08-07-2023, 07:31 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-07-2023, 08:01 PM by Olohana 1790.)
fear mongering haoles lol
yeah. racistchit does happen from time to time........ we have million and 1/2 plus peeps here, its going to happen every month or 2 duh duh
iduh.... maybe try for look up the word 'odds'
ps the word Haole is not a bad word... I am born and raised obvious kine... I was called haole all the time asa kid windward Oahu.
ie look at da blondhaole kid rip da wave... he one keikikine RhioRhio
'Haole' (precontact/pre1778) means.... 'you cant chant that your Ohana is from the aina you stand on'
iow everyone here is a Haole! not a single person here in Hawaii is 50%+ Manahune kine Nuku Hiva Polynesian..... the kine who FIRST founded and settles these special islands...
300+ yrs before the 2nd kine invader Tahiti-Polynesians came and enslaved tortured and killed off the 'true Hawaiians'
learn something today...
the word 'Manahune'...... (with a's), means (in old Otaheite kine) 'Small Worthless Person'
iow a 'SLAVE'...
the first kine haoles here (Cook, Clarke ,King, Vancouver, Bligh, etc.)
all mistranslated the word as a 'Small Person' in Stature... ie an elf or brownie.
who happily built rockwalls and fishponds in a single night while only fed one shrimp ea.
...... all SLAVE labor in reality
aroha
95% of those here today are clueless on this....
more chit to learn
Kure is the oldest Hawaii island, its 34 Mil yrs old... its also the largest and most northern atoll Earth
but the islands are far older overall........ nearly 80 mil yrs old..
the islands NorthWest of Kure are all sea mounts now... going towards Alaska.
why? because they have moved into cold water, via plate tectonics moving this entire island chain 2" per year to the NW.
the 'Darwin Point' is the spot in the ocean where coral fails to grow at the same rate as the islands sink naturally via wave erosion.
cold water does this...then the island go under surface forever
if plate tectonics took our island chain East to West and not North at all, we'd have hundreds of high islands just like Oahu and Kauai...
Humans have lived on these special islands for only 1/60,000th the time these islands have been here.
no one's indigenous, all Polynesian race..
Polynesians all came from indo China via Taiwan, then bounced around PNG an the Solomons NewCaledonia, then went out into Pacific Fiji Samoa kine area, then out to SocietyIles Tahiti Nuku Hiva, then Hawaii, then RapaNui (Easter Island), then Aotearoa (New Zealand's north island) last
we know this chit now via DNA... and before that we also knew all this chit because we followed the Lapita Pottery
cause this haole guy was 1 smart faka...
Kenneth Pike Emory
(November 23, 1897 – January 2, 1992)
(moved to Hawaii when he was 2 yrs old in 1900)
By the 1950s, Emory had become the World's foremost expert on Polynesian culture.
Emory was an American anthropologist who played a key role
in shaping modern anthropology in Oceania.
Emory's works span all four major fields of anthropology:
archaeology, physical anthropology, ethnography, and linguistics.
Kenneth Pike Emory was born November 23, 1897 in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
He moved to Hawaii when he was two and grew up there,
traveling first to Dartmouth and then continued his education afterward
at Harvard then received his PhD from Yale.
While he was a high-school student, several archaeological digs in the Honolulu area
piqued his interest in Polynesian artifacts and culture.
Proselytizing in the first half of the nineteenth century by
Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Mormon missionaries had been so successful
that by the 1920s Polynesians had abandoned their ancestral gods in all but a few isolated places.
When Emory realized this, he dedicated his life to finding and documenting
as much pre-Christian Polynesian culture as he could.
After attending Dartmouth College, he became associated with the Bishop Museum.
In 1924, with a group of Hawaii scientists
(including Gerrit P. Wilder, botanist; Mrs. Wilder, historian;
Dr. Armstrong Sperry, writer and illustrator; Dr. Stanley Ball),
he joined the four masted 170-foot 512 tons vessel Kaimiloa in Honolulu for a five-year expedition,
reaching many of the then inaccessible spots of the Pacific.
The vessel was a complete floating laboratory, possibly the most complete of any craft
that has undertaken a similar trip.
Bottles, crates, and boxes are stowed below along with gallons of preservatives
for insects and plant specimens for the Bishop Museum.
He then spent the next 60 years roaming the Pacific,
seeking out Polynesian settlement sites, excavating relics, and photographing petroglyphs.
He sought out Polynesians who remembered the pre-Christian chants and rituals,
and recorded them on film.
By the 1950s, he had become the world's foremost expert on Polynesian culture.
Emory theorized that Polynesians were descended from the Māori of New Zealand,
and that Polynesian culture originated in Tonga and Samoa
and migrated eastward through the Pacific to Tahiti, the Marquesas, and Hawaii.
Emory believed, but did not attempt to prove,
that Polynesians were capable of sailing great distances to all points of the compass.
He argued that when the population of an island exceeded its capacity,
a king or noble would outfit a large oceangoing vessel and set off
to verify rumors of other habitable islands, sending back word of his discovery.
Emory believed the Hawaiian Islands had been colonized by Society Islanders (Tahitians) in this way.
Others argued that even if Tahitians had found a new land mass such as Hawaii,
they would have been unable to return to their point of origin.
Emory disagreed, pointing out that contemporary copra schooners relied on wave direction,
ocean currents, and seabirds to guide them to land,
and Polynesian legends made frequent reference to celestial navigation.
Besides: "If they sailed south they were bound to hit islands whose inhabitants
would know where the Society Islands lay."
yeah. racistchit does happen from time to time........ we have million and 1/2 plus peeps here, its going to happen every month or 2 duh duh
iduh.... maybe try for look up the word 'odds'
ps the word Haole is not a bad word... I am born and raised obvious kine... I was called haole all the time asa kid windward Oahu.
ie look at da blondhaole kid rip da wave... he one keikikine RhioRhio
'Haole' (precontact/pre1778) means.... 'you cant chant that your Ohana is from the aina you stand on'
iow everyone here is a Haole! not a single person here in Hawaii is 50%+ Manahune kine Nuku Hiva Polynesian..... the kine who FIRST founded and settles these special islands...
300+ yrs before the 2nd kine invader Tahiti-Polynesians came and enslaved tortured and killed off the 'true Hawaiians'
learn something today...
the word 'Manahune'...... (with a's), means (in old Otaheite kine) 'Small Worthless Person'
iow a 'SLAVE'...
the first kine haoles here (Cook, Clarke ,King, Vancouver, Bligh, etc.)
all mistranslated the word as a 'Small Person' in Stature... ie an elf or brownie.
who happily built rockwalls and fishponds in a single night while only fed one shrimp ea.
...... all SLAVE labor in reality
aroha
95% of those here today are clueless on this....
more chit to learn
Kure is the oldest Hawaii island, its 34 Mil yrs old... its also the largest and most northern atoll Earth
but the islands are far older overall........ nearly 80 mil yrs old..
the islands NorthWest of Kure are all sea mounts now... going towards Alaska.
why? because they have moved into cold water, via plate tectonics moving this entire island chain 2" per year to the NW.
the 'Darwin Point' is the spot in the ocean where coral fails to grow at the same rate as the islands sink naturally via wave erosion.
cold water does this...then the island go under surface forever
if plate tectonics took our island chain East to West and not North at all, we'd have hundreds of high islands just like Oahu and Kauai...
Humans have lived on these special islands for only 1/60,000th the time these islands have been here.
no one's indigenous, all Polynesian race..
Polynesians all came from indo China via Taiwan, then bounced around PNG an the Solomons NewCaledonia, then went out into Pacific Fiji Samoa kine area, then out to SocietyIles Tahiti Nuku Hiva, then Hawaii, then RapaNui (Easter Island), then Aotearoa (New Zealand's north island) last
we know this chit now via DNA... and before that we also knew all this chit because we followed the Lapita Pottery
cause this haole guy was 1 smart faka...
Kenneth Pike Emory
(November 23, 1897 – January 2, 1992)
(moved to Hawaii when he was 2 yrs old in 1900)
By the 1950s, Emory had become the World's foremost expert on Polynesian culture.
Emory was an American anthropologist who played a key role
in shaping modern anthropology in Oceania.
Emory's works span all four major fields of anthropology:
archaeology, physical anthropology, ethnography, and linguistics.
Kenneth Pike Emory was born November 23, 1897 in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
He moved to Hawaii when he was two and grew up there,
traveling first to Dartmouth and then continued his education afterward
at Harvard then received his PhD from Yale.
While he was a high-school student, several archaeological digs in the Honolulu area
piqued his interest in Polynesian artifacts and culture.
Proselytizing in the first half of the nineteenth century by
Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Mormon missionaries had been so successful
that by the 1920s Polynesians had abandoned their ancestral gods in all but a few isolated places.
When Emory realized this, he dedicated his life to finding and documenting
as much pre-Christian Polynesian culture as he could.
After attending Dartmouth College, he became associated with the Bishop Museum.
In 1924, with a group of Hawaii scientists
(including Gerrit P. Wilder, botanist; Mrs. Wilder, historian;
Dr. Armstrong Sperry, writer and illustrator; Dr. Stanley Ball),
he joined the four masted 170-foot 512 tons vessel Kaimiloa in Honolulu for a five-year expedition,
reaching many of the then inaccessible spots of the Pacific.
The vessel was a complete floating laboratory, possibly the most complete of any craft
that has undertaken a similar trip.
Bottles, crates, and boxes are stowed below along with gallons of preservatives
for insects and plant specimens for the Bishop Museum.
He then spent the next 60 years roaming the Pacific,
seeking out Polynesian settlement sites, excavating relics, and photographing petroglyphs.
He sought out Polynesians who remembered the pre-Christian chants and rituals,
and recorded them on film.
By the 1950s, he had become the world's foremost expert on Polynesian culture.
Emory theorized that Polynesians were descended from the Māori of New Zealand,
and that Polynesian culture originated in Tonga and Samoa
and migrated eastward through the Pacific to Tahiti, the Marquesas, and Hawaii.
Emory believed, but did not attempt to prove,
that Polynesians were capable of sailing great distances to all points of the compass.
He argued that when the population of an island exceeded its capacity,
a king or noble would outfit a large oceangoing vessel and set off
to verify rumors of other habitable islands, sending back word of his discovery.
Emory believed the Hawaiian Islands had been colonized by Society Islanders (Tahitians) in this way.
Others argued that even if Tahitians had found a new land mass such as Hawaii,
they would have been unable to return to their point of origin.
Emory disagreed, pointing out that contemporary copra schooners relied on wave direction,
ocean currents, and seabirds to guide them to land,
and Polynesian legends made frequent reference to celestial navigation.
Besides: "If they sailed south they were bound to hit islands whose inhabitants
would know where the Society Islands lay."