Monday, December 24, 2007

HAWAI`I STATEHOOD VOTE FIXED!

The Maui News


Wendell Nakamura writes that "94 percent of the people of Hawai`i
voted yes to becoming the 50th state" in 1959.

Fact
check: Only 22 percent of the population even voted in the so-called plebiscite for statehood.

More importantly, though, are the questions of who was allowed to
vote, and for what.

Any U.S. citizen who had resided in the islands
for a year was allowed to vote, which included large numbers of American military servicemen and their families, who were essentially the occupation force that has held Hawai`i since the purported annexation in 1898.

Imagine U.S. soldiers being allowed to vote in
Iraqi elections today!

The question on the ballot was: "Shall Hawai`i immediately be admitted
into the union as a state?" Yes or No?

Yet, the U.N. resolution
guiding the process for removal of territories from the List of Non-Self-Governing Territories under which Hawai`i was administered (Resolution 742) stated: "the manner in which Territories . . . can become fully self-governing is primarily through the attainment of independence."

Why was the option of independence not on the ballot in 1959?


But with the wrong question asked of the wrong population, even the
vote in 1959 was not a valid act of self-determination, and did nothing to legitimize the occupation or legally transfer Hawai`i's sovereignty to the United States.

Scott Crawford

Hana, Maui