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Civil Contempt Motion filed against Na'i Aupuni
#1
Basically, the gist of the motion is that by certifying that everyone who was up for election is free to come to the February convention, Na'i Aupuni and the OHA have violated both the letter and the spirit of the injunction from three weeks back. The argument, in a nutshell, is that if people were restricted from running because of their race, having every candidate come to the convention rather than just the winners is no less prejudicial to those non-Hawaiians who could not run or vote in the election. Here's a link to the Supreme Court brief:

http://new.grassrootinstitute.org/wp-con...2-2015.pdf

I can't help but notice the dichotomy between this issue and the TMT debacle. In the TMT debacle, the protestors claimed that they needed to act when they did, because if they didn't and construction started, it would be too late after the fact, and that everyone should wait for the Hawaii Supreme Court to issue its ruling. And in this (specific) regard, I agree.

So I find it interesting that in this case, the Na'i Aupuni are facing a civil contempt motion for pushing ahead in the face of a Temporary Injunction from the US Supreme Court forbidding the race-based election and convention from going forward. Basically, the moving party here is making nearly the same policy-based arguments the protestors made against TMT.

I realize there is not 100% overlap between the protestors and Na'i Aupuni (and perhaps far from it), but to the extent anyone supports the TMT protestors and also pushing ahead with the Na'i Aupuni convention, I'd be interested to hear what the difference is and why the Na'i Aupuni folks can't wait until the legal process works itself out.
Leilani Estates, 2011 to Present
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#2
Sweet ... I love stuff like this.

Mahalo for posting Justin.

aloha,
pog
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#3
This article helps try to explain the whats,where,who,why,and when this is all suppose to take place.

http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/34012...ecognition

Not sure I understand what is at stake for the Hawaiians or the difference in Recognition they are asking for?
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#4
Thank you, Justin. You make an excellent point and I was waiting for the responses you asked for before saying anything. Given that, the lack of responses is interesting on its own. Hopefully someone will explain.
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#5
Thanks Justin.
Yes it's an interesting situation.
In addition to the points you made, I would add that the Na'i Aupuni election began as non-representative of the Hawaiian people, in that the candidates had to agree in advance that they supported sovereignty, a minority view of Native Hawaiians. Now, they will hold a convention with not only candidates who didn't win the election, but candidates who would have lost the election! Na'i Aupuni is not only unwilling to allow the legal process to run it's course, but it's deliberately moving forward with a body consisting of unelected representatives, who claim to represent the Hawaiian people.
"I'm at that stage in life where I stay out of discussions. Even if you say 1+1=5, you're right - have fun." - Keanu Reeves
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