“The Spirit of Aloha”: The Hawaii Supreme Court Challenges the U.S. Supreme Court Over Gun Rights

It has been 65 years since Hawaii became a state, but the Hawaiian Supreme Court appears to be having second thoughts. In an extraordinary ruling, the unanimous Supreme Court rejected the holdings of the United States Supreme Court on the Second Amendment as inapplicable to the 50th state. Hawaii apparently is controlled not by the precedent of the Supreme Court but the “spirit of Aloha.”  While Queen Liliʻuokalani would be pleased, the justices on that “other” Supreme Court may view such claims as more secessional than spiritual.

On Wednesday,  in State v. Wilson,  Justice Todd Eddins wrote the decision dismissing the appeal of Christopher Wilson, who was arrested in December 2017 for publicly carrying a .22-caliber pistol in his “front waist band.” Wilson insisted that he carried the gun while hiking for self-protection.

Under Section 134-25 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes,  “all firearms” must be “confined to the possessor’s place of business, residence, or sojourn.” The only exceptions are for transporting guns in closed containers, hunting or target shooting, and for those with a license.

Wilson argued that “prosecuting him for possessing a firearm for self-defense purposes outside his home violated his right to bear arms” under the Second Amendment. While the trial court rejected his motion, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022) and Circuit Court Judge Kirstin Hamman dismissed the charges with prejudice.

Justice Eddins wrote that the Hawaii Constitution “does not afford a right to carry firearms in public places for self defense.” Eddins notes that “Article I, section 17 of the Hawaii Constitution mirrors the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.” However, “we read those words differently than the current United States Supreme Court. We hold that in Hawaii there is no state constitutional right to carry a firearm in public.” He then adds:

“The spirit of Aloha clashes with a federally-mandated lifestyle that lets citizens walk around with deadly weapons during day-to-day activities. The history of the Hawaiian Islands does not include a society where armed people move about the community to possibly combat the deadly aims of others.”

Justice Eddins is referencing District of Columbia v. Heller, where the U.S. Supreme Court in 2008 explicitly recognized that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to arms. Most recently, in 2022 in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, the Court held that “the right of the people to keep and bear arms” extends beyond the home. Those decisions rely heavily on interpreting the right in line with the historical practices and understandings leading to the ratification of the Second Amendment.

Justice Eddins mocks the holdings of the Court and insists that the Second Amendment was intended to arm militias as a protection against the federal government, adding “that’s what they were thinking about long ago. Not someone packing a musket to the wigmaker just in case.” He dismisses the U.S. Supreme Court historical understanding as “debunked.”

Instead, he relies on such unassailable sources as the series The Wire:

Bruen‘s command to find an old-days “analogue” undercuts the other branches’ responsibility—at the federal, state, and local levels—to preserve public order and solve today’s problems. And it downplays human beings’ aptitude for technological advancement.

Time-traveling to 1791 or 1868 to collar how a state regulates lethal weapons—per the Constitution’s democratic design—is a dangerous way to look at the federal constitution. The Constitution is not a “suicide pact.”

We believe it is a misplaced view to think that today’s public safety laws must look like laws passed long ago. Smoothbore, muzzle-loaded, and powder-and-ramrod muskets were not exactly useful to colonial era mass murderers. And life is a bit different now, in a nation with a lot more people, stretching to islands in the Pacific Ocean….

As the world turns, it makes no sense for contemporary society to pledge allegiance to the founding era’s culture, realities, laws, and understanding of the Constitution. “The thing about the old days, they the old days.”

Yet, what is controlling is the history of Hawaii, which included limits on weapons. He notes that in 1833 King Kamehameha III (left) “promulgated a law prohibiting ‘any person or persons’ on shore from possessing a weapon, including any ‘knife, sword-cane, or any other dangerous weapon.'”

That 1833 decree reflects what Eddins calls “the Aloha Spirit.”

“In Hawaiʻi, the Aloha Spirit inspires constitutional interpretation…When this court exercises “power on behalf of the people and in fulfillment of [our] responsibilities, obligations, and service to the people” we “may contemplate and reside with the life force and give consideration to the ‘Aloha Spirit.’” HRS § 5-7.5(b) (2009).

     The spirit of Aloha clashes with a federally-mandated lifestyle that lets citizens walk around with deadly weapons during day-to-day activities.”

Whatever the Spirit of Aloha may encompass, it does not fit within the supremacy clause under Article VI, Clause 2. Nevertheless, Democratic Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez praised the decision as “thoughtful and scholarly” and celebrated the court affirming “the constitutionality of crucial gun-safety legislation.”

The hyperbole of the decision does not mean that the Hawaii Supreme Court is prepared to defy the United States Supreme Court. Indeed, other states are pushing their own bars on gun possession in public areas without such rhetoric.

Aloha is often interpreted as meaning “in harmony with the people and land around you.” The U.S. Constitution has the same principle that was ratified after the Articles of Confederation to establish the supremacy of laws. As Justice Jackson once noted, the justices of the United States Supreme Court “are not final because we are infallible, we are infallible because we are final.”

Here is the opinion: State-v.-Wilson-Hawaii-SC-2-7-24

157 thoughts on ““The Spirit of Aloha”: The Hawaii Supreme Court Challenges the U.S. Supreme Court Over Gun Rights”

  1. Here’s how that 1986 HRS 5-7.5 came about. It wasn’t steeped in tradition, it was a poem by Pilahi Paki in 1970 at a Governor’s conference in response to the Vietnam War.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1986/03/27/rekindling-in-law-the-spirit-of-aloha/2eaa2e7d-a62b-4564-b869-d4ed029a4d23/

    Note Mazie Hirono’s comment to the Washington Post:
    “Its supporters, such as Rep. Mazie Hirono, argue that it provides a nice reaffirmation of what makes Hawaii special and will have no legal impact on criminal or administrative statutes because it will be in a section of the code covering state symbols and mottos.”

    Tell that to Christopher Wilson

  2. Prior to the 2nd Amendment – found in the very same U.S. Constitution – Article VI (Section 1) requires the USA to honor all treaties made with Native Americans.

    Curious how we conveniently forget some parts of the U.S. Constitution while valuing only the parts we agree with. Maybe the USA should also honor Article VI Section 1 ratified in 1789 (ratified two years earlier than the 2nd Amendment).

  3. As long as Hawaii is a legal member of the United Stares the Federal Constitution trumps the states and the woke “Spirit of Aloha” excuse.

  4. “. . . unless those Arms disturb the ‘spirit of Aloha.’”

    I must’ve missed that footnote to 2A.

    And in that “spirit,” Honolulu (Hawaii’s largest city) has one of the highest crimes rates in the country. But don’t let those facts fool you into thinking that a gun is necessary for self-protection or for the protection of your loved ones.

      1. “This is a decision” that cannot be violated by the *federal* constitution. Thus the reference to 2A and mocking the Aloha Spirit.

  5. The threat of a tyrannical government is more real now than in the past. All the fake mass shootings to bring a knee jerk reaction for gun control proves
    the government is afraid of an armed citizenry. NZ and Australia have been stripped of self defense from their governments, which ran over them during lockdowns.
    Lastly, in 1833, the King prohibited weapons so his henchmen would be unchallenged and all powerful. Aloha spirit? I have lived on Kauai for 31 years. There are now surveillance cameras on every street lamp. Yes, we need a way to protect ourselves from tyranny. “Spirit of Aloha” is fake claim.

  6. Wonder how the American Citizens living in Hawaii feel about having their Rights under The US Constitution almost completely invalidated and stripped from them.

    1. They haven’t been. The US constitution obviously applies in all states, including HI, and is enforced by the federal courts. Nobody claims HI is exempt from that.

  7. the old Hawaiians were often 400 pounds and were a threat to anyone they met
    this is just Democratic Party gun control to prevent Lahaina residents from shooting land grabbers!!!

  8. Can a State be kicked out of the Union? Not secede, but kicked out? Hawaii deserves it. Their constant trampling of Constitutional Rights renders them unfit to be a State.

    1. No, it won’t. SCOTUS has no say whatsoever in the meaning of state constitutions. A decision by a state supreme court on the meaning of a state law cannot be appealed.

      So the only part of this decision that can be appealed is the bit at the very end where it found that the law being challenged also passes muster under the 2nd amendment; but that’s just one page out of 53, with practically no discussion, so there’s not much to have a field day with. That one page will either be upheld by a federal court or overturned; either way I doubt it ever gets to SCOTUS.

      1. State law cannot supersede federal law. Basic conlaw.

        The SCt has ruled that the Bill of rights are incorporated as to the States, and state law cannot abridge the Bill of Rights incl the 2nd.

        This isn’t hard. Moreover, the HA state con mirrors the USA 2nd.

        State courts have been overruled by Fed courts on their own interpretations of law when wrong.

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