The Philippine Islands believed there were other ways to protect their power. “She abandoned her traditions and set up a double standard of government- government by consent in America, government by force in the Philippine Islands” (Aguinaldo, 69). The Americans had promised to protect the territories that followed the same principles and Government of the United States. Once the Government of Washington got hold of the suggest promises they ignored every promise that was made and treated every territory as an enemy. The only crime that was being made between the countries was the fight for liberty. When the Queen of Hawaii found out of the signed treaty at Washington, she felt betrayed and violated. “Because my people, about forty thousand in number, have in no way been consulted by those, three thousand in number, who claim the right to destroy the independence of Hawaii. My people constitute four- fifths of the legally qualified voters of Hawaii, and excluding those imported for the demands of labor, about the same proportion if the inhabitants” (Liliuokalani, 4). Liliuokalani felt that the treaty violated her native people’s international rights and demanded that they revoke the Islands from additional deliberation that involved them with the