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27
September 2009
Down
the Path to Racism
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The recent deal between the Maori Party and National over free
insulation for Maori houses - whereby social assistance will
be based on race, not need - lays a new paving stone on the
path to a country divided by race.
According
to the Maori Party, they have ‘won’ special rights to free
tax-payer funded home insulation for some 2,000 Maori
households in return for supporting National’s Emissions
Trading Scheme Bill to a Select Committee. The deal shows how
institutionalised taxpayer funded Maori privilege has become
and the sort of deals that are done in an MMP Parliament.
This
home insulation deal comes hard on the heels of earlier claims
by the Maori Party that they had ‘won’ increases to
welfare benefits in return for their support of the emissions
trading bill. While this later proved not to be the case, the
fact that such a discussion took place is indicative of the
lengths to which National appears prepared to go to inflict
their harmful carbon trading legislation onto the country.
In
her article “Maori Party laughing all the way to the
bank”, Herald columnist Fran O’Sullivan reveals that the
Maori Party is also involved in a backroom deal with National
to open up previous Treaty settlements to more taxpayer-funded
compensation.[1] This new wave of compensation will be based
on the effect that the emissions trading scheme will have on
the asset value of their land, forestry and fishing
settlements. And such claims will not come cheap - last year
they argued that they could be owed as much as $2 billion if
land, currently in forestry, is prevented by the new emissions
trading legislation from being able to be converted into more
profitable uses.
All
of this begs an obvious question - if Maori are going to be
able to win massive compensation from the government for their
loss of asset value, what does the government intend to do for
non-Maori who face similar substantial losses from this
reckless new tax? Will they be offered similar compensation,
and have such potential taxpayer funded liabilities been
factored into the emissions trading scheme costings?
But
the government’s pandering to Maori interests doesn’t stop
there. National is working with the Maori
Party, Crown Law, and officials on the drafting an amendment
to their emissions trading legislation which will give effect
to the ‘principles’ of the Treaty of Waitangi. Minister
Nick Smith says that the intent of
the amendment is “to require ongoing consultation with Maori
about climate change policy”. That is no-doubt code for a
future where on-going compensation will become a matter of
course. In other words, National may be about to open up yet
another racket for Maori to claim compensation into
perpetuity. History has taught us that this is already a
fraught area with some historic Treaty claims having received
multiple ‘full and final’ settlements, some up to four
times![2]
Let’s
be clear on this point. The racist agenda that is currently
being imposed on the country by a group of radical Maori is
the result of MMP. Under MMP a party that won just 2.4 percent
of the popular vote is able to wield influence far in excess
of its public support. And the irony is that it is the
National Party that is in the driving seat - a Party that has
long been opposed to not only MMP, but to the Maori seats
themselves.
Inserting
clauses into legislation to give effect to the
‘principles’ of the Treaty of Waitangi has been regarded
as problematic since the practice first began in 1986. In that
year the Labour government inserted into section 9 of the
State-Owned Enterprises Act a clause that stated, “Nothing
in this act shall permit the Crown to act in a manner that is
inconsistent with the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi”.
By failing to carefully define what these principles are,
Parliament allowed Judges and those administering the law to
interpret the Treaty principles in whatever way they liked. It
was this failure by Parliament to define its terms, and the
consequential activism by Judges, that has given rise to the
concept of the Treaty as a partnership between Maori and the
Crown, with Maori as a superior ruling class.[3]
In
fact, the Treaty of Waitangi itself has no standing in law. It
was an agreement signed in 1840 by Maori and the Crown that
gave New Zealand a sovereign, that established private
property rights, and that ensured that all New Zealand
subjects are equal and protected by British law. The force of
the Treaty arises whenever it is included in Statute.
A
case in point is the highly controversial decision of the New
Zealand Geographic Board to insert an “h” into the
official name of Wanganui. The Board is governed by
legislation that contains a very specific Treaty of Waitangi
clause: Section 6 states, that in order to recognise and
respect the Crown’s responsibility to take appropriate
account of the Treaty of Waitangi, the
Board is encouraged to use original Maori names of
geographic features on official charts and official maps.[4]
In other words, the Board is not only directed to use Maori
names whenever possible, but it is also encouraged to seek
advice from the Maori Language Commission, which will of
course recommend Maori names.
There
was a similar controversy to the Wanganui case in Whangarei a
few years ago over the name of the local mountain, Mt
Parahaki. The Geographic Board supported local Maori who
claimed the name had been wrongly spelt and that it should
have been Mt Parihaka. While the historical evidence from maps
and records showed that the original name was correct and had
always been correct, the name was changed anyway. In this
case, history was re-written and the wishes of the vast
majority of locals counted for nothing.
Treaty
expert and law lecturer David Round, this week’s NZCPR Guest
Commentator, looks at the debate over the name of Wanganui and
the wider issues it raises:
“In
fact the arguments over the h mirror so many of the arguments
we are having over race and the Treaty. In this particular
controversy we see the whole world in miniature. This is not
just an argument over one letter; it is another battle in the
war that has been tearing us apart for a generation, and the
arguments are strangely familiar.
“In
itself, of course, the argument is
over something absolutely trivial.
But at this point we have to agree with Michael Laws in
his reply to the Maori schoolchildren of Otaki… To focus on
the h and ignore the crime rate, for example, is to choose to
see Maori as oppressed innocents and ignore brutal reality.
“This
is a mirror of our society. There is no doubt that Maori are
vastly over-represented in all the wrong statistics ~
illiteracy, school truancy, delinquency, domestic violence,
crime and prison occupancy, drug abuse, unemployment, poverty,
single parenthood… Yet what preoccupies Maori leaders and
the news media? Pointless and destructive arguments over what
exactly the vague words of the Treaty can cover 169 years
later, and over one letter in one word. We concentrate on the
tiny things and ignore that elephant standing in our
living-room. To raise the other issues would be a racist
diversion from the ‘real issue’ of white oppression.
“The
school claims that these letters were the children’s own
idea, but I am afraid I have my doubts.
Busy-body teachers anxious to indoctrinate their
charges in politically-correct thought are not unknown
elsewhere. Enlisting children in ones political causes is not
a wholesome thing to do. It is the kidnapping, one might
almost say the corruption of young minds. It may be inevitable
that our parents transmit their opinions to us; we expect
well-paid self-styled professionals to be rather more
professional. We respected teachers when they kept their
political opinions to themselves and taught their pupils how
to read and write. Now many teachers seem unable to accomplish
any of these basic tasks. To judge by what their pupils say,
much of the ‘history’ taught in our schools seems merely a
contemplation of the innocence and pacifism of the primitive
Maori and the beastliness and worthlessness of the white man
and his civilisation”. To read the full article click
here >>>
In
an NZCPR article in 2008, History Professor Paul Moon
described how ‘historical revisionism’
suppresses the truth of history, and he described the accusations
of racism and calls for his resignation
that resulted from his publication of a book about
the violent and widespread practice of Maori cannibalism.[5]
Without a doubt the impetus to re-write New Zealand history is
tied to the emergence of the
Waitangi
grievance industry, a brainchild of Labour Governments, which
set up the Waitangi Tribunal in 1975 to deal with contemporary
Treaty grievances and extended the jurisdiction in 1985 to
cover historical claims going back to 1840.
As
a result of these developments historical accounts of New
Zealand’s past, especially those relating to the issue of
first settlement, have undergone a dramatic sanitization over
recent years. In particular, stories that used to be taught in
schools of Moriori as Melanesian pre-Maori settlers of the
mainland, who were conquered and then driven to the remote
Chatham Islands by the far more 'aggressive' Maori, have all
but disappeared, in spite of claims by some Moriori
descendents that indeed their history long pre-dates that of
Maori.
In
fact, there is now growing scientific evidence of human
habitation in New Zealand over a thousand years earlier than
the great Maori migration is estimated to have occurred. In
“The timing of the human discovery and colonization of New
Zealand”, the University of Waikato’s Deputy Vice
Chancellor Professor Douglas Sutton and Massey University’s
Professor John Flenley combine with other archeologists to
argue that the evidence found in charcoal particles, pollen
spore records, mitochondrial Moa DNA, and the bones of Rattus
Exulans (the Polynesian rat, which
was closely associated with early human migration) points to
human settlement in New Zealand more than 1,000 years before
the great migration is reputed to have taken place around 1200
AD.[6]
This,
and other research, highlights that fact that the settlement
of New Zealand was most likely a continuous process, which
makes claims of an ‘indigenous’ population - deserving of
special treatment by government - all the more absurd. By its
definition, indigenous peoples are those “originating in and
characteristic of a particular region or country”. New
Zealand’s early settlers arrived by canoes over a period of
hundreds if not thousands of years. Later settlers came by
ship. Today they come by plane. All New Zealanders were
originally migrants and should be treated as equals by the
government.
This
week’s poll asks: Do you support the
government giving out social assistance based on race? Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Fran
O’Sullivan, Maori
Party
laughing all the way to the bank
2.Muriel Newman, Too
Much Secrecy
3.David Round, Are
Non-Maori Second Class Citizens?
4.New
Zealand Geographic Board Act 2008
5.Paul Moon, Cannibalism
too unpalatable for some
6.John Flenley et al, The
timing of the human discovery and colonization of New Zealand
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