Facebook suspended me so I told Zuck I would remind Everybody about his attempt to take land from Hawaiian Land Owners, not to mention What he said about Everyone in College and the shared employees with Google!

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Did this article years ago, came back here in 2023 during the Maui fires and found this from one of the sources I listed~

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Not so fast!
There is PLENTY of proof!

According to CNBC back in Jan. of 2017
Note URL [Universal Resource Locator] in top bar,

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Aloha! Now sell me your land!

Facebook
CEO Mark Zuckerberg is suing hundreds of Hawaiians to compel them to sell the billionaire small plots of land they own that lie within a 700-acre property that Zuckerberg purchased on the island of Kauai two years ago for $100 million.

In a statement posted hours after CNBC’s story on the properties was first published, Zuckerberg wrote: “For most of these folks, they will now receive money for something they never even knew they had. No one will be forced off the land.”

Zuckerberg-controlled companies filed eight so-called “quiet” title lawsuits in a Kauai court on Dec. 30 requesting the forced sales at public auction to the highest bidder. If successful, the suits would allow him to make his secluded beach-front land on the island’s north shore even more private, according the Honolulu Star-Advertiser newspaper.

Currently, owners of the lands, which total slightly more than 8 acres and have been in their families for generations — have the rights to travel across Zuckerberg’s property.

Many of the defendants are living, but some are dead. The defendants may hold just a tiny fraction of ownership in the parcels because they are several generations removed from the original owners, according to the newspaper.

The defendants had 20 days to respond to the suits or face forfeiture of their rights to a say in the proceedings.

Zuckerberg’s lawyer, Keoni Shultz, said in a statement to CNBC: “It is common in Hawaii to have small parcels of land within the boundaries of a larger tract, and for the title to these smaller parcels to have become broken or clouded over time.”

“In some cases,co-owners may not even be aware of their interests,” Shultz said. “Quiet title actions are the standard and prescribed process to identify all potential co-owners, determine ownership, and ensure that, if there are other co-owners, each receives appropriate value for their ownership share.”

The cases target a dozen small plots of “kuleana” lands that are inside the much larger property that Zuckerberg bought on Kauai. Kuleana lands are properties that were granted to native Hawaiians in the mid-1800s.

Some of the people who own, or who are believed to own, lands targeted by Zuckerberg’s suits are descendants of the original owners.

One suit, according to the Star-Advertiser, was filed against about 300 people who are descendants of an immigrant Portuguese sugar cane plantation worker who bought four parcels totaling 2 acres in 1894.

https://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/19/mark-zuckerberg-suing-hawaiians-to-force-property-sale.html

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According to the Guardian in 2019,

The Facebook CEO’s involvement in a family dispute over four small parcels of land worries many on an island where longtime residents have lost land to wealthy newcomers

Thu 17 Jan 2019 03.00 EST
On 22 December 2016, a retired professor of Hawaiian studies named Carlos Andrade sent a letter to dozens of his relatives informing them that he was about to sue them.

The relatives were among hundreds of partial owners of four small parcels of land on the island of Kauai, the legacy of a shared ancestor named Manuel Rapozo. A neighboring landowner, Northshore Kalo LLC, was willing to pay the legal fees to clear up the title on the property – enabling Andrade to take full ownership and compensate his fellow descendants for their shares.

It wasn’t until nearly a month later that the Honolulu Star-Advertiser broke the news that Northshore Kalo LLC was not a taro farm, as some had assumed (“kalo” means “taro” in Hawaiian), but a shell corporation controlled by Mark Zuckerberg. The Facebook founder was pursuing eight separate lawsuits related to parcels of land that, like the Rapozo parcels, were surrounded by his 700-acre Kauai estate.

Those who had been sued had a choice: they could sell their partial shares or try to outbid a billionaire in a public auction. If they lost, they could be forced to pay Zuckerberg’s legal fees.

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A media firestorm ensued, with some Native Hawaiians declaring Zuckerberg the “face of neocolonialism” and local politicians demanding reform to the state law that created the “quiet title and partition” process. Within days, Zuckerberg published an op-ed in the local paper apologizing for his ham-fisted approach and promising to drop the lawsuits.

But beneath the headline, Zuckerberg’s mea culpa included one major caveat: he would continue to support Andrade’s claim to his family’s parcels. Now, two years later, the quiet title process initiated by Andrade is drawing to a close and a judge has ordered a public auction of the parcels.

When one of the richest men in the world has expressed an interest in the outcome of an auction, there is no real question that he will get his way. But as the process heads towards its inevitable conclusion, a small cadre of Rapozo descendants are continuing to resist the forced sale of the property. They know that they don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of holding on to their tiny slice of paradise. Still, they argue that Zuckerberg’s involvement in the case, even though he is no longer directly suing them, makes a mockery of an unfair system that has long seen longtime residents of Hawaii lose their land to wealthy newcomers, be they sugar barons or tech billionaires.

“There’s a class of person – and Zuckerberg is a poster child – that have so much money that they distort day-to-day deeds and behavior,” said Wayne Rapozo, a London-based corporate lawyer who is a descendant of Manuel Rapozo’s brother and is helping to coordinate and finance the holdouts’ legal fight.

“Even if we lose, this has to be fought,” Rapozo continued. “I want my nieces and descendants to know that someone thought it was wrong … I want it to be known that it was resisted.”

‘My children grew up there’
On a blustery afternoon last November, Shannon Buckner stood in the shadow of the 6ft stone wall that surrounds Zuckerberg’s island retreat, “There’s a class of person – and Zuckerberg is a poster child – that have so much money that they distort day-to-day deeds and behavior,” said Wayne Rapozo, a London-based corporate lawyer who is a descendant of Manuel Rapozo’s brother and is helping to coordinate and finance the holdouts’ legal fight.

“Even if we lose, this has to be fought,” Rapozo continued. “I want my nieces and descendants to know that someone thought it was wrong … I want it to be known that it was resisted.”

‘My children grew up there’
On a blustery afternoon last November, Shannon Buckner stood in the shadow of the 6ft stone wall that surrounds Zuckerberg’s island retreat,“There’s a class of person – and Zuckerberg is a poster child – that have so much money that they distort day-to-day deeds and behavior,” said Wayne Rapozo, a London-based corporate lawyer who is a descendant of Manuel Rapozo’s brother and is helping to coordinate and finance the holdouts’ legal fight.

“Even if we lose, this has to be fought,” Rapozo continued. “I want my nieces and descendants to know that someone thought it was wrong … I want it to be known that it was resisted.”

‘My children grew up there’
On a blustery afternoon last November, Shannon Buckner stood in the shadow of the 6ft stone wall that surrounds Zuckerberg’s island retreat,peering through the gate. “This is our grandfather that I never knew, and I don’t want it to be gone,” she said. “I want my kids to be able to enjoy it. I’m going to fight to the end even if I lose.”

Buckner first learned of her inheritance – a 0.026% share of the Rapozo parcels – when she was sued by Andrade and Northshore Kalo back in 2016. The 46-year-old mother of two was living in Lihue, Kauai, at the time, just 20 minutes south of the parcels, which are located near the north shore plantation town of Kilauea. But she grew up on another island and was not familiar with her connection to the Portuguese sugar plantation worker who had purchased the property in 1894.

Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook, participates in a disc
SWITZERLAND - JANUARY 25: Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook, participates in a discussion during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Thursday, Jan. 25, 2007. (Photo by Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
'The third era of Zuck': how the CEO went from hero to humiliation
Read more
That ancestor, Manuel Rapozo, immigrated to Kauai from the Azores in 1882, according to family lore, and eventually renounced his Portuguese citizenship to become a full-fledged citizen of the Kingdom of Hawaii. When he died intestate in 1928, ownership of his land was passed to his seven children, and from there down through the generations.

For Rapozo descendants who grew up on Kauai, the parcels were an important part of their birthright. Before Zuckerberg purchased the estate (and built his mile-long wall), it was owned by a local auto dealer and surrounded by a hog wire fence. Family members had keys to the gate and could visit the parcels or access Pila’a beach, a stretch of white sand that can otherwise only be reached by a somewhat treacherous hike along the coast.

“My children grew up on that property,” said one descendant, a resident of Kilauea who spoke to the Guardian on condition of anonymity, citing concerns over her employment. “I have animals buried there. My children learned to ride bikes, shoot guns, drive, you name it, on that property.”

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Other holdouts, such as Alika Guerrero, have never set foot on the property, but still want to maintain their connection to it.

The 24-year-old Guerrero, who teaches Native Hawaiian culture and language at a resort on Maui, spoke to the Guardian in the lobby of another Maui hotel where his mother, 57-year-old Jennie Guerrero, works in the housekeeping department. Jennie Guerrero owns a 0.45% share of the property, which she said she wanted to pass on to her three sons.

“Both of us had the same response,” Alika Guerrero said of the day that he and his mother learned of the lawsuits. “Our family name is not going to be attached to anything to do with a billionaire buying up land in Hawaii and having us sell out our ancestral land.”

Wayne Rapozo, who grew up on Kauai and now lives and works in London, said that Zuckerberg and Andrade have created a model for how a “tag team tango of billionaire and dissident cousin” can dispossess “ordinary middle-class families that don’t have $40bn to play games with other people’s lives”.

“This case sets a horrible precedent which is un-American and un-Hawaiian,” he said. “They are making Hawaii look like a banana republic or colonial possession.”

‘Every little bit matters’
To Andrade and Zuckerberg, the case is much more straightforward: Andrade is the rightful heir to the parcels, they argue, and the lawsuit is simply a legal process that will allow them to compensate partial owners for fractional shares that are otherwise useless to them. “It is not reasonable or practical for 138 parties to own and control 2.35 acres,” said Harvey L Cohen, Andrade’s attorney, by email. “The quiet title process exists to address such matters, so that there is a clear owner based on an individual’s ownership interests and history with the land.”

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Andrade declined to be interviewed for this article, but he provided a lengthy statement detailing his history with the land and reasons for pursuing the quiet title.

Born in 1944 in the medical dispensary of the Kilauea sugar plantation where his great-grandfather (Manuel Rapozo), grandfather, and mother had all worked, Andrade said that he first learned of the parcels in the 1970s, when he was a new father and struggling to find affordable housing.

It was then that an aunt suggested that he live “on Grandpa’s land”, Andrade said. He and his wife had the land surveyed, cleared it, planted gardens and restored its irrigation system and taro pondfields. Other improvements included planting fruit trees and vegetables, and building a “comfortable, but still ‘off the grid’” house out of recycled building materials on one of the parcels.

“I am unaware of any other descendant of Manuel Rapozo who has attempted to make use of the lands or who has offered to assist in paying the property taxes or to contribute to clearing the lands and having them surveyed,” Andrade wrote. “I have spent more than half my life tending to these lands. Hopefully, my family and I will be able to do so well into the future. I pursue these actions of my own volition in order to make that dream a reality.”

Ben LaBolt, a spokesman for Mark Zuckerberg, endorsed Andrade’s perspective. “As Mark stated in his op-ed, he supports Dr Andrade’s claim to the property because Dr Andrade is the only member of the family to have cared for, lived on and paid taxes on this land and he did so over the course of 40 years,” LaBolt said by email.

“Mark kept his word and withdrew from the quiet title actions as a plaintiff,” LaBolt continued. “As required by law, Northshore Kalo became a defendant in the actions alongside the other individuals holding interests in the land. Neither Mark nor Northshore Kalo will bid at the auction. In fact, following the completion of the quiet title actions, neither Mark nor Northshore Kalo will own any interest in any of the kuleana involved in the quiet title action.”

Northshore Kalo did indeed withdraw from the lawsuit as a plaintiff in 2017, and switched to being one of the hundreds of defendants. The shell corporation has continued to buy up partial shares from other defendants, however.

When the quiet title suit was filed in December 2016, Andrade owned about 14% of the parcels, and Northshore Kalo owned about 24.1%. By the time the judge ordered the auction in November 2018, Andrade’s share had increased to 27.1% and Northshore Kalo’s to 43.9%. According to real estate records reviewed by the Guardian, Northshore Kalo paid out more than $450,000 in 71 different transactions in the course of increasing its stake.

Attorneys for the holdouts have argued in court documents that Andrade and Northshore Kalo used misrepresentations to acquire some of those shares, alleging that Andrade falsely told relatives that the land would “stay in the family” and that Northshore Kalo took advantage of people’s mistaken belief that it was a taro farm.

The judge rejected these arguments and ordered the auction. Notice of the time and place of the sale will be published in the local newspaper, and the plaintiff and defendants will be allowed to bid for the parcels.

Back in 2016, Zuckerberg forecasted the outcome of that contest when he wrote about Andrade’s claim to the lands.

“He is 72 years old, retired, and wants to clear up the titles of these kuleana so he can pass the land on to his children,” Zuckerberg wrote. “He will continue his quiet title action and upon completion his family will have ownership of those kuleana. He has been a steward of his family lands and we support him in this effort.”

The Kilauea cousin, Buckner and the Guerreros all say that they understand why Andrade wants to pass the land on to his children. They simply point out that they have children as well – and dispute his claims that he was the only descendant to care for the properties.

“For people like myself, our connection to land and ancestral property is more than just about money,” said Alika Guerrero. “We’ve been dispossessed for the last 150 years at least, so every little bit to us matters.”

To the young hotel employee, Zuckerberg’s decision to pick sides in a family dispute is less about what’s right and more about limiting the number of people with the right to access his properties.

“We’re a blemish in his sanctuary.”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/jan/17/mark-zuckerberg-hawaii-estate-kauai-land-rights-dispute

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It all started with my sharing this out for fun as I spend All of my free time sharing out Truth, attempting to show people Connections and Waking the Others Up!

Screenshot of it and link with video clip below,

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https://www.facebook.com/HoldernessFamilyMusic/videos/2142994432589639/

So as you can see, all I put was, "When you're a male and no matter how hard you try to be Clear. . ."

Didn't even say anything about what we All are seeing. . .The White Male is the most endangered among us due to the vile attacks of radical progressives! See, left that out and Still not enough for facebook snowflakes.

So they send me this when I am posting to like minded groups! No proselytizing going on,

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So I did Indeed click on the let us know link if I felt I had Not violated their "Community Standards!"

Now We all Know by default I Violated their radical Community Standards. . . just by existing and daring to speak a viewpoint that lied outside of the Socially Engineered Programming!

Here is a screenshot of my note to them and the words will be typed below.

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When I tried to share out a funny video on a Guy Doing his Best to make it clear he didn't want to be tagged for harassment. ..facebook for No Reason at all Suspended me. This is what they sent me when I tried to share out to like minded groups they sent me this message.

I did my due process, clicked on their link to let them know I don't Believe This Goes Against their "Community standards!" How can it. . .he's For Consent. Always complaining at conservatives no matter what, even when we line up with what they "Claim" they believe!

I did a screen shot of the note and here is what it said,

What did I do? I'm sharing to Like Minded groups I have been asked to join. Why am I not allowed to post to them?

We all share the same values and I don't see this happening to liberals who share out even when it is unwanted. They name call and belittle and you guys with the Zuck's blessing let them keep going, but if conservative. . .Suspended, Harassed, Banned!

I will be sure to let people know on all platforms that Do Not censor. . .Gab, Steemit, Bitchute, Voat what you are doing!

Have you had your meeting yet? You coming soon after Google's Meeting for Transparency, Accountability, Data Collection, Use and filtering Practice.

I'll throw in your lawsuits over your Elitist land in Kauai too!

Good stuff here Zuck!

Mark Zuckerberg is suing Hawaiian land owners to secure his 700-acre island getaway

https://www.theverge.com/…/mark-zuckerberg-facebook-hawaii-…

http://www.newser.com/…/zuckerberg-reconsiders-forced-hawai…
Wow! Update in 2023 after coming back in here during the #MauiFires, #MauiWildfires
Interesting AND Weird!

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https://www.inc.com/a…/zuckerberg-hawaii-estate-lawsuit.html

YIKES! Please reconsider, because we both know time is short and I'd rather be focusing on other things than reminding people of your trail Zuck!

Turn from your ways and choose Good!

Godspeed!

Melissa M.

I do wonder if Facebook's meeting will be soon as this meeting for Google recently occurred and now we see a Great Deal happening!

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See the entire article here which connects so much of what the White Hats have Always known about this tech giant here,

@artistiquejewels/google-fire-breaks-out-in-raycom-info-tech-park-which-houses-their-office-in-the-zhongguancun-technology-hub-in-beijing-china

Back to facebook,

If you're not aware at what Mark Zuckerberg had to say about people who would be engaging on "his" or the CIA's platform. Very enlightening.

This also includes his "charity" with all their Virtue Signaling that reads like a Who's Who for the DNC!

Who will Mark Zuckerberg Protect? Who has he stabbed in the back? Does past behavior predict the future?

@artistiquejewels/who-will-mark-zuckerberg-protect-who-has-he-stabbed-in-the-back-does-past-behavior-predict-the-future

https://www.kauaitravelblog.com/mark-zuckerberg-kauai-property/#google_vignette

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The 2014 purchases are marked with a red outline. The 2021 purchase is marked with a blue outline. (Markings are approximate.)

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https://www.theverge.com/2017/1/27/14416610/mark-zuckerberg-hawaii-island-land-protest-lawsuit-priscilla-chan

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https://www.theverge.com/2017/1/19/14327854/mark-zuckerberg-facebook-hawaii-kauai-property-lawsuits

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https://www.theverge.com/2017/1/27/14416610/mark-zuckerberg-hawaii-island-land-protest-lawsuit-priscilla-chan

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https://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/19/mark-zuckerberg-suing-hawaiians-to-force-property-sale.html

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/01/mark-zuckerberg-sues-to-keep-native-hawaiians-off-his-kauai-estate

https://www.barrattorneys.com/blog/zuckerbergs-hawaii-estate-new-face-of-neocolonialism/

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https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/mark-zuckerberg-facebook-ceo-sues-hawaii-hundreds-families-force-sell-land-kauai-kuleana-act-a7535731.html

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https://nypost.com/2017/01/19/mark-zuckerberg-is-trying-kick-neighbors-off-his-property/

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https://beatofhawaii.com/zuckerberg-controversy-here-on-kauai-unabatted/

#ZuckerbergHawaiiEstate, #ZuckerbergHawaiianProperty

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