Comments by "Anonymous" (@Anonymous------) on "The Jimmy Dore Show" channel.

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  39. Except for the government, no one knows how many people were killed or went missing in the fire. About half of the Lahaina residents were Filipinos, many of the parents and their children were Filipino immigrants, and the many of them had no relatives in the United States, so it's not surprising that no one knows when an entire family goes missing. Approximately 40% of Lahaina residents, or approximately 5,000 people, were poor slum dwellers from the Philippines who had been brought in by the US government to pose as native Hawaii Polynesians because both look almost identical; they had no relatives in Hawaii or the United States, or even in the Philippines, so no one notices when entire families are killed or missing!! According to the Hawaii Department of Commerce, Economic Development, and Tourism, around 5,100 Filipinos lived in the former plantation town of Lahaina just before the fire, accounting for roughly 40% of the population, Rick Nava, a Filipino community leader in Maui, lived near Lahainaluna Road and lost his home of nearly 50 years to the fires that spread rapidly on Aug. 8. “I’m looking at the not-found list, and most of them are Filipinos,” he said, referring to a list that is circulating online of people who remain unaccounted for. Kit Zulueta Furukawa, director of the Maui Filipino Chamber of Commerce, said she didn’t want to speculate about numbers, but “we can assume that a large portion of it will be our friends and relatives in the Filipino community.”
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