springs, mountains, rivers. these lands, these fish ponds, were managed by their ancestors as a sacred trust. here, where fresh water from the mountains and fast-moving ocean waters met. early, sustainable, clean fish farms. something in modern times we are still struggling to figure out. ritte: because you heard about what people think about us. but the true story is that we have a place of abundance and we try to protect it. try to protect all of these things that we ve been able to protect for the last thirty years and it s getting harder and harder. hano-hano: every single one of these hawaiians over here get enough evidence that the state of hawaii, the department of land and natural resources, have done a terrible job. we re not even looking for blame. we re actually looking for an agreement that from today anthony: right. hano-hano: we all gonna be pono, we all gon be righteous, we all gon be good. our planet is in such, um, bad shape. that being environmental, being
but eventually the white man showed up. that rarely works out well for indigenous people. americans built pineapple plantations and sugar mills, which the locals didn t want. the americans did what worked so well on the mainland, they took the land from the hawaiians at gunpoint. then you know the usa playbook. in an effort to destroy the native culture, they passed racist laws banning the hawaiian language from school and government. in 1898, congress officially annexed, aka stole hawaii and they become a u.s. territory, and it also became a u.s. target. see, japan didn t bomb hawaii because they had a beef with hawaii. hawaii was just a much more convenient american place to bomb than the west coast. hours after the bombing, the united states imposed marshal law on hawaii. hawaiians had to live under strict u.s. military rule for three years because they got
plantations and sugar mills, which the locals didn t want. the americans did what worked so well on the mainland, they took the land from the hawaiians at gunpoint. then you know the usa playbook. in an effort to destroy the native culture, they passed racist laws banning the hawaiian language from school and government. in 1898, congress officially annexed, aka stole hawaii and they become a u.s. territory, and it also became a u.s. target. see, japan didn t bomb hawaii because they had a beef with hawaii. hawaii was just a much more convenient american place to bomb than the west coast. hours after the bombing, the united states imposed marshal law on hawaii. hawaiians had to live under
were managed by their ancestors as a sacred trust. here, where fresh water from the mountains and fast moving ocean waters met. early, sustainable, clean fish farms. something in modern times we are still struggling to figure out. ritte: because you heard about what people think about us. but the true story is that we have a place of abundance and we try to protect it. try to protect all of these things that we ve been able to protect for the last thirty years and it s getting harder and harder. hano-hano: every single one of these hawaiians over here get enough evidence that the state of hawaii, the department of land and natural resources, have done a terrible job. we re not even looking for blame. we re actually looking for an agreement that from today anthony: right. hano-hano: we all gonna be pono, we all gon be righteous, we all gon be good. our planet is in such, um, bad shape. that being environmental, being green, is trending. that s where the hawaiians have always
and just thinking about the people on hawaii right now that had to live through this. the alert goes out and not until 35 minutes or so, was it corrected.they found out it was a false alarm. first let me ask you, sir, what was your reaction when you heard this? the good news is that it was a false alarm of the hawaiians will have to dig into this and find out what happened. because this will cause a tremendous amount of trouble. the bad news is that there is a real threat. there is a threat from north korean missiles and it is certainly a possibility. nothing is imminent but it is within the realm of possibility and some seem to be concerned about. i am also glad to hear that they do have and are taking steps outside of this false alarm to be prepared. just in case. because places like guam and hawaii are within the threat range of north korean missiles. as is the united states not. there been questions about the