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Description
The kingdom did not fall on a battlefield. It was quietly dismantled in boardrooms to protect the profit margins of a few sugar barons. In 1893, the sovereign nation of Hawaii was not conquered by a foreign army; it was stolen by a cartel of businessmen. When Queen Liliuokalani attempted to restore political power to native Hawaiians, a small group of American and European sugar magnates orchestrated a devastating coup d'état.Faced with crippling new US import tariffs that threatened their agricultural profits, the "Committee of Safety" conspired with the American minister to land US Marines in Honolulu. This book dismantles the romanticized mythology of Pacific annexation, exposing a ruthless corporate takeover executed purely for the protection of sugarcane margins.We trace the dark geopolitical maneuvers, the illegal imprisonment of the Queen, and the lobbying machine that forced the United States government to eventually absorb the stolen territory.Uncover the blueprint of modern corporate colonialism. This is the tragic, infuriating history of how a proud monarchy was dismantled so that foreign executives could monopolize a sweet commodity.



