In plain words: How the 12 Stones charter lines up against this placeʻs real law.
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on State of Hawaiʻi
12 Stones Global · Kilo Aupuni · State of Hawaiʻi · seat: Honolulu
Charter ⇄ Law Crosswalk — State of Hawaiʻi
The 12 Stones Sovereign Charter is the spec. Each governance function below is
traced from the Charter article that prescribes it, down to the real, enforceable law that already
exists to reach the same outcome — through this tenant’s own corpus and up the full
hierarchy. A roadmap of lawful correspondence, framed as a map — never an accusation.
Hierarchy · State of Hawaiʻi (Constitution + HRS) → United States → International → ICC → ICJ → Holy See
Integrity: every cell names a real instrument. A solid flagship citation is tagged
cited; where the exact section is still being verified the cell is tagged § pending verification
and shown dashed — named, never invented. 35 law-body cells across 8 functions, 3 pending verification.
Transparency — every public dollar posted & traceable4 law bodies
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. VI §6.2 — Fiduciary Trust“All budgets, fund allocations, and project expenses must be posted publicly via the RAIS system and linked to each Steward and Peacekeeper.”
State of Hawaiʻi
HRS Ch. 92F (UIPA); HRS Ch. 11, Pt. XIII (Campaign Finance) cited
Open-records right + every campaign contribution made public record via the Campaign Spending Commission.
United States
5 U.S.C. §552 — Freedom of Information Act cited
Federal public right of access to agency records.
International
UN Convention against Corruption (UNCAC, 2003), Art. 10 & 13 cited
Public reporting and access to information on public administration.
Holy See
Code of Canon Law (1983), c. 1287 §2 cited
Administrators of ecclesiastical goods must render a public account of offerings to the faithful.
Conflict of interest — no private funder steers a public decision4 law bodies · 1 pending
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. IV §4.3 — Custodianship of Resources“No private industry or outside funder may influence Custodian decisions without full glyph-based transparency.”
State of Hawaiʻi
HRS Ch. 84 — State Ethics Code (Standards of Conduct) cited
Conflict-of-interest disclosure and recusal; enforced by the State Ethics Commission.
United States
18 U.S.C. §208 — Acts affecting a personal financial interest cited
Criminal conflict-of-interest bar on federal officials.
International
UNCAC (2003), Art. 7(4) & 8 cited
Systems to prevent conflicts of interest; codes of conduct for public officials.
Holy See
Code of Canon Law (1983), c. 1298 § pending verification
Caution against alienation of Church goods to administrators or their relatives.
Open meetings & the people's voice in every decision4 law bodies
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. III §3.5 — Council of Stewards“Governance decisions are made in the open, with the people's right to be heard before action.”
State of Hawaiʻi
HRS Ch. 92 — Sunshine Law (open meetings) cited
Public's right to open meetings and to testify before any board acts.
United States
Government in the Sunshine Act — 5 U.S.C. §552b cited
Open-meeting requirement for federal multi-member agencies.
International
ICCPR (1966), Art. 25; UDHR Art. 21 cited
Right to take part in the conduct of public affairs.
Holy See
Code of Canon Law (1983), c. 212 §3 cited
The faithful have the right to make their views on the good of the Church known.
Public-trust stewardship of land, water & resources4 law bodies
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. VI + Art. IV — Fiduciary Trust & Custodianship“Resources are held in trust for the people and future generations, not for private extraction.”
State of Hawaiʻi
Haw. Const. Art. XI §1 (public trust); Public Land Trust, HRS Ch. 171 cited
Natural resources held in trust for the benefit of the people.
United States
Public-trust doctrine — PPL Montana, LLC v. Montana, 565 U.S. 576 (2012) cited
Sovereign holds navigable waters/beds in trust for the public.
International
Rio Declaration (1992), Principles 1–4; UN SDGs (2015) cited
Sustainable stewardship for present and future generations.
Holy See
Laudato Si' (2015) encyclical; Code of Canon Law c. 1254 cited
Care for the common home; Church goods held for sacred and just purposes.
Sacred sites & burial grounds — protected, repatriated4 law bodies
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. XV — Sacred Sites and Burial Grounds“Burial grounds and sacred sites are inviolable; disturbance triggers lineage review and ceremonial protection.”
State of Hawaiʻi
HRS Ch. 6E — Historic Preservation; §6E-43 (burial sites) + Island Burial Councils cited
State protection of burial sites and historic/cultural properties.
Repatriation of remains; protection of historic & cultural properties.
International
UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP, 2007), Arts. 11–12 cited
Rights to cultural/spiritual sites and to repatriation of remains.
Holy See
Code of Canon Law (1983), cc. 1205–1213 cited
Sacred places: their dedication, protection, and the loss of that character only by decree.
Enforcement, remedy & tribunals6 law bodies
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. XIII — Enforcement, Tribunals“Violations of the public trust are heard; remedy and, where warranted, ceremonial removal follow.”
State of Hawaiʻi
Haw. Const. Art. VI (Judiciary); HRS Title 32 (Courts) cited
The state forum for remedy and adjudication.
United States
42 U.S.C. §1983 (deprivation of rights); §1985 (conspiracy) cited
Civil action against officials who deprive rights under color of law — cited in the Charter itself.
International
ICCPR (1966), Art. 2(3) cited
Right to an effective remedy for violations.
ICC
Rome Statute (2002), Arts. 5 & 17 cited
Jurisdiction over the gravest crimes; complementarity to national courts.
ICJ
Statute of the International Court of Justice, Art. 36 cited
Jurisdiction over legal disputes between states.
Holy See
Code of Canon Law (1983), Book VII (Processes), cc. 1400+; c. 1311 cited
The Church's own forum and its inherent right to penal coercion.
Cultural & lineage integrity — language, education, heritage4 law bodies · 1 pending
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. V — Cultural and Lineage Integrity“Language, lineage, and cultural transmission are protected as the living spine of governance.”
State of Hawaiʻi
Haw. Const. Art. XV §4 (Hawaiian + English official); Art. X §4 (Hawaiian education); Art. XII (OHA / Hawaiian Affairs) cited
Hawaiian as an official language; constitutional Hawaiian-education and Hawaiian-affairs mandates.
United States
Native American Languages Act, 25 U.S.C. §2901; Apology Resolution, Pub. L. 103-150 (1993) cited
Federal policy to preserve Native languages; acknowledgment of the 1893 overthrow.
International
UNDRIP (2007), Arts. 13–14; ICESCR Art. 15 cited
Rights to language, culturally appropriate education, and cultural life.
Holy See
Vatican II, Sacrosanctum Concilium (1963) — inculturation/vernacular § pending verification
Magisterial principle of honoring a people's language and culture.
Foundation & self-determination of the people5 law bodies · 1 pending
12 Stones Sovereign Charter · Art. I §§1.1 & 1.8 — Foundation + People First (v6)“The Charter rests on the people's inherent right to self-governance. The purpose of this Charter is to bless people and please God across the four pillars — Food Security first, Education second, Truth third, Sovereign Charter fourth. People before spectacle. (§1.8 ratified 2026-06-25.)”
📄 Some records on this page are thin or pending. They are public — under this jurisdiction’s own access law you can request them and send them back to turn a gap into a fact on the ledger.
🌺 ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi here is offered with humility and held under community review with ʻŌiwi resources at Maui County. See the glossary →