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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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Jobs
and higher incomes are the reasons usually given for
increasing numbers of New Zealanders crossing the ditch to
settle in Australia. A net 40,000 moved there in the year to
the end of August. While greener pastures are undoubtedly a
key factor, it is highly likely that racial issues are also
causing the flight of Kiwis. Weary of a political environment
that encourages an aggressive mixed-race minority to make
unreasonable demands against taxpayers, fed-up Kiwis have had
enough!
That was
certainly the case for the one in six Maori who lived in
Australia in 2008. They openly admitted that a key reason for
their relocation was to escape tribalism. In a study carried
out by Te Puni Kokiri, many Maori expressed an overwhelming
sense of relief of being “free of Maori culture”, of being
able to “get away from the rigid beliefs of our elders”,
of getting away from “tikanga Maori” and “whanau
pressures”. In
other words, they wanted to live their lives free from the
fetters of tribalism and identity politics.[1]
The issue
of race has now become a defining line down through society.
This is in spite of the blurring of racial boundaries that has
been taking place since first settlement as each generation of
New Zealanders increasingly marry and have children across
racial and ethnic lines. It has created a ludicrous situation
where a growing proportion of the sovereignty movement leaders
are now more non-Maori than Maori.
The
blending of races also makes a mockery of official attempts at
racial profiling. Government agencies continue to classify New
Zealanders along ethnic lines in order to justify a divisive
bicultural political correctness that locks in special
treatment based on race, instead of need - even though such
categorisations are increasingly meaningless. It is time the
politicians, bureaucrats, academics, and other fellow
travellers of the Maori independence movement realised that
the country has moved on. We are not two separate races with
two different cultures coexisting in isolation, but a blend of
races and traditions, making up our own unique New Zealand
identity and culture. Biculturalism is more imaginary than
real and the sooner it is officially abandoned the sooner New
Zealand can put such division behind us and go forward.
The problem is that race has become a powerful political force
and money-making proposition. Back in the seventies, when the
consequence of widespread intermarriage was recognised –
namely in an on-going decline in the number of people who
could be categorised as Maori
- a change in the official classification was demanded. The
result was the 1974 Maori Affairs Amendment Act, which
replaced racial classification based on biology and blood
quantum, whereby someone had to have 50 percent or more of
Maori blood to be categorised as “Maori”, with one based
on self-identification and ethnic affiliation – having a
Maori descendent. These changes amounted to a political
construct designed to guarantee an on-going rise in the number
of people categorised as Maori, thus fulfilling the ambitions
of tribal leaders for power and resources.
Over the
years, the inclusion of ethnic privilege into government
policy has led to a rapid increase in the rights of Maori over
other citizens resulting in an exponential growth of
race-based initiatives including:
-
Maori-only
schools and education scholarships,
-
Maori-only
housing projects,
-
Maori-only
health prioritisation and initiatives,
-
Whanau
Ora and other Maori-only welfare initiatives,
-
Maori-only
prisoner programmes,
-
Maori-only
positions on government agencies,
-
Maori-only
consultation rights under the Resource Management Act,
-
Maori-only
co-management of parks, rivers, lakes, and the coastline,
-
Maori-only
tax rates - 17.5 percent tax for iwi corporations instead
of the 28 percent corporate tax rate, with tax-free status
for those that can convince authorities that their
business is based around a marae, Maori-only seats on
local councils,
-
Maori-only
seats on local councils,
-
Maori-only
local government Statutory Boards,
-
Maori-only
local government liaison committees,
-
Maori
seats in Parliament.
In
2000, Simon Chapple, then a Senior Research Analyst with the
Department of Labour, used data from the 1996 census to
examine the impact that these new definitions were having on
the number of people officially categorised as Maori. He found
that instead of the 273,693 New Zealanders who indicated they
were Maori-only
being the recognised total, Statistics New Zealand’s policy
of adding everyone
who included Maori as one of their ethnic groups into the
final count, meant that the official tally was 580,374! In
other words, the change in methodology effectively doubled the
“official” number of Maori. Simon Chapple recommended that
the Maori ethnic group should be restricted to those who
identify as Maori-only,
with everyone else allocated to their other major ethnic group
- but that suggestion was ignored.[2]
These changes were first introduced into our Census forms in
1986 through the use of ethnicity questions. With Statistics
New Zealand defining ethnicity as “cultural identity based
around commonly held values and beliefs”, calls were made
for one of the options to include New
Zealander in recognition of our unique New Zealand
culture. It was based on the observation that in their census forms, Australians are asked if they
are Australian, Canadians are asked if they are Canadian, and
in Britain, they are asked if they are British. In New
Zealand, however, there was no question asking if we were a
New Zealander.
The
rejection of this request has led to on-going protest action.
For the last two decades, New Zealanders have fought against
identity politics by choosing the “Other” ethnic group on
their census form and writing “New Zealander”. In 1986,
20,313 people did this, and in 1991, 20,800. By 1996, the
number had jumped to 58,614. By 2001, it rose further to
85,300, and by 2006, the number of people calling themselves a
“New Zealander”, had soared to 429,429! With the census
due on the 5th of March 2013, and officials
refusing to change the form on the basis that their
“research and testing… were not conclusive enough to
warrant changing the question”, it is highly likely that the
number of people who will reject ethnic labelling to call
themselves a New Zealander will exceed the 1 million mark.
Maybe this will be conclusive enough to force a change.
The deepening racial divide is not driven by ordinary Kiwis.
It is driven by the mixed race elite who run wealthy tribal
corporations and the Maori Party who represents them in
Parliament, along with Treaty activists who hold influential
positions within academia and the public service. Many seek
personal privilege by claiming that a non-existent partnership
with the Crown was promised by the Treaty of Waitangi. All of
this is arrant nonsense, as Sir Bob Jones indicated in a
recent Herald article:
“So, the comical Ngaruawahia ex-truck driver who can't speak
Maori and struggles with English but calls himself King of
Maoridom despite his realm ending at his letterbox has
declared Maori own the rain. That's excellent news. I assume
His Majesty will accept liability for inflicting millions of
dollars of flood damage annually through Maori rain supply
mismanagement. He can ponder that when sitting on the only
throne he'll ever occupy, namely in his lavatory.”[3]
Sir Bob
says, “Let's cut to the quick… what these parasites seek
is for hard-struggling Kiwi workers to give them money without
them having to work for it. It's that simple. They're a
disgrace, not only to Maori but to the human race.”
He
concludes, “Every Maori I know is angered by this rain, wind
and everything else ownership claim, rightly seeing it as
deceitful and divisive. It wouldn't surprise me if this
attitude is typical of Maoridom across the land. The ball's in
the Government's court to make it clear that the gravy train
has reached the station and is off to the museum. It should
also kill off the unnecessary Waitangi Tribunal whose
predictable, absurd decisions are causing so much
disharmony.”
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, David Round, a Treaty and
constitutional law expert at the University of Canterbury,
looks into this spurious claim for water, concluding that
there is no legal basis for it and that the Witangi Tribunal
had no authority to hear it:
“The law is clear. Since 1840 the English common law of
water applied here, and by that there was no private
(including Maori) ownership of water. Then the 1967 Water and
Soil Conservation Act vested the sole right to use natural
water in the Crown. Everyone, Maori included, who wanted to
use water other than in ways allowed by the Act or a proper
Plan, had to obtain a ‘water right’. The same arrangement
is continued by the 1991 Resource Management Act.
“The
‘water permits’, as they are now called, which power
companies hold were issued under these statutes. This means,
then, that the Waitangi Tribunal has never had the
jurisdiction to hear this water claim. Its doing so was
legally improper. This is because in 2006 the Tribunal’s
jurisdiction was limited; it now has no jurisdiction to hear
any ‘historical’ Treaty claim, complaining of events
before 2008. But the power companies’ water permits were
granted before 2008, under statutes also made before 2008.
“The
Tribunal is careless of the law, then. Numerous claims also
reveal its bias and partiality to claimants. It cannot be
taken seriously as a source of reliable history or policy.
Nowadays anyway, it is little more than a grandly-named Maori
lobby group.” Read the full article HERE.
It is absurd that the Waitangi Tribunal heard a claim over
which it has no jurisdiction. It’s ‘recommendations’,
which we know have no legal standing, should be regarded as
simple nullities. That unfortunately is the character of the
Tribunal which is why this racial institution should be
abolished.
Abolishing the Waitangi
Tribunal is a key demand of the Declaration of Equality
campaign for equal rights. If you haven’t supported it we
urge you to do so now - and to encourage your family and
friends to do the same. This battle for equal rights will not
be won unless New Zealanders take a stand.
So where is all of this heading? The bicultural agenda is now
deeply embedded in the country’s major institutions – our
schools and hospitals, universities and training colleges,
social agencies and the public service. These days the key
driving force is the Maori Party – along with the help of
their National Party coalition partner.
I will
finish with a glimpse of what
could be in store if National
fails to come to its senses. These following demands are taken
directly from the Maori Party’s 2011 election manifesto. It
is likely that some may become law – even if they are not
part of their confidence and supply agreement. No fanfare to
alarm the public of course, for that’s how radical change is
made - under the radar of pubic opinion.
Top of
their agenda is a bicultural constitution based on the Treaty
as supreme law.
“We will encourage active involvement and
participation in the Constitutional Review we advanced in the
2008-2011 Parliament. We will monitor outcomes from the
Constitutional Review to ensure it gives effect to Te Tiriti o
Waitangi.
“Treaty
studies will be taught in all schools, from Year 7 on,
starting in 2014. We want schools to teach local iwi history;
civic and heritage studies.
“All
policy provided to Cabinet and all bills tabled in the House
must be able to demonstrate the impact of the policy on whānau
and the Treaty partnership.
“An
Annual Report to Parliament on
progress on the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples to facilitate the right of Māori to preserve,
evolve and transform their ways of life. We will introduce a
requirement for Government departments and Crown entities to
report annually on outcomes for Māori.
“By
the 2014 election, all Māori to be automatically entered
on to the Māori roll at the age of 18 with the option to
transfer to the General Roll. We will also extend the
provision in the Census to identify tribally to the electoral
roll, where tribal affiliation is also stated.
“The
Māori seats will stay until such time Māori freely
choose, via a mana whenua referendum, otherwise.”
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you believe New Zealand is at risk of becoming an
“apartheid” nation? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Paul
Hamer, One in Six? The
Rapid Growth of the Māori Population in Australia
2.Simon Chapple, Maori
socio-economic disparity
3.Sir Bob Jones, Blatant
try-on shows it’s time to derail Treaty gravy train
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