Last year, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution congratulating the West Oahu baseball team for winning the 2005 Little League World Series. Those young men were an American success story because they never gave up. They scored three late runs to tie the championship game in regulation and then won it in extra innings.
But if an upcoming Senate measure becomes law, future Hawaiian
teams may celebrate championships as members of the international
squad instead of as Americans.
Lawmakers will vote as early as next week on the measure, which
would permit the creation of an exclusively race-based government
of ''native'' Hawaiians to exercise sovereignty over native
Hawaiians living anywhere in the United States. This government
would be treated as a separate but dependent nation, just as many
Indian tribes are. It also would have the right to exempt itself
from any parts of the Constitution it didn't agree with.
This proposal has been shot down before, but it's proved to be
like the vampire who won't die in a bad movie. No matter how many
times opponents think they've killed it, it keeps coming
back.
In a paper last fall, two Heritage Foundation legal scholars
outlined perhaps the best reason to oppose allowing supposed
Hawaiian natives to form a government: ''There are no 'native'
Hawaiians living apart from other Americans,'' former Attorney
General Edwin Meese and Todd Gaziano wrote. ''Hawaiians, whether
they have pure, part, or no 'aboriginal blood,' all live in the
same neighborhoods, go to the same schools and churches and
participate in the same community life.''
In other words, they're Americans, in the truest sense of the
word.
Right now, they live in the melting pot that brings people of many
different backgrounds together as a united people. And there's no
reason to change that. In fact, any time lawmakers consider passing
a law, they ought to ask, ''Will this unite us or divide us?''
Here, the answer is clear. It would drive a stake between
Americans, including many who've been friends and neighbors for
decades.
In addition to being divisive, the measure is also
unconstitutional.
No government organized under the U.S. Constitution may create
another government that is exempted from parts of the Constitution.
Congress is simply not allowed to create new nations, new
governments or new tribes and leave them free from their
constitutional responsibilities. We all enjoy the many benefits of
the Constitution because we all agree to be bound by it in its
entirety, even if we occasionally disagree with parts of it.
Imagine if Congress did allow native Hawaiians to discriminate on
the basis of race. That would clearly violate the 14th Amendment,
drafted specifically to ensure that all residents of a state enjoy
identical citizenship privileges. Whether you are a ''native
Hawaiian'' with direct blood ties to the former monarchy or someone
who moved to Hawaii last week, you're entitled to equal protection
as a Hawaiian and as an American.
In 1959, the people of Hawaii voted overwhelmingly to join the
United States. They understood they were voting to become full
citizens, committing themselves to protect and defend the
Constitution and to build our country side by side with Americans
in the 49 other states.
It's ironic that even as the U.S. Senate is proposing to offer
amnesty to millions of illegal aliens so they can supposedly
integrate into American society, it may also create a new
government that would allow millions of native-born Americans to
segregate themselves from American society.
Before voting, lawmakers ought to step back and ask themselves: Am
I upholding the Constitution? Am I maintaining our traditional
policy of E pluribus unum? Nothing less than a ''yes'' in both
cases is acceptable.
Edwin
Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research institute
and co-author of the new book Getting
America Right.
First Appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times