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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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There
is a growing consensus amongst western leaders that policies
and practices that divide citizens along ethnic and cultural
lines are immensely damaging to societies and nations. British
Prime Minister David Cameron, along with German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Dutch Prime
Minister Mark Rutte, and former Prime Ministers - John Howard
of Australia, Jose Aznar of Spain, and Yves Leterme of Belgium
- have all condemned multiculturalism as a failed policy that
undermines national identity, promoting separatism and
extremism.
Multiculturalism
is a doctrine based on the flawed notion that different
cultures can co-exist side by side within communities, each
retaining their own separate identity to create parallel
societies. This contrasts with the traditional understanding
that nations can only function cohesively if all the different
groups within a society adapt to the cultural values of the
society at large, to work together in the national interest.
It has taken more than thirty years for elected leaders to
realise that the increasing demands for separatist schools,
medical facilities, legal systems, and political
representation by different ethnic groups is creating
divisions and unrest so deep that they have weakened the
foundations of national identity and created a serious threat
to national security.
In
a speech to a security conference last year, British Prime
Minister David Cameron declared that organisations that
promoted separatism should not be tolerated. He made it clear
that they should be denied access to public funds and barred
from spreading their message in public institutions.
“Let's properly judge these organisations”, he
said. “Do they believe in universal human rights? Do they
believe in equality of all before the law? Do they believe in
democracy? Do they encourage integration or separatism? These
are the sorts of questions we need to ask. Fail these tests
and the presumption should be not to engage with such
organisations”.[1]
Western
leaders are now making fundamental changes to promote
community cohesion, shared values and a strong national
identity. In line with such objectives, they are withdrawing
state support from those who preach separatism, standing firm
against accusations of intolerance and racism. Instead of
encouraging difference and division, their new focus is on
celebrating unity.
Here
in New Zealand, the policies and practices that create deep
divisions within our society are not so much related to
multiculturalism as biculturalism. Biculturalism is a myth
based on the faulty premise that a nation can be unified if
two separate peoples of different cultures live side by side.
The advocates of biculturalism are pushing for a separatist
future - one land with two peoples and two laws. Their
ultimate ambition is a nation of self-governing tribes.
Tragically
for New Zealand there is even a chance that they may achieve
this goal – if complacency allows them to. If the Maori
Party can convince the National Party to support a new New
Zealand Constitution based on the Treaty of Waitangi - as is
likely to be recommended by the biased government
constitutional review panel - such a constitution would create
a new governing class, which would enable the separatist goal
of iwi to become a reality.
And
in response to those who say National would never do that,
just remember, that’s what we all said about the foreshore
and seabed. We thought National would never repeal Crown
ownership, yet here we are fighting a laborious battle to
restore it through a citizens’ initiated referendum – the
public’s rights and views ignored as the party put politics
and self-interest ahead of the national interest.
Underpinning
the whole notion of biculturalism is the existence of a
distinct race of people to claim that status. The problem for
biculturalists is that rapid inter-marriage, has blurred the
boundaries between races. Even the claim that Maori make up 15
percent of the population is a gross exaggeration. Statistics
New Zealand explains that the way Maori statistics are
reported was altered in the mid-seventies when government
definitions were changed from being based on ancestry and
blood quantum (someone had to be half-caste or more to be
classified as Maori), to be based on ethnic affiliation and
self-identification. Simon Chapple, a Senior Research Analyst
with the Department of Labour, explains the impication: “In
the 1996 census there were 273,693 New Zealanders who
identified ethnically as Maori and Maori only. In addition to
this, there were 250,338 New Zealanders who identified as
members of another ethnic group, usually Pakeha/European, and
also as Maori. Currently Statistics New Zealand’s official
policy is to arbitrarily classify mixed ethnicity individuals
who have Maori as one of their ethnic groups as Maori and not
as the other group or groups to which they also belong. This
sole plus mixed group is the Maori ethnic group as officially
measured. In addition the 1996 census reveals another 56,343
New Zealanders with Maori ancestry but who do not identify
ethnically as Maori. Adding these ancestry-but-not ethnicity
people gives around 580,374 Maori in 1996.”
He
suggested that a more accurate measure would be to retain half
of those classified as Maori as part of the Maori ethnic
group, with the rest allocated to a non-Maori groups using
their other primary stated ethnicity.[2] Using this approach,
the ‘Maori’ population would reduce to just over 7
percent, less than the population of Asian New Zealanders and
Pacific Island New Zealanders, highlighting the folly of the
bicultural agenda.
Associate
Professor of Education at Auckland University, Dr Elizabeth
Rata, has long warned about the dangers of biculturalism
explaining that it was driven by left wing activists who were
seeking an alternative to traditional class politics in the
seventies. As part of a group identity politics agenda - that
also encompassed feminism and gay rights - she explains that
many ‘biculturalists’ moved into positions of power and
influence in the education and health professions, social
services, and government circles, as public servants and
politicians, bringing with them their commitment to identity
politics: “Victimhood was subsequently understood as
oppression by colonisation, the patriarchy, and ‘Western’
culture generally, an oppression experienced by ethnic groups,
indigenous peoples, women, gays, and religious minorities’
rather than the capitalist exploitation of working class
people.”[3]
Their
influence is without question. Policies promoting
biculturalism have led to separate Maori education systems,
separate Maori health funding and care, separate welfare
through Whanau Ora, separate Maori housing schemes, separate
Maori justice procedures, separate Maori government
departments and tribunals, along with the maintenance of a
separate Maori electoral roll and separate Maori seats in
Parliament. In local government, there is separate Maori
representation through a range of special reserved seats,
liaison committees, and advisory groups.
Then
there are special Maori-only consultation rights under the
Resource Management Act, and special co-management rights for
rivers, parks and parts of the coastline. There are even
separate tax rates for Maori - in 2006 the Labour government
changed the law to allow the commercial arm of Maori tribes to
be granted charitable exemptions so they don’t have to pay
income tax on business profits. This is in addition to the
long-standing special tax status of Maori authorities which
pay 19.5 percent, a lower rate than other businesses, which
pay 28 percent. This has tilted the playing field in favour of
Maori business interests, which are estimated to have a
combined asset base of $37 billion.
The point is that the push for more privilege is relentless.
The Maori Party wants to restructure “the Justice System
upon the basis of the Treaty of Waitangi and the foundation of
partnership”, and it intends introducing ‘cultural
competency’ across the whole of the public sector. With its
eye on the compulsory teaching of the Maori language, their
drive for separate authority and influence is without end. It
is just as Elizabeth Rata warned - the bicultural movement has
been captured by Maori separatists who want nothing less than
the incorporation of tribal authority into governance
processes. “The bicultural movement in New Zealand has been
a mistake, that is subverting democracy, erecting ethnic
boundaries between Maori and non-Maori and promoting a
cultural elite within Maoridom.”[4]
I
asked the University of Canterbury’s Constitutional Law
Specialist David Round, this week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator,
to share with readers his views on New Zealand’s culture and
whether we are - or could ever be – a true multicultural or
bicultural nation. In his insightful way, David explains that
biculturalism is impossible:
“A society cannot be bicultural. If two cultures allegedly
co-exist within it, then one will be the prevailing culture,
and the other can be at best mere ornamentation and
affectation. In the same way, no individual can have two
cultures. One cannot live ~ which is what culture is ~ by two
completely different set of rules and cultural values and
attitudes. It is impossible. Certain Maori dream, obviously,
of having the best of both worlds ~ of enjoying everything
that the West has brought them while at the same time still
somehow being authentically ‘Maori’. That cannot be done.
A man cannot serve two masters. A culture is all of a piece. A
human being may live this way or that way, but he cannot live
both ways at once. You cannot enjoy all the comforts of the
West, reading and electricity and health care and television
and motor-cars and a money economy, and at the same time be
culturally Maori. Your Maoriness is shallow play-acting. It is
dishonest. By all means revere your ancestors and treasure
certain elements of their now-extinct way of life. But in all
honesty, admit that you are now different.”
David
ends his commentary with a clear statement of fact: “We have
only one prevailing culture here in New Zealand ~ a culture
not ‘European’, not ‘Maori’, but our own, the
consequence of these peoples, and now newer ones, living and
growing together in this unique place. That is as it should
be. While respecting genuine inherited difference, we should
be striving to meld those differences into one greater
national whole. That is the only way we will survive as a
nation. A house divided against itself cannot stand.” To
read David’s article The
Myth of Biculturalism, please click here
>>>
So
where to from here? While other Western Leaders have realised
that their futures lie in national cohesion, unity of purpose
and shared values and vision, our leaders seem intent on
jumping to the tune of the biculturalists. With their façade
of aggression and sharp tongues at the ready to call any
critic a racist, for too long good people have remained
silent.
Well
the time has come when remaining silent is no longer
an option. At present a minority group of influential mixed
race New Zealanders are trying to dictate a race-based future
for this country. It is time those who usually remain silent
found their voice. As David Cameron said, it is time to
withdraw state funding from institutions that divide us
instead of uniting us. It is time to turn our backs on
extremist groups. It is time to speak our mind and condemn
people who seek to disrupt the unity of our great country.
Change
will not happen overnight, but happen it must. New Zealand
needs a new direction where everyone can work towards a common
purpose. We need to recapture the pride in being Kiwis that
has eluded us for far too long. And while we are at it, we
need to change our official Census Form so we can take
pleasure in identifying ourselves as New Zealanders,
irrespective of our background! We need to look
forward to a new future as one people.
This week’s poll asks: Is
it time to end state funded biculturalism?
Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes:
1.David
Cameron, State
multiculturalism has failed
2.Simon Chapple, Maori
socio-economic disparity
3. Rata,
E. (2008) Educating for Citizenship in a Bicultural Society,
In St George, A. Brown, S. & J. O’Neill (Eds.) Facing
the Big Questions in Education: Purpose, Power and Learning,
(pp. 51-62) Melbourne: Cengage
Learning. ISBN: 9780170137393.
4.NZ
Herald, Tough
talker on tribal issues
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