How the US Conquered Hawaii & Made it 91% Empty

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 4,8 тыс.

  • @auguststavbro
    @auguststavbro Год назад +6659

    Why reallifelore uses the word ‘vastly’ VASTLY more than other adverbs

    • @bababababababa6124
      @bababababababa6124 Год назад +550

      That’ll be a good Half As Interesting video

    • @scyllajk2757
      @scyllajk2757 Год назад +339

      Have you realised how he always places emphasis on certain words to make it seem bigger.
      like he doesnt just use the word "vastly' he uses the word a GIGANTIC ENOURMOUS AMOUNT of times more than other channels

    • @wrath231
      @wrath231 Год назад +72

      Very clickbaity, imo

    • @Ar1AnX1x
      @Ar1AnX1x Год назад +48

      he loves making vast videos too

    • @darlingj.canela
      @darlingj.canela Год назад +34

      Maybe there are vastly reasons for that.

  • @altanativeftw2625
    @altanativeftw2625 Год назад +2212

    Maybe do a video on Arctic settlement patterns next? Svalbard, Greenland, Alaska, the Canadian Arctic, and the Russian Arctic.

    • @alphamanticore2344
      @alphamanticore2344 Год назад +55

      I think the people of Nunavut would like that a lot, because we all know they have a lot of people and the population density is obviously very high

    • @SAMIAMFNX
      @SAMIAMFNX Год назад +3

      im in canada

    • @Plab1402
      @Plab1402 Год назад

      ​@DontReadMyProfilePicture.104okie

    • @worldsbiggesthater9847
      @worldsbiggesthater9847 Год назад

      1080p

    • @highway2heaven91
      @highway2heaven91 Год назад +26

      @@alphamanticore2344I’d like to see a video of Nunavut. It’s probably the least popular state/province/territory in North America.

  • @hanalereynolds-kane8484
    @hanalereynolds-kane8484 Год назад +936

    I live on Kauai. You say a tiny population of 73,000. We are overpopulated because people keep moving here. Locals are pushed out everyday due to price gouging of our land and the cost of living is so high. We have a fairly large homeless population and many of them are older locals and younger local families who can't afford to move away or refuse to give up on their home.

    • @deykuzor
      @deykuzor Год назад +150

      It's actually underpopulated in terms of land area. (Not that Kauai could support a larger population, it really can't without serious infrastructure changes which would hurt the character of the island). I do projects on Kauai and most of the pushing out of the locals are because people are building homes they aren't even living in over there... It's kinda infuriating to watch. :/

    • @nathanielmoore87
      @nathanielmoore87 Год назад +80

      Ugh, I'd hate for Kauai to end up covered in a concrete jungle like Oahu. It's such a beautiful place. I lived on Oahu for 3 years, and it felt way too crowded and somewhat artificial. I'd take weekend trips any chance I could to get out to the other islands, and I tell people to this day that you haven't really seen Hawaii unless you've gotten away from Oahu. All that said. Kauai is my favorite island by far. I have some good memories at Barking Sands.

    • @xMaluko
      @xMaluko Год назад +53

      73,000 is small in comparison to Oahu is the point he was making in the video. Pretty much all of the islands have been experiencing big population bursts from ppl in the mainland unfortunately which he wouldn't be able to really cover in the video. Even Molokai has been having a lot of haoles coming to the island.

    • @mnfchen
      @mnfchen Год назад +32

      What about the rich landowners in Kauai? Don't they disproportionately own a lot of the land?

    • @daverohrich8518
      @daverohrich8518 Год назад +27

      It's all about WHERE the people are. Japan has crazy dense populations in certain areas, while there are massive swaths of untouched land. He's just speaking in terms of overall density based on land area

  • @liliaalesan8201
    @liliaalesan8201 11 месяцев назад +440

    I was raised on the Big Island. It may not be busy, crowded, and congested like Oahu but we enjoy the simple life style. It's not for everyone but it's how you want your life to be.😊

    • @joeljelliff2901
      @joeljelliff2901 10 месяцев назад +20

      Thanks for sharing from the Island. I am always interested in people living authentic lives

    • @Tanystropheus10
      @Tanystropheus10 8 месяцев назад +2

      L j

    • @anacasco7765
      @anacasco7765 8 месяцев назад +5

      I understand what you mean for I love the same type of natural environment... In fact, I'd love to go back to those islands... and stay for long there!!
      I've written a couple of "stories" from my visit by 1980 and both of them tell of the beautiful hawaiian people I met there because they were HUMBLE and GENTLE!
      That is what really matters about "places". One of the situations took place in Kauai - visiting the fern-grotto cave - and the other near Hanauma Bay - entering the Devil's Eye - 👍🤣

    • @richardbarron8869
      @richardbarron8869 8 месяцев назад +2

      I WISH YOU AND YOUR THE VERY BEST!

    • @Metzgeweiser
      @Metzgeweiser 8 месяцев назад +7

      I used to live in Pahoa and went to school in Hilo, I thought exactly the same thing. It’s not packed but it is certainly not empty.

  • @carlossaraiva8213
    @carlossaraiva8213 Год назад +491

    Among the first foreign workers who arrived in Hawaii were portuguese farmers from Madeira osland and the Açores (Azores) Islands for their expertize in working on sugar and pineapple plantations. Like many afterwards they stayed there. They brough with them a musical instrument, a small guitar called the "cavaquinho" (portuguese for small piece of wood) which the locals loved so much they incorporated into thrir local music traditions, gaining the haiwaiian name of ukalele.

    • @kylesarts7777
      @kylesarts7777 Год назад +37

      Also, food. Malasadas became an icon in Hawaiian cuisine and Portuguese sausage.

    • @arielmarquez6746
      @arielmarquez6746 Год назад +26

      And gave us the word podagee also 😂

    • @LeKo-wo7bv
      @LeKo-wo7bv Год назад +20

      Ukulele the Hawaiian word reflects the type of music it produced when they listened to it.
      Comes from the Hawaiian word..
      Uku-- flea
      Lele-- jump,hop,skip,fly.
      Yup- produced music sounding or movement like a jumping, skipping ,hopping, or flying flea.🤣😅👍
      Must of and still is alot of fun to listen to what kind of music they produced.😁

    • @realitybob2
      @realitybob2 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@LeKo-wo7bv
      The fingers "jumping around" on the strings and fret board made them think of fleas.

    • @barrycraig1549
      @barrycraig1549 11 месяцев назад +13

      So I guess the Americans are the villains because? The natives killed in slaughtered each other for years as Noble warriors. So tired of the one-sided. Mostly friendly. Natives virtuous

  • @Labyrinth6000
    @Labyrinth6000 Год назад +1247

    Video idea: Why is Louisiana so POOR despite having the mouth of the Mississippi and an oil economy?
    You figure New Orleans would be on the status similar to other major cities in the world like Cairo, Shanghai, and Hiroshima would make their provinces/states rich, but that's no longer the case with Louisiana. New Orleans used to be the 3rd largest city in the US behind Baltimore and New York in the 1800s thanks to river navigation. Coming from someone who is from Louisiana.

    • @woolwarian
      @woolwarian Год назад +101

      Maybe planes, trains, and automobiles made people not rely on the Mississippi River too much?

    • @rainewithan3
      @rainewithan3 Год назад +155

      when i lived in louisiana i remember hearing about how the state makes LOTS of money off of natural resources, which confused me considering the roads were terrible, the public places were poorly funded, and everyone around me was poor. going to school you would see houses in various stages of decomposition as they sunk into the ground or the roofs fell into themselves. almost everyone lived in a trailer too and lived off of food stamps ☹

    • @wanlittle
      @wanlittle Год назад +130

      Id bet the Jones act has a lot to do with it. It requires all cargo between two US ports to be sailed on US made ship and majority US crew. There are almost no ships that meet that actually meet those requirements these days. It has basically cratered our domestic shipping industry.

    • @soliloquy5995
      @soliloquy5995 Год назад +32

      The Mississippi River was only really relevant during the advance westwards and the various booms that occurred. It's no longer a booming area, mostly rural with people deep set in their ways, therefore the economy doesn't grow. So the river which is also their greatest asset, is also their greatest curse.

    • @sokonek1
      @sokonek1 Год назад +76

      @@soliloquy5995there is a lot of river transport on the Mississippi. It is mostly farm products being exported from the Midwest.

  • @kairos_fluent
    @kairos_fluent Год назад +574

    I think a video about the Balkans geography and how that influenced the history and politics of that region would be very interesting.

    • @Dynamic241
      @Dynamic241 Год назад +17

      I guess, but the balkans already get enough attention. That’s not a bad thing, but I would like to learn abt more history about stuff outside the western/ European sphere

    • @pey850
      @pey850 Год назад +34

      @@Dynamic241 balkans are the unknown of europe lol

    • @nickmacinic4869
      @nickmacinic4869 Год назад +13

      @@Dynamic241 The balkans aren't part of the western world

    • @Dynamic241
      @Dynamic241 Год назад +5

      @@nickmacinic4869 but there European, that’s why I said western/European

    • @Dynamic241
      @Dynamic241 Год назад +4

      @@pey850 I guess, most of Eastern Europe is unknown but I’ll prefer learning abt a actual under represented part of history

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano2391 Год назад +78

    Your cost of living information is as accurate up to date as possible. One of many reasons I never truly returned to reside in my home State after enlisting in our USN, 1983.

    • @MisterClear-yc3on
      @MisterClear-yc3on 6 месяцев назад +4

      we had 2 battery groups just off of Lahaina as my friends and neighbors were murdered...the Navy stood down. and I'm a 12 year Naval combat vet.. GO NAVY

    • @byronharano2391
      @byronharano2391 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@MisterClear-yc3on Aloha Shipmate.

    • @erikcrouch7881
      @erikcrouch7881 Месяц назад

      There is a special kind of evil in turning pristine natural beauty into a tourist trap. My grandmother told me about the trips that she and my grandfather took in the 70s and even then it was being commercialized.
      The look on her face when she described swimming in more than 80 feet of water that she could see to the bottom of was and is one of my only regrets about being landlocked..

  • @1in6win
    @1in6win Год назад +2053

    Hearing RealLifeLore repeatedly say “Kame-Hame-Ha” is both awesome and hilarious.

    • @cool_gabe
      @cool_gabe Год назад +105

      Is that the origin of the khamahamaha power blast from DBZ that Goku does

    • @1in6win
      @1in6win Год назад +113

      @@cool_gabe I don’t think it’s a direct reference to this man, no. “Kame” means turtle in Japan and it’s supposed to be a reference to the Turtle Hermit (Roshi)

    • @Dezsr
      @Dezsr Год назад +41

      ​@@1in6winthat's the pun

    • @markgutierez9922
      @markgutierez9922 Год назад +23

      ​​@@1in6winactually kame house was a random Island 🏝️

    • @nicholasrobusto3737
      @nicholasrobusto3737 Год назад

      yooooooooooooooooooooooooo i get it now @@markgutierez9922

  • @gamingmoth4542
    @gamingmoth4542 Год назад +1531

    It’s interesting to see that the British Empire nearly went to war with Spain over control of a nearly useless island off the coast of South America, but were still willing to respect Hawaii’s sovereignty despite its’ strategic importance.

    • @zethwitt384
      @zethwitt384 Год назад +398

      At that point I think it's just spite- "This native people can have their sovereign nation on these islands, but we'll be damned if we let the Spanish Bastards take an inch of land!"

    • @Hyenadont
      @Hyenadont Год назад +210

      I mean, the same thing happened with the British American Civil war, where the British "wanted" to allow American Indians to keep land whereas America wanted to well, do a colonialism and take all of the land for themselves, massacres be damned.

    • @daeseongkim93
      @daeseongkim93 Год назад +113

      The problem is Hawaii has a geographical isolation (the Pacific Ocean), the Falklands were still in the sphere of influence of the naval empire that was the British Empire (the Atlantic Ocean). Also Britain could not really take advantage of this strategic location, at this point, Britain didnt really have much going for it. The American west coast is mainly occupied their rival, the U.S.; British Columbia was not so important of a trade hub when the French has locked them in from much Atlantic trade with Quebec, and Australia was a penal colony that did most of their trade through the Cape. The Hawaiian crown also emulated everything about the British royal court and visited the Queen in London in a grand worldwide journey, an endeavor most monarchs would not go about doing. The British admired that an exotic kingdom on the other side of the world would do so and also Victoria felt humbled by meeting these royals that looked up to them for civilization rather than the other way around when a larger empire would have to forcefully impose civilization to foreign barbarians.

    • @ishmyboy
      @ishmyboy Год назад +67

      We would have gone to war with Spain or France over a gust of wind. And rightly so

    • @spencerlopes1482
      @spencerlopes1482 Год назад +94

      Great Britain and Hawaii have historically very close ties. Britain was Hawaiis closest ally. Their relationship is reflected in the Hawaiian flag as it closely resembles the British flag.

  • @lizziesmusicmaking
    @lizziesmusicmaking Год назад +239

    This video covers a lot more of Hawaii's history than the title suggests. Not that I'm complaining! I learned a lot. It's kind of nice getting more than I bargained for.

    • @vincentmansell5374
      @vincentmansell5374 Год назад +2

      There was zero reason to 'start from the beginning'.. Kinda annoying. The title should represent the video.

    • @KairyuX
      @KairyuX Год назад +9

      ​@vincentmansell5374 Eh, I think in order to understand "how" the US conquered hawaii it would require an explanation of how it all started. Which is the beginning. Minus the mispronouciations of various hawaiian words it was a well informed video.

    • @tip00former1
      @tip00former1 10 месяцев назад

      🤡@@vincentmansell5374

    • @Godisamazing1984
      @Godisamazing1984 10 месяцев назад +1

      Way to much history

    • @sheevhernandez3869
      @sheevhernandez3869 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Godisamazing1984true but it's still interesting to hear about

  • @wehojm7320
    @wehojm7320 Год назад +102

    Wow! Your vlog is incredible. I grew up in Honolulu and attended elementary through high school. Of course we learned history in general and had some exposure to highlights of Hawaiin history from the Polynesian exploration, arrival of Capt. Cook, Kamehameha and the subsequent rulers, the eventual exploitation by the pineapple and sugarcane growers and the increased Western/American influence through to statehood. However your complete analysis of history, population demographics and distribution, economics influences and Hawaii's geopolitical position in the world is a real eye opener. Well done.

    • @JustMeAloha
      @JustMeAloha 5 месяцев назад +2

      I'm born & raised in Hawaii and 2nd generation sakada. I agree

  • @jackdaniel3135
    @jackdaniel3135 Год назад +149

    Dude what? I was just now looking at a map of Hawaii on Google Maps and was thinking, “wow, only one of these islands seems to have way more human habitation than the others. Why is that?” Then I open RUclips and this was posted an hour ago.
    Some coincidences weird me out.

    • @Z3t487
      @Z3t487 Год назад +8

      It's the algoritm chasing you!
      Just kidding 😂

    • @USANA158
      @USANA158 Год назад +1

      Heck yeah, same here

    • @louisinese
      @louisinese Год назад +2

      I was thinking about a movie I hadn’t watched in years and it appeared on my feed 😂

    • @Sherolox
      @Sherolox Год назад +11

      RUclips *is* owned by Google, too. That is no coincidence lmao.

    • @shasmi93
      @shasmi93 8 месяцев назад +5

      You know Google owns RUclips so Google looks at everything you do and search and they recommend other things so you will consume them and also ads. We are all being watched all the time.

  • @dameneko
    @dameneko Год назад +241

    Person from Hawaii here, of mixed racial and ethnic heritage. I was going to add some pronunciation notes for "Kaho'olawe" but then RealLifeLore's rendition of "Kame-hame-ha" entered the chat. I appreciate this video and you sharing this lore with the wider world all the same. As others have noted, it's good to have more info about the islands reaching a wider audience.
    Note about the diverse population -- it is not as segregated as this video made it seem with the presentation of stats. You left out mixed folks completely, or somehow chose a box for us. I realize that presenting populations as monoracial and monoethnic is more convenient for and accessible to most Americans, who mostly have a very Anglo-informed view of race, but it completely erases the extensive interracial and interethnic mixing that was already happening long before Hawaii became a state.

    • @AvsFan32
      @AvsFan32 Год назад +12

      I haven’t been to Hawaii, but I thought about this several times throughout the video based on some of the history presented here. I’m sure you are gorgeous and just know you are special!

    • @ShadoFXPerino
      @ShadoFXPerino Год назад

      44:05 race mixing is "a historic tragedy". Apparently RLL is a ethno-nationalist now. 😅

    • @waltermh111
      @waltermh111 Год назад

      You sound really ignorant and liberal educated with your nonsense. The west are not the only ones to see things by race. Asians very much divide people by ethnicity which is the same difference.
      Even africans do. South americans do. In fact these days black people have a new word, colorism. It means to divide people by skin tone, Which they claim black people do a lot.
      As for his population stats, The last population stats he gave was a hundred years ago or longer And no, the populations were mixing to such a degree that it's irrelevant to keep the stats divided.
      The population would have still been very much segregated because of culture With little mixing.
      For sure, there would be some mixing because guys will screw any girl that they think is pretty. But you are overplaying it. Especially where the plantation and therefore, the plantation workers would be compared to the population of natives.
      Mixing would have sped up more decades later as the workers settled and had children that expanded beyond the plantations. He didn't give the stats that late in the history because it wasn't relevant.
      Not that your point is relevant at all because the only point of the stats is the relevance to the conflict between America, Hawaii, and Japan. Japan would see their people as different from the natives, even with mixing, because ethnicity is very important to Asians. And the Japanese aren't Anglo, so don't have an Anglo informed view of race.
      I get it you've been raised under a liberal school system. So you're not very educated. But you've been lied to. Japan is not a race by the way. It is an ethnicity, so your diatribe that just needed to mention that we invented race was irrelevant because it wouldn't apply here.

    • @nussknacker9827
      @nussknacker9827 Год назад +3

      Thank you for educating us on this
      I didn't know this

    • @mrlakkie1612
      @mrlakkie1612 Год назад

      U do realize that on the "anglo" islands alone there are different ethnicities that can be mixed right? Or do u just see "white" as one race, like most dumb americans?

  • @BoyProdigyX
    @BoyProdigyX Год назад +867

    It's great that he pronounces King Kamehameha I's name like a Saiyan about to blast their foe with a Ki wave 🐉 haha This was really cool, especially as a Hawaiian who was born in Hilo but has lived my life far away in Philly. Still, every opportunity there is for people to learn about Hawaii's history, especially in such a straightforward and earnest way, I support fully. I wish there was more attention paid to the various highs and lows of early Hawaiian civilization, such as the various wars amongst tribes, Hawaiian spirituality and beliefs and of course, surfing 🏄🏽‍♂among other things. Great work though 🌺and Aloha! 🤙🏽
    edit: The then Japanese Emperor probably also declined the marriage between then 16 year old Imperial Prince Yorihito and King Kalākaua's niece because she was 5 haha Could you imagine how different things may have gone if that match _had_ transpired?

    • @johnkeefer8760
      @johnkeefer8760 Год назад +67

      Just to piggyback for anyone curious:
      It should be pronounced closer to “kuh-MAY-huh-MAY-huh”

    • @yipper503
      @yipper503 Год назад

      ​@@johnkeefer8760AMEN!

    • @danielratner
      @danielratner Год назад +9

      @@johnkeefer8760 That's more fun to say

    • @teelo12000
      @teelo12000 Год назад +49

      Nah if he was pronouncing it like a Saiyan would, it would have taken three RUclips videos to say it.

    • @iyziejane
      @iyziejane Год назад +15

      Yeah but people in Hilo pronounced it that way long before DBZ existed...same way most locals say "Hawaii" and not "Hava'ii"

  • @KombuchaPants
    @KombuchaPants 9 месяцев назад +12

    Outstanding! And saving your advertisement to the end is nice. I actually watched the Hello fresh ad all the way through. I usually fast forward or move onto another video when they are at the beginning or middle. And you have earned gained a subscriber.

  • @kurtmcfc1629
    @kurtmcfc1629 Год назад +139

    I've heard the phrase "priced out of paradise" many times.. but this video encapsulated that so well. Very sad for the native people.

    • @gandydancer9710
      @gandydancer9710 Год назад +12

      Why sadder for them than for most of the rest of us, also priced out of living in Hawaii?

    • @Michelle-rdz17
      @Michelle-rdz17 Год назад +2

      @@user-nt5gh2kh1e yes there is… Europe, Africa, Asia has native people just like the Americas had and has with the Native Americans.

    • @videogamebomer
      @videogamebomer Год назад

      ​@@user-nt5gh2kh1ewoke lies.

    • @texasjoehotdog1838
      @texasjoehotdog1838 Год назад

      @@Michelle-rdz17 So basically nonwhite inhabitants of a place by the time Europeans arrived. Google has this definition marked as offensive you know. Do better

    • @timothyandrewnielsen
      @timothyandrewnielsen 10 месяцев назад +3

      They have mosquitos galore now. It's not exactly paradise anymore.

  • @cesarehipthenhopthenhip8377
    @cesarehipthenhopthenhip8377 Год назад +186

    Why when he mention King Kamehameha it's just keep getting funnier everytime 😂

    • @HontasFarmer80
      @HontasFarmer80 Год назад +36

      It feels like his name should be shouted slowly and ending in a world shaking shout.

    • @Z3t487
      @Z3t487 Год назад +25

      Dragon Ball Flashbacks 😎

    • @orbrat212
      @orbrat212 Год назад +19

      Funnily enough, that's what Akira Toriyama named the move after; the name of Hawaii's king

    • @frankv7068
      @frankv7068 Год назад +1

      🤣 hardy hardy ha!

    • @Faith12996
      @Faith12996 Год назад +6

      ​@@Z3t487Literally what came to mind lol. DBZ creator heard this dude's name and was like "this shall be the name of the ultimate power move" 😅

  • @hailsatin3530
    @hailsatin3530 Год назад +104

    The only thing that sounds really off is Kaho'olawe. W's are usually pronounced as V's in the middle of a word for most words (some exceptions exist). Because it's not populated or widely discussed except among locals, the pronunciation without the V sounds almost unrecognizable.
    That being said, the W in Hawai'i is often pronounced by natives as a V.
    And the " ' " is an okina and is usually a hard pause and to skip it can actually change the meaning of the word. Making it like "Hava-ee" or "Kaho-oh lahvay"

    • @rickshawwheelchair
      @rickshawwheelchair Год назад +3

      Thanks!

    • @RayzeR_RayE
      @RayzeR_RayE Год назад +1

      Molokai-ee

    • @paula889
      @paula889 Год назад +3

      ​@@RayzeR_RayESome people from Molokai argue that historically there was no okina at the end of the word and the dictionary entry was a mistake. So he gets a pass on that one.

    • @pepperonish
      @pepperonish Год назад

      Kamay-hamay-ha

    • @GrlSnipr
      @GrlSnipr Год назад +1

      @@paula889not trying to sound rude but isn’t it taught that all double vowels are separated by an okina

  • @b.s.adventures9421
    @b.s.adventures9421 10 месяцев назад +10

    If you visit, be humble, no grumble.
    Show respect. Do NOT try to hurry anyone.
    It goes a LOONG way.

    • @jimmirow
      @jimmirow 2 месяца назад

      Correct. Basic respect for peoples, land and traditions that is not yours.

  • @SebastianBlix
    @SebastianBlix Год назад +361

    This was entertaining and VASTLY informative! I’d love to see one on how Okinawan history and how it became part of Japan.

    • @questionablechannel1262
      @questionablechannel1262 Год назад +7

      Same!!!!

    • @flouisbailey
      @flouisbailey Год назад +9

      Guam as well.

    • @tsdfghjkl
      @tsdfghjkl Год назад +11

      No thanks.
      I can imagine a bunch of Chinese bots coming to that video saying "free Okinawa" "Okinawa should be independent" or something like that.

    • @Magnatross
      @Magnatross Год назад +4

      ​@@tsdfghjklthat's no reason to avoid making the video.

    • @Bayard1503
      @Bayard1503 Год назад +5

      @@tsdfghjkl I mean.... a free Okinawa is probably the only way they could hope of salvaging some of their culture from total assimilation.

  • @jansix4287
    @jansix4287 Год назад +80

    This lecture turned progressively more interesting the longer it lasted. I feel like I now understand a good chunk of all Pacific history.

  • @ambition112
    @ambition112 Год назад +345

    1:39: 🌴 Hawaii's population is heavily concentrated on the island of Oahu, despite it being the third largest island.
    4:16: 🌋 The Hawaiian Islands were formed over millions of years and were discovered by humans around 900 A.D. The islands were eventually unified under the kingdom of Hawaii.
    8:55: 🌴 The Kingdom of Hawaii faced challenges including a declining native population, lack of available workers, and its strategic importance in the Pacific.
    13:29: 🌺 The population of native Hawaiians declined while the population of White westerners and imported Asian laborers increased as the Western landowners imported labor from East Asia to work on plantations and ranches.
    18:13: 🌺 Hawaii's monarchy was overthrown by Western business class and US government, but annexation was initially refused.
    22:31: 🏝 Hawaii's annexation by the United States led to the domination of the land by a few wealthy individuals and corporations, causing a decline in the native Hawaiian population.
    27:15: 🌊 The American military's infrastructure development around Pearl Harbor and its strategic location led to the attack on Pearl Harbor, making Hawaii a major military base for the US in World War II and beyond.
    31:53: 🏝 Hawaii's current population pattern is influenced by factors such as private ownership, military use, rainfall distribution, and development opportunities.
    36:37: 🌴 Hawaii's tourism industry, centered around Honolulu, is a major contributor to the state's economy.
    40:45: 💰 Despite being a small and remote island, Oahu in Hawaii is heavily populated and has the highest home prices and rents in the country, making it unaffordable for many residents.
    45:29: 🍽 HelloFresh offers fresh and affordable meal options that can be prepared in 15 minutes or less, helping busy individuals avoid expensive delivery food or unhealthy frozen meals.
    Recap by Tammy AI

    • @kalaiolele8796
      @kalaiolele8796 Год назад +21

      Note: Hawai'i was never legally annexed. There are no signed treaties of annexation between the Kingdom of Hawai'i and the United States.

    • @DASBIGUN
      @DASBIGUN Год назад +16

      ​@@kalaiolele8796it's called conquest. No papers needed when u have a military multiple times in strength to the "other" military. It's a sad fact that the native people on Hawai'i have been used (sometimes brutally), but we should focused on healing and treating the native people's.

    • @lythonoise
      @lythonoise Год назад +4

      @@kalaiolele8796usa not subject to global law and the oppressive warring and caste nature of the indigenous was exposed and taken advantage of. No land was “stolen”.

    • @vincentsnow8436
      @vincentsnow8436 Год назад +4

      @@DASBIGUN “it’s called”________ Anytime you see this written or spoken ; everything that follows is from a poorly educated person - trying to grapple with concepts that are far outside their comprehension.

    • @DASBIGUN
      @DASBIGUN Год назад +2

      @@vincentsnow8436 look who's talkin

  • @alohafromthe3033
    @alohafromthe3033 6 месяцев назад +8

    Maui continued to produce sugar until the end of 2016. The entire central valley was covered with sugar cane fields. They would light the fields on fire as part of the harvesting process. When that happened, the cane spiders (huntsmen) would scatter & locals would see more of them in town. The mill was called Puunene & they’ve opened a museum there. Definitely worth a visit. Today, they’re growing various fruit trees & other produce where the sugar cane once stood.
    Edit: Just saw Peter Santenello’s tour of Maui. The fields were purchased by a Canadian retirement investment firm & they’re losing money on the project. The land should be returned back to the locals so they can manage it properly & grow food. The land where the mill sits was purchased by a Chinese investor. Might be developed into housing, but unfortunately not affordable housing for locals.

    • @MisterClear-yc3on
      @MisterClear-yc3on 6 месяцев назад +1

      update..Blackrock just bought it and are turning it into a shopping district..I worked there as a boy

  • @persona2grata
    @persona2grata Год назад +44

    I've heard, although I don't actually know if this is true, but I've heard that companies in high tech industries that work with the military in Hawaii actually have difficulty keeping employees because everybody thinks living there would be like living in paradise, but once they are living there the combination of a high cost of living and the somewhat isolated nature of life on the island combine to create a surprisingly high turnover rate.

    • @bamafencer12
      @bamafencer12 Год назад +10

      Makes sense. It's fun for 3 weeks. but gets old..

    • @NONO-hz4vo
      @NONO-hz4vo Год назад +11

      It works if you LOVE the ocean. Island life gets old for people who are used to life on the mainland. Instead of being able to hop in a car and travel to 100's of destinations you really only have a few options no matter which Hawaiin island you are on. Also there aren't really seasonal changes, which again makes things a bit more monotonous.
      Had one set of relatives though move to Nevada where the summers are 90f and the winter high averages is low 40's. Curious how long before they are back.

    • @WCSmith-vr3fx
      @WCSmith-vr3fx Год назад +1

      Yes, very true.

    • @NoName-zn1sb
      @NoName-zn1sb 10 месяцев назад

      @@WCSmith-vr3fx Laughing Out Loud!

    • @giankperez6377
      @giankperez6377 10 месяцев назад +4

      It is always the case; paradise, anywhere, is a place to visit not to lived on it.

  • @Kevan808
    @Kevan808 Год назад +477

    As a proud American combat veteran, this makes me sad. I'm born and raised in Hawaii, but this part of our history is tragic and heartbreaking. It's so economically crippling here that locals are forced to move to the mainland to make ends meet.

    • @anakinlapierre-tate4127
      @anakinlapierre-tate4127 Год назад +66

      Read the rest of American history tf😂

    • @j.s.m.5351
      @j.s.m.5351 Год назад +40

      For real lol. Which part was not heartbreaking and tragic?

    • @LoveYouStranger
      @LoveYouStranger Год назад +62

      A majority of your country’s history into the present is literally appalling lol

    • @NONO-hz4vo
      @NONO-hz4vo Год назад +44

      Happens all over actually. Any place where money starts to flow in will displace the local residents. You see it in many ski towns, resort destinations, and anywhere ex-Californians migrate.

    • @LoveYouStranger
      @LoveYouStranger Год назад +13

      @@NONO-hz4vo Yeah that’s literally capitalism btw.

  • @TheTurboman23
    @TheTurboman23 Год назад +41

    My great great grandparents were among the workers from the Philippines that worked on the sugar cane fields and later the pineapple fields. So i was particularly more invested in this video than others 😅

  • @maxbielawski6745
    @maxbielawski6745 Год назад +8

    I'm from Maui, and it is quite spaced out, with lots of rural areas. There is small areas of population density that follows the coastline basically.

  • @hanoapuaa
    @hanoapuaa Год назад +108

    I’m born and raised on Maui, and must say this was a pretty good video 👍🏽

    • @Enfjscrolling
      @Enfjscrolling Год назад +21

      Hey, are you doing alright? I hope you and your family are safe and sound, and same with your friends. Much love from Kauai 🩷

  • @quetaquenya6418
    @quetaquenya6418 Год назад +145

    I put Hawai'i in the "true size of" program and the island chain spanned from the Oder close to Berlin, to the Polish border close to Lviv. That's kind of insane. I think most people outside of North America imagine it as a very small area, and not this "proper" island chain equivalent to many European countries.

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Год назад +7

      That is why a bridge will never be built between them. It would be physically impossible.

    • @____Carnage____
      @____Carnage____ Год назад +9

      Question though, did you only measure the eight main islands (Big Island to Ni’ihau) or did you measure the entire Hawaiian archipelago including the over 100 smaller islands down the line?

    • @jimster1111
      @jimster1111 Год назад +7

      the islands themselves are very small compared to most western states. i can go out my front door and literally see 600sqmi of land. the equivalent to oahu.

    • @quetaquenya6418
      @quetaquenya6418 Год назад +2

      @@____Carnage____ It did only use the islands pictured in the video, so Ni'ihau to Hawai'i (I think?)

    • @leoprg5330
      @leoprg5330 Год назад +1

      I literally thought Hawaii is about the size of Canary islands

  • @JonBoullion1020
    @JonBoullion1020 Год назад +22

    Pearl Harbor is the main reason why Oahu is the most populated island. It’s the largest natural port out of all of the islands. That and the fact that, Kailua is where the Marine Corps Base is, Schofield is the Army Base, and Hickman Joint Naval-Air Force Base.
    As a Native Hawaiian and someone who grew up and went to school in Mililani, HI, I can tell you now that most White and Black people living there are most likely in the military and therefore apart of the minority. By far the majority are people of Asian heritage.

    • @BaytideDragons
      @BaytideDragons 3 месяца назад

      You’re wrong. The marine corps base is in Kaneohe.

  • @jlo2017
    @jlo2017 Год назад +13

    Absolutely fascinating to learn so much in 45 minutes!! Thanks for touching so many topics of its history.

  • @deykuzor
    @deykuzor Год назад +38

    Archaeologist who grew up on Maui and lives on Oahu here to confirm that everything in this video is more or less accurate. Some other commenters have commented on some nuances or some debateable things like Hawaii's population at the time of first contact but yes, all these events happened and the time frame and cause/effect narrative and its effect on the people is true. The amount of land the Federal government owns on Oahu also includes part of Kahuku in the North, Makua to the West, a large chunk of Kailua in the East, a fair chunk in center Oahu around Schofield, and obviously Pearl Harbor in the South. Basically Oahu is the most populated but we all cluster in Honolulu, Pearl City, and Kapolei at this point.
    Maui by extension, was largely populated in what is colloquially Wailuku/Kahului, North Kihei, and what was until last month, Lahaina...
    Big island is almost entirely concentrated around Kona but Hilo is a close second.
    Kauai is the fourth most populated and I think its largely the southern end since the military owns a big part of that island too

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад

      I just don't get how he comes with that 91% figure. Seems like a random number just for the title of the video.

    • @deykuzor
      @deykuzor Год назад +2

      @@soundscape26 video title got changed for clickbait. I don't have an accurate figure for that either.

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +2

      @@deykuzor Thanks. And labelling all other islands as being empty as well.
      It's a bit sad that a guy with 7M+ subs still have to resort to clickbait.

    • @TheWooka20
      @TheWooka20 Год назад +1

      crazy seeing this comment here! I went to UH for archaeology but don't work in archaeology anymore. do you work CRM? with who if so?

    • @deykuzor
      @deykuzor Год назад +2

      @@TheWooka20 I do work with CRMs but I am independent. I take contract work as a writer or a field guy with CRMs who need extra bodies by way of signing a contract. I used to work for several CRMs over the years or do federal work though so I've worked with the military, the national parks, public utilities and transit, and the private sector now.

  • @damianchenot2667
    @damianchenot2667 Год назад +78

    I may be biased since I am stationed here in Hawaii, but this is one of your better videos in recent memory. This is saying a lot since nearly all of your videos are fantastic. Keep up the good work!

    • @SV-kr9fu
      @SV-kr9fu Год назад

      Are you one of those fvckers that keep making all the noises on the weekends in Chinatown? Keep it down!!! I'm trying to get my beauty sleep.

  • @bodewerchin4952
    @bodewerchin4952 Год назад +58

    I feel like it's worth mentioning that Moloki was also the place where many governments sent people who had leprosy. Just ask Pater Damian what that was like

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Год назад +8

      They sent 'em to *Molokai* too.

    • @BillMitchell-lm8dg
      @BillMitchell-lm8dg 6 месяцев назад

      The leper colony was on a flat peninsula named Kalaupapa
      and isolated from the rest of the island of Moloka'i
      by high cliffs negotiated on mule back.

    • @Joseph-ax999
      @Joseph-ax999 6 месяцев назад +1

      When I hear the name Molokai that's what I think of.

  • @mrbfros454
    @mrbfros454 Год назад +5

    Wow, I had no idea what I was getting into, but once I started I was hooked! Excellent, production and presentation of a wealth of information and knowledge. Thank you!

  • @prst99
    @prst99 Год назад +150

    Niihau still has native Hawaiians living there. They speak Hawaiian daily. It’s not a totally isolated island.

    • @jaer.6540
      @jaer.6540 Год назад +21

      according to Wikipedia, it only has about ~160 people living there, with no power lines (only solar) or sewage. All fresh water comes from rain fall and its even evacuated when not enough water has fallen.

    • @prst99
      @prst99 Год назад +29

      @@jaer.6540 yeah I know. It’s got way more people than Kahoolawe. I don’t want others to think it’s a private island without people.

    • @jf8138
      @jf8138 Год назад

      As of last year, it is less than 60 something. These people leave to work, and they do not come back. The population WILL disappear within a decade or 2 at most.

    • @pdraggy
      @pdraggy Год назад +3

      @@prst99 and WAY WAY more than Kaho'oalawe wich... doesn't even exist lol

    • @prst99
      @prst99 Год назад +5

      @@pdraggy Niihau is an actual community and not like Jeffrey Epstein’s private island.

  • @stonynotdusty
    @stonynotdusty Год назад +136

    Keep this place Oprah free!

    • @lexingtonconcord8751
      @lexingtonconcord8751 10 месяцев назад +19

      Divest all the land of the billionaires in Hawaii

    • @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm
      @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm 9 месяцев назад +4

      Too late. Holds property on Maui.

    • @blueconversechucks
      @blueconversechucks 7 месяцев назад

      All those scumbags colonizing hawaii and youre worried about oprah?

    • @reaux3921
      @reaux3921 7 месяцев назад +6

      Why? Oprah is a good woman.

    • @reaux3921
      @reaux3921 7 месяцев назад +4

      Racist

  • @P48L1N
    @P48L1N Год назад +35

    Geographically and geologically speaking, Hawaii archipelago is very very similar to the Spanish Canary Islands, and politically too:
    -Formed by a magma plume
    -3rd biggest mountain from the bottom of the ocean in the world (Tenerife), only 3rd to Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa.
    -An "state" of their country (autonomous community to be exact)
    -Very populated (even more than Hawaii)
    -Still active volcanoes

    • @johannweber5185
      @johannweber5185 Год назад +8

      * Both are popular tourisr destination.
      * On both some of the largest telescopes in the world are located.

  • @BruTheThreat
    @BruTheThreat Год назад +41

    I’ve lived on the big island most my life and I love explaining this kind of stuff to mainlanders. Soldiers fighting for the US in WW2, fought under a 48 star flag cause Alaska and Hawaii didn’t become states till 1959. The tragic history of the islands theft is often swept under the rug. So for the tourists who visit, respect for the locals and the land goes a HUGE way

    • @anitapeludat256
      @anitapeludat256 11 месяцев назад +5

      Indigenous people of Alaska also . What the US govt did to Natives of Hawaii and Alaska and the early white European immigrants did to Indigenous people of North America is egregious at best. Sickening .

    • @home_def
      @home_def 11 месяцев назад +1

      They would have been poorer without us

    • @BruTheThreat
      @BruTheThreat 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@home_def That's their choice to make not ours. Also come visit Hawaii and tell me that it's not poor. Highest homeless rate per capita, an economy dependent on tourism, the 2nd most expensive state to live in and we're constantly hit with natural disasters from hurricanes to volcanos. Very weak argument you have here.

    • @tip00former1
      @tip00former1 10 месяцев назад

      🤡@@home_def

  • @ViperSRT3g
    @ViperSRT3g Год назад +88

    Hearing you pronounce Kaho'olawe was pretty funny 🤣 for those unfamiliar, W's in Hawaiian are actually pronounced as V's. So it would sound like Ka-ho-ou-lah-ve

    • @BlueSunHiredGun
      @BlueSunHiredGun Год назад +8

      Yeah, I’ve heard the island’s name pronounced many MANY weird ways in my life, but this was a first. Generally the emphasis is also on the “law” syllable.

    • @austinrogge1771
      @austinrogge1771 Год назад +7

      @@BlueSunHiredGun Bra! and he said it so many times! cringed every time haha

    • @SillyMynabird
      @SillyMynabird Год назад

      It was a really funny (painful) tick that would pop up now and then.
      But, eh, can't blame him too much.

    • @bryanschwing3406
      @bryanschwing3406 Год назад +1

      King Kamehameha was pronounced funny as well...

    • @vicronson
      @vicronson Год назад +1

      Interesting, Hawaiians pronounce W's the same way German's do

  • @NotRiansLuke
    @NotRiansLuke Год назад +132

    I've lived in Hawaii for 15 years and learned a ton of things I didn't know about Hawaii's history from this video. Btw, I still have trouble with pronouncing Hawaiian words, but can tell you the island of Koho'olawe is actually pronounced KO-ho-O-la-vey. Great video, thanks!

    • @TheAmateurListener
      @TheAmateurListener Год назад +14

      I came here to say this. It was painful listening to the multiple Hawaiian words that were mispronounced.

    • @hualani6785
      @hualani6785 Год назад

      OMG, WTF? How can anyone know nothing about where they live? How incredibly insulting to Hawai'i's history, our
      culture, our religion, our kanaka maoli. I only hope your a snow bird, that doesnt truly "live" in Hawaii. You have no business living in Hawai'i without understanding what's going on around you. This is not the resource btw- read! Learn about the place you "claim" you live in. There's no excuse for stupidity. You are a guest at best, even those of us who's relative's bones are buried here are guests. DO you even live by the state motto? Doubtful.

    • @caustichonu
      @caustichonu Год назад +3

      KA*-ho-O-la-vey

    • @SeeJayPlayGames
      @SeeJayPlayGames Год назад +3

      also pretty sure it's King Ka-MEHA-meha, not KA-me-hame-ha

    • @richardboreiko
      @richardboreiko Год назад +6

      @@SeeJayPlayGames More like ka MAY ha MAY ha from what I've been told. These videos meant to inform us should inform themselves first!

  • @stevenkothenbeutel448
    @stevenkothenbeutel448 Год назад +73

    Although your pronunciation of Hawaiian names was atrocious, the video was well done.
    Kamehameha = KUH May Ha May Ha

    • @Flaming_Pulsar
      @Flaming_Pulsar Год назад +35

      I imagine the popularity of a certain anime is to blame for this

    • @HontasFarmer80
      @HontasFarmer80 Год назад +13

      @@Flaming_Pulsar The problem is sometimes Goku will say it in a long dramatic way to indicate building up a big blast. KAaa Meeh .... Ha Meeeeeh.... HAAAAAAAA! If a great king has to have a namesake in pop culture ... an epic world shattering attack sounds about right.

    • @Flaming_Pulsar
      @Flaming_Pulsar Год назад +7

      @HontasFarmer80 That's exactly what I mean. Although when the attack is referenced rather than used, it is pronounced correctly. Still, naming am attack after a great king is pretty cool

    • @mnm5165
      @mnm5165 Год назад +3

      Blame DBZ lol

    • @markbollinger1343
      @markbollinger1343 Год назад +1

      Glad someone answered this. I wasn’t sure if I was wrong and he did his research or I was right

  • @rickrutledge9363
    @rickrutledge9363 20 дней назад +1

    I have a place on the Big Island and love it.
    This is the most comprehensive video I've seen yet on the State!
    Great job.

  • @thomasrinschler6783
    @thomasrinschler6783 Год назад +15

    One thing that wasn't mentioned is that during the early years of the kingdom, the rulers moved their court around the islands periodically, with Waikiki and Honolulu being two of these temporary capitals. However, in 1845 (de facto, de jure in 1850), the capital was permanently moved to Honolulu, given its fairly central location as well as its excellent harbors. Honolulu being the permanent capital gave Oahu a leg up over the other islands even well before the start of any substantial US involvement in the islands.

  • @dearsirormadam20
    @dearsirormadam20 Год назад +49

    The fact that we get free documentaries on RUclips by RealLifeLore is truly a gift. 👏👏👏
    May I also remind you the fact that our Native American population in our motherland, the Continent of America before the European Colonizers arrived, was around 15 millions, while the European population in their motherland, the Continent of Europe was around 25 millions.
    Today, Native American population is 15 million, while the European population, in the Continents of America + Europe, is a staggering TWO BILLION! A shocking sad truth. 😔
    In my humble opinion, it's about time to decolonize the Colonized lands, and return it to rightful owners Native American people.
    Notorious global cardinal crimes the Christian West has committed, and benefited a great deals, such as Slavery & Colonialism had long been over, why on earth is notorious Colonization still lingering on, may I ask? 🤷

    • @sheevhernandez3869
      @sheevhernandez3869 9 месяцев назад +2

      Real words 😅

    • @Ouioui555
      @Ouioui555 9 месяцев назад +1

      lol. U mean the conquerors came after the natives slaughters each other and created a kingdom.

    • @Ouioui555
      @Ouioui555 9 месяцев назад

      @@sheevhernandez3869dude no. Educate urself. They slaughtered each other then. A strong empire came and made them effective. Hawaiian Kingdom was a joke, and only existed for five seconds.

    • @alejandromaldonado6159
      @alejandromaldonado6159 4 месяца назад

      You need a Snickers?

  • @Primalxbeast
    @Primalxbeast Год назад +15

    I guess that explains why when the super yacht Ulysses showed up at one of the islands, the residents were worried that the owner wanted to buy land there.
    The islands are already carved up by so many rich people.
    They even protested and kept him from coming ashore.

  • @JennaGetsCreative
    @JennaGetsCreative Год назад +4

    I feel like talking about median price doesn't hit for the average person who doesn't know the difference between mean, median, and mode.
    For those who don't know, quick rundown:
    Mean = the "average" you're thinking of. Total/number of items. This number can be skewed by an unusually high or low outlier.
    Median = when you put all the datapoints in value order, the median is the midpoint. Not affected by outliers if the sample size is large enough (and homes in a state is more than large enough)
    Mode = the value that occurs the most in a set of numbers.

  • @Firestorm637
    @Firestorm637 Год назад +16

    I live on maui. Hawaii would have similar hot humid weather like Florida if not for a few reasons. Only islands not associated with nearby land mass, they are located middle Pacific Ocean. This allows the ocean to warm the land if cold and cool the land if hot. Trade winds keep the humidity down. Temperatures stay in a narrow band winter and summer. Oceans temperatures also stay in a narrow band

    • @MisterClear-yc3on
      @MisterClear-yc3on 6 месяцев назад

      and the massive geoengineering operations. ionospheric heaters..and the weapons platforms..then there's the attack on Lahaina....which has ruined Maui forever.

    • @jdos5643
      @jdos5643 5 месяцев назад

      I feel like Hawaii is nice all year round. The closest thing to paradise

    • @midgetmoney1
      @midgetmoney1 5 месяцев назад

      Best weather in the world. Except when the Kona winds are up.

  • @sandraa35
    @sandraa35 Год назад +12

    I need your videos on daily basis. Hope you know I check my yt notifications everyday so I don’t miss anything. You’re doing something different than all the others on the platform and one can tell the effort you put into all this. ❤

    • @donlee.4308
      @donlee.4308 Год назад +1

      That’s vastly on full display..

  • @Shine13373
    @Shine13373 Год назад +21

    This was vastly more entertaining than I thought it would have been.

  • @savage22bolt32
    @savage22bolt32 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the wonderful video, and a huge thanks for not ruining it with crappy background music.
    I don't know why some people are compelled to add annoying background music throughout their videos.

  • @SaadAliArts
    @SaadAliArts Год назад +60

    Oahu island has 70% of Hawaii population
    Clark county has 73% of Nevada population
    Cook county has 40% of Illinois population
    Texas triangla has 70% of Texas population
    Maricopa county having Phoenix city had 62% of Arizona population
    Anchorage has 40% of Alaska population
    Greater Boston has 64% of Massachusetts population
    New York Metropolitan area has more than 66% of New York population
    Twin Cities Metropolitan area has more 60% of Minnesota population
    American Geography and Demography is amazing and interesting ❤❤❤❤🇺🇸🗺️

    • @monica012077
      @monica012077 Год назад +1

      Pack any as many people into the smallest area possible so they politically can't stop you from stealing land.

    • @celiabrickell2500
      @celiabrickell2500 Год назад

      What do you mean by "Nevada population" , "Illinois population" , ect.?

    • @SaadAliArts
      @SaadAliArts Год назад +2

      ​@@celiabrickell2500Nevada, Illinois's state's population. Duh

    • @laurastabell2489
      @laurastabell2489 Год назад

      In Europe, the divide between city and country was even more extreme. Due to constant wars, farm land near cities was prized. Hawaii and other cities like New York should do the same. Supply lines sometimes fail. The ability to grow food on land or have clean fresh drinking water close at hand should be paramount in importance. Im living in a two acre sprawl development mess outside of NYC. Yes, the natives have been mostly displaced. The farm land mostly developed. More toxic pestacides per acre than farm land are spread for lawns in an area supplying drinking water to others and that gets its water largely from wells. We could use a few high rise buildings here , take down the sprawling ranch homes and put the land in conservation for passive forest farming/organic farming and watershed, tourism use. Our zoning wont allow buildings over 40 feet. Hawaii should do the same. Natives should start building up in their communities creating green high rise communities and restore or conserve the land around the buildings as green spaces. By renting the top floors for tourism, they can recoup the cost and buy up more land to build and conserve. In Greece, the landowners work with builders who raise their single family homes on to the top of the high rise buildings. Its a bit comical to see! -but they dont have to sell out and own rentable appartments out of the deal. The builder gets to build without first buying the land so has a better financial picture for the actual building to be built. They don't require so much borrowing then and can get the loan to build without capital. Its been a win win for land owner and builder. If natives work together, pool rescources, they could do the same. Maybe create native only investment corporations whose goal is to create housing ownership for all native families involved. The trick is to gain control of a large contiguous piece of land so voting on local laws for projects to move forward will be easier.
      Drafting petitions to United States government and the UN to have areas returned or protected as native lands might be possible due to history of misappropriation. Drafting a plan for conservation and development of areas that would be feasible might ve a first stem. I would also hope that the huge holdings by a few ultra wealthy individuals might be passed for reasons like tax incentives back to the natives, at least in part. The rest being held for conservation and farming purposes. Having a single owner of a large estate as it is now, has held many areas free of sprawl and destructive development. There are other natives concerned here too, the wild life. Things can change very rapidly upon death of an individual large land owner. The time to act is now.

    • @dusanmicicelovic7597
      @dusanmicicelovic7597 Год назад

      Obviously, Goku was here.... And Master Roshi before him, here he learned unique KAMEHAMEHA

  • @ratatatuff
    @ratatatuff Год назад +36

    Glad you mentioned Winona LaDuke as "scholar". She is doing awesome work and I'm a big admirer of hers.

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh Год назад +106

    Imagine owning an entire Hawaiian island. I can't really even comprehend it.

    • @ГеоргиКолев-ш3я
      @ГеоргиКолев-ш3я Год назад +9

      For the price of 300 houses :D

    • @prst99
      @prst99 Год назад

      It’s a lot of work though

    • @wsams
      @wsams Год назад +4

      I have a small patio

    • @GMAMEC
      @GMAMEC Год назад +5

      I hope it stays in the family. However, if there’s valuable resources on that island, someone will find a way to take it .

    • @ThwipThwipBoom
      @ThwipThwipBoom Год назад +16

      @@GMAMEC If the USA wants the resources on those privately owned islands, it's going to get them.

  • @974beavis
    @974beavis 3 месяца назад +2

    i'm from a tiny island east of madagascar and we have the same problems of price rises and taraffic congestion , lack of housing and high rents . still got some island vibes but have to live borderline to enjoy it

  • @aitakahashi2229
    @aitakahashi2229 Год назад +38

    Nice condensed recap of Hawaiian history. However, whereas you pronounce “Liliuokalani” flawlessly, you STRUGGLE with “Kahoolawe” and “Kamehameha”. Toooo funny, but good job! 👍👍

    • @HeindsAG
      @HeindsAG 4 месяца назад

      If I’m correct, is it
      Lil-iou-kalani
      Kaho-o-lah-way
      Kuh-may- uh-may-uh

    • @mattfrederic2038
      @mattfrederic2038 3 месяца назад +1

      Some words just dont make sense if the speaker wasnt born and raised in that culture

  • @timanctil8225
    @timanctil8225 Год назад +7

    Your pronunciation of Kamehameha is hilarious...
    My Hawaiian friends will get a kick out it! 😂🤙

  • @agactual2
    @agactual2 Год назад +11

    I got about six minutes in, thought "that was a fascinating video on how Hawaiis islands formed". Then I remembered this is a video about Hawaiis population and that was just the intro.

  • @JustMeAloha
    @JustMeAloha 5 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you! I love your video regarding Hawaii. I was born on the Big Island of Hawaii, lived on Maui, but moved to Oahu because of the jobs. I've been a realtor mainly on the island of Oahu. The prices of homes as of today ... June 2024 is around $1.2 million. Crazy high!

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 4 месяца назад +1

      Wow, is that the average price? That's crazy. I thought it was bad enough here in London. I guess most people can only rent.
      Cheers.

  • @MichaelEilers
    @MichaelEilers Год назад +43

    The location of the airport is by far the strongest influence on big population centers. There’s NO reason that Phoenix should be bigger than Flagstaff, which is a wetter, cooler, more centrally located and more pleasant place to live, but the big international airport was built in Phoenix and thus it become dominant.

    • @sanfranciscobay
      @sanfranciscobay Год назад +1

      Employment also brings people to live nearby, for example US Military and Pearl Harbor.

    • @ProfessionalGasLighting
      @ProfessionalGasLighting Год назад +5

      Flagstaff is wetter because it snows. Living in the snow requires a different lifestyle. From keeping a shovel and snow tires to a simple window scraper. It’s easier to not deal with that, it shows with the population demographic leaning to higher than average retired or near retiring ages.

    • @DragonCaptain
      @DragonCaptain Год назад +4

      Flagstaff has a lot of forests surrounding it. I don't see it being a geographically viable option. I mean, neither is Phoenix, because of the drought of the Colorado River and hotter summers. But I think there are more reasons than Phoenix having an airport

    • @MichaelEilers
      @MichaelEilers Год назад +7

      @@ProfessionalGasLighting your comment is totally invalidated by the fact that many, many people live in the northeast, including some of the most populous cities in the US. Ever been to Chicago in the winter? Boston? NYC?

    • @MichaelEilers
      @MichaelEilers Год назад

      @@DragonCaptain before the airport and the military bases were established, Phoenix was a three-stoplight town with dirt roads. There’s a reason the whole dirty looks like it was built in the last 30 years, it actually was.

  • @Lazy_Tim
    @Lazy_Tim Год назад +23

    Spend 2 weeks on the big island. Loved it! Australian here. Also got married there.

  • @netizencapet
    @netizencapet Год назад +8

    Well-researched. The part reviewing the long geologic cycle that has created the giant submarine mountain chain of which the Hawaiian islands are but the most recent portion of the Hawaiian Seamounts was very cool.

  • @Jerrycourtney
    @Jerrycourtney 6 месяцев назад +2

    I was blessed with a two-week trip to Honolulu in September of 2021. Despite the nature of my trip, and then-COVID restrictions, it was the most wonderful, magical place I’ve ever been, and I’ve made it my life’s mission to move to HI one day.

  • @jeremyglass4283
    @jeremyglass4283 Год назад +31

    My family went to Hawaii this summer, and we actually spent very little time on Oahu. One thing you were right about are the prices, we (family of 4) literally spent $180 one morning for breakfast! I'd say Oahu is the best place to live in Hawaii, but if you're on vacation, don't stay there more than you want to, the traffic near Honolulu is awful! Kawaii is definitely the most picturesque of all the islands, and the best island to visit if you like nature and hate crowds, it's also a lot more tropical and wet. There's lots of stuff to do on Maui and the big island too, and regardless of where you go, the beaches are top-tier. Be warned though, avoid the sun between 10am-2pm in the summer, or you will get fried without constant and extensive sun protection.

    • @kaimukiwahine16
      @kaimukiwahine16 Год назад +9

      *Kaua'i. But I'm glad you think the Garden Isle is kawaii!

    • @LeKo-wo7bv
      @LeKo-wo7bv Год назад +4

      HAWAIIAN BREAKFAST FOR 4
      4 1lb. bags of poi. $40
      1 lb. dried aku/ahi $35
      1 lb. lomi salmon $ 9
      Drink water. __0_
      $84.
      Hawaiians had one of the healthiest diets b4
      McDonald's 😂👍
      Good for breakfast and snax at the beach. No foam cooler needed. 👍😅

    • @jeremyglass4283
      @jeremyglass4283 Год назад

      @@LeKo-wo7bv we went to IHOP

    • @sanfranciscobay
      @sanfranciscobay Год назад

      4 Buffet Breakfast at all of the larger Hotels is going to cost $40 per person and is a very good selection of food. Same costs in the San Francisco Bay Area.

    • @____Carnage____
      @____Carnage____ Год назад +6

      Everything is expensive here, don’t even get us started on gas or house prices

  • @gregoryevans3822
    @gregoryevans3822 Год назад +8

    Small correction. US has a major Naval installation in Yokosuka, Japan. It would be the closest major naval base to Taiwan, not Pearl.

  • @DomyTheMad420
    @DomyTheMad420 Год назад +70

    6:30 actually there is a theory that those Polonesian voyagers may have found the island a millenia early but didn't consider it good land to settle

    • @AlexDuWaldt
      @AlexDuWaldt Год назад +4

      Doubt it.

    • @Turnpost2552
      @Turnpost2552 Год назад +15

      With hiw spare the island were, i wouldnt think they would choose an alternative espically back in the day. Anyone who reconsidered probably cost there life.

    • @________Thatheis
      @________Thatheis Год назад +2

      Agreed, not just from found petroglyphs the Hawaiian Burial Council documented the time frame goes centuries back now.. Alōhá Ahi Ahi

    • @pdraggy
      @pdraggy Год назад

      @@AlexDuWaldt at that time the islands may have not been developed yet as in just a bunch of rocks and volcanoes. Who knows where they landed. Not that improbable actually.

    • @MC3141592653589
      @MC3141592653589 Год назад +5

      @@Turnpost2552How the Polynesians explored was they only explored up wind. That way, if their supplies started to run low, going back home would be fast

  • @thumper1747
    @thumper1747 9 месяцев назад +1

    Another very interesting and very well produced documentary. Kids all over the world could watch and learn about different parts of the world using your videos. Will subscribe Geoff

  • @rightfuldarthvader5085
    @rightfuldarthvader5085 Год назад +15

    There is so much things about the U.S. that can be so interesting, yet and weird and difficult to understand. Poor states, rich states, high population centers, abandoned and deserted areas, I could go on forever. It’s weird how much more diversified the country is than most expect.

    • @bradbutcher8762
      @bradbutcher8762 Год назад +14

      People from other countries always say how Americans don't travel outside of their country much...they're right. Most of us have never even seen more than half of our own country.

    • @wesleywatson2009
      @wesleywatson2009 Год назад +8

      ⁠@@bradbutcher8762big country, many different races and ethnicities, different cultures, many different biomes. All of that diversity can happen in one state too. Not many people outside of America and even here in the states realize that.

    • @amazin7006
      @amazin7006 Год назад +10

      ​@@bradbutcher8762 most humans in general do not travel outside of their country, how many Chinese people go visit Japan or Thailand? Not many at all. It is only Europeans who say Americans don't travel, and they only travel because their countries are the size of our cities.

    • @karenwang313
      @karenwang313 Год назад +4

      I mean, the US is the size of a continent, its not a surprise that it's as diverse as it is.

    • @monica012077
      @monica012077 Год назад

      ​@@amazin7006Chinese people travel everywhere. They have more disposable income than any other people in the world right now.

  • @kaimukiwahine16
    @kaimukiwahine16 Год назад +65

    Most of our local population, including many of my friends, have relocated to the west coast or to the Ninth Island (Las Vegas) because they were all priced out. Can look to Iam Tongi and his story of his family having to move because it's getting way too expensive. It does almost feel that there is less locals and more mainland transplants. The concept has gotten worse with the Lahaina fire last month and that people who called that town home will have to sell.
    Great video. Pronunciation could do some work, got some but a number of them... Would benefit to reach out to a native speaker (but did get quite a chuckle so cheers for that!). Shoutout to my fellow kama'aina in the comments. cheehoo!

    • @dariussoohoo
      @dariussoohoo Год назад +14

      Kaho’olawe had me dying 😂

    • @kaimukiwahine16
      @kaimukiwahine16 Год назад +7

      ​@@dariussoohoo For real! Had to stop the video a couple of times to collect myself. Even had to skip ahead only to hear it a second later! Would help a little bit if they included the okina to know where it breaks.
      Again, no shame! It's like when folks say Likelike as "like like". Just need a local or a native speaker on how it's correctly pronounced.

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Год назад

      Sounds like a issue the state government could address

    • @____Carnage____
      @____Carnage____ Год назад +1

      I’d love for him to say Humuhumunukunukapua’a

    • @daeseongkim93
      @daeseongkim93 Год назад

      lol the hawaii state government dont give a shit, they profit off of local kama'aina moving, they get kickbacks from foreign and mainland land developers building new subdivisions to attract even more mainlanders to move out to hawaii into high cost houses that locals wont be able to afford@@AL-lh2ht

  • @LiqqaRoni-cx3tx
    @LiqqaRoni-cx3tx Год назад +7

    This was fascinating! We Americans don't get nearly this much education about Hawaii. Literally Queen Liliauakalani is the only thing I ever got from school.

  • @philippal8666
    @philippal8666 9 месяцев назад +2

    Only 42% of rent? Here it’s at least 67%, before tax, gas, electricity, food, transportation, etc.
    And this is not minimum wage.

  • @RangerB66
    @RangerB66 Год назад +9

    Author states the western most U.S. naval and air bases are in Hawaii, Guam & Okinawa. But I believe there is still an entire carrier battlegroup based at Osaka, Japan, and as of 2021 the Philippines have given the US military 2x air bases.

    • @myTeapotON
      @myTeapotON Год назад +2

      Carrier strike group is stationed in Yokosuka about 40 miles south of Tokyo. Weird that he missed it because it's one of the US Navy's major fleet headquarters. He missed another naval base in Sasebo about 40 miles north of Nagasaki as well. Probably 20 ships total "permanently" stationed between those two bases.

    • @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm
      @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm 9 месяцев назад

      And the Philippines was a war prize to the USA after Spain lost the Spanish-American war. It was then a US territory when WWII began. Eventually, they won their independence from the USA after the war and are their own nation once again.

  • @merrywalsh2809
    @merrywalsh2809 Год назад +11

    I live on Maui. Another reason there are more people on Oahu is because it has much more water than the other islands because of its natural underground aquifers, features that the other islands lack. On Maui, people can wait years for a water meter on undeveloped land, or resort to catchment. Disagreements over who gets the water are common, with competing factions consisting of hotels and golf courses, large farming operations, and developers. Water reclamation and conservation is growing, as a strategy to forestall moratoriums. Meanwhile, the leeward dry sides of the island, struggle to contain brush fires. The brush is a consequence of invasive grasses after the plantations collapsed due to emerging global competition for sugar cane and pineapple. The wet side of the island has seen its water transported to the dry side through a series of flumes for over 200 years. Water limits growth on Maui and contributes to high real estate prices. The Jones Act created an American shipping monopoly to the islands to support the American Shipping Industry at the expense of the islands. This has resulted in what is likely price gouging for all goods brought here. As my father used to say, “it’s a great life if you don’t weaken.”

    • @jackfoster78
      @jackfoster78 9 месяцев назад +1

      I hear Kaho'olawe also used to have a similar aquifer, until it was used as a military firing range - explosions cracked the impermiable rock layer, drained the aquifers and left the island uninhabitable

  • @historiacontaco
    @historiacontaco Год назад +24

    Very similar situation to Puerto Rico where there are 3 million puerto ricans in the island but 5 million in the US.
    Would love to see you do a video on Puerto Rico

    • @antoinedaly5450
      @antoinedaly5450 Год назад +2

      To add some additional information. Due to the sugar industry, the US foment the immigration of puerto ricans to Hawaii. That's why you can find there the coqui frogs and the cachi cachi music, which is a variant of the jibaro music.

    • @zombiekilldemon
      @zombiekilldemon Год назад +2

      This is why my people in Puerto Rico need independence because if statehood were to happen then like the native Hawaiians the poorest demographic on our own home island

    • @historiacontaco
      @historiacontaco Год назад

      @@zombiekilldemon appart from that, the Cabotage laws which greatly impact the cost of goods and economy in the island would not go away because Hawaii and Alaska go through the very same laws. Some people support statehood because we would then be able to apply for bankruptcy, but fail to see it also means the price of goods in the island (which imports all of it goods) will always be high because of it

    • @zombiekilldemon
      @zombiekilldemon Год назад +2

      @@historiacontaco I understand people the immediate economic beliefs of full annexation by the US but the long term cost are real and those long term cost are having our culture diluted to the point of cultural appropriated camodification for the sake of tourism is to high a cost for me. We can have independence and continued economic ties to the US. That's why I also advocate for Free Association with the US that way we can have visa free travel along with the movement of goods and still proclaim our sovereignty as an independent nation on the world stage. Also as a nation we would have access to things like the International Monetary Fund so we wouldn't need to declare bankruptcy. We can also decide our own trade so we can get goods cheaper from throughout Latin America without paying for US protectionists tariffs.

    • @historiacontaco
      @historiacontaco Год назад +1

      @@zombiekilldemon a few years ago there was a movement called Movimiento Union Soberana (Sovereign Union Movement) which advocated for independence but while keeping an association with the US like some pacific island countries have at the moment. It didn’t get any big following however, I would have liked to see how something like that went if it was further developed upon

  • @islandaloha
    @islandaloha 4 месяца назад +2

    The reason is Oahu island has the most level land suitable for agriculture and habitation. It also has a natural deep-water harbor suitable for the Navy fleet. Geographically it is protected from tropical storms from all sides. And it is far away from the Big Island which has active volcanoes and earthquakes.

  • @Mici
    @Mici Год назад +28

    I like the original title of "Why Oahu Has VASTLY More People Than the Rest of Hawaii" better

    • @watertart
      @watertart Год назад +3

      How many title edits happened? When I first clicked this video, I swear it was called something like "Why Hawaii is 91% empty."

  • @MrHistory269
    @MrHistory269 Год назад +10

    A RealLifeLore video about my home state? A welcomed surprise.

  • @BearJwG
    @BearJwG Год назад +17

    Geography of Tierra Del Fuego/Patagonia, the feud between Puerto Williams Chile and Ushuaia Argentina for southernmost town in the world, and how that region is essentially cut off from the rest of the continent due to glaciers would be a great topic to see you cover.

    • @alexburke1899
      @alexburke1899 Год назад +3

      There’s an interesting/sad story about the late 1800’s gold rush there too. A Romanian guy named Julius Popper found lots of gold on a beach there with his men and even minted his own gold coins. But like most colonialists he was an asshole and killed the last of the native Selk’nam people that lived there.
      I think Popper ended up getting murdered in a hotel room in Buenos Aires though, so there was a tiny bit of karmic justice in the end.
      Another interesting fact about that area geologically is if you look on google earth south of the Strait of Magellan, you can see an area that used to be open to the ocean and used by sailors in the 16th century, and it supposedly closed in the 17th century after a major earthquake lifted that area, and/or just closed off the outlet to the ocean.

  • @travisgreenleaf8858
    @travisgreenleaf8858 6 месяцев назад +1

    Aloha, I’m from the island of Moloka’i. ( Moe-lo-ka-ee ) Crazy to see our general history laid out in 40min. Amazing job. Wish you touched more on the Hawaiian culture and renaissance of our language.

  • @jewleetee9320
    @jewleetee9320 Год назад +17

    Thank you for creating quality content about our islands!
    Just want to leave a quick note about pronunciation:
    O’ahu = oh-ah-hu (not oh-wah-hu)
    Moloka’i = mo-lo-ka-ee
    Kaho’olawe = ka-ho-oh-la-ve
    The ‘ is called an ‘okina, it’s actually considered a letter in the Hawaiian alphabet and it is used to break up vowels, some people refer to it as a “glottal stop”. It’s just as important to pronounce as the other letters. Might help with future content about this paradise :)

    • @ThwipThwipBoom
      @ThwipThwipBoom Год назад +1

      Bro how he pronounced those 3 words is exactly how every single other mainland American I have ever met pronounces them. I think y'all Hawaiians need to get the word out more about this lol

    • @LeKo-wo7bv
      @LeKo-wo7bv Год назад

      👍🤏🫶

    • @LeKo-wo7bv
      @LeKo-wo7bv Год назад +3

      @@ThwipThwipBoom
      a e i o u
      Ka Ke Ki Ko Ku
      Your mini lesson for today.
      👍😅😅 Haole (ROBBERS)of the colorful hawaiian language.

    • @emptyhad2571
      @emptyhad2571 Год назад

      Hawaiian we’re conquering each other so they got conquered themselves.

    • @ThwipThwipBoom
      @ThwipThwipBoom Год назад +1

      @@LeKo-wo7bv French sounds better honestly.

  • @plebiain
    @plebiain Год назад +39

    It bears saying that the real tragedy is not the fact that more of Native Hawaiian people live outside Hawaii than in, but the wealth inequality between Native Hawaiians and the billionaires and corporations that forced them out.

    • @azaz20244
      @azaz20244 Год назад +4

      i dont see your point. corporations across the entire planet make vastly more money than the residents in the country in which they operate

    • @ratatatuff
      @ratatatuff Год назад +16

      @@azaz20244 I guess the point is that native and indigenous people suffer more than anyone else under predatory capitalism. It's time to dispossess the billionaires and return the land to the rightful owners.

    • @plebiain
      @plebiain Год назад +8

      I have in mind companies like Dole with their history of violence and imperialism contributing to the oppression of Native Hawaiians (recall the part of the video discussing how under a member of the dole family overthrew the native rulers in an act of war and suppressed the voting rights of the natives). The wealth and power corporate bodies took away from the natives is what I mean to refer to, not the fact that they make more money (sorry if that wasn't clear)

    • @mnm5165
      @mnm5165 Год назад +6

      @@azaz20244 all your comments are just defending the horrific actions of your people towards natives. Haven’t y’all learnt anything over the past 300 years??

    • @jackmahoney1001
      @jackmahoney1001 Год назад +3

      Absolutely; Hawai’is story is one of the saddest I’ve ever heard. It’s an example of the complete evils of the world, but also of the resilience of the natives who survived despite the struggles

  • @dzapper7
    @dzapper7 Год назад +5

    At 39:50 You state that Guam and Perl Harbor are the closest American naval bases to China. You overlooked Yokosuka Naval base in Japan which is home to the US 7th Fleet including Carrier Strike Group 5, Destroyer Squadron 15 and has major drydock and repair facilities.

  • @Carnage88
    @Carnage88 Год назад +3

    I'm sad I won't get to see how the archipelago grows in the future. Just imagining new islands adding to Hawaii is a fun thought.

  • @HelloThere-ts2nd
    @HelloThere-ts2nd Год назад +9

    15:40 submarine icons from civilization 5 warm my heart 😂 great video as always!

    • @BroskiMcBrosef
      @BroskiMcBrosef Год назад +1

      He uses the oil icon as well, which I always enjoy seeing as well (:

  • @res3t505
    @res3t505 Год назад +81

    People don’t understand how far Hawaii is from the mainland

    • @margosood1959
      @margosood1959 Год назад +15

      3 time zones far...that's a lot of water !

    • @bababababababa6124
      @bababababababa6124 Год назад +13

      I’m not American so i seriously don’t understand how Hawaii isn’t independent, surely they’d feel left out being that far away right?
      Then again they probably wouldn’t survive without US money

    • @Steve-318
      @Steve-318 Год назад +9

      2300 miles from California. It's even further from Japan, around 3300 miles.

    • @robtoe10
      @robtoe10 Год назад +16

      ​@@bababababababa6124 Hawaii was a sovereign Kingdom until the late 1800s, and as far as ex-country US states go, it is rather unique in being non-European in its national ethnicity (unlike say the Vermont Republic or Texas)
      There are Hawaiian nationalist movements, but separatism in a US state is hobbled at the starting line because it's plain illegal for a state to leave the US.

    • @ash3972
      @ash3972 Год назад

      @@bababababababa6124 colonialism

  • @ourfriendlyanimals
    @ourfriendlyanimals Год назад +14

    This guy teaches me things better than my prior university professors.

    • @ikaikaxkeahi
      @ikaikaxkeahi Год назад +1

      I agree, honestly the best place to receive Hawaiian Studies education is here in Hawaiʻi, I don't trust the universities on the continental US.

    • @ourfriendlyanimals
      @ourfriendlyanimals Год назад +1

      @@ikaikaxkeahi You’re probably right. They might teach it the other way around. Heh.

    • @rogueascendant6611
      @rogueascendant6611 Год назад +2

      @@ourfriendlyanimals Most university professors are rather for themselves whether money or self-interest rather giving the whole truth. But other reason is mostly from the institute or educational department that do not adapt or update their curriculum. Some are stagnant and some are restraining the knowledge to acknowledge.

    • @ourfriendlyanimals
      @ourfriendlyanimals Год назад +2

      @@rogueascendant6611 Not to mention, some are so stuck in their ways that they don’t even consider the possibility that they may be wrong about some things, even when they are given valid opposing views by others.

  • @TomKellyXY
    @TomKellyXY 9 месяцев назад +1

    The closest Navy bases aren’t in Guam or Oahu. There’s one in Yokosuka, Japan.

  • @andreypetrov4868
    @andreypetrov4868 Год назад +5

    Excellent video but you've forgotten to mention that apart from other empires, Russians not only visited Hawaii in 19 century but even built a fort on one of the islands. Then they decided that it's too far from nearest Russian town and abandoned it.

  • @Aydenmzgaming
    @Aydenmzgaming Год назад +4

    8:50 goku enters hawaii

  • @pattyccannon
    @pattyccannon Год назад +23

    Your pronunciation of Hawaiian names had me LOL

    • @localboi808state
      @localboi808state Год назад +1

      Bro I was rolling I think him pronouncing Kaho'olawe was my favorite way someone butchered the name.

    • @bababababababa6124
      @bababababababa6124 Год назад +6

      Dragon Ball Z messed up everyone’s pronunciation of Kamehameha

    • @Unmannedperson
      @Unmannedperson Год назад

      How many different ways did he pronounce Kahoolawe? My favorite was "Ka-hool-wa-la-wa-ley"

  • @danielj1063
    @danielj1063 11 месяцев назад

    Very refreshing in that you've loaded most of the lengthier ads at the end of documentary

  • @beyondborderfilms4352
    @beyondborderfilms4352 Год назад +9

    This may also explain why living in Hawaii is very expensive (at least somewhat).
    everyone is concentrating on a tiny island instead of spreading out.
    The very limited amount of land, top with environmental regulations,rich people and speculators tending to buy properties there to own,rent, or resell at a much higher mark up price and the preference for single family homes means that O'ahu will still and always be expensive as hell.

  • @nemunemufan
    @nemunemufan Год назад +4

    Thank you for respectfully sharing the history of Hawaii and trying your best to pronounce all of the Hawaiian words.

    • @mr22guy
      @mr22guy Год назад

      VASTLY more polite than how I would have put it :)

    • @SV-kr9fu
      @SV-kr9fu Год назад

      Now, can you go tell about half of the natives & locals around here to speak proper English?

    • @heatherkuhn6559
      @heatherkuhn6559 Год назад

      Max Miller did a better job with the pronunciation.

    • @NoboruTakaoka
      @NoboruTakaoka Год назад +1

      Hawaiian is a official language of the state same as English and I assume you are referring to pigen which is also it's own language, not English so gtfo with this

  • @2006gtobob
    @2006gtobob Год назад +11

    I was stationed in Pearl Harbor for 2 solid years, early 1994 to early 1996. I became pretty familiar with Oahu and loved my time there. 10 years later, my wife and I visited for a 2 week delayed honeymoon and it remained much the way I recalled. We stayed on Oahu barely 2 days, spending the rest of our time on two, new to me, islands, Hawaii and Maui. I was amazed by the lack of population and was very happy for that, serenity!
    We came back in 2010, and that'll be the last time. We vistied Kaui and Maui for the bulk of our time, but the homeless/tent dweller situation was really starting to become visible.
    Too bad. I loved Hawaii. It's history is amazing!

  • @Calebs_Aviation
    @Calebs_Aviation Год назад +4

    Wow! I already knew most of this info as I’ve visited Hawaii and I love Hawaii 🌸 however I always watch these videos as I watch every Real Life Lore video as Joseph has great insights and a great channel! Also I knew how The Big Island Hawaii used to be much more populated and popular that’s why Hawaii island is so volcanically active 🌋 and very dangerous! Also a new island that you mentioned called Loihi is being formed now. Also that’s part of the reason why air travel and flight services recently picked up on the other islands in recent decades from the 1990s onwards! 🎉

  • @HiKimiko
    @HiKimiko Год назад +6

    "Oahu" translates to "Gathering Place"

  • @thomasbusciglio5239
    @thomasbusciglio5239 Год назад +4

    Idea for a potential future video: the Kuril Islands, the Russian-Japanese feud over them, and their strategic importance to this day.

  • @Weniger_Anzeigen
    @Weniger_Anzeigen Год назад +8

    I´ve lived in Hawaii in 2020. The prices are absolutely insane. And you can´t even be picky about the things you eat. a walmart in honolulu has a produce sections that´s smaller than two humans lying next to one another. That being said: the nature and beaches are beautiful (although they´re really crowded). but yeah rent etc. is absurdly high so regular people have to live in more rural areas. and even some of the local students at the university I attended chose apartments that were like half a nhour to an hour away from the campus because the city is just way too expensive if you´re living there long term.

  • @jimmirow
    @jimmirow 2 месяца назад +1

    Food=$600/month and a bachelor needs $18/hr wage to survive. Average pay is around $12