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Tuesday, November 21, 2023

JC: Willie Needs His Gob Smacked

Willie, Willie, Willie… when will you learn?

Willie Jackson, once again, has made the mistake of opening his mouth. Willie is something of an arsonist in the sense that his comments are designed to be inflammatory and have an incendiary feel about them. He aims to light a fire under the topic he is speaking on.

Willie’s latest effort in this regard concerns the Treaty of Waitangi. In Willie’s world, this document is not up for discussion. He is incensed that a little so-called Maori upstart by the name of David Seymour wants a referendum to let the people determine the meaning of the principles of the Treaty so that they apply to modern times. This, of course, is not democracy as Willie understands it. He’s already enlightened us to the fact that ‘democracy has changed’. Democracy, in Willie’s view, appears to be ‘the world according to Willie’.

Willie would have us believe that he understands the Treaty and his understanding is the correct and only one. Not so, according to his ex-wife Moana Maniapoto. She wrote in February 2017 that Willie had no understanding of the Treaty. She said she tried to break it down for him once on a drive from Rotorua to Auckland. She said she’d ask him to repeat back to her what she’d just said, but he’d give her a blank look, a shrug and then laugh. This is the same man who purports to be an ‘expert’ on the matter.

This is the same man who is threatening anyone who tries to interfere with his understanding of the Treaty with civil unrest: in other words, violence on the streets. He told Jack Tame in a Q+A interview it would be of such magnitude that the Springbok tour protests would pale by comparison. After reading the words of his first wife it’s hard not to conclude that he is nothing more than a bully. But the reality is that he and his ilk are a danger to the harmonious society most of us want to live in.

Willie and his fellow travellers in the Maori Party have a controlling agenda. Willie and his mob want the minority to take control from the majority. These types are in it for themselves and they don’t care who the casualties are along the way. Except for Ngai Tahu, can someone tell me which members of other tribes have benefitted from monies gained through government payouts for land confiscation? Virtually none of it has reached ordinary Maori trying to put food on the table.

Can anyone tell me who of the Maori population has benefitted from the ‘by Maori for Maori’ approach? If any have, I doubt the numbers would justify the taxpayers’ money spent. The truth is Maori as a whole are no better off. Nothing has majorly improved for them as a result of these initiatives, which I prefer to call rorts. The same health and education issues are apparent, Maori crime statistics are still too high, there are too many in gangs, too many incarcerated (or should be), and the family violence continues and babies are suffering and dying as a result. Willie would be better off rallying his people to get active in these areas.

Most Maori want to live in harmony with their fellow citizens. Is this what Willie wants? No, he doesn’t. It’s divide and conquer for him. He says we have nothing to fear from co-governance. One only has to read the He Puapua report to see what there is to fear. That is exactly the reason Winston didn’t get to see it. Who had the fear at that point? The answer is Willie. He was fearing that, if Winston saw it, his and Nanaia’s plans for owning the water would dry up, for the same reason Willie didn’t want any interference with the Treaty. It’s his way or the highway.

Willie has made it crystal clear that if he doesn’t get his way and the Treaty is in any way interfered with there will be war. It would seem Willie no more understands democracy than he does the Treaty. Willie needs to understand the big part he played in Labour’s historic loss on October 14. He allowed the Greens to increase their vote and gave Winston another chance in government. Every one of his utterances caused fair-minded people to quit Labour in droves.

Willie may not understand the Treaty or democracy but he needs to understand this: the majority in this country will not put up with his divisive and racist rhetoric.

The Maori Party need to heed the same message. Your average Kiwi is fair-minded and supports a fair go for everyone. What we don’t support is the minority trying to rule the majority. If the Maori elite, because that is what they are, continue down the road they are on at everybody else’s expense then they will achieve nothing.

These people are no doubt cognisant of the result of The Voice referendum across the ditch. Willie knows only too well a referendum here would replicate that result, which is precisely why he says we shouldn’t have one. It is precisely why we, or at the very least Parliament, rather than the courts or the Waitangi Tribunal, should determine exactly how the principles of the Treaty relate to New Zealand in 2023. Hopefully, ACT and NZ First will ensure this happens.

Willie can organise his protests if he wants but that will only ensure he, his Labour Party, the Greens and the Maori Party will continue to occupy the opposition benches. In other words, the majority will continue to set the agenda for having harmonious race relations in this country. Long may that be so.

JC is a right-wing crusader. Reached an age that embodies the dictum only the good die young. This article was first published HERE

8 comments:

Robert Arthur said...

Most of the extreme maori activist struggle to disguise their blatant anti colonist, anti democratic intentions. (Most/all of Te Pati, Tamahere, Mahuta etc etc) But a small number consistently maintain an apparent bonhomie designed to charm and to convince potential subjects/vassals/opponents that they could not possibly be plotting anything draconian. Jackson is one of. His smooth patter refined on talkback radio trivialises all hints of revolution. But his words carefully digested and his actions are/were clearly directed otherwise.

Allan said...

Willie is very fond of his own voice, which is good, because he's about the only person who still listens to it.
In my view, which would probably have Willie frothing at the mouth, the Letters Patent of 1840 establish New Zealand as separate from New South Wales and established it as having it's own Govt. and legal system modelled on Westminster. Surely this must be our founding document!
The Treaty was a agreement between the Crown and and Maori chiefs, setting out a few principles on which the new found colony should be run.

Anonymous said...

Willie jackson is a total fraud. His paternal grandoarents are british . Would he call his own grandparents colonists?

Anonymous said...

Yes Allan. Our Governments over the years have completely ignored Queen Victoria's 1840 Royal Charter/Letters Patent, New Zealand's true Founding Document and First Constitution. This has ALLOWED the treaty to be taken as New Zealand's Founding Document when in fact, it had absolutely nothing to do with New Zealand becoming a British Colony or setting up our political, legal or justice system under one flag and one law, irrespective of race, colour or creed.
There is no other document in New Zealand's history that comes anywhere near to a Founding Document, than Queen Victoria's 1840 Royal Charter/Letters Patent.
All the treaty did why New Zealand was under the laws and jurisdiction of New South Wales, was to ask the Maori people to give up their individual territories in exchange for becoming British subjects with the same rights as the people of England, no more and no less.
Our successive Governments have a lot to answer for with their lies and false information on this matter, and it has cost the taxpayer dearly.

Anonymous said...

Willie and his ilk are not elite. They are troublemakers.

If they follow through on their threats of violence I hope to goodness the authorities (not reactionaries) come down on them like a ton(ne) of bricks. The message MUST be unequivocal, loud and Clear, idiot proofed etc etc that this type of behaviour is not acceptable.

Akl couldn’t cope with/identify the anti Posey Parker aggro. That was a disgraceful display of some NZers and authorities. I hope they have learned something.

So help us God, if Willie et al are allowed to get away with it.

Anonymous said...

Well to respond to wee Willie in kind, he is indeed a fraud, and a wealthy one at that. He needs to be reminded that if he continues to essentially threaten/incite unrest, then all bets are off and his home addresses will be published on social media so the general populace knows where to find him - along with those others of his ilk that are fueling these ideas, Trump style. He and his kind need to pull their heeds in, for they are far out-numbered and if they really want to spend the latter years of their lives in prison or constantly in fear, carry on. I'm sure I'm far from alone in having had a gutsful of this opportunistic racist fool's antics.

Wayno said...


"Can anyone tell me who of the Maori population has benefited from the ‘by Maori for Maori’ approach?"

If there are any here is the perfect forum for them to enlighten us.

Jackson and his ilk are a cancer on NZ society and we await the outcome of the 3 parties and whether this out of control nonsense is going to be addressed.

Empathic said...

I don't think a referendum is an appropriate way of determining principles of Te Tiriti, any more than it would to determine principles of mathematics. A substantial enquiry would be better, to assess the evidence for and against any of the recently-invented principles none of which are alluded to in the wording of Te Tiriti.

However, a referendum would be appropriate to decide whether to continue trying to use an 1840 Treaty to guide laws and government in very different circumstances almost 200 years later. That vote would need to give 50% of the say to Maori if the outcome is to be binding and with sufficient respect to be successful.

Another worthwhile referendum question (that would be fine on an equal vote per person basis) would be "Should any derived principles beyond the wording of Te Tiriti guide our laws and government?"