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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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Our
society has its fair share of charlatans. They come in many
different guises. Some use the mantle of environmentalism.
Greenpeace has been campaigning against asset sales on the
basis that profits might go offshore. Yet their annual report
shows that last year they sent almost a quarter of the $8
million they collected from the donations of New Zealanders offshore to their international body!
Others have used the cloak of tribalism to persuade
successive governments to transfer, for their own private
purposes, enormous wealth and power from the public of New
Zealand. Masquerading as servants of their peoples, an elite
group of tribal leaders, assisted by advocates in many
different areas of public life - politics, the media, the
state service, academia - have persuaded governments to give
them public riches they do not deserve. Today they are
claiming the ownership of New Zealand’s water. Last year
they were given the right to make secret deals for the
ownership of our mineral-rich foreshore and seabed. Before
that, the Clark Government gave them a slice of the
electromagnetic spectrum – hardly something that tribal
leaders could claim they “owned” at the time of the
signing of the Treaty.
This current claim for water is nothing but an
extortionate claim for free shares in the about-to-be floated
state owned enterprises. It follows hard on the heels of
demands for the ownership of New Zealand’s plants and
animals, including their genetic codes. The Wai 262 Flora and
Fauna claim is still awaiting the government’s response.
If we look ahead, judging by the present tribal protest
action over exploration rights for minerals, and oil and gas,
corporate iwi are no doubt readying themselves for new claims.
This time it will be for the ownership of all of New
Zealand’s minerals, along with another attempt to gain
control of the country’s reserves of oil and gas.
And let’s not forget what could be regarded as one of
the tribal elite’s greatest victories - the Maori Party’s
success in persuading John Key’s government that secretly
signing New Zealand up to the United Nations’ Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples to potentially give
self-defined “indigenous” groups special governance powers
and rights above those of every other citizen, was in the best
interest of New Zealand. To her credit, then Prime Minister
Helen Clark stood her ground and rejected all such advances a
few years earlier. She could see the inevitable consequences.
It is not beyond the bounds of comprehension that there
will be a claim for the ownership of the air we all breathe,
and perhaps there will even be a proposed levy on all citizens
who cannot claim Maori heritage - for the privilege of living
in “their” country.
Are such things as claims for the air we breathe fanciful?
Not if politicians continue to put the interests of an
ill-defined racial group ahead of the rights of all New
Zealanders. The fact is that if the wider public continues to
sheepishly accept these outrageous race-based deals by the
ruling party, then our rights as New Zealand citizens will
continue to be trampled by self-serving deal-making
politicians.
It appears that the New Zealand public has been somewhat
conditioned into acquiescence by the tactics of the iwi elite.
Firstly they use the publicly funded and outrageously biased
Waitangi Tribunal to deliver favourable decisions based on
their fabricated versions of history - complete, as we are now
hearing, with evidence based on taniwhas and other forms of
pagan spiritualty. If the government refuses to accept the
Tribunal’s resolutions – which, fortunately, are not
binding – the demands are then transferred into the court
system using legal aid to fight any opposition to the highest
level. In doing this they rely on eventually striking activist
Judges who support the elevation of Maori rights. Going by
past history, there now seems to be no lack of such advocates.
The public of course, find such tactics bewildering. It is
difficult to understand some judicial decisions, let alone
have the confidence to criticise them. Those that do speak out
against Maori rights arguments are usually accused of racism.
As a result, the public has been increasingly cowed into
silence and opposition to outrageous developments is now
muted.
But the problem is that unless New Zealanders step up and
pressure the government through public opinion to recognise
that that the only legitimate option is to act in the best
interest of all
citizens, we are heading towards a two-tiered society
dominated by tribal influence and racial division. It is
hardly the model of a modern democratic nation striving to
succeed in a global world.
In considering iwi claims to water and all other public
resources, the point that is largely overlooked is the fact
that these claims can only have real legitimacy if tribal
leaders can convince the government that they represent a
group of citizens who are separate from all other New
Zealanders. In spite of their desire to depict themselves as
being separate, Maori clearly are not. They are as much a part
of the general population as anyone else. Rapid intermarriage
over the last 200 years means that tribal populations are no
longer distinct – they are all of mixed race.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is Dr Elizabeth
Rata, an Associate Professor of Education at Auckland
University, who has spent her career exposing how bicultural
policies, aimed at better social justice outcomes for
disadvantaged Maori, have subverted democracy and led to the
formation of a powerful and wealthy elite within Maoridom. In
her article she explains that the notion that there are two
separate peoples in New Zealand is a political fabrication
that should be rejected:
“To claim that there are two separate ‘peoples’
each with rights to ‘public’ resources under the control
of separate political entities is the fundamental
flaw in the iwi case. It deserves rebuttal. Despite the
insistence on a primordial difference, Maori and non-Maori are
not two distinctive peoples with that distinctiveness
justifying separate political categories. At present ‘New
Zealand’ is the political entity and its public are all the
nation’s citizens. This means that citizenship, not tribal
membership, is the political category. All New Zealanders
belong to this national category. Yet the iwi strategy of a
separate people, aligned with the equally effective strategy
of ‘partnership’, is powerful politics.”
Dr Rata blames the politicians who foolishly gave
political power to what is effectively an elite lobby group of
Maori business corporations, for the predicament we are in
today. Their unrelenting greed for money and power is now
threatening the very future of New Zealand.
So what is the basis of the claim by tribal leaders
that they are a separate group that deserve separate powers
and rights above those of all other New Zealanders?
They use the first settler argument, of course, to
claim that because they were early immigrants they should have
special rights. So what? Every
New Zealander has immigrant roots – in the early days our
ancestors all arrived by sea; now it’s mostly by air. New
Zealand has no “indigenous” racial group in the way that
some countries have tribes that can trace their origins back
to almost the beginning of mankind, with little outside
intermarriage. There are no such ‘first peoples’ in New
Zealand, just immigrants.
Another myth perpetrated by tribal leaders is that the
first settlers ‘owned’ the whole county. This is totally
illogical and a complete fabrication. New Zealand’s small
population did not “own” the whole country. In the days
before private property rights were established by the rule of
law, people “owned” what they could defend. Common areas
like mountains and wilderness areas, the foreshore and seabed,
rivers and lakes, were not “owned” by anyone but were used
by all. The same goes for resources - minerals, the sea, the
air, our water, wild animals and plants, and other common
goods.
It is this reality that makes the Maori Council claim for
water such a complete and utter farce - especially when the
evidence of an ownership right is based on the existence of
taniwha. The Herald reports that the Maori Council's lawyer
Felix Geiringer told the Waitangi Tribunal that a belief that
taniwha were the guardians of waterways is evidence
that Maori believed they 'owned' the water: "People say
'in this resource is my taniwha, my guardian spirit. He
protects me, he protects my water resource. He's not your
taniwha so if you are going to use that resource without my
permission, he will do terrible things to you'. It's not a
joke, it's a very strong indication that hapu was telling the
world that this was their water resource and it couldn't be
used by anyone else without their permission. That is the very
essence of a proprietary relationship.''
But such nonsense doesn’t stop there. Why for example do
Maori have to be specially consulted over every consent
application under the Resource Management Act? Why do they
have special rights over the gathering of seafood instead of
being bound by the same rules as everyone else? Why do they
have special rights to dead whales - which are hardly
indigenous creatures - to
the point of being able to prevent legitimate scientific
analysis of the cause of stranding and death? Why do they have
the exclusive right to greenstone?
While these are undoubtedly vexed issues, more troubling
developments are now underway, that threaten the very
foundation of New Zealand’s democracy. Thanks to the Maori
Party, a $4 million government-funded project is now being
rolled out to replace our existing constitutional arrangements
and the sovereignty of Parliament, with a new written
constitution based on the Treaty of Waitangi as supreme law.
Dr
Rata has been watching the progress of this review and
believes “The threat of a race-based constitution in New Zealand
is now very real”. She ends her excellent article, New
Zealand Constitution: Why iwi have got it wrong, with this: “There is still only one New Zealand public. There is still
one New Zealand government, however compromised it has allowed
itself to become. If the value of a single constituted New
Zealand public is not understood and protected, it is possible
that a new constitution will recognise a race-based polity
with an, as yet, unknown degree of power. At that point the
fundamental
incompatibility of the racial tribe with democracy will be too
obvious to ignore but too entrenched to resist. The loser will
be democracy. It will also be New Zealand.” To read the full
article - which includes details of Dr Rata’s new book, The
Politics of Knowledge in Education, please click here>>>
There are not two separate people in New Zealand as the Maori
elite try to claim. We are now a country of many different
people of different backgrounds and beliefs united by the fact
that we are New Zealanders first. If we are to forge a
successful future, we must have a strong belief in ourselves
and our country. It is time the politics of division - which
the political class has imposed onto our country – is put
behind us once and for all. We are all New Zealanders and that
is all there is to it. Anyone who doesn’t like that fact,
should leave.
This
week’s poll asks: Should
tribal corporations get any special treatment regarding the sale of
shares in Mighty River Power? Click here for poll >>>
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