Hawaii - First Impressions (Maui) 🇺🇸

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[mellow guitar] [man] My grandfather on my mom's side worked for the sugar plantation. You were put in a lottery to draw lots. So these were all kind of like connected with employee housing It's an interesting experiment. 'Cause this is what it's like, '63, Hawaii just recently became a state. Yeah? Acknowledged in '59. -Yeah. -And so back before then… …all of the different races were... For the sugar plantation you had little camps. You had a Filipino camp, a Hawaiian camp, a Japanese camp, but then post-admission into statehood, the new subdivisions, they had to show mixing in of races. So then you had the homes here and the subdivision was one house a Japanese family, the next house a Portuguese family, next house, Filipino family. We were like the first five homes in this whole subdivision of a hundred-plus homes. So it was all sand. It was all sand around us. [Peter] What are the prices now compared to those days? -Oh, God! -Today? -Yeah. Today is like, what? They say a three bedroom house is $1.3 million. -So like this is 1.3 mil? -At least. [Peter] You're what you consider Native, right? -I guess local. One melted pot. [laughs] -So is that how it works here? Most people are a melting pot of some sort, right? -Yeah, everybody's kind of, you know… There was a period where everybody was saying we're a melting pot of culture, and race, and ethnicity. But for me, I look back and said well, I would agree and I would disagree. We're all live here in a bowl of salad. We're all tossed salad, all mixed in, but I wouldn't say we're melted. Because we still all hold our individual cultural identities. -Okay. -A tomato is still a tomato, a cucumber is still a cucumber. You know, and so my grandparents were a designation of what they call a Sakada They were like the first generation of contract sugar workers and they came from the Philippines. And then they married my grandmother who was 100% Hawaiian. I look back at it, it was kind of an interesting social experiment. The quality of the people that were brought, for example, for digging tunnels… -Okay. -And so you found a lot of them being the small Asian folks. Whether it be Chinese, or what we call Pake, or Japanese. And then you had some that came with skills. Plumbers and power people, you know? So these are the buildings here. The sugar transport buildings. -Are they still in operation? -No. These are all obsolete, out of operation. -So no more sugar on the island? -No more sugar on the island. This is the sugar platform. -What's it now? -It's just right now, I guess mats and containers are being stored here. -How does it make you feel to see this? -Um, for me? -Yeah. -I want to get it back for the kingdom. -Yeah? -You know, this is kingdom land. This was, at one time, the king's. 'Cause they control the port. -Okay, so when the United States annexed Hawaii did they pretty much take control over the islands then -…or was it a power sharing sort of-- -Yeah, yeah. The military backed the economic business people. They illegally overthrew the Kingdom of Hawaii. And this is 131 years ago. I think it was 1892, '93. But this is the harbor. This is the entrance of the harbor. -This is your lifeline these days? -Right. -Everything comes through here? -Everything comes through. -How important is that? -Very important. -It's survival, right? -I would say well over 95% of everything that comes on this island comes through this port. And I say 95 because a small percentage is air-freighted in but the greater majority is brought in by ships. -How much of your food are you guys importing? -Well, there is evidence or rumor that people say between 90-92% of all the food that's consumed is being imported. For me, as a farmer, as a grower of food, I'd like to challenge us to say, "How do we zero-net import?". Why are we going to the store and buying a banana from Ecuador or Mexico? -Mm-hmm. -When we can ask ourselves, "Can we grow bananas?". [Alika] We just need to start with what can we grow? [Peter] So you do have a lot of land here, I'm noticing, in Maui. -This is all sugar lands. This is all controlled and then the sugar entities sold close to 45,000 acres over to a Canadian retirement investment fund and they bought this land. Some little more than six years ago and it's primarily lemons and limes. There's some coffee here. Today a lot of politicians, and decision makers, heads of businesses, they make their decisions based on the Benjamins. On the pluses and the minuses. If you are raised on the values of Kanaka, of the people of Hawaii… -Yeah. -Then you are embedded with the engrained motto… Of state motto of [Hawaiian]. "The life of the land shall be remained in it's existence as long as we continue to live in the right way." -Okay. -Right and just way. In that, you know for me, I look at the decision making is any decision, any new decision, any critical decision, this decision that I'm about to make, does it harm the land? This decision, does it affect our air? What's its effect and affect onto the children? Effect and affect onto the elders? How does it affect the birds? How does it affect the nature? How does it affect the ocean and the fish? Everything like that. You must look at it and say, "Does anything or anyone suffer from this decision?". And that's the difference of [Hawaiian]. Yeah? [Alika] It's too many people move here but don't live here. They just sleep here. Because if you live here you would then protect this place that you love. Many of them all have some place else that they call home If anything happens here, they have someplace else to go to. If something happens here, we have no place else to go. This is our home. So our position always is Aloha Aina. "Protect it with the love of the land." Malama Aina, "Care for it." And so then they come here and get involved trying to change this place exactly like the place they ran away from. This is the way it is because this is a choice of the the quality of lifestyle that we want it to be. -The lifestyle here is… You've seen a lot, you've traveled. It's just slower in general? -Or what would you say the lifestyle is? -Yeah, I would say it's slow. But it's getting faster day by day. [laughs] Technology has made us go faster. -You know? -Yeah. -But where I live, my wife and son, they'll go diving for food. I no longer do that so I always tell them, "You guys go and I'll man the hibachi." [laughs] I'll run the grill. So they go out, they go diving, they go spear the fish, and spear the octopus. For them it's their therapy and it's their lifestyle. Our backyard, we grow food. We harvest coconuts and my son's side hustle is selling coconut candy and so we harvest the coconut and now my job is to bake it and make it for them and we have 100% organic coconut candy. -You know? -Oh, that's great. [mellow guitar] [Peter] So this is a friend of yours we're going to see? -Actually she was a young student of mine that I coached. I was a canoe coach. -[Peter] Smells so good up here. -[Alika] Yeah. -These are all eucalyptus and pine. -Oh, yeah. -[Alika] She see me? -[Peter] Yeah, she was on the porch. -Okay. [Peter] Oh, what a place. [Peter] Almost chilly out. [Alika] Yeah. [Alika] We got a farm up here. [Peter] Seventy years old, Alika, huh? -Yeah. -Wow. Just island life keeps you in shape or what? [Alika chuckling] Yes. [woman] How's this view? [Peter] What a view. [Kai] The 500 acres of solar that I shut down at Tetra Tech. -[Alika] Yeah. -[Kai] Put them in Waikapu instead. I shut her down. -[Peter] You shut down the solar? -[Kai] Yeah. -So they're gonna put in solar panels? -They did already. You can see it, that's 250 acres right there. They're gonna do an additional 250 acres. -Why'd you shut it down? You don't want to see the panels? -It so goes against green energy. It's like the amount of greenhouse gasses and emissions it takes to make one panel goes against greenhouse gases. You never see one acre that the battery's not leaching into the groundwater. And the fact that there's no disposal and they just bury it, it's like what the hell? It kills all the microbes in the soil. It's like we're not gonna be able to farm for 11 years. We'll have to replenish the soil. [Peter] Let me ask you this. You can't see from here but there are windmills. How do locals feel about the windmills? I guess it depends who you talk to. -That magnetic solar storm came and it was cranking at 200 miles an hour. That means the battery cells were full at least an hour. So where does the excess energy go once the battery cells are full? It directs itself to the ground. [Peter] You are in contrary to what most people think about green energy who think windmills, solar panels are a good thing. -You're saying no, it's not helping. -It's horrible. There's no place for it to be disposed of. That's one of the gnarliest things. -You like natural gas? -I think nuclear is more clean energy than anything else. Let the water flow and get a water generator. Yeah, that can combust as well but we would have all the water flowing to our seas. Which will be replenishing our coral reefs. -Okay. So you're saying that almost all of the land in West Maui's on a lease hold and technically still owned by the crown that is your lineage? Is that correct? -The actual crown. -Pre-annexation? -Not the Hawaiian government. Not the Hawaiian nation. -The only and real crown. -Okay. King Kamehameha the Great, Paiʻea, he founded the entire Lele four. Which is the entire island of Lanai and the entire west side of Maui in 1810 as his royal historical domain. Meaning that all Lanai, all of Westside Maui is under a Pioneer Mill contract of a lease that had started in 1914. Pioneer Mill merged a company with Harry, Jeanette, and Weinberg Harry, Jeanette, and Weinberg’s thing was to strip over 500,000 Hawaiians for speaking Hawaiian or dancing hula known as the black magic devil language or black magic dancing. They stripped our language and our hula for 40 years. When my grandfather won in 1996, he won against Pioneer Mill, -Won what? -100% crown judgment. It's over 4.1 million acres. -Your grandfather? -228 islands of Hawaii, yeah. -So there were no deeds back then or what's the story with that? -I have all the paperwork. I had seven boxes and this is all that we have left. I have like a bunch of other stuff left but this is… -[Kai] Maybe not record this. -[Peter] Yep. -This is my Family taking Harry, Jeanette, and Weinberg Pioneer Mill, MFACT, Hiromi and Omora, AKA the… What are the guys that came and did a bunch of development back in the day? Yakuza. [laughs] [Peter] Yakuza was here? -Seriously? -Yakuza. -Well now-- -Yakuza parked their money here? -A lot of it. -Wow. Industrialized in hotels, condos, and all of the big, big houses at frickin' Sunset Beach. [laughs] So what it's saying is after 80 years of litigation based upon undisputed facts that the Paki family owns an absolute 100% interest owned by the late Frank Clark of the Moamokakui lands… plural. Moamokakui lands is like the largest land commission in the state of Hawaii. It goes to 228 islands. We only know about eight I don't even know about the other 220 islands. -Nobody lives on those other islands, right? -A lot of them have artifacts, and headstones, and a lot of our old culture that they made us forget about. Like in our culture in my paperwork we were guardians of heaven's gate. Which is Eke Crater. You know, Eke Crater is the top of this mountain here. -In the clouds there? -Yeah, in our paperwork it talks about a culture that doesn't even exist nowadays. These people have commercialized our culture, our language so much that-- -These people? Who are they? -Even just the Hawaiians. The Hawaiians that are down there, [sings in Hawaiian] [Kai and Alika laugh] In our culture, like the Kapunas that I remember when you're speaking Hawaiian you're like, [speaks Hawaiian angrily] -Kapunas, what are Kapunas? -[Kai] Kapunas are the elders. -[Alika] The elders. -The language you don't speak or hear anymore. [Alika] So that says you guys have 100% of Lele-- -Lele four. [Peter] What's Lele four? -[Alika] The land in vision. -[Kai] Lanai and West Side Maui. Where Murdoc, Bill Gates, and the richest person in the world nowadays running my lease hold, Larry Ellison. [laughs and claps maniacally] [Peter] Larry Ellison owns most of Lanai? Or I'm gonna air quote "owns". -Lele four. [laughs] -[Alika] Steward-- -[Kai] Steward of a lease hold. [Alika] Look. This is Lele one, two, three, and four. [laughs] This is Maui Nui. The West Side Maui and Lanai is Lele four. [Peter] And Lele four is yours? -All of that. She had one piece-- [Peter] What were you saying about your favorite celebrity? [Alika and Kai laugh] [Peter] You were saying something. -Oprah Winfrey bought Thompson Ranch. Thompson Ranch was on a lease hold from Waihini and Kolaloaui Konika. That's my great-great-grandma. Two of our big parcels of land were bought by Oprah Winfrey. And she was aware. She's aware of the not owning the land that is under a lease hold under not a fee simple title but a lease hold. But she conducted her own energy and she has this yellow brick road all the way from Haleakala Ranch to Sumner guys who use it all the way to Wailea. -Okay, so how does that work? Someone, when they buy land like that, there's a title to it or no? -You can get land from a state or a realty place but you don't own the land. You own the establishment that's on it. -You don't own the land? -No, the crown owns the land. The crown land can never be sold. -You're saying Oprah doesn't own that land? -No neither does Zuckerberg or Jeff Bezos. -But they think they do? -They bought the same parcel. They think they do. -They have a title with their name on it? So in courts it's their land, right? -They're not happy but nobody's challenged them yet, I just found out. I could challenge them and end this lease. But this lease, I couldn't just end one section, I would have to end the whole thing. That's why I've been trying to gather allies. Like Haleakala Ranch Baldwins or Marilenin Pine guys. -So if I bought a home in the neighborhood where you grew up… -Yeah… -Would that be legit? -I think you would have to research the title of the actual land. You know, 'cause some of the lands, like we're finding is that they were giving like 100 year lease and her particular land, the lease was upped in 1988. The grandpa, who was still alive then went to court and he went through adjudication and the adjudication was settled in '96. -And we only got a portion of what our exhibit said we owned. [Alika] Right. And so they said pretty much like, gave 'em 300 acres and said, "Here, for now just..." [Kai] But now your title insurance is what you're gonna be forced to buy. -So if I-- -Title insurance is saying you're buying a lease hold property and if the land owner was to ever come, you get 80% back of what infrastructure you put onto the land but you have to leave when the landowner says you have to leave. -So you don't get a proper title, like free and clear, like it's good to go? -No. -You get basically just rights to the land? -The crown will always own the land, can never be sold, and only-- -People would disagree with what you're saying. -People are just finding out. [Kai] Unfortunately, and I just found out every Hawaiian that's been losing their Kwiana and Kwonahiki lands has been losing it because the crown never stood up for them. And I didn't know. My family was kind of fighting over the land. Who gets what? Who's at the top? How much does it cost? How much can we get? They really messed sh*t up. My dad, my uncles, nobody really did anything. They were all just doing drugs, and just robbing people, and then here I come along in my baggy camouflage pants hitchhiking on the side of the road. Mahi Pono, this Canadian company, they're taking 70% of the water that's supposed to be growing food for the people and they're growing lemons, potatoes-- [Alika] What about the sugar mill? -The sugar mill with the Chinaman that just bought it? The sugar mill is still inconsidered as a Hawaiian commercial sugar company. They sold that. That's still in a lease hold. [Alika] I want that sugar mill back. -[Kai] The China guy is-- -[Alika] I don't want the sugar mill. I want the water that's under the sugar mill. -There's a well there. -There's three wells there. [Kai] Guess where one of the wells is. -Under the church right there. -Yeah, yeah. [Peter] So why do you want the water? [Kai] To grow food. We have none. -To grow food and show housing for the people. If that property has 7 million or 10 million gallons a day and if I want to put a hundred Hawaiian families into affordable homes-- [Kai] Actual affordable homes. -Yeah, we need to show that we have water. And then on top of that my interest with the mill was we want to grow our own homes. We want to be able to grow our own hemp, process our own hemp, build our own building materials, So we can stand up our own homes without shipping in materials from elsewhere. So these are real problems that our people… Our people are being a choice. Oh, we gotta choose to live here or leave and many of them are choosing to leave. -More are outside of the islands these days than on the islands I read. -Yeah, yeah. -That’s' true, right? -There's more Hawaiians living away from the islands than there is within the state. And so the question is if there's no Hawaiians, how can this be Hawaii, you know? [mellow guitar] There's a federal act of the Hawaiian Homestead Act. -Okay. -And that was created in 1920. And it was primarily just to get the Native Hawaiians onto their lands. On this island we have around 20 to 21,000 acres of that kind of land but they gave the Hawaiians the most unlivable, unbuildable lands, you know? It was all lava rock, forest. -Are we on this land right now? -This is it. -This is it? -This is one of the subdivisions. It's called Waiahuli Hawaiian Homelands. -It's nice land though. -Yeah, took many, many years for them to do the land prep, land clearing. Getting the people on the land. -Okay, so Native Hawaiians would get their homesteads and it's just passed down through the generations? -Yes, so it's a 99 year lease. To first qualify you need to have a minimum of 50% blood quantum of Hawaiian blood. And then now you can pass it down to a successor of 25% or more. As we go forward there's gonna be less and less blood quantum… -…and more inter-marrying. -Right. -The current legislation is trying to ask for a change down to 3% blood quantum. So that five generations from now can still live on their land. -Right, because how many Native 100% Hawaiians are there left? -I really don't know but-- -It's like a thousand or something. -Yeah, not that much. -And so when it gets that low you can't start marrying your cousins, right? -Right. And it's been years, you know, from 1920 to now, I mean only now there's like a wait list of like 50% or more Hawaiians on the wait list. -Okay. -And the wait list today is now 29,000. [Peter] But there are a lot of nicer, newer homes. Are the Hawaiians funding those or where is that money coming from? -It's coming… They're forced mortgages out to Hawaiians. -Okay, so the land is free for them but they're building the homes. -The land is a dollar a year for 99 years. -Okay. -And they were to build their homes. The act did not say put Hawaiians into $600,000 mortgages. The act said just to put the Hawaiians on land. So that they could have their own homestead and practice their own self-determination. [Peter] So when you live on Maui or any one of the islands, correct me where I'm wrong here, it's like Hawaii is the the United States and every island is like its own state? -Would that be a good way of saying it? -Yeah, yeah. -Here is totally different than big island, Moloka‘i, Oahu? -Right. -And you guys are very proud, right? -Every island has its own beauty. Every island has its own quirks. [chuckles] [Alika] '50s and early '60s, we were still very rural. We only had like a police force of two, maybe four. Because no military base, no four year university, no high-security prison kind of controlled the growth of Maui for a while. -Okay. -And then in the '70s when tourism came, and then the economic income increased, and the taxation increased, we were then able to have a somewhat larger police force. But in the early stages we were able to slow the growth down. -Oh, interesting. -[Peter] Surfing is huge in the culture? -[Alika] Yeah, this is Kiki surf meet. [Peter] Oh, this is great. [Alika] Young surfers. [Alika speaking Hawaiian] [Hawaiian] [rooster crows] [Alika chuckling] Check out the waves. [waves crashing] [Alika] My grandmother, she was known as the Opihi lady. And opihi is a limpet that you'll find on the rocks and seaweed, limu, we call it limu. All of that was all edible but she would walk through here all the way down the coast gathering food and bring back food to the village. [Peter] To the village? -Yeah, this is my grandmother's stomping grounds. But she was very spiritual in the sense of her practice. A lot of it was she was always in tune with nature and always very, very communicative with gods, you know? [Alika] I call it the Kanaka lens. Kanaka is from a perspective of a Hawaiian person, a Hawaiian eye. You incorporate not what is just going on around you physically, but you also incorporate understanding of spirituality. It's a wholesome approach and not just strictly a physical relationship. You also must react through your na'al. Na'al is your gut. -Okay. -Or your gut instinct. -Yeah. -And we look at that as your ancestors coming to you through a manifestation of nature. And they try to find ways to communicate to you. So many a times you have a feeling inside. It's kind of like a butterfly that's just fluttering in you. -Okay. -That is your ancestors communicating to you of giving you this gift of guidance. Some people will call it gut instinct. -Right. -The failure of man or the failure of us is we only listen to it 20% of the time. We only follow our gut 20% of the time. And I've always shared with the kids, I say, you know, that's your Kupuna, that's your elders, that's your tutu communicating to you to guide you, to steer you to make the right decision. And if you ever have a doubt, try to flip it. Make the decision 80% of the time. -[Peter exhales thoughtfully] -[Alika] Yeah? And you will be right. -But to listen to your gut you have to be still-- -In tune. -In tune? -Yeah. So how to reset yourself. -That's interesting. I never thought of it that way. So that's the ancestors coming in through you giving you guidance? -Yeah. -So always follow your gut? -Yeah, so another thing would be hoailona. Your ancestors come to you, communicate to you through manifestations of nature. That they give you signs that is out of the ordinary. Sometimes it comes to you in the sun. It'll shine bright. Sign… You'll see the change in light. Sometimes it'll come to you in form of wind 'cause that's nature. Sometimes it'll come to you with a light gentle breeze in the back of your ear, that tickles the back of your ear. You have to recognize it 'cause that's you, grandma. That's you, tutu. And you're listening, and feeling, and seeing she's guiding you, yeah? They come to you in rain, light, gentle drizzle, or heavy rain. They can come to you in a rainbow. Out of the blue you'll see a rainbow. They come to you in animals. In the ocean they could come to you as a shark. Out of the blue a whale jumps in front of you. What does that mean? So it's one thing to see and recognize what is a hoailona? The second thing, or the challenge, what does that mean? You know, what does that mean, grasshopper? -Yeah? -[Peter chuckles] Say I see an owl and it's flying with me right here. It's telling me whatever I'm thinking or deciding upon, it's going with me. So I would interpret that as an affirmative. If that owl flew in front of me across, that is telling me exercise with caution. I've seen a couple of times the bird would fly straight at me and pass me going backwards. And I was headed into a meeting. I quickly interpreted that as a flat out no ways. Don't even go. Yeah? And I just… I was with a group of guys and they all told me, "Uncle, you saw that bird?" I said, "Yeah." "What direction was it flying? It went backwards." I goes, "Yeah, and how do you interpret that?" He goes, "I think they're telling us no." I said, "Yeah, so let's not even take this meeting." and we turned around and walked out. Yeah? And so these are things, real things that we have to be in tuned with nature. -Mm-hmm. -Because we are not here by ourselves. We are constantly being sheep-herded and supported by those who came before us. -Hmm. -They all stand behind us and they guide us. You didn't get to Maui just to get to Maui. You know, there is a purpose of why they got you here. -Yeah? -Hmm. -And so those ancestors of the spirit world work in together, and they communicate, and the realm of communicating to us is through various forms and manifestations of nature. [Alika] I wanted you to see the sugar mill. [Peter chuckling] Okay. That's a solid change of topics, I like it. [Peter] "US Postal Office", that's a postal office still in business? -Yeah, still going. -Okay. Yeah, it's the last sugar mill. -So it was the big five, right? -On all of the islands? -Yeah. -No sugar here. -Yeah, this is the last operating sugar mill in the entire state of Hawaii. They shut it down some six years ago. -Six, that's it? -Yeah. -There's not one in Kawaihae right now? -No, no. I think the entity was a corporation out of Taiwan got it. Rumor has it that they have no interest in the mill, they just want the land. -And the water? -Yeah, so they just want to develop. They want to tear everything down and develop. [Peter] Here we got the tape holding up the electrical box. [both laughing] [Peter] Here we go. [Peter] This might be the most beat up USPS I've seen I gotta say. -It's got the old boxes. -But it's very active. [Peter] It's got the old boxes. This is it, huh? [Alika] Yeah, it pushes out a lot of mail. [laughs] -It's active as in big line here during the day? -Yeah. [Peter] That's great. -Still active. [Peter] You know what, a lot of these post offices haven't been updated since the '50s. I gotta say I've never had a problem with them. -Yeah? -I always ship things overnight with them, they always work. [Peter] Here we go, here's the box. Feels like something might come out and bite you. -No, we're good. -[mailbox clanks] [Peter] So the tracks you can see here just went right out to the port, huh? -Right, on the left side coming here, you'll see a couple of buildings. They're old, old plantation buildings. That was the manager's building. Today it's a sugar museum. So this is like a former manager's house. So they kept it refurbished, operating. These two buildings are all part of the sugar museum along with the equipment. [Peter] So sugar really is one of the big stories of Hawaii? -Yeah. -What's up here? -The land that she was telling me about, that's hers. This golf course is part of the land that she can take back. -Kai, the woman we met earlier. -Yeah. And so I said take it back 'cause I kept an eye on this. I'm going this golf course can be a farm. It already has irrigation water lines already in it. We can easily transform it into a food forest. Every golf course, instant. We can grow-- -You don't have a lot of golfer friends do you? -No. [laughter] -Fair to say? -Yeah. -You're definitely not making them now. -No. -It's beautiful up here. -Yeah. [Alika] So this whole section is shut down. -Why? -They don't own it, she owns it. -Yeah, but shut down? It's not operating? -Not operating. -They're mowing the grass. -Yeah, that's it. Technically she can claim it because it's on a lease hold and the Japanese honored the standing to the Hawaiians that they just left it like that. -This side-- -So it's Japanese ownership? -Yeah, yeah, and the Japanese respect… recognize that. -This side is an operating golf course. -Okay. -Yeah. [Alika] On every island there's struggling golf courses that are struggling to turn a profit. So why not just take it back and grow food? -Where are all the golfers right now? I don't see anyone? -Yeah, this is a private club. -Okay. -These guys pay 15 grand a month to be able to golf any time. -Right. -Yeah. This is called the Marilyn Monroe House. -Oh, that's cool. -I forget the guy's name that designed it. -Wow. -But this is what similar design… -That is cool. [Alika] "King Kamhameha Golf Club". [Peter] What a beautiful building. [Peter] Wow. [Alika] Last week I went to a high school. I spoke to two classes, about 30 in each. So about 60 students. Of the 60 students I asked who is gonna work for the tourism and hotels? -Not one raised their hands. -Really? -They don't want to work for tourism. Of the 60 students I said well, "You guys all eat?" They said, "Yeah." I said, "How many meals a day?" "One meal, two meals, three meals?" Every one of them, three meals. I said, "So you guys eat 21 meals a week." "Who's gonna grow the food?" Only three hands went up wanting to be farmers. -Yeah, a lot of people don't want to do the hard work that it takes. -So then I said, "Okay, you're not gonna do tourism, not gonna do food, then what's your plan?" "What you 57 others?" -They all shrugged their shoulders. -Really? -Have no plan. -Wow. -Is there a lack of motivation? -Yeah, lack of vision. -Lack of vision and lack of reality. -Okay. And I said, "Good luck, you guys are juniors, and in one year you're gonna be kicked out to society and you have no plan." You know? [Alika] But what we're looking at is a view of the 45,000 acres that once was all sugar production. -This whole valley? -Yeah, the whole valley. My thinking is this, 45,000 acres that was bought up from the former sugar company, sold it to a Canadian retiree investment fund. An investment fund is to invest and make money. This enterprise is losing money every year by the millions. The parent company is located in Northern California The company up there is called Trinitas. Yeah? They bought up some almond farms, and water, and just recently filed bankruptcy. So I'm hoping for a domino effect to take place. And that the investors of this retirement fund are gonna say, "We don't wanna be losing more money." yeah? But I need us to be ready financially to get supporters so that we can buy the land back for the people. -Do you have an email contact, website, anything like that? How do people find you? My full name A-L-I-K-A-A-T-A-Y@Gmail. AlikaAtay@gmail.com -You ready for your email to blow up? -I'm open. -[Peter laughs] -If it's to-- -Can't guarantee everyone's nice. -Like I told you, I'm not limping in. You know, we gotta make the change for our future. -You know? -Okay. Well I'm sure you're gonna get a flood of emails and like when I'm finding stories like how I found you… -Yeah. -…was putting a lot of feelers out, needle in a haystack. You are showing us a perspective and a look of Maui that very few of us have. -Yeah. -So really appreciate you bringing us in for that today. Showing us your friend, her story. That was very interesting. -Yeah. -And respect to what you're doing, what you're all about. -It's the journey. It's the journey and you never give up, you know? And it's also to dream, you know, we gotta dream. We can't have reality without dreams. -Well your passion for your homeland, your island is palpable. It's very obvious, so… -No, thank you for your time. -All right guys, thanks for coming along on that journey. It's the start of a multi-part Hawaii series starting with Maui, Moloka‘i, Oahu, Kauai. This is just the beginning and that was a good entry. -We have a whole lot more. -Lot more coming. -An eclectic collection of experiences. -Yeah. -All right, thanks for coming along. -Aloha. -Until the next one… Aloha. -Aloha. [mellow guitar]
Info
Channel: Peter Santenello
Views: 587,903
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: hawaiian islands, native hawaiians, maui, hawaii, maui hawaii, documentary, peter santenello, hawaiian kingdom, hawaiian mythology, history of hawaii, hawaii travel, hawaii 2024
Id: oAMMopBnXQ0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 44min 18sec (2658 seconds)
Published: Sat Apr 27 2024
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