The State of Hawaii is fictitious and one simply has to sneeze to bring the facade crashing down. Ke'eaumoku Kapu has demonstrated this by occupying the Kuleana lands. If the false narrative of Hawaii's annexation and statehood were true, the Royal Land Commission Awards would be void. Ke'eaumoku Kapu and his students would have been arrested for trespassing and destroying private property. Instead, they've displaced the foreigners to whom the lands were fraudulently sold and started growing food and restoring the water supply. Last time I checked with him in May he had settled 5 or 6 cases and was still working reclaim more lands. This is happening in 2019.
Feel free to stick your head in the sand and believe the lies, but I promise if you watch carefully enough what is happening in and around Hawaii, you will know that Hawaii is a sovereign state, not a U.S. state.
Again, you're arguing things that simply are not so. The state of Hawaii receives, in US Federal tax money, 1.61 for every dollar of taxes it pays.
You can't have it both ways.
Your points about native lands also do not disprove the statehood of Hawaii. There are native lands in every state in the Continental US as well.
Kuleana lands are not "indian reservations" which exist at the whim of the federal government; they are properties awarded to private citizens of the Hawaiian Kingdom by the Kuleana Lands Act. Everything about the Kuleana lands, from the size of each parcel, to the conditions of the land awards, are matters of Hawaiian Kingdom law and are not at all dependent on any kind of racial entitlement program in the State of Hawaii or United States.
I am not sure how you mean to conflate Kuleana Lands with "native lands in every state in the Continental U.S." I am needing some elaboration.
Also, about the State of Hawaii's federal tax burden, what about it? Are you saying that it is impossible for a government to profit in Hawaii without federal money? Please interpret the data you provide.