In this way, it seems that we have returned to the familiar script.
Let’s first review the process of the Hawaiian Islands being incorporated into the United States in 1898.
Initially, only primitive tribes existed in Hawaii.
The chief who first came into contact with the ghana telegram data British quickly conquered the remaining tribes with the help of the other side's advanced armed forces and established the Kingdom of Hawaii.
In 1869, the Hawaiian royal family issued the Declaration of Rights, completely transforming itself into a European-style country and beginning the road of "reform and opening up":
Foreign immigrants were allowed to choose to become naturalized Hawaiian citizens and own land.
But this action planted the seeds of the country's destruction.
At that time, the United States was experiencing a whaling boom in the Pacific, and the Hawaiian Islands became the New West in the hearts of Americans, with more and more people coming here to stake out their land.
Before long, immigrants became the majority in the area, owning 75% of the land, and squeezed into the fallen country's parliament and even the cabinet, participating in the country's operations and decision-making.