…. and you can get a three bedroom house for the low low price of $2,000,000. Sad, your average native Hawaiian will never be able to afford to live there.
It's like that everywhere. Wherever rich people want to live, they will live,and it pushes everyone else out due to high real estate prices as a result of the land being desirable and valuable. The entire world is like that, it just Hawaii. Any place that is beautiful and especially coastal areas are off the charts expensive. That is just life unfortunately.
This isn’t about where every rich person lives, this is about real estate prices being driven through the roof. Everywhere the Democrats go, they do this. Look at every single democratic city. They all progress super fast and then deteriorate just as fast. This will end up being another Waikiki stuffed full of crime. It’s just how the Democratic Party works. The proof is in the pudding. Look at every single place they rule. I would say, this is not about politics. But this is about politics lol.
I make 80k a year and the bank happily gives me a loan for my 2mil house. People like you always use ‘average’ as an excuse to cry about not given free stuff.
Well Sister if you keep telling her how beautiful Kailua is maybe Oprah Winfrey would like to buy that next people like you they exposing our beautiful land cut it out it’s time to preserve our land and appreciate it and keep it for our families to come thank you
@@jakeroberts7435 They aren’t fans, they fought against it and protested it, especially when he (I should say the president of his foundation, it’s not in Obamas name yet) wanted to rebuild the seawall and extend his property onto the public beach… a public beach that I believe is a conservation site because it has an old Hawaiian turtle pond… and somehow he got approved to do so.
@@annpetin8447 yes vrbo or airbnb. just browse around a the options that are there. if you're not finding something great, maybe it's because you waited until the last minute to book something. you have to book at least six months out to find anything decent. it gets very booked up in summer months.
Wife and I have visited the islands many times......Maui, and Oahu the most. From So Cal. Kailua is a place we visited many times for the last 30 years. It has changed. It's still nice but the building up is inevitable. Already too crowded. And some people do not respect the land. Good video...keep Kailua from getting too overwhelmed. Mahalo.
I lived in Hawaii and then I got stationed there….then I visited every year for many years…..every year…it more and more crowded…expensive…the average person like say a teacher and firefighter, social worker, middle management , cannot afford anything in Hawaii and Kailua as beautiful as it is…is simply not affordable…..not even close…2 million dollars will get you a shack….a tent on the beach….the native and island born folks cannot afford to live here or any where in Hawaii and are leaving in droves for Washington state and Oregon and vegas
Mahalo nui for acknowledging Hawaiians and our struggle to remain in our homelands as others push us out, so few people ever think or care about us, only their own wants.
In my ignorance. I thought Kailua was essentially an enclave with people who brought enough money and eventually push locals out and is now fully Haole owned.
Bill 41 is currently being challenged court and a request for injunctive relief is before the judge right now. It appears that Bill 41 is going to be revoked , but that will be up to the federal court.
@@PolynesianPrincessa it’s the locals with thier pit bulls, noisy NFL parties and poorly maintained homes and 12 people living in them that are ruining the neighborhoods.
@@ffletch5277 wow you must be white and not from Hawai’i…. 12 people in a home is called multigenerational ! We don’t put our elderly in homes and kick our children out at 18. And if you know anything about Polynesians you might know that they make up the largest demographic outside of black and white players in the country, making the the nfl it a big part of life in that most of actually know people on several teams…unlike most of America who will likely never know anyone in the nfl. Just goes to show that you transplants are hated in Montana just as much as you are in Hawaii. You move and try to change a place into your ideal. If you don’t like these elements of Hawaii then leave. Simple.
When we left the Philippines (after 6 years) and went back to Hawaii, dad bought a new construction 5 bedroom house in Kailua for $40,000. It was on a corner lot with a swimming pool. That was back in 1968. I wonder what it’s worth now…..
Has to be over 3 million at a minimum. My parents bought a house in the 80's and then sold it for about seven times its price in 2021. It's nice they made so much, but they actually said they would've preferred it if everything was just normally priced, and you could both sell and buy at affordable prices.
“Everyday people” have either been completely priced out and and forced to move, are working 2-3 jobs to live in a studio apartment or are living in a vehicle or tent… you want to see THAT?!
How many more years will Kailua have a sand beach? Erosion is a big problem, the beach used to extend to the end of the boat ramp, now the ironwoods are falling into the sea. Lanikai used to have a large beach, now half of it is gone…
Yeah, l grew up there, I'm worried about Obamas oceanfront estate next door in Waimanalo, the rising oceans will soon take it away due to Climate change, huh?
@@jakeroberts7435 Obama actually rebuilt a new seawall and extended his property out onto the public beach… funny how he was allowed to do that, especially since there’s an old Hawaiian turtle pond fronting his property that’s SUPPOSED to be a protected conservation area and his seawall is blocking freshwater from reaching the beach, which is needed for limu to grow, which is what the turtles eat.
@@The.Hawaiian.Kingdom Yeah, and the Lahaina Land Grab, the Maui Massacre proves your point. Yet no peeps from the King, it being his "home" state an all that.