Hawaiian Law and Order: Stop Spreading COVID-19—It’s the Law

Law comprises a set of rules that regulate the behavior of persons, to include businesses and organizations, within a country. In a constitutional monarchy, laws reflect the national consciousness of its subjects because they directly enact legislation for the country as members of the legislative branch, which are then signed into law by the Monarch.

In 1840, the Hawaiian Kingdom was transformed from an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy under a written constitution. This constitution was succeeded by the 1852 constitution, and then by the 1864 constitution, which is the present constitution of the country. According to the 1864 constitution there are three Estates in the Kingdom: the Monarch, the Nobility, and the People. The Monarch appoints Nobles to the Legislative Assembly, but their number cannot exceed 20. Representatives are elected by the People, which always outnumbered the Nobles in the Legislative Assembly where both Estates sat together in a unicameral legislative body. Prior to 1864, there were two separate houses in the legislature, the House of Nobles and the House of Representatives.

On June 21, 1850, both Houses of the Hawaiian Legislature enacted the Penal Code for the Hawaiian Kingdom. Under Hawaiian law, imprisonments for all crimes are at hard labor. Hawaiian crimes are felonies if the imprisonment is two years or more, or misdemeanors if imprisonment is less than two years. Like the United Kingdom, there is no statute of limitations for Hawaiian crimes.

Under Chapter 37 was the misdemeanor crime of “Common Nuisance.” Section 1 states, “The offense of common nuisance is the endangering of the public personal safety or health. … As, for example, the…spreading or endangering the spreading of…infectious disease.” Endangering the spreading is placing the “public personal safety or health at risk.” Section 9 and 10 provides for the punishment. “9. Whoever is guilty of the offense of common nuisance in the first degree…shall be punished by imprisonment at hard labor not more than six months, or by fine not exceeding five hundred dollars. 10. Whoever is guilty of the offense of common nuisance in the second degree…shall be punished by imprisonment at hard labor not more than two months, or by fine no exceeding twenty-five dollars.” According to the Penal Code, malice “includes the acting with a heedless, reckless disregard or gross negligence of the life or lives, the health or personal safety, or legal rights or privileges of another or others, many or few, known or unknown.”

In 1868, the Legislative Assembly enacted a statute directing the Judges of the Supreme Court to compile and revise the 1850 Penal Code. On April 3, 1869, the revised Penal Code came into effect and included thirty-six additional chapters, and the common nuisance chapter was changed from Chapter 37 to Chapter 36. Spreading an infectious disease is a serious crime under Hawaiian law.

According to §12 of the Hawaiian Civil Code, “One of the most effectual ways of discovering the true meaning of the law…is by considering the reason and spirit of it, or the cause which induced the Legislature to enact it.” The single most threat to the aboriginal Hawaiian population was the introduction of infectious diseases that decimated the population. In 1848, Governor Kekuanāo‘a made the following report that was published in Ka Elele Hawaii newspaper. The report was in Hawaiian, but an English translation is provided by Awaiaulu, Inc.

Regarding Illness in Hilo. Regards to you, the Elele. All of the students of this school are afflicted with the contagious smallpox. Previously, some individuals had coughs. They did not have whooping cough. At church service yesterday, there was one boy with whooping cough. Some had fevers, perhaps two, almost exactly like the illness of 1847. Many are somewhat fatigued. Different sick ones may have frequent cramps or headaches.

Malo is carrying out his duties among the folks of this area. In a nearby land area, there are perhaps 80 who are doing required public service. 18 of them have died since the contagious smallpox got here. Most were strong and able-bodied.

Illness at Lahaina. Lahaina has illness much like what is seen here in Honolulu. There is smallpox and whooping cough. Earlier, all the children had whooping cough, and afterwards, all the adults had already contracted it, and we heard that some have died.

Illness at Molokaʻi. Most of the people here are very ill. Some have died, and many more have the coughing illness. There are many sick folk at Hālawa. Someone dies there nearly every day. Few individuals went to church services on the last Sabbath. At services in the new month, there were none. There is no school at this time. All of the teachers are sick, as are most of the students. There have been no deaths among those who drank the medicine that we provided.

Illness at Honolulu. Here below is the letter from the Governor, M. Kekūanāoʻa, regarding those who died in the two week period from the 1st to the 15th of this November.

Fort of Honolulu. 18 November, 1848. Regards. I am reporting to you about the number those who died from Waikīkī to Moanalua in these past two weeks of November. Waikīkī, 7 dead. Honolulu area and Honolulu town, 271 dead. Kapālama, 7 dead. Kalihi, 24 dead. Moanalua, 7 dead.

You should publish this in the Elele Hawaii, and announce it in churches during services, which is all I have to say to you, with appreciation. M. Kekūanāoʻa.

If those numbers of the reported deaths are added up, it equals 380. And if you divide it by the 15 days, you get 25, that being the number of people who died each single day.

Illness at Waialua (Oʻahu). A letter from there states thus: Everyone here is ill, and some, if not ill, are recovering. Not many have actually died. There were perhaps ten that I heard of, and some of them had been infirm previously.

Extensive death has just hit here in Honolulu. Chiefs are dying, as are their people. Those of status great and small are entering the house of darkness. The wrongdoers and the righteous all end up falling.

This last Sabbath, Iakoba Malo, an attendant of Leleiōhoku, passed on. He was born on Hawaiʻi; he had always been a chiefs attendant, and was nearly 70 when he died. For many years he had been a servant of God, and appeared to be truly pious, steadfast to the oath he had made. It was never heard about him being in trouble, though he was connected to the royal circles, but did not get involved in pleasure seeking or wantonness because of where he resided. That was because his faith in Almighty God was sincere. He died with hope on God’s holy day. Smallpox and its resulting diarrhea were the causes of his death.

Here is another death: Mose Kekūāiwa, the son of Kekūanāoʻa and Kīnaʻu, died on the 24th of November; He was 19 years and four months old. He attended the Chiefs’ Children’s School for seven years, and mastered the English language. His body had been weakened previously by this illness, and when he contracted smallpox again, along with a cough, he passed on. How tragic is the death of the young!

Here is another: Ioana Kaʻiminaʻauao, the foster daughter of Kalama, wife of the king. She was three years and two days old. Kapaʻakea and Keohokālole were her actual parents. Liver failure was the cause of her death.

This as well: On the 19th of November, John Meek Jr. died, he being the firstborn of Captain J. Meek, and being 27 years old.

Because the printers have been ill, the Elele was not published at its usual time. Perhaps it will be published at its customary time in the future. Those who want a good paper should write articles for it. There are few who are writing articles; some have nearly abandoned this.  Those who care about the Elele should give this careful consideration.

There is no doubt that Governor Kekuanāo‘a’s 1848 report on the carnage from disease and virus across the Hawaiian Islands influenced the legislators’ 1850 common nuisance criminal statute of “spreading or endangering the spreading of…infectious disease.” This led to the formation of the Hawaiian Board of Health and the establishment of the Queen’s Hospital that provided free healthcare for aboriginal Hawaiians throughout the Hawaiian Islands.

Like the smallpox virus in the Hawaiian Kingdom, COVID-19 is an infectious disease under Hawaiian law, which has risen to a level of a pandemic in the Hawaiian Islands and the world. The Hawaiian public personal safety and health has been directly impacted by the spreading of COVID-19 and the only “scientific” defenses to the virus are vaccinations, quarantine, masks, and social distancing. Yes, there is no Hawaiian law that mandates these COVID-19 defenses because this virus didn’t exist then, but the common nuisance law exists that includes COVID-19 as an infectious disease. These “scientific” defenses, however, is what prevents the “spreading or endangering the spreading of” COVID-19.

§7 of the Hawaiian Civil Code states, “individuals may, in all cases in which it is not expressly or impliedly prohibited, renounce what the law has established in their favor, when such renunciation does not affect the rights of others, and is not contrary to the public good.”

Don’t commit the Hawaiian crime of common nuisance. Stop spreading COVID-19. It’s the law.

10 thoughts on “Hawaiian Law and Order: Stop Spreading COVID-19—It’s the Law

  1. How can Hawaiian nationals that wish to protect their community receive a COVID-19 vaccination administered by a government other than an enemy government that continues to commit genocide against our people?

    The Hawaiian situation is a humanitarian crisis and the international community has right and a duty to intervene for the sake of it’s own survival. The failure to do so is a clear indication that preserving the status quo is apparently more important to humanity than preserving life. The catastrophic consequence of such a foolish position is self-evident.

    By failing to allow Hawaiians reasonable and reliable access to safe and trusted preventive medicine, the world has effectively weaponized our Hā. Oh the irony… Hā Hā Hā Hā!

    • As a Hawaiian Kingdom subject, as a living Sovereign and as a Makainana, we should stay under the constitution of King Kamehameha Ist, all the way down to our Queen, who had made recommendations regarding vaccinations way back then. As such we should follow their law because this is still the Hawaiian Kingdom. Getting the Covid-19 vaccination is one way of preserving our Hawaiian race and culture.
      Kamakani Kohikiokala Kahunanui

  2. What of “occupier-produced” electricity; water; food; transport; roads; internet. Do you shun these? The questions answer themselves by the fact of your posting as to electricity and internet?

    There seems a reasonable factual basis for not using or shunning occupier-textbooks which contain falsehoods of history, but the argument that “Oh, X is bad in one part and therefore in every part” isn’t very fine grained, doesn’t reflect the facts of the particular situation and is unpersuasive to vaccinated me. On some human productions ethnicity or gender or race or status as occupier is irrelevant. Unless this is a sarcastic argument [suggested by the “ho-hum, hum, hum, hum, “Hā Hā Hā Hā!,] in which case a refresher course in effective sarcasm [non-occupier sarcasm, of course. Only indigenous satire and sarcasm is acceptable] is warranted.

    Lives are at stake and the vehicles for disease–the unvaxed– are not simply nuisances in their purposeful ignorance which I call “pignorance” but they are deadly nuisances. The argument that the unvaxxed, should their behavior result in another’s death, are guilty of reckless homicide doesn’t strain the concept of knowingly engaging in behavior dangerous to others any more than keeping a mountain lion or a King Cobra in the house caged or uncaged. [caution attempt at humor ahead] Oh! But I have the right to a pet. Maybe and the duty to protect others from it most especially if you know it is a killer as COVID is.

  3. That’s Right……when you’re SICK, stay home, keep safe and STOP! socialyzing and gossiping!!!!!!!!!

    Cecilia Kupau and `OHANA!

  4. Don’t trust America,their whole history is based on lies.WMDs.,Vietnam,Iraq,Afghanistan,Iran,fort Laramie treatises where they handed out blankets to the tribes that contained smallpox,9/11,tower 7,hiroshima,nagasaki,branch davidians,John Kennedy and his brother,Randy Weaver,the list is endless.So my point is are they telling us the truth about covid and the vaccine(Murder by injection),Author Eustice Mullins, check it out.Another point is the flu vaccine doesn’t keep you from getting sick because all viruses mutate that’s what they do,(delta variant),what next the kanaka variant?

  5. AMERICA, #1, the Native Indians….# 2, the U.S.A, not OF America, but IN America, they’re IMMIGRANTS, from GREAT BRITAIN, their birthright is England, they should acknowledge and be truthful of their identification. EVERY Culture Has an IDENTITY. EXAMPLE: The Hawaiian People, they’re birthright was given to them, HAWAII, their home!

  6. The Hawaiian Nation was built on story telling that’s how we know what Ohana we come from generations of story telling since we didn’t have a written language, symbols, body markings and story telling identified who we were.

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