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Monday, April 3, 2023

Mike Butler: Treaty twisting and two govts


An article with the bland title “Restoring the mana of the treaty”, published at the weekend, is among a torrent of treaty twisting writings arguing that the Treaty of Waitangi envisaged two governments in New Zealand, one by Maori for Maori and the other a fully bicultural version of what we already have.

As we head towards an election campaign in which “co-governance” is already an issue, it is crucial for voters to understand some of the fallacies that are being presented as facts.

Its author, Alistair Reese, was described by E-Tangata magazine as a “Pakeha” theologian, historian, and farmer.

Also described as having a “particular focus on “seeking to strengthen the relationship between Maori and Pakeha in Aotearoa”, he believes that “there is a need for Pakeha to understand who they are and how they belong in Aotearoa New Zealand”.

At this point I imagine that may be quite a few New Zealanders surprised and amused to find out from Dr Reese that perhaps they need help searching for their identity.

What did he write? In a nutshell:
• He agrees that the Maori text signed by most chiefs is the authoritative text.
• He worries about the standing of the 39 chiefs whose marks are on an English treaty text that is held to be faulty.
• To reconcile this problem, he argues that despite the differences in phrasing between the two treaty texts appended to the Treaty of Waitangi Act, there is no conflict between the official English and Maori texts.
• He takes the wonderings of one chief who signed the treaty at Waitangi to buttress his argument and ignores the statements of a number of other chiefs that undermine him.
• He argues that the British intervention in New Zealand in 1840 was to establish government over British settlers only while the chiefs could carry on being chiefs.
• He argues that “kawanatanga” and “tino rangatiratanga” actually mean plural governance.
• He concludes that the 1860 vision of a Maori King on his piece, the [English] Queen on her piece, God over both and love binding them together’ should be the model of an ideal government set-up in New Zealand.
Writings by an academic such as Dr Reese come with an implicit stamp of approval along the lines of “he has a PhD so he must know what he is talking about”.

But sometimes the utterances from a person who looks and sounds the part actually amount to twaddle.

And unfortunately, we have an official narrative that is promoted, while any research that shows flaws in the official narrative is ignored, sidelined, smeared and deplatformed.

Let’s look at what Dr Reese writes:
• We can all agree that the Maori text signed by most chiefs is the authoritative text. Governor William Hobson confirmed it. That was the document that was debated.
• The English treaty text containing the marks of 39 chiefs has been shown, by a private researcher, as having been attached to a smaller printed text in Maori merely to accommodate the chiefly marks that could not fit on the smaller document. (See . https://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.com/2023/04/mike-butler-english-treaty-text-what-to.html) Dr Reese may feel relieved that those chiefs were actually signing Te Tiriti after all.
• The actual problem about the differences between the English and Maori treaty texts appended to the Treaty of Waitangi Act is that the so-called “official English text” should never have been used as a text in English. Dr Reese cites treaty researcher Ruth Ross without mentioning that she concluded that the final English draft of the treaty went missing. That draft was found in 1989, in Pukekohe, in a deceased estate. One would have thought there would have been celebration, perhaps a sigh of relief among academics. But no! Successive governments expended no end of money and effort to either bury or discredit it. That treaty text in English, that has come to be known as the Littlewood Treaty, has been confirmed to be handwritten by treaty drafter James Busby, that has just two differences from Te Tiriti (being the date and the addition of the word Maori in Article 3). (See https://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.com/2010/05/mike-butler-lost-treaty-draft-and-race.html and https://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.com/2016/08/mike-butler-littlewood-treaty-to.html)
• Dr Reese cherry picks chiefly quotes. The vague musings of chief Nopera Panakareao, on February 5, 1840, that he quoted, that “the shadow of the land will go to the Queen, but the substance will remain with us”, should be balanced with the protestations of at least seven chiefs, who were alarmed that a governor meant having a chief over them.
• There is no evidence that any of the chiefs at that debate expressed thought that the treaty was about a governor governing English settlers only while chiefs could carry on being chiefs.
• “Kawanatanga” and “tino rangatiratanga” don’t mean plural governance. “Kawanatanga” translates “sovereignty” in Article 1 and “tino rangatiratanga” translates “complete possession” in Article 2.
• There is no evidence anywhere in the treaty debates that the treaty contemplated a dual government under a Maori king and an English Queen. Neither is there any evidence that a partnership between “Maori” and “the Crown” was contemplated.
The reality is that the current government is implementing a plan for two governments in New Zealand and that plan, called He Pua Pua, came to light two years ago. (See https://www.nzcpr.com/are-you-ok-with-two-governments-under-tribal-rule/) The government has denied that the plan is being implemented but a large part of the plan is up and running.

Such policies include:
1. The abolition of the right of local communities to hold binding referenda on Maori wards.
2. Forcing Maori language and culture on to government departments and local authorities, while the state-funded media replaced news with separatist propaganda.
3. Replacing English names of places, streets, towns, buildings, and government agencies with Maori names. Even the nation’s name “New Zealand” is being changed by stealth.
4. Setting up a separate Maori Health Authority with veto rights over the entire health system.
5. Transferring the marine and coastal area to Maori, with a precedent set by the High Court in the Bay of Plenty.
6. Transferring ownership of the conservation estate to private tribal entities, as recommended by the Options Development Group.
7. Imposing tribal control over water through the Three Waters Reform.
8. Imposing a revised history curriculum which intends to indoctrinate our children about the evils of colonisation.
It looks like the 1860s armed conflict about who controls New Zealand and how is being fought now, not on the battlefield, but through ideology and government policy.

The stated ideology is “treaty partnership” or “two spheres of government, one by Maori for Maori and the other a fully bicultural version of what we already have”.

However, when implemented, these policies enact dual structures in which tribal appointees have ultimate control. Just look at the new race-based health set-up called Te Whatu Ora, or the centralised water set-up called Three Waters. Something similar is envisaged through the Resource Management Act reform.

The current government is building a racist edifice based on misinformation and Dr Reese, who believes “pakeha” need help with identity issues, is promoting that dream to anyone who will listen to him.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

OMG that’s so funny. Now we’re being told who we are and why we are lost . Well Dr Reece through that wonderful invention of modern European science, the internet. I know exactly who I am and because of GPS , another fabulous invention of modern science, I can tell you to within 5 metres of where I am.
I think the lost ones are not Pakeha maybe Māori need to update the GPS in the canoes?

Anonymous said...

Brilliant Mike.
The last thing Maori wanted in 1840 was their ongoing tribal structure and struggles. As for suggesting any of these warrior warlords would submit to a single all powerful Maori warlord - that would have been no more palatable than in any other part of the world where this has been tried. Hence the agreement to have a separate non Maori ruler over all peoples. And the disbandment of the intertribal warfare. And the development of a nation.

Anonymous said...

It is probably quite apt that a theologian came up with this. For if Reese thinks for a moment that the Treaty envisaged two Governments and that proposed policies that embed a power of veto in the likes of Three Waters and the RMA reforms for the benefit of one minority cohort at the expense of the majority will somehow lead to a happy and prosperous future and will assist the majority to identify 'how they belong' in the world that they largely created, then he truly is a believer in the supernatural and make believe.
It seems these days that a number of those with doctorates, especially in the arts arena talk gibberish when it comes to the practical fundamentals of the real world and having a well-founded understanding of things like democracy.

Ray S said...

"It looks like the 1860s armed conflict about who controls New Zealand and how is being fought now, not on the battlefield, but through ideology and government policy."

I can see a time when 1860 will repeat its self, and it's not very far away.

Anonymous said...

You say “Kawanatanga translates sovereignty in Article 1 and “tino rangatiratanga” translates “complete possession” in Article 2.

In fact, it's the other way around. There were no words for sovereignty and ownership (in the English sense) in the Maori language. These portmanteau words were made up by the missionaries to convey the meaning of the English text in Maori.

If we wish to understand what the chiefs thought of the Treaty, we need to read the records of the Kohimarama Conference in 1860. It's clear they understood what the Treaty delivered: It delivered them from slavery and being eaten.

(Oh and the 4th article, the one about co-governance was at the bottom, but the snails got to it LOL)

Allan said...

Sir Apirana Ngata seemed to be quite clear in his explanation of what the Treaty means, that the cheifs handed sovereignty of all of NZ to the British Crown. This was so that the British system of govt. and legal system could become a common standard which hopefully would amongst other things, stop the intertribal warfare. Trying to govern or impose laws over only parts of a country would probably cause more problems than the ones it was hoped it would solve. I cannot see that anyone would even suggest such a flawed system let alone anyone agree to it.

Peter van der Stam, Napier said...

I am surprised that there are so many Educated professionals with very few working brain cells.
Either those few cells they HAVE are not working or demented.
Read the article. Ian Bratford has written this time about batteries. Nothing to do with anything???
Think again !!! This guy has it so correct about climate, CO2 and all other stuff.
But he, who am I, why do I think I know a bit mere than the Greens do.
They only think green but don't act Green at all.
Sad, but true.

Anonymous said...

David Lange 2000

"Democratic government can accommodate Maori political aspirations in many ways. It can allocate resources in ways that reflect the particular interests of Maori people. It can delegate authority and allow the exercise of degrees of Maori autonomy. What it can not do is acknowledge the existence of a separate sovereignty. As soon as it does that, it is not a democracy. We can have a democratic form of government or we can have indigenous sovereignty. They can not coexist and we cant have both of them".

Have we forgotten David Lange that quickly?

Anonymous said...

Great summary Mike as usual.
There is an easy (if somewhat painful)fix: form a commission of inquiry into the 47 year history of the Waitangi Tribunal, itself set up as an ongoing commission of inquiry. And as you mentioned about the suppression of widely known facts, it would need DDBO (deliberate deception by omission) to become an offence as such blatant behaviour is deemed to be, in the real estate industry. If examined on this basis, would quickly reveal any suspicious conclusions as to their truth or otherwise. Yes time for a reset.

Anonymous said...

It's actually a bit scary and has gone further than almost anyone could understand. I was at a training the other day where the speaker claimed that within three generations, four at the most, we would all be speaking Māori (as a first language) if not speaking dialectic Māori, depending on our rohe, or region. By then, if all goes well, we will also be under Māori governance, which, although by and for Māori, is also good for everyone. We would be ruled under Māori tikanga by Māori values. Something about goodness and kindness, nothing about tribalism, status, slavery, canabalism, infantacide, warefare, utu, etc. Those, I gather, have been written out of the modern history of the Māori race. There was no argument in the room, there was an air of positivity. Certainly no one questioned the narrative.

Allan said...

To the above, did the speaker add " Look at Zimbabwe to see your future"