When Kelvin Davis addressed a conference of indigenous Australians yesterday it is doubtful whether the Minister for Maori Crown Relations intended to damage the credibility of his government’s Maori policies, but that’s what he did. If the New Zealand Herald is to be believed, first, he used an incorrect translation of the Treaty of Waitangi instead of the Sir Hugh Kawharu translation that the previous Labour government celebrated at the 150th anniversary of its signing in 1990. Davis claimed that Article Three of the Treaty guaranteed Maori “the same rights and privileges of British subjects”. In fact, Article Three guarantees Maori “the same rights and duties of citizenship”. Small difference in wording, I agree, but the mention of “duties” is significant when it comes to Maori rights. These days all too many Maori spokespeople prefer to interpret the Treaty as promising Maori an armchair ride to prosperity rather than something they have to work for, like other New Zealanders.
Davis is one of them. In his speech he went on to explain that under the Treaty Maori had ‘the right to an education that led to outcomes as good as those of any other New Zealander, and the right to a health system that allowed Maori to live as long as any other New Zealander. The focus had to be on equity of outcomes, not just equality”. Where on earth did Davis get these ideas? The thought that Queen Victoria’s representative in 1840 was promising such a life to Maori at a time when their average life expectancy was about 30 years and almost none could read or write is preposterous. What the Treaty did promise was the same opportunities for Maori as for British people. Early Maori leaders like Sir James Carroll, Sir Apirana Ngata, Sir Peter Buck and Sir Maui Pomare understood this. Ngata often told his Maori supporters that if they worked and adapted the knowledge gleaned from the British to their own customs they, too, would thrive. He was always sceptical about welfare for Maori, believing that easy money would sap their initiative. Carroll was acting Prime Minister for lengthy periods in the first decade of the Twentieth Century. Ngata was the first Maori graduate in law; Buck and Pomare in medicine. Collectively, they kept reminding Maori they could achieve just like Pakeha. Kelvin Davis, who was once a school principal, could be preaching the same message. But he isn’t. He prefers to follow the welfare route; his vision seems to be that Maori will get ahead if governments shower them with special privileges.
Davis is telling Maori that they can continue to produce babies outside stable family environments; have disproportionally high numbers of fetal-alcohol syndrome babies; fail to vaccinate them; make less use of free medical services for children; smoke more than Pakeha; have high “Did Not Show” statistics for specialist appointments at public hospitals; continue to tolerate a world where more than 50% of Maori children truant from school each day; and be over-represented amongst the ram-raiders and the Hawke’s Bay burglars; and still get ahead. Despite evidence of manifold failures to avail themselves of the opportunities available to them, Davis’ government will “focus on equity of outcomes, not just equality”. I suspect that Ngata, Buck and Pomare would swiftly tell him he was on a hiding to nowhere, and that Maori leaders like him who fail to stress the need for effort and hard work are guilty of gross dereliction of duty. And they’d be right. Kelvin Davis is deliberately misleading his people. In fact, life wasn’t meant to be easy; everyone needs to put in effort.
Where has Davis got the notion from that it is possible to guarantee any people “equity of outcomes” no matter what choices they personally make in life? No other country has such a policy for the very basic reason that it just can’t work. Any scientist worth her salt will tell him that people aren’t born with equal talents. Equal rights? Yes. But not equal talents. Their success in life depends on what their parents did with their opportunities, and how much nurturing the children got from both their parents.
Sadly, Davis is one of the blunter knives in this government’s drawer. By continuing to recite that unattainable mantra he also calls into question his ministry’s preoccupation with promoting co-governance. How can our country recover the ground lost in the pandemic and in the storms if significant numbers of the decision-makers’ only qualification to be in charge is their ethnic make-up? We know of course that many Maori have made an effort and have succeeded in life. Good. That means they can qualify for roles in governance on the grounds of their ability, not their ethnicity. Then in governing roles they are just as accountable to the wider public as non-Maori. Just what Article Three of the Treaty envisaged.
Davis is telling Maori that they can continue to produce babies outside stable family environments; have disproportionally high numbers of fetal-alcohol syndrome babies; fail to vaccinate them; make less use of free medical services for children; smoke more than Pakeha; have high “Did Not Show” statistics for specialist appointments at public hospitals; continue to tolerate a world where more than 50% of Maori children truant from school each day; and be over-represented amongst the ram-raiders and the Hawke’s Bay burglars; and still get ahead. Despite evidence of manifold failures to avail themselves of the opportunities available to them, Davis’ government will “focus on equity of outcomes, not just equality”. I suspect that Ngata, Buck and Pomare would swiftly tell him he was on a hiding to nowhere, and that Maori leaders like him who fail to stress the need for effort and hard work are guilty of gross dereliction of duty. And they’d be right. Kelvin Davis is deliberately misleading his people. In fact, life wasn’t meant to be easy; everyone needs to put in effort.
Where has Davis got the notion from that it is possible to guarantee any people “equity of outcomes” no matter what choices they personally make in life? No other country has such a policy for the very basic reason that it just can’t work. Any scientist worth her salt will tell him that people aren’t born with equal talents. Equal rights? Yes. But not equal talents. Their success in life depends on what their parents did with their opportunities, and how much nurturing the children got from both their parents.
Sadly, Davis is one of the blunter knives in this government’s drawer. By continuing to recite that unattainable mantra he also calls into question his ministry’s preoccupation with promoting co-governance. How can our country recover the ground lost in the pandemic and in the storms if significant numbers of the decision-makers’ only qualification to be in charge is their ethnic make-up? We know of course that many Maori have made an effort and have succeeded in life. Good. That means they can qualify for roles in governance on the grounds of their ability, not their ethnicity. Then in governing roles they are just as accountable to the wider public as non-Maori. Just what Article Three of the Treaty envisaged.
Historian Dr Michael Bassett, a Minister in the Fourth Labour Government, blogs HERE.
8 comments:
If Puhoe had realised that the rights and duties of citizenship would include payment forever to continue not to work, a state house, payment for children, health care, free education, subsidised marae rebuild, the gift permanently exclusive to them of the Ureweras, and more, they would have risked the hangis of tribes on the way and the Ngapuhi locals at journey end and paddled from the Ureweras to Waitangi to sign.
You are absolutely right, Michael. Too few Maori represent good role models and it's therefore not at all surprising that many don't succeed in life and represent the wrong end of the worst statistics. Davis is patently just another in a long line of those wanting an easy ride and a free lunch. He needs to 'cross the bridge' into the real world of hard work, honesty and endeavour.
I agree with you Michael,but not all the blame should be on Maori parents. Equity should be achieved through a sound education system as well as effort from the home.We certainly now,do not have a sound education system as we once did when the Maori leaders you mentioned were educated.
The progressive system we now have,unbelievably has little concern for ethics
including a work ethic academic nor intellectual achievement. The teaching methods don't work and the teachers are not taught how to teach but indoctrinated in the philosophy instead.They believe failure of low decile children is inevitable and cast the blame everywhere else except the system.
I am justified in approaching the problem in this way since I assisted my mother
Doris Ferry,for 30 years,and saw the the shocking persecution she and her students experienced ,when she taught. privately hundreds (1500) of remedial reading students in a high decile area. The parents were stable,caring,
professional and business people,with homes full of books which they had read to their children, They encouraged a work ethic and the children tried hard at school,yet still failed to read.
Now maybe you can see why Doris was vilified by the education establishment especially when she stated in an interview," These children should have not failed ". To an establishment which persistently fails to examine itself for error this was intolerable.They actually labelled her as mad and not once visited her although they were invited. Plenty of politicians and journalists, however did and wrote of her shameful persecution.
Please Michael and all others on this site stop putting all the blame on parents. I don't have a sentimental view of parents since many of them have absorbed the same destructive ideas.
Davis, like the rest of the maori caucus from the labour cult are little better than beneficiaries. They receive a ludicrous salary plus allowances for being little more than cheerleaders for their cults apartheid agenda. Each ministry for which Davis has some responsibility is going backward. Why a conference of indigenous Australians would even bother to invite him as a speaker is beyond comprehension. Unless it is to stir up a bit of racial disharmony.
Gaynor, I don't believe Michael, or others, are solely blaming parents, but children are 'moulded' by their environment - the education they receive both at school and at home, and through those they interact with socially. If school curricula and pedagogy are deficient (which they clearly now are), and if home life comprises dysfunctional very often one parent families and where a strong work ethic is absent, not to mention honesty, support and compassion etc, (ie. appropriate role models) what chance do our young have and what is then the future of our country?
It would be fair to say that many, if not most Maori people, are satisfied with life as it is now, rather than it was before the arrival of the pakeha. The troublesome ones I call tribalistics, because they are still tribal in their attitude, to separate them from the peaceful Maori people. He Iwi Tahi Tahou - We WERE One People. Both National and Labour Governments must share much of the blame! Turning a blind eye is not going to answer the problem. It must be tackled now or it will only get worse and our country will be Aotearoa - up in the clouds, if it is not there already.
Dr Bassett as a historian you will know that in 1840 Maori “taonga” were so minimal they did not even include one’s head let alone one’s freedom. As a historian and Labour MP of the time you will be very aware that Kawharau’s translation into English of the Maori text of the Treaty of Waitangi was many many years later in a different political, social and economic environment. Likewise you will be aware that to legislate this latter day English translation as a political truth and for the Treaty of Waitangi Tribunal ( of which you were a member) to thereafter justify the use of this distorted text as the basis on which to reconstruct history and to sell out all New Zealanders to the allegedly genetically privileged few, is - dare I say it- disingenuous at the least. As the English text was a pre-requisite for the Maori text then that should be the translation sequence. The February 4 document of the time ( refer also the Littlewood Treaty) is the perfect fit for the Maori text. Lightbulb moment perhaps? For a well written learned discussion on the English and Maori texts refer to “Fair Colony” - available from charlton@farmside.co.nz.
Edit request prior to publication : in my article addressing Dr Basset’s reliance on Kawharau re- interpretation of TOW please change ‘dare I say it’ to ‘in my humble opinion’
Why - to make it unequivocally clear this is my opinion.
Thank you.
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