Difference between revisions of "Template:Nhsc-v1-28"

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of early action in the following
 
of early action in the following
 
areas:
 
areas:
* Additional educational and
+
* Additional educational and training opportunities to better equip native Hawaiians for employment.
training opportunities to
+
* Information services and technical assistance to assist both job applicants and small business concerns. [These measures should help
better equip native Hawaiians
+
deal with problems involving education, unemployment, crime, and alcohol and drug abuse, which appear to be related.]
for employment.
+
* Additional nutrition education programs and research to assist in reducing incidence of disease and accidents, and to reduce mortality rates.
* Information services and
+
* Specific assistance to native Hawaiians in finding housing.
technical assistance to assist
+
* Continued efforts to offer opportunities for native Hawaiians to learn about and develop a sense of pride in their culture. Steps can be taken by private individuals and organizations and by governments at all levels to address these areas of concern. The Commission feels that private groups
both job applicants and small
 
business concerns.
 
[These measures should help
 
deal with problems involving
 
education, unemployment, crime,
 
and alcohol and drug abuse,
 
which appear to be related.]
 
* Additional nutrition education
 
programs and research to assist
 
in reducing incidence of
 
disease and accidents, and to
 
reduce mortality rates.
 
* Specific assistance to native
 
Hawaiians in finding housing.
 
* Continued efforts to offer
 
opportunities for native
 
Hawaiians to learn about and
 
develop a sense of pride in
 
their culture.
 
Steps can be taken by private
 
individuals and organizations and by
 
governments at all levels to address
 
these areas of concern. The
 
Commission feels that private groups
 

Revision as of 18:03, 10 March 2006

To summarize the Commission's findings with regard to the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy: Based upon the information available to it, the Commission concluded that Minister John L. Stevens and certain other individuals occupying positions with the U.S. Government participated in activities contributing to the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy on January 17, 1893. The Commission was unable to conclude that these activities were sanctioned by the President or the Congress. In fact, official government records lend strony support to the conclusion that Minister Stevens' actions were not sanctioned. Besides the findings summarized above, the Commission concludes that, as an ethical or moral matter, Congress should not provide for native Hawaiians to receive compensation cither for loss of land or of sovereignty. Reviewing the situation generally, including the historical changes in Hawaii's land laws and constitution before 1893, the Hawaiian political climate that led to the overthrow, the lack of authorized involvement by the United States, and the apparent limited role of United States forces in the overthrow, the Commission found that on an ethical or moral basis, native Hawaiians should not receive reparations. In reaching this conclusion, the Commission did not find the Hawaiian circumstances analogous to the time when Congress voted payments to Colombia, as a result of the U.S. role in Panama. Those payments were based, in part, on the breach of commitments by the United States Government under an 1846 treaty guaranteeing to Colombia the "right of sovereignty and property" over the Isthmus of Panama, and, in part, on commitments owed to Colombia pursuant to certain contracts. Nevertheless, the Commission strongly recommends that the issue of reparations not impede the important steps that should be taken now to improve the condition of native Hawaiians. Based on the information it has collected, the Commission believes that the social and economic problems of native Hawaiians deserve immediate action and that these needs should be addressed promptly.

B. RECOMMENDATIONS

Based on its findings, the Commission would recommend consideration of early action in the following areas:

  • Additional educational and training opportunities to better equip native Hawaiians for employment.
  • Information services and technical assistance to assist both job applicants and small business concerns. [These measures should help

deal with problems involving education, unemployment, crime, and alcohol and drug abuse, which appear to be related.]

  • Additional nutrition education programs and research to assist in reducing incidence of disease and accidents, and to reduce mortality rates.
  • Specific assistance to native Hawaiians in finding housing.
  • Continued efforts to offer opportunities for native Hawaiians to learn about and develop a sense of pride in their culture. Steps can be taken by private individuals and organizations and by governments at all levels to address these areas of concern. The Commission feels that private groups