1. Scotty's friend who watched porn: Her name was Raina, correct? And wasn't Raina also the name of the girl whom she'd texted about having pubes? Same friend?
2. Hawaii - Have the natives and whites (Anglos? non-natives? Europeans?) always gotten along as well as they appear to in the movie? Both groups seem to have blended seamlessly. Was it always this way? If not, how did they finally "settle"? Coming from Israel, this fascinates me.
1. Yes Raina was her friends name, she was the one who was in the hospital and seen Elizabeth, the girl she texted was a Hawaiian girl I believe, her name was Lani. So no they were different girls.
1. Yes Raina was her friends name, she was the one who was in the hospital and seen Elizabeth, the girl she texted was a Hawaiian girl I believe, her name was Lani. So no they were different girls.
On #2, it's complicated. On one hand, unlike Israel there was/is no religious division between Europeans and Native Hawaiians because the Kingdom of Hawaii adopted Christianity. So this made marriage with Hawaiians more plausible to settlers, and as the white population was pretty small at the outset, it was pretty logical. Inter-racial marriage has continued to be fairly common in Hawaii (much moreso than on the U.S. mainland), and today around 25% of the population is racially mixed.
On the other hand, just like almost any place that was colonized/conquered, there is definitely resentment on the part of some Hawaiians towards whites (even though nowadays, most of the ethnic Hawaiians are themselves partially white - people of full-blooded Hawaiian ancestry are very rare). If you are white, you will be regularly referred to a "haole," which means "foreigner" but is only ever applied to white people. It can be a neutral term but can also be an epithet, depending on the context. There are reports of white children facing a lot of bullying in schools (where they are usually in the minority). At the same time, it should be noted that whites are generally wealthier than Hawaiians, so despite some hostility they are doing well economically. The hostility in any case can reinforce the desire of whites, especially wealthy ones, to stick amongst themselves. As we saw in the movie, this family didn't engage in much intermarriage with non-whites after that first marriage in the 1800s.
(We should note as well that 40-50% of the population is of Asian ancestry, and they're sort of in between the two extremes. They more or less get along with both whites and Hawaiians (Asians are never referred to as "haoles") though they may engage in self-segregation as well).
#2: I grew up on Maui from the age of 8 until present (37). There's absolutely a palpable degree of underlying resentment towards whites, of which I am even though I have Hawaiian blood. If you are "Haole", you need to tread lightly. Smile, treat people with respect, and MOST of the time you'll get it in return,though they'll always be those locals that hate you no matter what and will look for any excuse to fight, even if it's just a look.
Personally, I don't wish to live here anymore as I'm frankly tired of walking on eggshells. I hate to say it as a local, but being one, whites are tolerated at best. If you show the slightest of attitudes, you will get it back in spades.
As a haole guy who has spent most of my adult life on the Big Island, and the last seven years on Oahu- I haven't found this to be true at all. Sure you have some meatheads, just like with any other locale or race- but about half of my friends are local, a handful are from other countries, and the rest are haole- and I have rarely (in 30 years) had an issue with race. If anything, on the Big Island it was exactly the opposite of that- the local community was totally welcoming and inclusive, and the haoles seemed to have some serious cultural and identity issues. Just my two cents.