Nevada officials were caught off guard on Tuesday when Hawaiâi Gov. Josh Green seized control of Sin City.
"I'm proud to declare April 1st Hawaiâi Liberation Day," he proclaimed from a hastily erected podium in front of the Bellagio Resort & Casino.
Millions of expatriate kamaâÄina converged on the scene as the governor rolled out a series of dramatic reforms.
Clark County was disbanded and in its place, Green established the Extremely Mauka County of Hawaiâi. The California Hotel & Casino, however, was not renamed for fear that Hawaiâi residents would no longer find their way to nickel slots and endless buffets.
"I think itÊ»s well past time that we started imagining a new future for Las Vegas, a Hawaiâi future" the governor declared. "Solar-powered fans will bring tradewinds. A canal to California will create beaches. The IKEAs will no longer sell those awful Swedish meatballs and instead will offer poke bowls, lau lau, dim sum and rice."
While Hawaiâi Ă©migrĂ©s cheered their sudden rise to power, not everyone was comfortable with the new arrangement.
"Wait just a minute! Wait a minute!" shouted Nevada Gaming Commissioner Tex S. Holdem through a bullhorn. "IsnÊ»t gambling illegal in Hawaiâi?"
A hush fell over the crowd as Gov. Green produced a whiteboard and drew an elaborate diagram of infectious gambling addiction. That segued into a discussion of tax policy, with Hawaiâi proceeding to levy a personal income tax on all earnings where none had been collected in Nevada before.
"Whoa, this is not what I retired to Vegas for," murmured former state worker Brenton Nishigami, who had turned a $700,000 Mililani Mauka townhome into a five-bedroom single-family home for half the price in 2012.
At last report, former Hawaiâi-Nevada residents were seen loading U-Haul trucks to decamp to South Dakota, which has no income taxes.
EditorÊ»s note: Happy April FoolÊ»s Day â the only day youÊ»ll see fake news at Aloha State Daily.