Hawaii Apology Resolution

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When the president of the United States has to publicly apologize to the state of Hawaii, you know we messed up as a country. Public Law 103-150 explains the “Apology Resolution” meaning that the White House had to apologize for taking over the kingdom of Hawaii in 1898. The Hawai’i Appeased states, “As they did with other indigenous peoples and people who were enslaved, Europeans and Americans systematically dismantled the population, culture, and sovereignty of the Native Hawaiian people through disease, coercion, and violence. In Hawaii, foreign settlers:”Bill Clinton was the first government official to bring our wrongdoings to the Native Hawaiians to public view. In addition, yes, the historical and devastating moment was brought to light, …show more content…
Native Hawaiians have suffered so many losses due to the American government wanting to make the islands have the same government and political understanding as the people in power. The Struggle For Hawaiian Culture explains, “Native Hawaiians lost their homes, health, resources, and people as capitalism, expensive healthcare, new laws, and foreign disease overwhelmed their land and culture.”This explains that the Hawaiian islands benefited from their own land with their own farming and cultural ideas. One can perceive this quote as the American government changing the natural world that you travel to when you step into any of the Hawaiian islands. This place is unlike any other and that is what makes them different from the rest of the U.S. Another reason why Native Hawaiians are struggling is because of their young girls being targets. U.S. Today shares, “The average profile of a missing child in Hawaii is a 15-year-old Native Hawaiian girl. Despite making up just 10% of the state’s population, Native Hawaiian girls and women account for nearly 2 in 3 of its sex trafficking victims.” Most people view Hawaii as a problem-free paradise. What people don’t see is the fact that Hawaiian mothers and fathers are too weary to let their teen girls walk alone in this supposed paradise because 2 in three women trafficked in the United States are young Hawaiian girls. The American community has left the young Native Hawaiian community stranded, leaving them with the highest suicide rate in the U.S. The Honolulu Civil Beat says, “NHPI students were more likely to have made a plan for suicide, yet they were three times less likely to receive mental health services or treatment medications than non-NHPI students.” The quote shows us that the NHPI ( Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander )students are being denied access to mental health help, medication, and strategies for coping