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* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital of Honolulu, and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and [[Series/HawaiiFive0 its modern remake]]. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.

to:

* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital of Honolulu, and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'', [[Series/HawaiiFive0 its modern remake]].remake]], and ''Series/NCISHawaii''. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.

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Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents and Native Hawaiians have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the very-much-self-sufficient islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaiʻi is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed way up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

to:

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus trope in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents and Native Hawaiians have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the very-much-self-sufficient islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaiʻi is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed way up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.
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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, one Captain James Cook would bring news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let this much-desired Pearl of the Pacific get into the grasp of anyone else. Spending about six decades as a U.S. Territory, the most notable event that transpired upon the Islands was being the site of that which brought the United States into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be as American as those from the Forty-Eight, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, one Captain James Cook would bring news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let this much-desired Pearl of the Pacific get into the grasp of anyone else. Spending about six decades as a U.S. Territory, the most notable event that transpired upon the Islands was being the site of that which brought the United States into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be as American as those from the Forty-Eight, Continental 48, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let this much-desired Pearl of the Pacific get into the grasp of anyone else. Spending about six decades as a U.S. Territory, the most notable event that transpired upon the Islands was being the site of that which brought the United States into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be as American as those from the Forty-Eight, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman one Captain James Cook brought would bring news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let this much-desired Pearl of the Pacific get into the grasp of anyone else. Spending about six decades as a U.S. Territory, the most notable event that transpired upon the Islands was being the site of that which brought the United States into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be as American as those from the Forty-Eight, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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Some edits.


* '''Lānaʻi''': "The Pineapple Isle", called that because it was once a large plantation for pineapples, the fruit that everyone now associates with Hawaiʻi. With only one town on the island, it comes behind Kahoʻolawe and Niʻihau in the competition for the smallest population. Also part of the county of Maui.

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* '''Lānaʻi''': "The Pineapple Isle", called that because it was once a large plantation for pineapples, the fruit that everyone now associates with Hawaiʻi. With only one town on the island, island (Lanai City), it comes behind Kahoʻolawe and Niʻihau in the competition for the smallest population. Also part of the county of Maui.



* '''Niʻihau''': "The Forbidden Isle", located just southwest of Kauaʻi and part of Kauaʻi County, with a population numbering just under 200. Privately owned and a RealLife example of a HiddenElfVillage, it's difficult for tourists to secure permission to visit. Only native Hawaiians (meaning the Polynesian natives, not just natural-born citizens of Hawaiʻi) are allowed to travel to Niʻihau for anything longer than a brief tour. It's looked upon by many Hawaiians as the state's hidden gem.

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* '''Niʻihau''': "The Forbidden Isle", located just southwest of Kauaʻi and part of Kauaʻi County, with a population numbering just under 200.200, mainly in one settlement on the western coast (Puʻuwai). Privately owned and a RealLife example of a HiddenElfVillage, it's difficult for tourists to secure permission to visit. Only native Hawaiians (meaning the Polynesian natives, not just natural-born citizens of Hawaiʻi) are allowed to travel to Niʻihau for anything longer than a brief tour. It's looked upon by many Hawaiians as the state's hidden gem.
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Minor edit.


* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital of Honolulu, and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and [[''Series/HawaiiFive0'' its modern remake]]. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.

to:

* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital of Honolulu, and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and [[''Series/HawaiiFive0'' [[Series/HawaiiFive0 its modern remake]]. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaiʻi is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

Hawaiʻi is, by most metrics, the most racially diverse state in the U.S., and its residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Hawaiʻi is the only state in which Caucasians do not constitute the majority of the population. However, the largest racial group is not Native Hawaiians but rather people of Asian descent. Hawaiʻi is home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its relative proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well; most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour). Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of total numbers), thanks in part to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

The state has a unique governmental structure—specifically, it has no cities. The only legally constituted governments below the state level are its five counties. And actually, only four have locally run governments. Kalawao County, which encompasses the former leper colony, is run by the state's health department, with most public services provided through Maui County, and it's part of a judicial district that includes the City and County of Honolulu.[[labelnote:Aside]]The colony was officially closed in 1969, once antibiotic treatments for Hansen's disease (the affliction commonly referred to as leprosy) allowed it to be managed on an outpatient basis. Most of the residents, fearing ostracism due to having been disfigured by the disease, wished to stay. The state agreed to allow existing residents to remain. No new residents are allowed, and those younger than 16 are prohibited from visiting unless they're relatives of residents.[[/labelnote]] Speaking of Honolulu, the area that most people think of as "Honolulu" is merely the main urban core of the City and County... which not only includes Oʻahu, but also all of the state's smaller islands that lie northwest of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. All populated places in the state are classified by the U.S. Census Bureau as "census-designated places" ([=CDPs=]). Another quirk about Hawaiʻi is its [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem K–12 education system]]. Unlike the other states, where public education through the secondary level is operated by local school districts (or, in Virginia, an arm of the local government), the state government directly operates all public schools. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania).

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem this much-desired Pearl of the Pacific get into the hands grasp of anyone else. It spent Spending about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including the most notable event that transpired upon the Islands was being the site of the events that which brought America the United States into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, as American as those from the Forty-Eight, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents and Native Hawaiians have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the very-much-self-sufficient islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaiʻi is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far way up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

Hawaiʻi is, by most metrics, the most racially diverse state in the U.S., and its residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked were brought in to work on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Hawaiʻi is the only state in which Caucasians do not constitute the majority of the population. However, the largest racial group is not Native Hawaiians but rather people of Asian descent. Hawaiʻi is home to a very large sizeable Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its relative proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well; most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour). Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of total numbers), thanks in part to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

The state has a unique governmental structure—specifically, structure. Specifically, it has no cities. The only legally constituted governments below the state level are its five counties. And actually, only four have locally run governments. Kalawao County, which encompasses the former leper colony, is run by the state's health department, with most public services provided through Maui County, and it's part of a judicial district that includes the City and County of Honolulu.[[labelnote:Aside]]The colony was officially closed in 1969, once antibiotic treatments for Hansen's disease (the affliction commonly referred to as leprosy) allowed it to be managed on an outpatient basis. Most of the residents, fearing ostracism due to having been disfigured by the disease, wished to stay. The state agreed to allow existing residents to remain. No new residents are allowed, and those younger than 16 are prohibited from visiting unless they're relatives of residents.[[/labelnote]] Speaking of Honolulu, the area that most people think of as "Honolulu" is merely the main urban core of the City and County... which not only includes Oʻahu, but also all of the state's smaller islands that lie northwest of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. All populated places in the state are classified by the U.S. Census Bureau as "census-designated places" ([=CDPs=]). Another quirk about Hawaiʻi is its [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem K–12 education system]]. Unlike the other states, where public education through the secondary level is operated by local school districts (or, in Virginia, an arm of the local government), the state government directly operates all public schools. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania).



* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital "city" of Honolulu and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and [[''Series/HawaiiFive0'' its modern remake]]. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.

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* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital "city" of Honolulu Honolulu, and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and [[''Series/HawaiiFive0'' its modern remake]]. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.
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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the Fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the Fiftieth fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the Fiftieth and last-admitted State]], comprising an island chain archipelago of eight major islands and several smaller atolls, islets, and seamounts, located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] State Number 50 in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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[[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus, pineapple, pork, rum, macadamia nuts, ukuleles, golf, Pearl Harbor, Fire Dancers, excess consumption of SPAM, and linen pants.]]

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[[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus, pineapple, pork, rum, macadamia nuts, ukuleles, golf, Pearl Harbor, Fire Dancers, fire dancers, excess consumption of SPAM, and linen pants.]]
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[[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus, pineapple, pork, rum, macadamia nuts, ukuleles, golf, Pearl Harbor, Fire Dancers, and linen pants.]]

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[[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus, pineapple, pork, rum, macadamia nuts, ukuleles, golf, Pearl Harbor, Fire Dancers, excess consumption of SPAM, and linen pants.]]
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[[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus.]]

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[[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus.HulaAndLuaus, pineapple, pork, rum, macadamia nuts, ukuleles, golf, Pearl Harbor, Fire Dancers, and linen pants.]]
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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail or how to achieve it has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Hawaiʻi is, by most metrics, the most racially diverse state in the U.S. and the only one in which Caucasians do not constitute the majority of the population. However, the largest racial group is not Native Hawaiians but rather people of Asian descent. Hawaiʻi is home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well; most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour). Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of total numbers), thanks to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

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Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Hawaiʻi is, by most metrics, the most racially diverse state in the U.S. , and its residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Hawaiʻi is the only one state in which Caucasians do not constitute the majority of the population. However, the largest racial group is not Native Hawaiians but rather people of Asian descent. Hawaiʻi is home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its relative proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well; most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour). Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of total numbers), thanks in part to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaii is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania). Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

The state has a unique governmental structure—specifically, it has no cities. The only legally constituted governments below the state level are its five counties. And actually, only four have locally run governments. Kalawao County, which encompasses the former leper colony, is run by the state's health department, with most public services provided through Maui County, and it's part of a judicial district that includes the City and County of Honolulu.[[labelnote:Aside]]The colony was officially closed in 1969, once antibiotic treatments for Hansen's disease (the affliction commonly referred to as leprosy) allowed it to be managed on an outpatient basis. Most of the residents, fearing ostracism due to having been disfigured by the disease, wished to stay. The state agreed to allow existing residents to remain. No new residents are allowed, and those younger than 16 are prohibited from visiting unless they're relatives of residents.[[/labelnote]] Speaking of Honolulu, the area that most people think of as "Honolulu" is merely the main urban core of the City and County... which not only includes Oʻahu, but also all of the state's smaller islands that lie northwest of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. All populated places in the state are classified by the U.S. Census Bureau as "census-designated places" ([=CDPs=]). Another quirk about Hawaiʻi is its [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem K–12 education system]]. Unlike the other states, where public education through the secondary level is operated by local school districts (or, in Virginia, an arm of the local government), the state government directly operates all public schools.

to:

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaii Hawaiʻi is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

It Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is also a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Hawaiʻi is, by most metrics, the most racially diverse state in the U.S. and the only one in which Caucasians do not constitute the majority of the population. However, the largest racial group is not Native Hawaiians but rather people of Asian descent. Hawaiʻi is home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most well; most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. tour). Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of total numbers), thanks to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania). Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

The state has a unique governmental structure—specifically, it has no cities. The only legally constituted governments below the state level are its five counties. And actually, only four have locally run governments. Kalawao County, which encompasses the former leper colony, is run by the state's health department, with most public services provided through Maui County, and it's part of a judicial district that includes the City and County of Honolulu.[[labelnote:Aside]]The colony was officially closed in 1969, once antibiotic treatments for Hansen's disease (the affliction commonly referred to as leprosy) allowed it to be managed on an outpatient basis. Most of the residents, fearing ostracism due to having been disfigured by the disease, wished to stay. The state agreed to allow existing residents to remain. No new residents are allowed, and those younger than 16 are prohibited from visiting unless they're relatives of residents.[[/labelnote]] Speaking of Honolulu, the area that most people think of as "Honolulu" is merely the main urban core of the City and County... which not only includes Oʻahu, but also all of the state's smaller islands that lie northwest of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. All populated places in the state are classified by the U.S. Census Bureau as "census-designated places" ([=CDPs=]). Another quirk about Hawaiʻi is its [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem K–12 education system]]. Unlike the other states, where public education through the secondary level is operated by local school districts (or, in Virginia, an arm of the local government), the state government directly operates all public schools.
schools. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaii is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

to:

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the islands being a year-round tropical paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaii is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism]], tourism[[/note]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.

Added: 1564

Changed: 1919

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania). Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] name; [[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow.[[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's islands being a year-round tropical resort paradise that they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while many native Hawaiians live in poverty, poverty[[note]]The poverty level in Hawaii is counted as one of the lowest in the nation... but only before you [[https://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2019/09/12/hawaii-has-one-of-the-lowest-poverty-rates-in-the.html factor in]] the cost of living, which is pushed far up by the islands' isolation and the impact of all the tourism]], [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact impact]] all the resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] watershed.

It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America (it's technically part of Oceania). Despite being largely rural, Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.



[[SpellMyNameWithAnS By now, some of you are wondering about the apostrophe-like symbols that sometimes appear between the two i's in Hawaiʻi, and in other odd places as well.]] Well, technically, that symbol is the closest analog in the English alphabet to the ʻokina, which is actually a letter in the Hawaiian alphabet. It is used to indicate that there is a brief pause preceding a vowel, similar but not the same as a glottal stop. (Think of how someone with a Brooklyn or Cockney accent pronounces the two "t"s in the word "bottle"). One of the best ways to spot a current or former longtime resident of the Islands is if they remember to include the ʻokina in the spelling of place names as well as the names of people[[labelnote:Editing note to tropers]]If you want to easily add this symbol when editing TV Tropes, type "[=&=]#699;" without the quotation marks[[/labelnote]], and whether or not they pronounce Ws as Vs in applicable names.[[note]]The letter W is pronounced as a V in the Hawaiian language, making the proper pronunciation of Hawaiʻi, "Havay-ee".[[/note]]

to:

[[SpellMyNameWithAnS By now, some of you are wondering about the apostrophe-like symbols that sometimes appear between the two i's in Hawaiʻi, and in other odd places as well.]] Well, technically, that symbol is the closest analog in the English alphabet to the ʻokina, which is actually a letter in the Hawaiian alphabet. It is used to indicate that there is a brief pause preceding a vowel, similar but not the same as a glottal stop. (Think of how someone with a Brooklyn or Cockney accent pronounces the two "t"s in the word "bottle"). One of the best ways to spot a current or former longtime resident of the Islands is if they remember to include the ʻokina in the spelling of place names as well as the names of people[[labelnote:Editing note to tropers]]If you want to easily add this symbol when editing TV Tropes, type "[=&=]#699;" without the quotation marks[[/labelnote]], marks[[/labelnote]] and whether or not they pronounce Ws as Vs in applicable names.[[note]]The letter W is pronounced as a V in the Hawaiian language, making the proper pronunciation of Hawaiʻi, "Havay-ee".[[/note]]

Changed: 3754

Removed: 1677

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Removing redundancies


Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that Americans don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media. Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of native Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while actual native Hawaiians tend to live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks in part due to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory and later immigration. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands, Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese), and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography geek side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the 46-States-and-4-Commonwealths comprising the USA in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary, and for being the only state not geographically located in North America[[note]]It's technically part of Oceania[[/note]]. Despite being largely rural, Hawaii is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

[[SpellMyNameWithAnS By now, some of you are wondering about the apostrophe-like symbols that sometimes appear between the two i's in Hawaiʻi, and in other odd places as well.]] Well, technically, that symbol is the closest analog in the English alphabet to the ʻokina, which is actually a letter in the Hawaiian alphabet. It is used to indicate that there is a brief pause preceding a vowel, similar but not the same as a glottal stop. (Think of how someone with a Brooklyn or Cockney accent pronounces the two "t"s in the word "bottle"). One of the best ways to spot a current or former longtime resident of the Islands is if they remember to include the ʻokina in the spelling of place names as well as the names of people[[labelnote:Editing note to tropers]]If you want to easily add this symbol when editing TV Tropes, type "[=&=]#699;" without the quotation marks[[/labelnote]], and whether or not they pronounce Ws as Vs in applicable names.[[note]]The letter W is pronounced as a V in the Hawaiian language, making the proper pronounication of Hawaiʻi, "Havay-ee".[[/note]]

Here, one can discover a melting pot of Western, Eastern, and Pacific culture and people that can't be found anywhere else in the world.

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its central placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the illegality and colonialism of the annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that Americans they don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media. media (tropes that were actively played up when Hawaiʻi was first appealing for statehood, in case you're wondering why so many mid-century movies featured them). Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of native cheerful Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while actual many native Hawaiians tend to live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks in part due to its relative proximity and the Philippines' past as U.S. territory and later immigration.territory. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands, islands; Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese), Portuguese); and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography geek side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the 46-States-and-4-Commonwealths comprising the USA states in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary, boundary (due to just being the shores of the islands) and for being the only state not geographically located in North America[[note]]It's America (it's technically part of Oceania[[/note]]. Oceania). Despite being largely rural, Hawaii Hawaiʻi is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

The state has a unique governmental structure—specifically, it has no cities. The only legally constituted governments below the state level are its five counties. And actually, only four have locally run governments. Kalawao County, which encompasses the former leper colony, is run by the state's health department, with most public services provided through Maui County, and it's part of a judicial district that includes the City and County of Honolulu.[[labelnote:Aside]]The colony was officially closed in 1969, once antibiotic treatments for Hansen's disease (the affliction commonly referred to as leprosy) allowed it to be managed on an outpatient basis. Most of the residents, fearing ostracism due to having been disfigured by the disease, wished to stay. The state agreed to allow existing residents to remain. No new residents are allowed, and those younger than 16 are prohibited from visiting unless they're relatives of residents.[[/labelnote]] Speaking of Honolulu, the area that most people think of as "Honolulu" is merely the main urban core of the City and County... which not only includes Oʻahu, but also all of the state's smaller islands that lie northwest of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. All populated places in the state are classified by the U.S. Census Bureau as "census-designated places" ([=CDPs=]). Another quirk about Hawaiʻi is its [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem K–12 education system]]. Unlike the other states, where public education through the secondary level is operated by local school districts (or, in Virginia, an arm of the local government), the state government directly operates all public schools.

[[SpellMyNameWithAnS By now, some of you are wondering about the apostrophe-like symbols that sometimes appear between the two i's in Hawaiʻi, and in other odd places as well.]] Well, technically, that symbol is the closest analog in the English alphabet to the ʻokina, which is actually a letter in the Hawaiian alphabet. It is used to indicate that there is a brief pause preceding a vowel, similar but not the same as a glottal stop. (Think of how someone with a Brooklyn or Cockney accent pronounces the two "t"s in the word "bottle"). One of the best ways to spot a current or former longtime resident of the Islands is if they remember to include the ʻokina in the spelling of place names as well as the names of people[[labelnote:Editing note to tropers]]If you want to easily add this symbol when editing TV Tropes, type "[=&=]#699;" without the quotation marks[[/labelnote]], and whether or not they pronounce Ws as Vs in applicable names.[[note]]The letter W is pronounced as a V in the Hawaiian language, making the proper pronounication pronunciation of Hawaiʻi, "Havay-ee".[[/note]]

Here, one can discover a melting pot of Western, Eastern, and Pacific culture and people that can't be found anywhere else in the world.
[[/note]]



* '''Hawaiʻi''': "The Big Island", for being big. The southeasternmost island in the entire chain and the largest; larger than all of the other islands combined. As you may have noticed, it shares its name with the state. This is because of King Kamehameha the Great, who first united the islands under his rule at the turn of the 19th Century, was originally a chief from this island. To avoid confusion, it will usually be referred to by its nickname or as "the island of Hawaiʻi" It is home to three of the five remaining active volcanoes in the Hawaiian chain: Kilauea, currently the most active volcano in the world, Hualālai, and Mauna Loa (the fourth, Loʻihi, is currently building itself up on the seafloor roughly twenty miles off the Big Island's southeast coast, and is predicted to breach the ocean surface sometime between 10,000 and 100,000 years from now). A dormant volcano, Mauna Kea, is the location of one of the most important astronomical observation sites in the world, and it is the highest mountain in the state (also the world, if you measure it from the seafloor--TakeThat, Everest). It is also the source of the world-famous Kona Coffee blend.
* '''Maui''': "The Valley Island", it is the home of the seaside town of Lahaina, which was a major whaling station in the 19th century Pacific. It's also one of the few places in the world that grows sweet onions. Like Mauna Kea, many astronomical observatories and telescopes are located on Haleakalā, a partially-dormant volcano that comprises 75% of the island's landmass.
* '''Kahoʻolawe''': Sometimes called "The Target Isle" or "The Empty Isle", and for good reason. It's the only major island in the chain with an official population of zero, thanks partially to a severe lack of freshwater sources (it's ''really'' dry compared to the rest of the islands), but mainly because it was a training ground and bombing range for the U.S. military from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII all the way up to 1990. The military forked control of the island over to the state in 1994, and currently, efforts are ongoing to clear the island of unexploded ordnance. Part of the county of Maui.

to:

* '''Hawaiʻi''': "The Big Island", for being big. being... [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin big]]. The southeasternmost island in the entire chain and the largest; larger than all of the other islands combined. As you may have noticed, it It shares its name with the state. This is rest of the chain because of King Kamehameha the Great, who first united the islands under his rule at the turn of the 19th Century, was originally a chief from this island. To avoid confusion, it will usually be referred to by its nickname or as "the island of Hawaiʻi" Hawaiʻi". It is home to three of the five remaining active volcanoes in the Hawaiian chain: Kilauea, currently the most active volcano in the world, Hualālai, and Mauna Loa (the fourth, Loʻihi, is currently building itself up on the seafloor roughly twenty miles off the Big Island's southeast coast, and is predicted to breach the ocean surface sometime between 10,000 and 100,000 years from now). A dormant volcano, Mauna Kea, is the location of one of the most important astronomical observation sites in the world, and it is the highest mountain in the state (also the world, if you measure it from the seafloor--TakeThat, Everest). It is also the source of the world-famous Kona Coffee blend.
* '''Maui''': "The Valley Island", it is the home of the seaside town of Lahaina, which was a major whaling station in the 19th century Pacific.century. It's also one of the few places in the world that grows sweet onions. Like Mauna Kea, many astronomical observatories and telescopes are located on Haleakalā, a partially-dormant volcano that comprises 75% of the island's landmass.
* '''Kahoʻolawe''': Sometimes called "The Target Isle" or "The Empty Isle", and for good reason. It's the only major island in the chain with an official population of zero, thanks partially to a severe lack of freshwater sources (it's ''really'' dry compared to the rest of the islands), islands) but mainly because it was a training ground and bombing range for the U.S. military from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII all the way up to 1990. The military forked control of the island over to the state in 1994, and currently, efforts are ongoing to clear the island of unexploded ordnance. Part of the county of Maui.



* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital "city" of Honolulu and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, Hawaii is 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and its modern remake, ''Series/HawaiiFive0''. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.

to:

* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital "city" of Honolulu and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, Hawaii is it's 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and [[''Series/HawaiiFive0'' its modern remake, ''Series/HawaiiFive0''.remake]]. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.




The state has a unique governmental structure—specifically, it has no cities. ''[[SincerityMode Seriously.]]'' The only legally constituted governments below the state level are its five counties. And actually, only four have locally run governments. Kalawao County, which encompasses the former leper colony, is run by the state's health department, with most public services provided through Maui County, and it's part of a judicial district that includes the City and County of Honolulu.[[labelnote:Aside]]The colony was officially closed in 1969, once antibiotic treatments for Hansen's disease (the affliction commonly referred to as leprosy) allowed it to be managed on an outpatient basis. Most of the residents, fearing ostracism due to having been disfigured by the disease, wished to stay. The state agreed to allow existing residents to remain. No new residents are allowed, and those younger than 16 are prohibited from visiting unless they're relatives of residents.[[/labelnote]] Speaking of Honolulu, the area that most people think of as "Honolulu" is merely the main urban core of the City and County... which not only includes Oʻahu, but also all of the state's smaller islands that lie northwest of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. All populated places in the state are classified by the U.S. Census Bureau as "census-designated places" ([=CDPs=]).

Another quirk about Hawaiʻi is its [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem K–12 education system]]. Unlike the other states, where public education through the secondary level is operated by local school districts (or, in Virginia, an arm of the local government), the state government directly operates all public schools.
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Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the fact that the occupation and annexation of Hawaii was conducted illegally and without the consent of the indigenous population. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the fact that the occupation illegality and annexation of Hawaii was conducted illegally and without the consent colonialism of the indigenous population.annexation. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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None


Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty.sovereignty, with advocates emphasizing the fact that the occupation and annexation of Hawaii was conducted illegally and without the consent of the indigenous population. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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Minor edit.


* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital "city" of Honolulu and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, Hawaii is 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and its modern remake, ''Series/HawaiiFive0''. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the sequel.

to:

* '''Oʻahu''': "The Gathering Place". When most people go to Hawaiʻi, this is where they end up. The island is home to the capital "city" of Honolulu and about 75% of the state's total population. If the island were its own state, it would have the highest population density of any in the country.[[note]]As it is, Hawaii is 13th already. For reference, the current densest state, UsefulNotes/NewJersey, is at 1200/sq. mi.; O'ahu is at about 1400/sq. mi. However, Oʻahu is not denser than UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC, whose density is ''10,000''/sq. mi.[[/note]] The other islands are collectively referred to as the "Neighbor Islands". Here you will find Waikiki, the famous white sand beach around which enterprising opportunists built several hotels, cheap souvenir shops, t-shirt stands and an ABC store[[note]]A convenience store that's very similar to 7-11, except... Hawaiʻian[[/note]] every block or so. Here you will also find Pearl Harbor, the bombing of which by the Japanese Empire on December 7, 1941 finally convinced UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates to enter UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It is also the headquarters of the [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks United States Navy's]] Pacific Fleet. In fact, there are nearly as many military bases on Oʻahu as there are hotels; a detail that rubs some people the wrong way. There are some other attractions, such as the North Shore (very popular with surfers), Matsumoto's Shave Ice (a world-famous shave ice shop in Haleiwa), Kaneohe Bay (in which lies the island featured in the opening credits of ''Series/GilligansIsland''), the Punchbowl (in which lies the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific), and the Diamond Head (the distinctive mountain to the east of Honolulu). This island is the setting of ''Series/HawaiiFiveO'' and its modern remake, ''Series/HawaiiFive0''. It is also the [[WideOpenSandbox open world]] setting of {{racing game}} ''VideoGame/TestDriveUnlimited'' and one of two such settings in the first sequel.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Some edits.


Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe apostrophe-like character is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]



* '''Kauaʻi''': "The Garden Isle", and the northwesternmost of the major Hawaiian Islands. It is [[SceneryPorn a quiet, lush, tropical paradise]], the Hawaiʻi that visitors often expect to see. The sets for a few popular [[Film/JurassicPark films]] and [[Series/{{Lost}} TV shows]] were located here; [[Disney/LiloAndStitch a popular animated film about a Hawaiian girl with aliens]] ([[WesternAnimation/StitchTheMovie and]] [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries most]] [[Disney/LiloAndStitch2StitchHasAGlitch of]] [[WesternAnimation/LeroyAndStitch its]] [[Franchise/LiloAndStitch franchise]]) is ''set'' here. Also, it's the home of the third mountain in the state to contend for a world record - namely, Mount Waiʻaleʻale, one of the wettest locations in the world, with an average yearly rainfall of 426 inches.

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* '''Kauaʻi''': "The Garden Isle", and the northwesternmost of the major Hawaiian Islands. It is [[SceneryPorn a quiet, lush, tropical paradise]], the Hawaiʻi that visitors often expect to see. The sets for a few popular [[Film/JurassicPark films]] and [[Series/{{Lost}} TV shows]] were located here; [[Disney/LiloAndStitch [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch a popular animated film about a Hawaiian girl with aliens]] ([[WesternAnimation/StitchTheMovie and]] [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries most]] [[Disney/LiloAndStitch2StitchHasAGlitch [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch2StitchHasAGlitch of]] [[WesternAnimation/LeroyAndStitch its]] [[Franchise/LiloAndStitch franchise]]) is ''set'' here. Also, it's the home of the third mountain in the state to contend for a world record - namely, Mount Waiʻaleʻale, one of the wettest locations in the world, with an average yearly rainfall of 426 inches.
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* '''Hawaiʻi''': "The Big Island", [[CaptainObvious for being big.]] The southeasternmost island in the entire chain and the largest; larger than all of the other islands combined. As you may have noticed, it shares its name with the state. This is because of King Kamehameha the Great, who first united the islands under his rule at the turn of the 19th Century, was originally a chief from this island. To avoid confusion, it will usually be referred to by its nickname or as "the island of Hawaiʻi" It is home to three of the five remaining active volcanoes in the Hawaiian chain: Kilauea, currently the most active volcano in the world, Hualālai, and Mauna Loa (the fourth, Loʻihi, is currently building itself up on the seafloor roughly twenty miles off the Big Island's southeast coast, and is predicted to breach the ocean surface sometime between 10,000 and 100,000 years from now). A dormant volcano, Mauna Kea, is the location of one of the most important astronomical observation sites in the world, and it is the highest mountain in the state (also the world, if you measure it from the seafloor--TakeThat, Everest). It is also the source of the world-famous Kona Coffee blend.

to:

* '''Hawaiʻi''': "The Big Island", [[CaptainObvious for being big.]] big. The southeasternmost island in the entire chain and the largest; larger than all of the other islands combined. As you may have noticed, it shares its name with the state. This is because of King Kamehameha the Great, who first united the islands under his rule at the turn of the 19th Century, was originally a chief from this island. To avoid confusion, it will usually be referred to by its nickname or as "the island of Hawaiʻi" It is home to three of the five remaining active volcanoes in the Hawaiian chain: Kilauea, currently the most active volcano in the world, Hualālai, and Mauna Loa (the fourth, Loʻihi, is currently building itself up on the seafloor roughly twenty miles off the Big Island's southeast coast, and is predicted to breach the ocean surface sometime between 10,000 and 100,000 years from now). A dormant volcano, Mauna Kea, is the location of one of the most important astronomical observation sites in the world, and it is the highest mountain in the state (also the world, if you measure it from the seafloor--TakeThat, Everest). It is also the source of the world-famous Kona Coffee blend.
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Commas don't go inside parentheses.


Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that Americans don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media. Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of native Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while actual native Hawaiians tend to live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks in part due to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory and later immigration. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands, Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese,) and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography geek side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the 46-States-and-4-Commonwealths comprising the USA in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary, and for being the only state not geographically located in North America[[note]]It's technically part of Oceania[[/note]]. Despite being largely rural, Hawaii is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

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Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that Americans don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media. Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of native Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while actual native Hawaiians tend to live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks in part due to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory and later immigration. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands, Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese,) Portuguese), and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography geek side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the 46-States-and-4-Commonwealths comprising the USA in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary, and for being the only state not geographically located in North America[[note]]It's technically part of Oceania[[/note]]. Despite being largely rural, Hawaii is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.
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Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

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Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] or Hawaii, is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''[='=]okina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''[='=]okina'' ''ʻokina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''[='=]okina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''[='=]okina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by the [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hawaii_map.GIF]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus.]]

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[[quoteright:350:https://static.[[quoteright:340:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hawaii_map.GIF]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Way, [[caption-width-right:340:Way, way more than simply HulaAndLuaus.]]
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The Hawaiian Islands (''Mokopuni o Hawaiʻi''), collectively known as Hawaiʻi, are an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawaii's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawai'i residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that Americans don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media. Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of native Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while actual native Hawaiians tend to live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks in part due to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory and later immigration. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaii residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands, Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese,) and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography geek side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the 46-States-and-4-Commonwealths comprising the USA in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary, and for being the only state not geographically located in North America[[note]]It's technically part of Oceania[[/note]]. Despite being largely rural, Hawaii is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.

to:

The Hawaiian Islands (''Mokopuni o Hawaiʻi''), collectively known as Hawaiʻi, are Hawaii, or Hawaiʻi,[[note]]The apostrophe is meant to indicate the ''[='=]okina'' or glottal stop used in the Hawaiian-language pronunciation of the name[[/note]] is an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawaii's Hawai'i's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawai'i Hawaiʻi residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, rather than just anyone who's from or lives in the state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

Hawaiʻi is a popular tourist destination for mainland Americans, due to the fact that it's a year-round tropical resort that Americans don't need a passport to visit. This is the reason for the prevalence of the tropes AlohaHawaii and HulaAndLuaus in American media. Local residents have a general distaste for mainland tourists, due to their ignorance of (and unwillingness to learn about) Hawaiian culture and customs, their tendency to treat the islands as one big resort, the fact that stereotyped images of native Hawaiians are often used in tourist attractions while actual native Hawaiians tend to live in poverty, [[GaiasLament and the negative environmental impact resorts, hotels, and golf courses have on the natural watershed.]] It is also home to a very large Japanese American community, thanks mainly to its proximity to Japan, which also sends over lots of tourists (and the reason for the prevalence of the aforementioned tropes in Japanese media as well). Most Japanese who talk about having been to America mean they once went to Hawaiʻi on a package tour. Since the early 20th Century, [[UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} Filipino]] Americans have also made the islands their home (second only to California in terms of numbers), thanks in part due to the Philippines' past as U.S. territory and later immigration. As a result, Tagalog and Ilokano have become one of the most widely-spoken languages in the State (alongside Japanese) outside English. Hawaii Hawaiʻi residents are generally divided into three categories: Native Hawaiians, the indigenous population of the islands, Locals, which refers to the descendants of those who worked on the sugar plantations (Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Portuguese,) and Haoles, which is a mild slur for non-local Caucasian people, the connotations of which imply a lack of connection with the land and its culture. Geography geek side-note here: Hawaiʻi is unique among the 46-States-and-4-Commonwealths comprising the USA in having no straight-lines anywhere on its boundary, and for being the only state not geographically located in North America[[note]]It's technically part of Oceania[[/note]]. Despite being largely rural, Hawaii is generally politically liberal and is one of the only states without a marked disparity between the politics of its rural and urban areas.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Hawaiian Islands (''Mokopuni o Hawaiʻi''), collectively known as Hawaiʻi, are an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawaii's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaii residents[[note]]"Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, and is never used to refer to someone who is just from or living in the state[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

to:

The Hawaiian Islands (''Mokopuni o Hawaiʻi''), collectively known as Hawaiʻi, are an island chain located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean about 2,000 miles from UsefulNotes/TheUnitedStates mainland. The original settlers were seafaring Polynesians who discovered the archipelago around the thirteenth century. In 1778, Englishman James Cook brought news of Hawaiʻi to the Old World, and Europe would continue to have a vested interest in Hawaiʻi for the next 100 years. Hawaiʻi was viewed as an important strategic checkpoint given its placement in the Pacific and was more than once occupied by foreign powers. Despite these feuds, Hawaiʻi stayed as an independent nation... that is, until 1898, when the Hawaiian monarchy was overthrown by sugar barons backed by [[SemperFi U.S. Marines]].[[note]]In 1993, the Federal Government formally apologized for their hand in the overthrow. [[/note]] The island chain was then annexed by the United States, who decided they weren't going to let the gem of the Pacific get into the hands of anyone else. It spent about six decades as a U.S. Territory, including being the site of the events that brought America into UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, before being admitted into the Union as [[UsefulNotes/TheSeveralStates the 50th state]] in 1959, with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower signing the legislation that made Hawaii's statehood official. The 44th President of the United States, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, was born and raised in Hawaiʻi. While Hawaii residents[[note]]"Hawaiian" Hawai'i residents[[note]]The term "Hawaiian" almost exclusively refers to Native Hawaiians, and is never used to refer to someone who is rather than just anyone who's from or living lives in the state[[/note]] state.[[/note]] consider themselves to be American, they tend to avoid many of the Eagleland tropes, and given the general distaste for the circumstances of the annexation, there is an active movement for Hawaiian sovereignty. [[WeAREStrugglingTogether However, lack of organization and disagreement over exactly what sovereignty would entail has prevented much significant progress in this direction.]]

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