I knew of only 1 100% Hawaiian, my friends dad. Which makes my friend 50% Hawaiian now as his mom isn't Hawaiian. I think theres a bum who I woudl always see in the McCully area and he looks like 100% Hawaiian. He's often carrying what looks like a pillow and in a tattered gray shirt. Sometimes he's in Kapahulu. When I was in elementry school in the mid 90's, he was around wearing teh same type of clothing that he wears today.
Cool story, bro.

Imagine if we required a DNA test to determine gender/sex before allowing someone to join women's sports or compete in other spaces reserved for women.
Seems like discrimination based on biological membership should be across the board, huh? Maybe we should ask Elizabeth Warren whether it's enough to claim membership in a group simply based on one's belief that they belong?
When she apologized to the entire Cherokee nation for her lifetime of claiming she belonged to their tribe, the Tribal Leaders released a statement:
"Using a DNA test to lay claim to any connection to the Cherokee Nation or any
tribal nation, even vaguely, is inappropriate and wrong," Cherokee Nation Secretary
of State Chuck Hoskin, Jr., said in a statement at the time. "It makes a mockery
out of DNA tests and its legitimate uses while also dishonoring legitimate tribal
governments and their citizens, whose ancestors are well documented and whose
heritage is proven. Senator Warren is undermining tribal interests with her continued
claims of tribal heritage."
https://www.npr.org/2019/02/01/690806434/warren-apologizes-to-cherokee-nation-for-dna-testThat makes a lot of sense. Rather than set an arbitrary blood quantum or other biological marker in the mandatory requirements, maybe the better, and more Constitutional, approach would be to require applicants for home lands prove they have an established connection to the Hawaiian Kingdom. Maybe have records of residency and relatives living and working in Hawaii since before statehood or some other date.
This goes back to the age old question as to whether or not someone who was born in Hawaii of parents whose ethnicity is, say Japanese, can claim they are themselves Hawaiian? Treating citizens as less than those of a particular bloodline is an antiquated practice that our laws seek to eliminate through equal protection. The same evaluation ought to be applied when deciding on programs everyone pays taxes to support but which only benefit a subset of the population based solely on who their parents and grandparents might have been.