The Star Kingdom of Hawaii is a rare example of an actual, working monarchy in the modern day. The native population had never forgotten the overthrow of their historical monarchy in the later 1800s, but also never had the power to take their sovereignty back. The American garrison could not be defeated by any force of arms the locals could raise, and as the years turned into decades and then over a century they did what they could to encourage America to reverse its actions. The American government eventually recognized the overthrow, and even began considered them for inclusion to the list of Indian Tribes. Then the Second Great Depression came upon us all, and politics on Hawaii changed as fundamentally as they did on the mainland.
American Samoa is home to America’s primary military base in the South Pacific Ocean. It is actually a reserve, multi-service base manned almost entirely by local Samoans who maintain the historical naval base buildings for tourists to visit. The permanent garrison is small, and most of its duties include air and sea shows for the locals and tourists, or saving people from accidents and natural disasters. They also serve as a recruiting center for locals who are interested in serving in the military. But beneath the surface, literally, is an entire military complex devoted to protecting Samoa from any stray Chinese, Russian, or other agency that may not have Samoa’s best interests at heart. Undersea and underground defenses surround the base, and highly classified training runs suggest it can deploy all turrets, walls, and other parts of the defense and attack grids into combat positions in a matter of minutes. And though the defenses have never been needed against a human foe, they were deployed in 2156 to block a tsunami from rushing into the harbor and destroying the city. That one act recouped every dollar sunk into the base over the centuries, and few locals begrudge the investment into what is otherwise a glorified tourist trap and recruitment center.
Pago Pago is the one truly great big city of American Samoa. Pago Pago Harbor is one of the best natural deepwater harbors in the South Pacific Ocean, and is protected from storms by Mount Pioa in the east. And that same mountain brings down fresh rain in an amount no other harbor in the world can match. It is one of the most livable and productive sites of its kind in the world, and some of the greatest seafood companies on Earth have called it home for centuries. Restless Samoans looking for a better life come to Pago Pago to make it big, and if that small city isn’t good enough for them, they can catch a ship or a flight from there to any place else on Earth and beyond. It is where tourists come to sea the beautiful islands, and it is where New Hong Kong businessmen come to negotiate new deals on fish delivers to their home islands that are forever in need of more food. It is the hub of American Samoa’s economic power, and the various clan chiefs throughout the islands use it to acquire the foreign monies they need to buy all the conveniences their people demand.
American Samoa is much like the Midwestern States in many ways, if you replace the endless tracks of fields with endless tracks of ocean. Small towns or clan gathering areas of between a hundred and a thousand people dot the various islands, both natural and manmade. They farm fish instead of wheat or corn for a living, and they work long hours to keep their boats and nets working. Samoan fishers are trained in the old ways, without relying on personal fishing assistants to do their work, just as they are taught in school to do their own math and remember their history from their own memory rather than using a personal computer. The granting of personal computer and personal assistant is a coming of age ceremony in modern Samoa, proof that the child is one step closer to becoming an adult. The work ethic they learn as children is one of the traits that make Samoans so effective when they go to seek success in the big city of Pago Pago and beyond.
On Veterans Day, we thank those who served our nations in defense of our freedom.
We see so many places out there in the world where people are fighting just to live. To taste even a piece of the freedom we enjoy. Syria. Afghanistan. Venezuela. Hong Kong. It reminds me how much of an exception we are. The safe and secure world we’ve built behind the wall of soldiers who volunteered to hold the ramparts for us. We have inherited a better world than most of the rest of the world, and we dare not forget why.
That is why I say Thank You for all of your service.
Everything I write is dedicated to those who have defended the freedom that makes it possible for me to write my stories.
And here are some members of Bull Squadron, Marine Fighter Attack Wing 112, The Cowboys, with an old Humvee in the background. They really were a well-connected bunch.
Alice White, daughter of the White Family of San Francisco, Earthborn
Jay Lovato, son of the President of the Navajo Nation, Earthborn
Daniel Freemon, son of the President of Dixie, Earthborn
Virginia Adams, daughter of the Adams Family of Massachusetts, Earthborn

Forge of War on Amazon
Angel Flight on Amazon
Angel Strike on Amazon
Angel War on Amazon
Wolfenheim Rising on Amazon
Wolfenheim Emergent on Amazon