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MIN CHARTER 2018-10-12 (2018-2020)
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MIN CHARTER 2018-10-12 (2018-2020)
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Hawaii County Charter Commission -4 October 12, 2018 <br />Title 10, Chapter 134. Here again, Title 10, Chapter 134 is limited to the Army, <br />the Navy, and the state militia and everybody is armed that way. The gun control <br />law, under Title 10, Chapter 134, is unconstitutional. <br />Moving onto Communication 7.5. The Planning Commission, they're based on <br />falsehood, based on the lands are either crown or government lands. So they <br />usually say either corporation or individual is the owner of the land. In this <br />kingdom, individuals and corporations do not own crown or government lands. <br />So there's a falsehood there. And all the Planning Commission is doing is ----- <br />they're doing the land speculations under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. <br />That's Indian land in the Ohio River Valley. It was applied to this kingdom with <br />the 1875 Reciprocity Treaty which King Kalakaua's American cabinet had used a <br />seal in D.C. to place his kingdom under the Northwest Ordinance, not through an <br />amendment but through an illegal treaty that placed his kingdom under the <br />Northwest Ordinance. There's no amendment. The Constitution has never been <br />changed. <br />Okay, Communication 9, the Planning Director, Department of Planning. The use <br />of HUD (Department of Housing and Urban Development) to develop these lands <br />is another thing. It's based on land speculation. The kingdom is not designed to <br />land speculation because there's native tenant rights involved, and the land always <br />belongs to the kingdom. You cannot take the land out of its inventory. So these <br />lands, at no point and time were they lands that belonged to the United States, <br />lands that belonged to the provisional or republic, or to the territory, and even the <br />State of Hawai`i today. You have to remember in the Admission Act it says <br />1.8 million acres of lands called Hawaiian Horne Lands—which was created in <br />1921 and it's based on again, here again, the Northwest Ordinance—the blood <br />quantum to the Hawaiian Hornes Commission Act is based on, I think it's <br />Article 2 of the Northwest Ordinance, the 50 percent. <br />And if you don't know the history of the Northwest Ordinance, it dates back to <br />the revolutionary war. The Continental Congress promised a Continental Anny. <br />Indian lands in Ohio River Valley, they would be paid that way. The Continental <br />Array was make believe; it had no sovereignty. And the army was another make <br />believe. The soldiers were just individuals fighting for something that they could <br />not actually achieve because they were Europeans. <br />So when you look at how they went about it, it's all illegal. So the land <br />planning—and they keep putting general public in there and they keep forgetting <br />that there's native rights involved. That is left out, and native rights are totally <br />different. And another problem that we've got with the general public is the <br />treaties all ended in 1987. The only treaty that was continued was the Reciprocity <br />Treaty by the U.S. Congress and that was continued for a purpose and that was an <br />illegal treaty to begin with. But why did they keep it going? Because they <br />wanted to keep control of this place under the Northwest Ordinance. <br />Page 5 <br />
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