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The House of Kawananakoa, descended from a branch of Liliʻuokalani's family, still exists. The current head of the family (and theoretical heir to the Hawaiian throne) is Quentin Kawananakoa, a former state legislator who unsuccessfully ran for Congress last year.

2007-06-18 12:56:12 · answer #1 · answered by JerH1 7 · 1 0

Public sector generally has a much better retirement system than social security that they can begin collecting 60% of their salary at age 50-55, but they also have to pay more into it. Private sector is stuck with social security which isn't being properly funded. only 75% of the benefits are "guranteed." but Obama says a few tweaks will reshape it. Public sector is also likely to get a greater number of holidays. Some get paid for unused sick days. and it tends to be a less stressful work environment. I sometimes hear this myth that "private sector pays more" but I don't buy it. Public employees are compensated quite decently compared to them it's about the same, but like everything it depends on the position. The public sector is about 30% unionized while the private sector is about 7% unionized.

2016-05-19 00:02:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The descendants of the Hawaiian royalty certainly do exist. They may not have power or a title but they certainly exist.

2007-06-18 16:01:39 · answer #3 · answered by kajun 5 · 1 0

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