Maui hate crime case spotlights Hawaii’s racial complexity

tod evans

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Maui hate crime case spotlights Hawaii’s racial complexity

This is not a federal crime!
I'm going to side with the locals here, not wanting an outsider moving in, especially one whose people have a track record of behaving in manners that fly in the face of local customs.
Sounds like nobody was killed, nobody maimed, just a simple asswhuppin'.
Maybe the US would be a better place with a few more non-government asswhuppins'?



Maui hate crime case spotlights Hawaii’s racial complexity

https://apnews.com/article/hawaiians-hate-crime-beating-sentence-55d0a9d504a49b062f56c1d09e662fd8

In a case that reflects Hawaii’s nuanced and complicated relationship with race, two Native Hawaiian men are scheduled to be sentenced Thursday for a federal hate crime in the brutal beating of a white man who tried to move into their remote, traditional fishing village.

A jury convicted Kaulana Alo-Kaonohi and Levi Aki Jr. in November, finding that they were motivated by Christopher Kunzelman’s race when they punched, kicked and used a shovel to beat him in 2014. His injuries included a concussion, two broken ribs and head trauma.

Local lawyers believe this is the first time the U.S. has prosecuted Native Hawaiians for hate crimes. The unique case highlights the struggles between Native Hawaiians who are adamant about not having their culture erased and people who move to Hawaii without knowing or considering its history and racial dynamics.

Tensions began over a dilapidated, oceanfront home in Kahakuloa, a small village off a narrow road of hairpin turns and sweeping ocean views at the end of a valley on Maui, an island known for luxurious resorts.

Growing up in the village, Alo-Kaonohi would “hunt, fish, farm, live off the land,” he wrote in a letter to U.S. District Judge J. Michael Seabright. “To make a little money, I would sell coconuts, mango, flowers, bananas on the side of the road to tourists who would be passing through to see the beautiful scenery of Kahakuloa.”

Kunzelman and his wife purchased the house sight-unseen for $175,000 because she wanted to leave Scottsdale, Arizona, to live near the ocean after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

“We loved Maui; we loved the people,” Lori Kunzelman told The Associated Press, describing how her husband planned to fix up the house himself.

He was starting to do that when the attack happened, she said.

“It was obviously a hate crime from the very beginning,” she said. “The whole time they’re saying things like, ‘You have the wrong skin color. No ‘haole’ is ever going to live in our neighborhood.’”

“Haole,” a Hawaiian word with meanings that include foreigner and white person, is central to the case. It’s a word often misunderstood by people who don’t comprehend Hawaii’s history of U.S. colonization and the 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom by a group of American businessmen, said Judy Rohrer, author of a book titled “Haoles in Hawai’i.”

White people who move to Hawaii are unaccustomed to being identified racially and are “not used to thinking about whiteness,” said Rohrer, who grew up white in Hawaii and is now a professor at Eastern Washington University. “We’re used to being in the majority and then we get to Hawaii and all of a sudden we’re not in the majority, and that makes us uncomfortable.”

Of Hawaii’s 1.5 million residents, about 38% are Asian, 26% are white, 2% are Black, and many people are multiple ethnicities, according to U.S. census figures. Native Hawaiians account for about 20% of the population.

But it’s more than racial, Rohrer said, explaining how the Hawaiian word has become part of Hawaii Pidgin, the creole language of the islands, to describe behavior or attitudes not in sync with local culture.

“Acting haole” means “acting out of entitlement, and like you own the place,” she said.

In video recorded by cameras on Kunzelman’s vehicle parked under the house, only one racial utterance can be heard, defense attorneys said. Aki is heard saying, “You’s a haole, eh.”

Kunzelman testified that what’s not audible in the video is the men calling him “haole” in a derogatory way.

After the assault, Aki referred to Kunzelman to police as a “rich Haole guy,” a “dumb haole,” and a “typical haole thinking he owning everything ... trying to change things up in Kahakuloa,” prosecutors said.

Tiare Lawrence, a Native Hawaiian community advocate on Maui, said she doesn’t condone the attack but is deeply familiar with the tensions that permeate the case.

“The threat of outsiders coming in ... brings a lot of sadness for Hawaiians who are trying so hard to hold on to what little piece of paradise we have left,” she said. As an example, she cited efforts to revitalize the Hawaiian language after it was banned in schools in the wake of the overthrow.

Attorneys for Aki and Alo-Kaonohi say it wasn’t Kunzelman’s race that provoked them, but his entitled and disrespectful attitude.

Kunzelman came to the village saying he wanted to help residents improve their homes and boost property values, without considering that higher property values come with higher property taxes in a state with the highest cost of living, the defense attorneys said. But the tipping point came when Kunzelman cut locks to village gates, they said.

Kunzelman testified he did so because residents were locking him in and out. He testified that he wanted to provide the village with better locks and distribute keys to residents.

In a letter to the judge, Aki said he doesn’t see himself as racist: “Not only because I am almost half-Caucasian but also because I have people who I love and care about who are white.”

Both men were prosecuted in state court for the assault. Alo-Kaonohi pleaded no contest to felony assault and was sentenced to probation, while Aki pleaded no contest to terroristic threatening and was sentenced to probation and nearly 200 days in jail.

Alo-Kaonohi was also sentenced to a year in prison for an assault at a Maui bar soon after the Kunzelman attack.

For the federal hate crime, prosecutors are asking for a sentence of about nine years for Alo-Kaonohi and six-and-a-half years for Aki.

Lori Kunzelman acknowledged being unaware of Hawaiian history and said she has since learned about it.

“But attacking an individual white man doesn’t change history or improve things or justify actions on anybody’s part,” she said.

The Kunzelmans still own the Kahakuloa home but split their time between Arizona and Puerto Rico.

“We couldn’t even sell it to anybody because it’s not safe,” Lori Kunzelman said. “It’s not safe because of the animosity that’s there.”

In an attempt to convey the animosity, prosecutors during the trial portrayed village residents as saying things like, “this is a Hawaiian village,” and “the only thing coming from the outside is electricity.”

But several non-Hawaiians who live or have lived peacefully in the village told the AP they never had problems.

“I am 82 years old. I have lived here for 50 years,” said Bruce Turnbull, a white, retired teacher who lives near Alo-Kaonohi’s family. “I’ve learned in Hawaii, coming from the outside in, it’s a good thing to live by the people around you and not tell them to live by you and your values.”
 
Kunzelman came to the village saying he wanted to help residents improve their homes and boost property values, without considering that higher property values come with higher property taxes in a state with the highest cost of living, the defense attorneys said. But the tipping point came when Kunzelman cut locks to village gates, they said.

Another leftist haole moving to Hawaii to try to "civilize" the poor natives. Next thing you know he will try to increase taxes and build welfare housing for those natives, move them away from the beach...

This is why Hawaii is so leftist. Democrats move there and implement their big government welfare state on the natives. High taxes and culture destroying welfare. And guess who lives at the beach when they are done?
 
Kunzelman and his wife purchased the house sight-unseen for $175,000 because she wanted to leave Scottsdale, Arizona, to live near the ocean after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

And there's another problem. The global commoditization of housing. That house should have never gone up on a national or global listing like that in the first place. The natives need to address that problem more than anything.
 
In a case that reflects Hawaii’s nuanced and complicated relationship with race [...]

How much "nuance" and "complexity" is AP apt to look for when "hate crime" perps are white? /end-rhetorical-question
 
How much "nuance" and "complexity" is AP apt to look for when "hate crime" perps are white? /end-rhetorical-question

The minority has to be, like natives, not prone to vote for bigger government to even be capable of committing a hate crime.
 
AP (probably): "In a case that reflects Hawaii’s Ohio's nuanced and complicated relationship with race [...]"

Texas Professor Tells Elementary School Teachers to ‘Interrogate Whiteness’
https://www.breitbart.com/education...ary-school-teachers-to-interrogate-whiteness/
SPENCER LINDQUIST 17 Feb 2023

[...]

Gee, what could go wrong?

Meanwhile, in completely unrelated news, elementary school students also "interrogate" some "whiteness":

Ohio elementary school says black students forced white students to pledge "Black Lives Matter", group beat up anyone who wouldn't comply
https://notthebee.com/article/repor...d-the-group-beat-up-anyone-who-wouldnt-comply
Harris Rigby (17 February 2023)

This is out of Ohio. An elementary school made the news when a group of black students mobbed and compelled white students to repeat the "Black Lives Matter" mantra under threat of physical violence.

https://twitter.com/EndWokeness/status/1626384070975320064


Well, would you look at that?

A group of young, impressionable elementary kids modeling behavior seen in adults for the last 3 years or more, and we're supposed to be surprised.

From Fox:

The Springfield Police Department said an officer responded to Kenwood Elementary School just before 10:20 a.m. on Monday in reference to an incident that happened on Friday.

When the officer arrived, he spoke with the school's principal, Evan Hunsaker, who said an incident occurred on the playground on Friday during recess.

The principal told police that a group of Black students gathered several White students in the playground and forced them to say, "Black Lives Matter," against their will, the incident report states.

The suspects also allegedly recorded the White students who were forced to make the statement, police said.

Hunsaker told police the students who tried to avoid the situation were chased down, dragged or carried to a particular spot on the playground, with one student getting punched in the head by one of the suspects.

This is evil.

But this is what we are teaching these kids.

It happened on a Friday and the police weren't called until Monday. This was either handled by the school or just ignored completely while the victims went home and complained.

The report shows there were five victims and four suspects involved in Friday's incident...

District officials told ABC station WKEF in Dayton, Ohio, that they are aware of the incident and are "committed to providing our students with a safe learning environment, where they look forward to attending every day."

Police collected statements, and the suspects could face charges of assault and menacing.

"This incident is still under investigation and detectives continue to conduct interviews in the case," police said Thursday. "The Division is working in conjunction with the Clark County Prosecutor's office to determine potential next steps in this matter."

I hope that charges are pressed. This type of hatred and violence can't go unpunished.

But it shouldn't be a shock when young children start acting like the "adults."

https://twitter.com/MrAndyNgo/status/1631464580248485890

https://twitter.com/AuronMacintyre/status/1631477174254354432
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AP (probably): "In a case that reflects Hawaii’s Ohio's nuanced and complicated relationship with race [...]"



https://twitter.com/AuronMacintyre/status/1631477174254354432
FgMyrqP.png

More examples of why race and housing are not issues for government, especially the federal government.
My gut says the student/teacher makeup would be completely different without government involvement, my gut also tells me that without government involvement the animosity could not thrive.
You get more of what you pay for.
 
A couple things.

Firstly, fie on Kunzelman for not doing his homework. His apparent do-gooder mindset got him an ass-kicking.

Secondly, as for his good intentions to "improve" the local homes, I question whether he was doing it for them, or himself. But equally to the same point, even had he succeeded in getting set up there, would he have been holding a gun to the heads of the locals to let him "improve" their homes? Score -1 for locals.

Thirdly, who'd owned the property prior? I ask because if it was a fellow native, then why didn't he sell to the village, or perhaps in better keeping with what I have perceived (perhaps wrongly) as the very communistic tang of the culture in question, donate it to them? There may be nothing there to see, but what if there is? Hypocrisy is lousy in the human animal, the self-exalting Hawaiian natives included. And make no mistake about it, they are a raft of strutting, conceited jack-offs just like the rest of us.

Here we see examples of several phenomena that are all too common with humans: failing in due diligence, do-gooding, reacting irrationally to a perceived threat that was really not much of a threat at all. The locals didn't even give that stupid bastard the chance to explain himself, did they? So once again it appears everyone involved proceeded like assholes, but the locals were the worse of it, it seems, because they were the ones that resorted as violence as a first move without any apparent warning for the interlopers to beg off. Even wild animals warn prior to attacking.

Humans. Worse and worse by the minute. Our story will not end well.
 
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