- Drugs & Opiates
- Alcoholism
- Plastic Aloha
- Fast Food
- Unbalanced Diet
- Polluted or Stolen Water
- Unexploded Ordinance on our islands
- Companies that poison our keiki by their schools
- Missile interception facilities between the islands
- Chem-trails
This is the inside of a Chem Trail plane.
Those are the planes that leave the criss cross patterns
across the sky, spraying us with pesticides.
For your safety, the government has been hiding this information,
as not to cause alarm to the fact that
they are spraying you with poison.
Prohibition
Undoubtedly, lecturing by temperance advocates began soon after Captain Cook’s arrival, but early attempts at stemming the flow of alcohol were haphazard and inevitably failed. The situation changed when local organizations began to ally themselves with the national temperance movement.
1901 — Formation of the Anti-Saloon League of Hawaii, a local adjunct of the Anti-Saloon League of America. By 1916 the Hawaii League has a full-time lobbyist in Washington, but faced with opposition from Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole, Hawaii’s representative in Congress — and an ardent supporter of “home rule” — Territorial legislators repeatedly fail to enact prohibition.
1918 — Finally, after being pummeled with criticism and pressured by his financial supporters, Kuhio declares in favor of federally imposed prohibition and President Woodrow Wilson signs a bill that turns Hawaii dry. Liquor doesn’t flow (legally) in Hawaii until prohibition is repealed in 1933.
Prohibition
Undoubtedly, lecturing by temperance advocates began soon after Captain Cook’s arrival, but early attempts at stemming the flow of alcohol were haphazard and inevitably failed. The situation changed when local organizations began to ally themselves with the national temperance movement.
1901 — Formation of the Anti-Saloon League of Hawaii, a local adjunct of the Anti-Saloon League of America. By 1916 the Hawaii League has a full-time lobbyist in Washington, but faced with opposition from Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole, Hawaii’s representative in Congress — and an ardent supporter of “home rule” — Territorial legislators repeatedly fail to enact prohibition.
1918 — Finally, after being pummeled with criticism and pressured by his financial supporters, Kuhio declares in favor of federally imposed prohibition and President Woodrow Wilson signs a bill that turns Hawaii dry. Liquor doesn’t flow (legally) in Hawaii until prohibition is repealed in 1933.
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