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Amy
Brooke
Amy
Brooke is a longtime columnist, reviewer, sociopolitical
commentator and poet. Her highly regarded books for
children and young adults (16 to date) have been consistently
blacklisted since the political Left in this small country
gained control of the children's writing establishment. www.amybrooke.co.nz
. She founded and has run the Summersound Symposium for
close on a decade and a half, during which time it
has become apparent that some effective way is now urgently
needed to bring a halt to our political classes'
exclusion of the public from the decisions of the day. The 100
Days - Claiming Back Democracy that she has convened- www.100days.co.nz is
an idea whose time has well and truly come.
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Amy Brooke
3 April 2010
100
Days - Claiming Back New Zealand
Over
25 years ago, in 1985, a former member of the Communist Party,
Geoff McDonald, with a lifetime spent in the Labour and Trade
Union movements, wrote the first of three books, Shadows
Over New Zealand, on defence, land rights and
multiculturalism. It was followed by The Kiwis Fight Back
, giving additional evidence of what he noted as a
psychological war being waged against New Zealanders,
particularly in the attempt to use the accusation of racism as
a useful and dishonest tool to intimidate the majority - with
so-called “indigenous rights” being an important part of
the neo-Marxist agenda for weakening legitimate government.
His analysis embraced the decline in education standards - in
particular the evidence for the need to get back to teaching
the basics by traditional methods; the Left’s takeover of
the supposedly green conservation movement; the implications
of the then proposed Bill of Rights; the threat to ANZUS, the
dangers of neutrality; the damaging nature of United Nations
policies as they affect New Zealand;
and the danger presented to us as a free country by the
Communist-controlled push for countries to be persuaded (and
essentially forced) to surrender sovereignty to a world
controlling government.
In
his third book ,The Kiwis at the Crossroads, written
with increasing urgency, he observed neo-Marxist activity in
this country with the trained eye of a former participant
in Communist Party activities, and the success of this
psychological assault on New Zealanders through the useful
tool of underinformed and lazy media.
In
particular, Geoff McDonald drew attention to the deliberate
wielding of the bludgeon of racism against ordinary New
Zealanders concerned about the politicization and distortion
of Maori land rights; the invention of a spurious
“partnership” claim; the
quite deliberate misrepresentation of the original intent and
provisions of the Treaty of Waitangi;
and the growth of a well-promoted, anachronistic
tribalism, re-conjured by tribal leaders for the advantage of
tribal executives and for propagandizing and enlisting young,
now only part-Maori, for exclusively tribal advantage.
McDonald saw indeed the shadows over this country, and that
the manipulated policies of biculturalism and multiculturalism
were being very actively promoted with the aim of subverting
assimilation. Again visiting education issues, he discussed
what was deeply wrong with the Look-and-Say method of teaching
reading, and why it was going to destroy the reading
capability of so many New Zealand children. He stressed again
that teaching reading and writing by phonics should be brought
back; that arithmetic and teaching by rote and repetition
should be reintroduced, and the new maths should be thrown out
- along with what
he noted even then was political and other junk infiltrated
into the curriculum.
Granted
the enormous importance of all these issues, in particular the
push for Maori sovereignty and the manipulation by Maori
leaders of the racism slogan, possibly the greatest threat to
New Zealand that this writer identified was “shifting the
population balance” by
changing our immigration policies to build a multicultural New
Zealand, with restrictions on British migration and plans for
a massive influx of Asians as refugees and migrants. The
Left’s design, he warned, was to cultivate
“authenticity”- what we now call
“diversity” - by various immigrant groups keeping
their own culture, and eventually opening New Zealand to
migration from every corner of the world – a deliberate
anti-assimilation philosophy
specifically designed to destroy the homogeneity of this
country.
The
reality of a heavily-promoted, even well-meant
multiculturalism throughout the West has been too late
perceived as a device to divide and conquer - a move well
under way in Britain and the continent with the growing
Islamification of their societies, the demand for separate
government and laws, and the insistence that the cultural
demands of Muslims, in particular, and their well-manipulated
sensitivities either take precedence, or must be damagingly
accommodated. The result, as we see in this country, too, with
minorities beginning to flex their political muscle; with the
essentially racist and damaging Maori seats in parliament and
the demands by
radical activists for separatism,
special funding, and even sovereignty are
leading to what the black American writer Thomas Sowell
predicted as the bullying of the majority by the minority.
“The
long march through the institutions…” the Italian
communist Gramsci’s visionary strategy aimed at destroying
the West, which Geoff McDonald warned against,
with graphic examples,
has been long indeed. Its great success can be measured
by contrasting what is now being called a broken society
against the former, far
greater cohesion of Western societies before the
finally-radicalized 60s ratcheted up its attacks on the
freedoms and values our parents’ and grandparents’
generations took for granted. Some of these have now been now
destroyed: others are continually weakening, undermined,
diminished and attenuated.
Since
this destructive watershed decade, a determined attack on the
colonist forebears of the majority of New Zealanders by
distortions and misrepresentations of our successful joint
co-existence in this
country - epitomized by the unquestioning acceptance of
intermarriage between Maori and European - has been
deliberately mounted. Particularly singled out have been the
missionaries, many of these men and women of great courage
whose hard work and good character brought about - where the
government could not - peaceful settlement and coexistence in
areas such as the Bay of Islands, infamous for lawlessness,
drunkenness and rapaciousness.
Moreover,
in the radical
agenda of the Left, it has been particularly important since
the 60s to discredit the Christian values that underpinned the
settlement of this country - and the very notion of
civilization itself. Institutions such as Sunday schools have
been ridiculed. Former minister Professor Lloyd Geering’s
long attack on the central tenet of Christianity (while
inappropriately professing to be still Christian, a source of
dismay to many) contributed under Helen Clark’s left-wing
government to his inexplicably receiving the highest possible
New Zealand honour. Naturally, our own literary establishment,
with its well-funded agenda and long politicised criteria predictably
invites highly controversial spokespersons to its annual
awards during Writers & Readers Week. This year's guest
speakers. “theologian” Richard Dawkins, antagonistic to
the very notion of an intelligent creator - and Peter Singer,
the prominent atheist promoting animal liberation and ethics
without religion - were only too predictable. When did our
very own subversive literary establishment last invite guest
speakers mounting a very able defence for the intellectual
strengths of Christianity?
This
is not an idle concern, the undermining of our country’s
foundation values. For communist Gramsci’s
agenda of the promotion of Marxism and its neo-Marxist
offspring to succeed, the
biggest challenge has been to weaken Christianity’s
hold on our culture - a task made easier by the growing
politicization of the churches, abandoning their central
message of the importance of the relationship between an
individual and his/her creator, to instead posture on
politicised areas well outside their sphere of authority,
capability - or even good judgment - as we've seen with the
recent infamous Waihopai incident. However, it was, oddly
enough, the God-is-dead Nietzche, who reminds us
that the life of the West and its values are based on
Christianity… that the notion that we can get rid of it -
while still keeping its values - is an illusion. In a
memorable line, as Dinesh D’Souza reminds us, Nietzsche
termed our Western values, “shadows of gods”. His
inescapable conclusion? “Remove the Christian foundation and
the values must go too.”
New
Zealand is not just at the crossroads. It is arguably almost
past the point of no return. Chinese companies, all inevitably
controlled by the CCP, the Communist Chinese Party, are
now being allowed to colonise New Zealand. This is not only in
a commercial sense, by undermining and essentially destroying
so many New Zealand businesses and industries to date, in that
hopeless export imbalance between a very small country and a
giant one employing virtual slave labour – in the name of a
basically naive free trade ideology that neglects the very
real and important principles of fair trade.
In addition, China is now possibly to be permitted
to buy New Zealand land, with the selling of the twenty and
more (some reports
quote a far higher figure) Crafar farms for approximately one
and a half billion dollars. It is sheer naivety to claim that
independent Chinese businessmen would now own this
New Zealand land and New Zealand assets, with
potential, ultimately to destroy its future competitor,
Fonterra. It is the simple fact that there is no Chinese
business of any size that is not a front for the Communist
Chinese Party, i.e. for a cruel and oppressive
regime that we are now allowing to gain a foothold in this
country. As the Australian News Weekly notes,
“The Stern Hu trial has implications for Australia
and shows how brutally Beijing treats those whose actions
conflict with the Chinese Communist Party's global ambitions.
In particular, it highlights the danger of allowing Chinese
corporations, which are financial entities controlled by the
Chinese Communist Party, from gaining control of strategic
industries as they are threatening to do through takeovers of
major corporations in Australia.” Incredibly
enough, the New Zealand Overseas Investment Office (formerly
Commisssion) is actually considering allowing what is
essentially Communist China to own New Zealand territory by
buying New Zealand farmland – and to ratify the buying of
farms already bought illegally.
China
is already now colonising us commercially as it moves
determinedly into the Pacific. A well-informed Chinese
professor, a former
protester at Tiananmen Square, when asked which culture
presented the greater threat to New Zealand, militant Islam or
China itself, had
no doubt of the answer. Islam’s attack on the West through
terrorist activity, although real and threatening, cannot
match the well organised, wealthy and cohesive strength of
militant Communist China, with its duplicity and its hunger
for land and resources.
The
threat to New Zealand has also come from within. The long
tenure of the Left has ushered in policies destructive not
only to the economy, as we saw in Prime Minister Helen Clark
and Finance Minister Michael Cullen's disastrous overseeing of
the country, now plunged
into massive indebtedness through the bribing of as many as
possible sectors of the electorate, and renegotiating - for
the purpose of a collective Maori vote - compensation
claims well and fairly settled in the past. The
Left’s deliberate establishing of a culture of welfare
dependency to remain in power has not only had disastrous
economic consequences. It has also has influenced the very
character of New Zealanders, once
seen as proudly independent and determinedly self-sufficient.
This, allied to the promotion of sociopolitical changes - the
espousing of radicalised “rights” such as gay
“marriage”; extreme and subversive environmentalism - more
red than green - and a whole bundle of extreme isms
such as feminism, racism, sexism, separatism, anti-Semitism
has very much contributed to social disintegration.
However,
when the country periodically and ritually throws out the
government of the Left, having ratcheted up
its achievements since its previous tenure, the
government of the Right, in previous years and during its
present tenure, has done little to undo its predecessors’
disastrous achievements. In fact, in areas such as the
promotion of racism by separatist funding, lavish tribal
settlements and resettlements to the tune of hundreds of
millions - and now accumulatively billions of dollars ( and in
Prime Minister John Key’s foolish capitulation to the
radical Maori Party's demands to fly its sovereignty flag
alongside the New Zealand flag itself) the
situation has worsened.
Accumulatively,
the two worst things that can happen to a country coming under
the internal attack are first, when its people lose hope,
when, as GK Chesterton reminds us, “A tired democracy
turns into a dictatorship”. Equally as destructive is the
insidiousness of an attack upon its most important and
cohesive unit, that of the family. With the weakening of the
family structure comes the weakening of society itself - as we
have seen with the abuse of alcohol and drug taking, reaching
near epidemic proportions, together with our high rate of
teenage pregnancy and dismaying abortion statistics.
The
attack on the family, launched last year by the reportedly
Marxist Sue Bradford from the minority Green Party,
backed by former socialist Prime Minister Helen Clark,
has become a watershed for what is meant to be our democracy.
Inexplicably, our present lightweight Prime Minister John Key
ignored the concerns of the country about the
intrusion into the rights and responsibilities of good parents
by backing the fascist anti-smacking legislation - even though
he was well aware that, in repeated polls, well
over 80% of the country opposed it. Moreover, with wide-spread
recognition that the legislation would do little to address
the problem of the horrific child abuse existing particularly,
though not exclusively, in the Maori sector of the population,
the government simply lied.
In
a virtual attack on middle New Zealand, at a time when the
growing number of ill-behaved, undisciplined children reaching
their teenage years, and now even well beforehand, is
beginning to be an affliction on this country, Key’s
Jesuitical claim was that the law is working as Parliament
intended - the government does not want to see parents
criminalised for a light smack. However, as predicted, his
promoted legislation has done nothing to reduce the incidence
of abuse, and Auckland law lecturer Richard Ekins, who
specialises in the study of legislative authority and
statutory interpretation, says what we all knew - that
Prime Minister Key’s claim
simply isn't true.
In Ekin’s words “ Parliament intended precisely to
criminalise parents for light smacking.” So, arguably,
“any police policy not to prosecute light smacking is
unlawful” - in spite of an extraordinarily high-handed
personal recommendation to the police from the Prime Minister.
What
has happened to our society, with many good parents now
thoroughly demoralised, fearful of the watching eye of the
politically correct…the neighbour over the fence; the
narrowed eyes in the supermarket; the PC teacher quizzing
children in the classroom, encouraging them to report on their
parents… the parallel with the 1930s and Nazi Germany is a
chilling one. So, too, is the fact that girls even as young as
12 are being
referred for abortions without their parents’ knowledge.
However,
the most chilling consequence of all, as far as democratic
outcomes are concerned, is that although some National Party
members were against the anti- smacking legislation, and
equally sceptical about the man-made global warming rort which
has led to our disastrous Emissions Trading Scheme policy,
they were told that no dissenting vote was allowed in either
respect. Apparently, what John Key wants John Key gets. An
autocratic leader of the left, Helen Clark, has been replaced
by an autocratic leader from the Right – both moving from
the philosophy of freedom for the individual towards the state
control imposed by the Left.
We
have always known that we have a very approximate form of
democracy in this country where citizens now have very few
democratic rights, basically reduced to that of throwing out a
government which has let down the country's hope of it being
better than its predecessor. Our justification for calling
ourselves a democracy has been qualified as a representative
one - where our elected members of parliament represent their
constituencies to ensure the will of the majority is carried
out. What the anti-smacking legislation, and our ETS
legislation has shown is that our elected members no longer
represent us. Not one member from the majority National or
minority Labour parties represented his or her electorate in
rejecting the anti-smacking legislation. Every National Party
member folded up at John Key's edict - and the same with
Labour. Moreover, the Prime Minister's hijacking of the
National Party’s list candidates at the last election by
personally selecting the first 50 – the responsibility,
according to the party constitution -
of grassroots elected committees, was equally an attack on our
democratic traditions. These list MPs, not answerable to any
electorate, owe their tenure in parliament and their promotion
possibilities to the party leader only.
With
our politicians now merely yes-men and women, we no longer
have any brakes on the political ambitions of individuals and
even minor parties in parliament, who can hijack what should
be a democratic political process. What many now regard as the
moral incapacity of parliament has ensured a growing divide
between politicians and the people of this country. The Prime
Minister's extraordinary promotion of the socialist Helen
Clark as a highly capable fiscal manager eminently suitable
for a top United Nations position, together
with his offering her lieutenant, former Finance Minister
Michael Cullen, a comfortable and rewarding board position at
New Zealand Post - ignoring their dismal financial record over
the past decade which has so demonstrably damaged New
Zealand's economic welfare - has been a revelation about how
well the political class looks after its own, regardless of
the adversarial posturing in parliament.
What
the country has at
last perceived is that there are no checks and balances on the
ambitions of determined political leaders. We do not have a
democracy - no longer even a representative democracy. This
recognition has not been without its advantages. Courageous
individuals have stood up to be counted - John Boscawen , now
an ACT MP, promoting his Private Member's Bill to overturn the
invidious anti-smacking legislation - against determined
opposition from the Prime Minister - and leading a
pro-democracy march in Auckland… Aucklander Colin Craig,
organising his own pro-democratic march; Larry and Barbara
Baldock tirelessly promoting the call for New Zealanders to
last have a say on government directions through binding
referenda; Muriel Newman’s forum carrying much-needed debate
and clarification of the issued of the day; scores of lively
blogs.
The
mood of restlessness and anger in the country at large will
not pass. This allied to the growing recognition from our
history in recent decades, allied to Barbara Tuchman's verdict
in The March of Folly, that governments get most issues
wrong… means that even if we have passed the crossroads of
competent decision-making, and a great deal of damage has
already been caused, it
is not too late to reverse our thoroughly anti-democratic
directions.
How
to do so? New Zealanders thoroughly disenchanted with the
voting process, and the tinkering with regard to the election
of candidates are not going to be impressed by former Prime
Minister Mike Moore’s dream of 20 no doubt self-selected
“eminent New Zealanders” forming a committee to
decide on our future directions for us. Neither the promotion
of an upper house, nor that of a new voting system is going to
solve the problem of the now perceived incapacity of
parliament, both collectively and individually to deliver
democratic government.
The
call for a direct democracy is one whose time has come.
Moreover, the means for achieving this is a hugely effective
way of stopping in its tracks the hijacking of the political
process by party politics, dominated by an autocratic leader.
Switzerland, the
most successful democracy of all, described as the most
peaceful, prosperous and open society in the world, adopted it
over a hundred and fifty years ago when this small but
extraordinary country realised that its own democracy was one
in theory only. The provision it then claimed would serve us
equally as well, in spite of the fact that we do not have this
country’s advantage of all its legislation being promoted
not tops- down as with by our political hierarchy - but from
grassroots representatives from the small states or cantons.
The provision that we are now going to have to work for is
even
more important to claim than the binding referendum
process which must follow. The two go hand in hand, but one
before the other.
Essentially,
this provision ensures that although parliament can pass any
law, including those insufficiently debated, typically late at
night, or on Christmas Eve - or through any profoundly
undemocratic trade-off with a minor party manipulating the
system… whatever law is passed actually can't coming into
effect for 100 days. During this time, if 50,000 citizens are
concerned enough to call for a referendum, it has to be put -
what is called a facultative (optional) referendum - and the
country's verdict is binding. The different,
citizens-initiated referenda, where proposals come from the
people themselves, are a separate and interesting issue. But
it is the facultative referenda that we most urgently need to
put a stop to our now perceived lack of genuine representative
democracy - so very well illustrated by the scandalous
ignoring of the country's wishes in parliament’s infliction
of the anti-smacking legislation.
Yes,
in the call for facultative referenda there all sorts of
obstacles and objections that would be put to this process,
and nearly all politicians will fight it bitterly. However,
there is nothing like an idea whose time has come. Every
single one of these objections has can be and has been
answered. In short, the proof of the pudding is in the eating.
This system works. It works as such a matter of course, that
Swiss politicians (in a country of quite marked racial harmony
with four main languages spoken) are part-time politicians
only, involved in earning a real living such as running a
business, in a profession, in trade, in farming. It is simply
untrue to claim that adopting the 100 Days provision to
provide a scrutiny period, and very likely put a brake on much
of the legislation issuing from parliament would
bring the business of running the country to a stop. What it
pre-eminently does is to prevent the now common hijacking of
the wishes of the majority by determined minorities pushing
for self-advantage or for radicalised political ends. The
Bradford legislation would never have been endorsed by either
of our political parties once the preliminary polling had been
done. They would have had no excuse to persevere with the
costly promoting of legislation that the country indicated
quite firmly it would overwhelmingly reject.
Only
two provisions would need to be applied to the concept of 100
day : the first that the government has power to act in time
of emergency. The second would be an onus on anygovernment
owned-media such as television and broadcasting, and the
state-supported Listener,
to fairly and objectively present both sides of an
issue under debate – requirements almost totally neglected
in the highly politicised claim of anthropogenic global
warming, and in the anti-smacking debate
There
will be time in future articles, and on the new website listed
below, www.100days.co.nz
to confirm the already launched
100 Days -Claiming Back New Zealand
movement, and to both raise and answer inevitably hostile
objections. The silliest of all, possibly, have come from both
Prime Minister John Key and former National Party leader Don
Brash, arguing that binding referenda don't work because of
the situation in California. However, both appear to be
unaware that not only is California the victim of its own
peculiarly idiosyncratic past policies which will be discussed
on this website, but that binding referenda already exist,
with varying degrees of success worldwide, and with growing
interest into how they can be improved.
The
move towards the reinstating of democratic freedoms and
responsibilities is not maverick thinking, but
a growing movement internationally. Two British Conservative
MPs have written a book called The Plan: Twelve Months to
Renew Britain, also containing the 100 Days proposal
to put a stop on government edicts and to allow a
period of public scrutiny - and of either acceptance or
challenge. Most importantly, the final verdict on which way
the country should go with regard to a particular piece of
legislation would - let us say will…
when this battle is won… rest where it should, with
the electorate itself. Yes, the public can get issues wrong,
but the public can take responsibility for these and reverse
its decisions, when need be. Governments frequently get issues
wrong, but trying to persuade them to reverse them can be
compared to Sisyphus pushing
the boulder uphill.
The
100 days – Claiming Back New Zealand
concept can also restore power to ratepayers under the
increasingly problematic authority of top-heavy city council
bureaucracies, and can be used in exactly the same way by
ratepayers to claim back accountability in their own local
communities.
The
state is meant to serve its citizens, not vice versa. As a
recent News Weekly article on this topic pointed out,
blocking referenda are a check on the ambitions of the
political class which now controls and dominates our lives.
Politicians do not relish the prospect of having their bills
very probably and humiliatingly defeated by voters. The
polling beforehand would become axiomatic, and would and will
actually count towards avoiding such an outcome.
This
new movement, The
100 days –Claiming Back Zealand, claiming back our
democracy, is targeted to achieve just this. We need to remind
ourselves that at crucial periods in history, it has often
been an essentially simple idea which has been right for its
time. As G. K. Chesterton has pointed out, “the
simplification of anything is always
sensational” – a concept
the Swiss have long turned to brilliant advantage to become
the most successful democracy in the world.
We
need to remind ourselves, too,
that
simple does not equate to simplistic, that in a true
democracy the deeply flawed concept of leadership cannot be
used to hijack the country's direction. It is the concept of
individual initiative, of individual responsibility - of
people standing up individually to be counted - as are New
Zealanders, increasingly, throughout the country, which offers
the best, in fact the only chance to fight for a true, and
very possible, democracy. And vital to this movement is the
concept of the 100 days to claim back New Zealand.
©
Copyright, Amy
Brooke, 2010
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