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David
Round
David
Round teaches law at the University of Canterbury and is author of
"Truth or Treaty? Commonsense Questions about the Treaty of
Waitangi".
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
We
get the government we deserve
David
Round
17
September 2012
As
well as the better-known physical earthquakes, Canterbury
received another sort of shake-up in 2010, when Parliament
made the Environment Canterbury (Temporary Commissioners and
Improved Water Management) Act 2010. (‘Environment
Canterbury’ is the name under which the Canterbury Regional
Council publicly operates. How I loathe these public relations
names! The very name ‘Canterbury Regional Council’ gives
us a fair idea of its status and scope. But ‘Environment
Canterbury’ could be anything ~ a drain-cleaning company, or
one for sewage collection or plantation forestry or selling
heat pumps or…anything.
The National Roads Board ~ we all knew at once what that did.
But ‘Transit New Zealand’ might easily be a private
trucking or bus or haulage or rail company. ‘New Zealand On
Air’….But I digress.) It was under this 2010 Act, anyway,
that the government dismissed the elected councillors of the
Canterbury Regional Council and replaced them with temporary
commissioners. The government has just announced an extension
to the term of office of those appointed commissioners;
elections will not be held for Regional Councillors until 2016
at the earliest.
A
good case can be made out that the real reason the elected
councillors were dismissed was not that the Council was
‘dysfunctional’, as alleged, but that its approach to
water issues, in particular, was not pleasing to the
government and some of its influential supporters. Certainly
the Act does a great deal more than just allow for the
dismissal of councillors ~ indeed, councillors could be
dismissed under other legislation, it was not necessary to
make a new Act just to do that.
A great deal of the Act deals with water and makes specific
rules for Canterbury which are different from those prevailing
everywhere else in the country. I will concede that the new
more co-operative approach to water allocation does seem to be
something of an improvement, and I certainly understand that
Environment Canterbury staff find their relationships with the
commissioners generally better than past relationships with
elected councillors. But at the same time water conservation
orders, for example ~ and their revocation! ~ are to be dealt
with under rules much less sympathetic to conservation than is
the ordinary law.
Now
we must admit that for most of us, living in cities and not
involved in irrigation or various other outdoor activities,
regional councils do not usually impinge all that much upon
our day to day lives. In Christchurch’s case, also, the
earthquakes have tended to demand most of our attention, and
cause all other matters to be put to one side. All the same,
regional councils can affect our lives in many ways, and it
has to be a matter of concern when a government decrees that
for some years henceforth ~ and who knows how long it will end
up being? ~ democracy in any part of our structure of
government is no longer in operation, and government nominees
will run a public body with extensive public powers. There has
been some comment in the Press
on the just-announced further postponement of elections, but
not a great deal; and that is worrying. How much do we value
democracy? I am sorry to say that I sometimes wonder if many
of our countrymen value it much at all. They might well
consider that a warm bed and food on the table are much more
pressing concerns; although in the long run, and even in the
short-term, decisions made by governments can have very
far-reaching effects on our own domestic lives.
Sometimes
institutions are overthrown by force. At other times, though,
they just fade away because no-one, or not enough people
anyway, seem to care. Democratic rights can go that way. It
has often been observed that at various times in history the
popular right to attend assemblies has been regarded not as a
precious right to be carefully guarded, but as a burdensome
duty which men would very often avoid if they could. Every New
Zealand election, now, a significant and increasing number of
voters cannot be bothered, just once every three years,
getting off their lazy backsides to travel (in most cases)
five minutes at the most, in order to exercise a right which
our ancestors dreamt of and struggled for for centuries. I
despair, sometimes, of the apathy of our countrymen. Part of
the reason may be the loss of our sense of community, as we
become much more isolated individuals, all in our own homes
being fed the same diet of thought-suppressing television
entertainment, sitting in front of computers; driving to work
in our own motorcars; part of the
reason also is that, as we say of a child who refuses
to eat the good food put in front of it, we are ‘too well
fed’; our lives are still so comfortable (and discontents
are so easily numbed by the mindless distractions of
television, the pathetic religion of professional sport, and
the rest) that we are just too comfortable to care. But
whatever the reason, our apathy is worrying. People, it is
said, get the governments they deserve. The appalling
dictatorships of less fortunate countries are not just
accidents; they inevitably have their foundations in the
character of those societies ~ in their bitter divisions,
selfishness and shortsightedness and lack of self-control, and
in traditions of absolute rule. In Russia or Nazi Germany,
Mali or the Middle East, the appalling governments we behold
are, in a very rough and ready way, the natural expression of
the peoples they rule. Well, the rule is true of us also; and
as we ourselves change, so our system of government changes
also. As we soften, so we will be more put upon.
The
liberal democratic regime which we take for granted is a plant
of very slow growth. It is also a plant that, like all others,
must be tended, and which without tending may wither and die.
This, perhaps, is another reason for our apathy; we assume
that, having attained a pretty high standard of good
government, we can leave it to carry on without further
attention. But no ~ the rule applies to us as much as to
anyone else that ‘the price of liberty is eternal
vigilance’. Just as much as does the United States of
America, we believe in our own ‘exceptionalism’. We assume
that we are somehow exempt from the laws of
history; that nothing can ever go wrong here; that our
own ‘innocence’ (and that too is
a myth; we are human beings like everyone else ~ even
Maori ~ and not exempt from the usual human flaws) will always
protect us. So we venture carelessly on, following any casual
impulse or fad. We justify our attitude by saying that we are
‘the social laboratory of the world’. We forget that not
all laboratory experiments succeed. The failures and
disasters, of course, are equally instructive.
We
get the governments we deserve. Our political class is
unimpressive. On Treaty matters they are all either spineless
appeasers (National, Labour, United Future, Greens) insincere
opportunists (New Zealand First) or greedy bullies (Maori,
Mana). As for John Banks…well, dear me. But on no other
matters are they any or much better. Our prosperity and our
economic prospects
have been going down the gurgler since the 1970s, and no party
has any idea what to do about it. National, Labour, Greens ~
do you ~ do they themselves ~ seriously believe for a second
that they have any answer? They are unimpressive; and yet,
they do no more than represent an increasingly unimpressive
and hopeless people.
Do
I have the answer? Well, it would be a strange thing if I did
where no-one else has any idea, but I suggest that the answer
has to arise out of our own character and attitudes as a
nation. Our crisis is one of character. We are in the
situation we are in because of the sort of
people we are. Any solution must spring out of our own
energy and faith in ourselves, out of a shared understanding
of the world and of our hopes for the future, and out of a
sense of brotherhood and sisterhood which impels us to care
for each other but which also impels those who are cared for
to desire that they pull their weight in striving for the
common good. ‘Without vision the people perish.’ Most of
all, we must have faith in ourselves. We must not believe that
the world owes us a living, and that a saviour lurks somewhere
ready to help us, be that saviour an over-mighty state, an
ideology of capitalism or communism, or rescue from overseas,
be it by overseas ‘investment
and asset sales or
just continued immigration. We must rely on ourselves, and we
must stop snarling at each other, and get up and do something.
This is more easily said than done, of course. I remember an
observation that ‘the trouble with saying ‘you’ve just
got to snap out of it’ is that the sort of people you say it
to are the sort of people who can’t’! But there is no
other way.
The
Treaty and race debates which have been tearing this
country apart for a
generation, which have been promoted by the dimwits in the
bureaucracy and intelligentsia, and the hapless mainstream
churches desperate to prove their own relevance, and which
politicians have been too stupid or unprincipled to resist ~
these debates have not only promoted immensely harmful
divisions but have been among the greatest of diversions from
this great task.
Indeed, the official philosophy, not just of racial agitators
but of the bureaucratic class itself, seems to involve the
assumption that accepting radical Maori claims will not only
automatically be for the benefit of the country but that it
will actually solve our problems, and set us on a sure path to
brotherhood and prosperity. Really, they should review their
medication.
As
you will know by now, a Nga Puhi sub-tribe is now making a
Waitangi Tribunal claim for Maori to earn a dividend for the
use of wind for commercial electricity generation.’ The
reasoning behind this, according to the news reports, is
merely that the wind, like water, is a ‘resource’ and
therefore Maori must have a ‘dividend’; there is, so far,
not even lip-service paid to the sham of Treaty
‘principles’, although doubtless the claim will be
officially adorned in that dress when officially presented to
the Tribunal. Bear in mind, of course, that all windfarms are
erected with the full consent of landowners ~ the situation is
not one where landowners have windfarms imposed on them
without compensation, but one where windfarms have been built
on private land with the full consent of those private
landowners, to whom rent is paid. A
Maori columnist in the Christchurch Press
suggests that the wind claim may not actually be serious,
and that it is unlikely that it will be taken seriously by the
Tribunal. Possibly so; and in fairness we must certainly agree
that the Tribunal has only received the claim, not heard it
and found in its favour. But I would not stake my entire
fortune on the Tribunal’s rejection of the claim. The
Tribunal, after all, based its ‘finding’ that Maori were
entitled to radio waves, part of the electromagnetic spectrum,
on the fact that Maori navigated by the light of the
stars, which were also part of the spectrum! You
navigate by the light of the stars, therefore you are entitled
to radio waves. I do not see that it is any more absurd to
argue that you sailed by the power of the wind, therefore you
are entitled to a share in windfarms.
In
any case, there is a certain appropriateness about the claim
for the wind. The claim is just for a commercial use of wind,
but if it should be the case that Maori do have some right to
the air then that right would not, in principle, be just to
commercial use of the air, but to all uses. And we all use the
air, to stay alive. Maori now are claiming then, that they
have a right to the very air which we breathe and which
sustains life itself. That
being so, we would be under an obligation to pay them a rental
just for the right to remain alive. Put like that, the claim
sounds absurd; but it is really no more than the logical
continuation of the pathetic arse-licking by which our craven
political class ~ Labour, National, the whole pack of useless
cowardly swine, our smiling members of parliament, lovely
people every last one of them, always ready with a smile and a
kind word ~ has sold us down the river for a generation. Down
with them all.
Yes,
they may be nice people, most of them, superficially at any
rate. You have to be to succeed as a politician. But we do not
put them there to be nice, we put them there to fulfil their
promises and act on our wishes.
And do they do that? No. And why would they change
their ways unless we make it quite clear that we have had
enough of their lies and treachery? Until just a little while
ago, water ownership was not an issue in New Zealand; and the
law was clear (as it still is) that water is owned by the
Crown. But the lovely people in the National Party have with
singular ineptitude managed to engineer another enormous
division, a completely new source of bitterness in our
increasingly divided society. It is deeply ironic that John
Key is now being praised for standing up to Maori, because it
was John Key who created this whole fiasco in the first place.
National’s stupidity has ended up by uniting Maori ~ a rare
thing indeed, and a dangerous one ~ and by convincing Maori
that they own water. That is what the Maori king has just said
at his recent national hui ~ and so from now on attempts to
assert public ownership of water for the common good will be
interpreted by increasing numbers of Maori as the theft of
something that is already theirs. Who is to blame for this?
Every single National Party M.P. These are the same MPs who,
believe it or not, campaigned at the last election on a
promise to end racial separatism. Well, either they are liars
or they are fools, because it is not happening.
You
may think these words excessively harsh. I’m sorry, but they
are not. If you think they are excessively harsh ~ and if you
do not tell your MPs, of all parties, in fact ~ what you think
of their stupidity, dishonesty and racism, then you ~ yes,
you, my friend ~ are part of the problem.
We get the government we deserve. I could practically
guarantee that if every one of you, reading this column, and
agreeing with me, were to phone your MP regularly, and tell
him or her precisely what you thought, we would make a
difference. We read these columns, we moan to each other, but
we don’t moan to the people who matter. It is very nice of
you to e-mail me, or telephone me, as some of you do ~ and I
do appreciate it! ~ but do not do it any more. Telephone your
Members of Parliament. Make appointments to see them. (Don’t
bother joining their parties and ‘radicalising from
within’; ordinary rank and file members of all political
parties are just 
unpaid fundraisers and cheerleaders,
whose
views receive very little respect.) Tell
them exactly what you think of
them and their policies. Don’t just do this once. Make their
lives a misery. That is what they are doing to ours, after
all. They are running our country into the ground. And, after
all, Maori are making their lives a misery. That is actually
why Maori are succeeding, because they
are actually out there complaining, while we just sit at home
and get angry in private. So ~ get up, and do something.
Don’t be daunted; don’t put up with you M.P.’s
condescension and racism. STOP BEING NICE. We
are at war. At present ~ long may it continue ~ words are our
weapons. For heaven’s sake, use them. Muriel & I and the
handful of other people who write and do things cannot do it
all by ourselves. If you ~ yes, you ~ do not act, then you
have only yourself to blame for the consequences.
*The
NZCPR has launched a DECLARATION OF EQUALITY: There shall be one
law for all New Zealanders with no special treatment based on race…
To read about it and sign the petition please visit
www.ConstitutionalReview.org.
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