I asked Maria Taylor to type for me cuz I am no good at typing and - TopicsExpress



          

I asked Maria Taylor to type for me cuz I am no good at typing and I am better olelo kanaka, but not all can olelo so she helps me with my English words. What I saw was at least 90% of the people testified for the Kingdom. The people have spoken and it should be so. It was important for us to hear each other. Politically, this is unchartered territory, so I want to help you guys make manageable goals that can be put into practice now. Some of us have been trained for this period of time. While I was having my training, teaching and all, there were others who were being trained and taught; wahines, kanes, and they train from a very young age. I will share with you the protocols I was taught and would love to hear from others who were also taught. We have to make ready and prepare for ourselves. Prepare for the “what ifs.” What if the USA told us we have 90 days to prove we can make the land sustainable? We no can wait until tomorrow – we must begin right now. We need to be self-sufficient to be independent. What if the president gave us what we want and they give us back the control – now what are we gonna do about it? Expect things we take for granted to be gone. The monarchy gave freedom to the people and communities to govern themselves as they saw fit. Communities in Oahu are different than those on Big Island. Protocol requires the next step starts with community. Not USA kine community, but Kingdom communities. No one in the Kingdom has a monopoly for anything. My kids are your kids, you feed mine, I’ll feed yours. Your grandkids are my grandkids. Who in the community fixes cars, who is good with computers, who has time to check in on the elderly, who is a doctor, a nurse, a teacher, what schedules do people have? Who can take turns as a community watchman and check up on their neighborhoods. The communities are going to have to plan for all this – it’s all in the planning and each community has freedom to do what is best for them, which includes having security. What are the necessary things everyone needs everyday? Food and water. Everyone on every island, no matta if they are educated, rich, poor, etc. everyone needs to eat and we need fresh water. Some in the communities need to secure the water to be self-sustaining. Go to the waterfalls and build a trench or something to divert the water to the lohi and farms, make a water hole in the secret places, move rocks and utilize the nature. It will take communities to work together. No one has a monopoly on water in the Kingdom. The community needs to be one, continue to meet and get to know each other well. It is important to know who has what skill. Those in the aupuaa support each other and by that I mean if one is going to court - all who can, go with him. If one needs to clear his land, make a party out of. The communities need to become self-sufficient so no one needs to worry about buying food or feeding their keiki. Some are farmers, some fisherman, some can make gates to house wild pigs, etc. If you no more land, throw seeds in the forest to live among the existing plants. Make medicinal gardens. But be smart about it –have a goal and don’t bring unnecessary attention to yourselves. Each community will then decide upon the leaders to speak on its behalf but that will come naturally as the community works together. If each community on every island will start with this, soon we will trade goods and services with each other and other nations, be self-sufficient and independent. From the communities, will arise district leaders as they are voted in, which is the building block of the Kingdom government – the elected representatives. From the islands, the nations will know and we can teach them to be war free, humble with each other and be successful. If anyone has anything to add to this or offer suggestions, please feel free to share. There will be more to share, but to keep the momentum going, this is something every subject can work on. I hope you guys take this in and don’t sleep on it too long. Mahalo nui loa. Keaka Kealii Kaahiki Iaukea
Posted on: Sat, 12 Jul 2014 01:37:28 +0000

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