has appointed Tyler Iokepa Gomes as deputy to the chairman of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, effective today.
Gomes most recently served as the partnership manager at Elemental Excelerator, where he oversaw the Elemental Hui - a partnership network of local business, non-profit, educational, and philanthropic institutions.
Previously, Gomes served as deputy public defender in the Office of the Public Defender, and co-authored and co-edited legal pleadings in Waters v. Nago, which successfully overturned the 2018 election results in the District IV Honolulu City Council race.
A resident of Maunawili, O'ahu, Gomes is a graduate of the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, having earned a bachelor's degree in Hawaiian Language and a J.D. and certificate in Native Hawaiian Law from the William S. Richardson School of Law.
Gomes' appointment is subject to Senate confirmation.
###
See MoreGomes most recently served as the partnership manager at Elemental Excelerator, where he oversaw the Elemental Hui - a partnership network of local business, non-profit, educational, and philanthropic institutions.
Previously, Gomes served as deputy public defender in the Office of the Public Defender, and co-authored and co-edited legal pleadings in Waters v. Nago, which successfully overturned the 2018 election results in the District IV Honolulu City Council race.
A resident of Maunawili, O'ahu, Gomes is a graduate of the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, having earned a bachelor's degree in Hawaiian Language and a J.D. and certificate in Native Hawaiian Law from the William S. Richardson School of Law.
Gomes' appointment is subject to Senate confirmation.
###
Kepakemapa 25, 2019
Pōʻakolu
Copy paste to share nonsubscriber unable to read
...
Pōʻakolu
Copy paste to share nonsubscriber unable to read
...
Moʻolelo:
MAUNA KEA, Hawaii >> Public support for the Thirty Meter Telescope has declined sharply after more than two months of peaceful but determined protests on Mauna Kea, and most voters now oppose the idea of using force to reopen Mauna Kea Access Road to allow construction to move forward, according to a new Honolulu Star- Advertiser poll.
Half of all voters surveyed in the poll still support plans to build the $1.4 billion next-generation telescope near the summit of Hawaii’s tallest mountain, but that is a dramatic drop from 18 months ago when 77% of voters said they supported the project.
The poll also found that slightly more than half of all voters approve of the protests, which are a well-organized effort to prevent the TMT from ever being built.
ADVERTISING
The state and anti-TMT protesters are deadlocked. Supporters of TMT say the project has a legal right to proceed with construction, but protesters who describe themselves as protectors of Mauna Kea are camped on the access road to prevent construction equipment from reaching the summit area.
The access road has been closed since July 15, and dozens of anti-TMT activists were arrested July 17 for blocking the roadway. The protesters regard the project as a desecration of a mountain that many Hawaiians consider sacred, and say they will not allow TMT to be built.
The Star-Advertiser poll found Hawaiians object most to the project, with 62% now saying they oppose construction of the TMT.
The Hawaii Poll, conducted Sept. 12-19 on cellphones and landlines by Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy of Washington, D.C., included 800 registered voters statewide and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. It includes a percentage of a separate poll of 400 Hawaiian registered voters, weighted to reflect their percentage of Hawaii voters. The margin of error on the Hawaiian poll is plus or minus 5 percentage points.
Gov. David Ige said in an interview Tuesday that “the issue of building TMT is not a popularity contest. TMT has the potential to benefit the world by advancing scientific knowledge, and has met all its legal requirements.”
He noted the flurry of anti-TMT activity on social media in recent months, and acknowledged the poll shows support for the project dropped amid that cacophony.
“I do get the sense, and I think some of it is shown in the polls, is that people want both,” Ige said. “They would like and they support TMT, and they support the protesters, even though you and I know that that’s two different sides of the same coin.”
Ige has pledged to reopen the road and “enforce the law” so that construction can proceed, but the new Star-Advertiser poll found 59% of Hawaii voters oppose the use of force to reopen the road. Among Ige’s fellow Democrats, fewer than a third say the state should use force to clear the road.
That is one reason Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim and Ige have been patient as they try to work through the issue to find a solution, Ige said.
“Use of force is the absolute last step that we would want to be looking at,” Ige said. “Whatever action that we take to physically move those who are breaking the law will be done in a respectful and nonviolent way.” That might mean law enforcement officers would pick up protesters and move them off the road, he said.
Andre Perez, one of the leaders of the protest movement, said in a written statement that the poll results show “that the more educated people become on this issue the more they support the protection of Maunakea and oppose the TMT.”
“The community support for the protectors’ stance, and opposition to the state using force to clear the road, clarifies that by any ethnic or cultural standard, arresting elders for protecting their sacred, ancestral land is just wrong,” Perez said in the statement.
“Hawaiians have suffered generations of injustice and forced compromise. The Hawaiian community has drawn the line to say no more. The kupuna (elders) and kia‘i (protectors) are united, firm and committed to their position,” Perez said. “It’s my feeling that the outcome of this issue will define Hawai‘i politics and community relations for generations. TMT should just leave Hawai‘i.”
Colin Moore, director of the Public Policy Center at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, said the poll results are remarkable because support for TMT has apparently collapsed since Honolulu Civil Beat polled voters on the same issue early last month.
“You’re talking about people changing their mind about an issue, which is an incredibly hard thing to achieve,” Moore said. “It’s not as if the TMT is a new idea that no one has ever heard before. I mean, people had years to form opinions on this, so it goes to show in some ways the brilliance of the protest campaign.”
The finding that most voters support the protest is also surprising because protest movements tend to be unpopular. That suggests that “they have a lot of respect for the way that the protest has been handled,” Moore said.
“The kapu aloha (nonviolent protest) approach seems to be very popular, and that again is a testament to the sophistication and organization of the protest movement,” he said.
Gordon Squires, vice president for external relations for TMT, said the poll results “do not deter or discourage us because we strongly believe they reflect responses to a number of issues beyond TMT.”
“Those issues include the desire among some Native Hawaiians for self-determination, a belief that there has been mismanagement of Maunakea in the past, and community concerns about citizens acting unlawfully and where that might lead,” Squires said in a written statement. “TMT, its supporters and its protesters have become caught in a perfect storm wherein TMT is an icon for those issues.”
When the project’s sponsors first came to Hawaii more than a decade ago, “we were aware of the issues related to self-determination and land management. We heeded those concerns, and others that arose during numerous sessions with residents across Hawaii,” Squires wrote.
“We listened carefully and responded with solutions. The resulting site selected, which is 600 feet below the summit; the physical design plan; and the education and workforce programs all stand to benefit Hawaii and all residents, without negative impact, now and into the future,” he said in his statement.
During the 10-year approval process and legal review, “TMT brought together scientific minds and community hearts to create something of which Hawaii can be proud. TMT is grateful for the community’s support and we believe this poll does not reflect their commitment, which we know full well through their advocacy and public as well as personal communication.”
But Moore said the poll probably understates the opposition to TMT because people who are most likely to oppose the project — young people and students — are less likely to answer the phone and sit for a poll interview, he said.
He said there may be greater opposition to TMT among Hawaiians because many have family members who are committed to the protest movement. “My guess is that this is a message that Hawaiians have heard more directly from people they know and trust,” he said.
On the use of force to clear the road, the poll results show “that’s entirely off the table. That’s politically impossible now,” Moore said. “What this shows is that’s going to be very politically costly for the governor, for Democrats who stand with him. This is the sort of thing that can become a voting issue. I think it would if there’s force used.”
“I don’t know what they’re going to do, but these numbers suggest that it won’t be possible to resume construction,” Moore said.
See MoreMAUNA KEA, Hawaii >> Public support for the Thirty Meter Telescope has declined sharply after more than two months of peaceful but determined protests on Mauna Kea, and most voters now oppose the idea of using force to reopen Mauna Kea Access Road to allow construction to move forward, according to a new Honolulu Star- Advertiser poll.
Half of all voters surveyed in the poll still support plans to build the $1.4 billion next-generation telescope near the summit of Hawaii’s tallest mountain, but that is a dramatic drop from 18 months ago when 77% of voters said they supported the project.
The poll also found that slightly more than half of all voters approve of the protests, which are a well-organized effort to prevent the TMT from ever being built.
ADVERTISING
The state and anti-TMT protesters are deadlocked. Supporters of TMT say the project has a legal right to proceed with construction, but protesters who describe themselves as protectors of Mauna Kea are camped on the access road to prevent construction equipment from reaching the summit area.
The access road has been closed since July 15, and dozens of anti-TMT activists were arrested July 17 for blocking the roadway. The protesters regard the project as a desecration of a mountain that many Hawaiians consider sacred, and say they will not allow TMT to be built.
The Star-Advertiser poll found Hawaiians object most to the project, with 62% now saying they oppose construction of the TMT.
The Hawaii Poll, conducted Sept. 12-19 on cellphones and landlines by Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy of Washington, D.C., included 800 registered voters statewide and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. It includes a percentage of a separate poll of 400 Hawaiian registered voters, weighted to reflect their percentage of Hawaii voters. The margin of error on the Hawaiian poll is plus or minus 5 percentage points.
Gov. David Ige said in an interview Tuesday that “the issue of building TMT is not a popularity contest. TMT has the potential to benefit the world by advancing scientific knowledge, and has met all its legal requirements.”
He noted the flurry of anti-TMT activity on social media in recent months, and acknowledged the poll shows support for the project dropped amid that cacophony.
“I do get the sense, and I think some of it is shown in the polls, is that people want both,” Ige said. “They would like and they support TMT, and they support the protesters, even though you and I know that that’s two different sides of the same coin.”
Ige has pledged to reopen the road and “enforce the law” so that construction can proceed, but the new Star-Advertiser poll found 59% of Hawaii voters oppose the use of force to reopen the road. Among Ige’s fellow Democrats, fewer than a third say the state should use force to clear the road.
That is one reason Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim and Ige have been patient as they try to work through the issue to find a solution, Ige said.
“Use of force is the absolute last step that we would want to be looking at,” Ige said. “Whatever action that we take to physically move those who are breaking the law will be done in a respectful and nonviolent way.” That might mean law enforcement officers would pick up protesters and move them off the road, he said.
Andre Perez, one of the leaders of the protest movement, said in a written statement that the poll results show “that the more educated people become on this issue the more they support the protection of Maunakea and oppose the TMT.”
“The community support for the protectors’ stance, and opposition to the state using force to clear the road, clarifies that by any ethnic or cultural standard, arresting elders for protecting their sacred, ancestral land is just wrong,” Perez said in the statement.
“Hawaiians have suffered generations of injustice and forced compromise. The Hawaiian community has drawn the line to say no more. The kupuna (elders) and kia‘i (protectors) are united, firm and committed to their position,” Perez said. “It’s my feeling that the outcome of this issue will define Hawai‘i politics and community relations for generations. TMT should just leave Hawai‘i.”
Colin Moore, director of the Public Policy Center at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, said the poll results are remarkable because support for TMT has apparently collapsed since Honolulu Civil Beat polled voters on the same issue early last month.
“You’re talking about people changing their mind about an issue, which is an incredibly hard thing to achieve,” Moore said. “It’s not as if the TMT is a new idea that no one has ever heard before. I mean, people had years to form opinions on this, so it goes to show in some ways the brilliance of the protest campaign.”
The finding that most voters support the protest is also surprising because protest movements tend to be unpopular. That suggests that “they have a lot of respect for the way that the protest has been handled,” Moore said.
“The kapu aloha (nonviolent protest) approach seems to be very popular, and that again is a testament to the sophistication and organization of the protest movement,” he said.
Gordon Squires, vice president for external relations for TMT, said the poll results “do not deter or discourage us because we strongly believe they reflect responses to a number of issues beyond TMT.”
“Those issues include the desire among some Native Hawaiians for self-determination, a belief that there has been mismanagement of Maunakea in the past, and community concerns about citizens acting unlawfully and where that might lead,” Squires said in a written statement. “TMT, its supporters and its protesters have become caught in a perfect storm wherein TMT is an icon for those issues.”
When the project’s sponsors first came to Hawaii more than a decade ago, “we were aware of the issues related to self-determination and land management. We heeded those concerns, and others that arose during numerous sessions with residents across Hawaii,” Squires wrote.
“We listened carefully and responded with solutions. The resulting site selected, which is 600 feet below the summit; the physical design plan; and the education and workforce programs all stand to benefit Hawaii and all residents, without negative impact, now and into the future,” he said in his statement.
During the 10-year approval process and legal review, “TMT brought together scientific minds and community hearts to create something of which Hawaii can be proud. TMT is grateful for the community’s support and we believe this poll does not reflect their commitment, which we know full well through their advocacy and public as well as personal communication.”
But Moore said the poll probably understates the opposition to TMT because people who are most likely to oppose the project — young people and students — are less likely to answer the phone and sit for a poll interview, he said.
He said there may be greater opposition to TMT among Hawaiians because many have family members who are committed to the protest movement. “My guess is that this is a message that Hawaiians have heard more directly from people they know and trust,” he said.
On the use of force to clear the road, the poll results show “that’s entirely off the table. That’s politically impossible now,” Moore said. “What this shows is that’s going to be very politically costly for the governor, for Democrats who stand with him. This is the sort of thing that can become a voting issue. I think it would if there’s force used.”
“I don’t know what they’re going to do, but these numbers suggest that it won’t be possible to resume construction,” Moore said.
Star Advertiser
Anti-TMT forces step up their campaign off the mountain
By Timothy Hurley Oct. 2, 2019
...
Anti-TMT forces step up their campaign off the mountain
By Timothy Hurley Oct. 2, 2019
...
Sensing new momentum for the cause, opponents of the Thirty Meter Telescope have turned up their outreach campaign this week to rally against the $1.4 billion project and push for Native Hawaiian rights.
At least four rallies were scheduled on Oahu this week culminating with unity marches on four islands on Saturday, including one through Waikiki starting at 2 p.m.
“There’s a collective momentum gaining all around the islands,” said Lanakila Mangauil, one of the high- profile Mauna Kea protest leaders who has a full schedule of speaking engagements on Oahu this week followed by appearances in Las Vegas, Utah and New York City next week.
On Monday, the Hawaiian island cultural educator joined a sign-waving at the Department of Hawaiian Homelands in Kapolei and then spoke to more than 500 people in the evening.
>> Photo Gallery: Protesters show up at Mayor Kirk Caldwell’s first fundraiser
Mangauil was scheduled to conduct a “Mana‘o Mauna Kea” outreach at Papakolea Park Tuesday night, while tonight he plans to join Kumu Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu in a 6 p.m. presentation at Windward Community College.
On Thursday, Mangauil is scheduled to appear in Waimanalo at Hui Malama O Ke Kai at 5:30 p.m.
Organizers of the Kukahi “Together We Rise” Unity March say they are hoping to attract thousands to an event that kicks off at Ala Moana Beach Park and culminates at Kapiolani Park with music and speeches from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Mangauil expects to speak again.
Mangauil said he encourages his audiences to educate themselves about the aloha aina movement and urges them to take action. He also discusses the importance of kapu aloha, the nonviolent form of protest he described as the hallmark of the TMT protest.
“It’s the unifying theme that holds us together for what we know as pono,” he said.
Similar unity marches are planned simultaneously on Maui, Kauai, Molokai and in Yokohama, Japan.
Anti-TMT forces aren’t the only ones planning events this week. At noon Friday a panel discussion sponsored by Imua TMT is scheduled at the state Capitol Auditorium. The topic: Can culture and science co-exist on Mauna Kea?
One of the panelists is retired Judge Walter Heen, who was the first director of the Office of Mauna Kea Management and a former Office of Hawaiian Affairs trustee.
Others on the panel are Makana Silva, a Native Hawaiian astrophysics student, and Samuel Wilder King II, executive director of Imua TMT. The poster for the event says Silva and King camped out on Mauna Kea and spoke with protest leaders and are expected to discuss the experience.
See MoreAt least four rallies were scheduled on Oahu this week culminating with unity marches on four islands on Saturday, including one through Waikiki starting at 2 p.m.
“There’s a collective momentum gaining all around the islands,” said Lanakila Mangauil, one of the high- profile Mauna Kea protest leaders who has a full schedule of speaking engagements on Oahu this week followed by appearances in Las Vegas, Utah and New York City next week.
On Monday, the Hawaiian island cultural educator joined a sign-waving at the Department of Hawaiian Homelands in Kapolei and then spoke to more than 500 people in the evening.
>> Photo Gallery: Protesters show up at Mayor Kirk Caldwell’s first fundraiser
Mangauil was scheduled to conduct a “Mana‘o Mauna Kea” outreach at Papakolea Park Tuesday night, while tonight he plans to join Kumu Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu in a 6 p.m. presentation at Windward Community College.
On Thursday, Mangauil is scheduled to appear in Waimanalo at Hui Malama O Ke Kai at 5:30 p.m.
Organizers of the Kukahi “Together We Rise” Unity March say they are hoping to attract thousands to an event that kicks off at Ala Moana Beach Park and culminates at Kapiolani Park with music and speeches from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Mangauil expects to speak again.
Mangauil said he encourages his audiences to educate themselves about the aloha aina movement and urges them to take action. He also discusses the importance of kapu aloha, the nonviolent form of protest he described as the hallmark of the TMT protest.
“It’s the unifying theme that holds us together for what we know as pono,” he said.
Similar unity marches are planned simultaneously on Maui, Kauai, Molokai and in Yokohama, Japan.
Anti-TMT forces aren’t the only ones planning events this week. At noon Friday a panel discussion sponsored by Imua TMT is scheduled at the state Capitol Auditorium. The topic: Can culture and science co-exist on Mauna Kea?
One of the panelists is retired Judge Walter Heen, who was the first director of the Office of Mauna Kea Management and a former Office of Hawaiian Affairs trustee.
Others on the panel are Makana Silva, a Native Hawaiian astrophysics student, and Samuel Wilder King II, executive director of Imua TMT. The poster for the event says Silva and King camped out on Mauna Kea and spoke with protest leaders and are expected to discuss the experience.
HAS THE ILLEGAL US OCCUPATION OF HAWAI`I WORKED? - http://FreeHawaii.Info
#FreeHawaii #HawaiianKingdom #FakeState #ProtectMaunaKea #SherwoodForest
#FreeHawaii #HawaiianKingdom #FakeState #ProtectMaunaKea #SherwoodForest
“Kū Kia’i Mauna” Pareos still available on Hawai’i Island at Waimea Urgent Care and Maui at Nā ‘Aikāne o Maui on Front Street. #MaunaMajority
Healani Sonoda-Pale
“Kū Kia’i Mauna” Pareos still available on Hawai’i Island at Waimea Urgent Care and Maui at Nā ‘Aikāne o Maui on Front Street. #MaunaMajority
MAKAʻALA
Our precious KIAʻI of MAUNA KEA / MANA WAHINE KOA Hāwane Rios has been nominated for the NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS.
Awards Ceremony will be held... on November 2, 2019 in New York.
Our precious KIAʻI of MAUNA KEA / MANA WAHINE KOA Hāwane Rios has been nominated for the NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS.
Awards Ceremony will be held... on November 2, 2019 in New York.
PLEASE click on link to VOTE...
You will find her under Category #11 BEST INDIE SINGLE OF THE YEAR
***DIRECTIONS. Hawane Rios feat Nahko
*******************
#38. Hawane Rios feat Nahko Directions
https://nativeamericanmusicawards.com/…/hawane-rios-feat-na…
See MoreYou will find her under Category #11 BEST INDIE SINGLE OF THE YEAR
***DIRECTIONS. Hawane Rios feat Nahko
*******************
#38. Hawane Rios feat Nahko Directions
https://nativeamericanmusicawards.com/…/hawane-rios-feat-na…
MAKAʻALA
Our precious KIAʻI of MAUNA KEA / MANA WAHINE KOA Hāwane Rios has been nominated for the NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS.
Awards Ceremony will be held... on November 2, 2019 in New York.
Our precious KIAʻI of MAUNA KEA / MANA WAHINE KOA Hāwane Rios has been nominated for the NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS.
Awards Ceremony will be held... on November 2, 2019 in New York.
PLEASE click on link to VOTE...
You will find her under Category #11 BEST INDIE SINGLE OF THE YEAR
***DIRECTIONS. Hawane Rios feat Nahko
*******************
#38. Hawane Rios feat Nahko Directions
https://nativeamericanmusicawards.com/…/hawane-rios-feat-na…
See MoreYou will find her under Category #11 BEST INDIE SINGLE OF THE YEAR
***DIRECTIONS. Hawane Rios feat Nahko
*******************
#38. Hawane Rios feat Nahko Directions
https://nativeamericanmusicawards.com/…/hawane-rios-feat-na…
DONʻT MISS THIS TOMORROW NIGHT IN NEW YORK CITY - http://FreeHawaii.Info
#KeAupuni #LeonSiu #UnitedNations #FreeHawaii #HawaiianKingdom
#KeAupuni #LeonSiu #UnitedNations #FreeHawaii #HawaiianKingdom
LAWSUIT STRIPS TMT OF CANARY ISLANDS PERMIT - http://FreeHawaii.Info
#MaunaMajority #MaunaOverMoney #MaunaOverMilitary #KuKiaiMauna #AlohaAina #ProtectMaunaKea #WeAreMaunaKea #AoleTMT #TMTShutdown #PuuHuluhulu #TheWorldIsWatching #FreeHawaii #HawaiianKingdom
Hawai`i Free Press - September 25, 2019 - By Andrew Walden
...Continue Reading
#MaunaMajority #MaunaOverMoney #MaunaOverMilitary #KuKiaiMauna #AlohaAina #ProtectMaunaKea #WeAreMaunaKea #AoleTMT #TMTShutdown #PuuHuluhulu #TheWorldIsWatching #FreeHawaii #HawaiianKingdom
Hawai`i Free Press - September 25, 2019 - By Andrew Walden
...Continue Reading
IS THE FAKE STATE OF HAWAI`I NOW OBSOLETE? - FreeHawaiiTV.com
#MaunaKea #SherwoodForest #FakeState #PuuHuluhulu #IwiKupuna #HawaiianKingdom #FreeHawaiiBroadcastingNetwork #KoaniFoundation #EhuKekahuCardwell
#MaunaKea #SherwoodForest #FakeState #PuuHuluhulu #IwiKupuna #HawaiianKingdom #FreeHawaiiBroadcastingNetwork #KoaniFoundation #EhuKekahuCardwell
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