Monday, May 20, 2024

The Legitimate Government in Hawaii Series: Hate, Animosities in an Apartheid Occupied Hawaii

 The Legitimate Government in Hawaii Series:  Hate, Animosities in an Apartheid Occupied Hawaii


                                                             Reviewed by Amelia Gora (2024)


Because there was No Annexation, the treatment of Kanaka Maoli remains as an apartheid situation by White Annexationists/Supremacists in the Hawaiian Islands even today.  The move by the U.S. is to categorize Kanaka Maoli as an Indian Tribe.... this newspaper article uncovers the reasons since 1897:

The Independent. [volume] (Honolulu, H.I.) 1895-1905, August 06, 1897, Image 2

Image provided by University of Hawaii at Manoa; Honolulu, HI

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85047097/1897-08-06/ed-1/seq-2/


People of Color included "Niggers, Chinese, Indians, and Japanese" were 'bullied, flogged, and lynched at will as the occasion rises' by the usurpers in 1897:


The Independent. [volume] (Honolulu, H.I.) 1895-1905, July 17, 1897, Image 2

Image provided by University of Hawaii at Manoa; Honolulu, HI

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85047097/1897-07-17/ed-1/seq-2/

The Independent. [volume] (Honolulu, H.I.) 1895-1905, July 17, 1897, Image 2

Image provided by University of Hawaii at Manoa; Honolulu, HI

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85047097/1897-07-17/ed-1/seq-2/

 
Note about the researcher of this post:





  


It is almost hilarious that I am a mixed person of color with a name that translates to

a white person.  See the translation below about my Gora name......lol:


The word 'gora' which is literally translated as 'whitey' or 'of pale skin' is something we will use to refer to white people. The word 'kala' again refers to someone of dark skin or those of an Afro-Caribbean background. These are some of the most common words in our vocabulary but is it still okay to use




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