We have been denied a referendum on the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi next year because the Prime Minister is afraid some radical Maoris will have a hikoi. It seems likely that the majority of people would vote in favour of ACT leader David Seymour’s proposed legislation, which would remove race based privileges for Maoris and move us closer to equal voting power for our elections. We are, however, allowed to have a debate next year about Seymour’s proposed principles.
The Treaty of Waitangi Act set up the Waitangi Tribunal in 1975 to
consider Maori claims of prejudice arising from acts of the Crown that were
inconsistent with the ‘principles’ of the Treaty of Waitangi. The principles
are supposedly derived from the articles of the actual Treaty of 1840. However,
the principles have not been specified, so the Tribunal assumed the role of
identifying them. The Tribunal is a commission of enquiry, so the
interpretations of the Treaty by the Tribunal are not law unless the Government
writes them into legislation, which the previous Labour government was doing
prior to the election.
A comprehensive explanation and analysis of the facts, laws and misconceptions resulting from this process is given in The Treaty Facts by Clive Boonham, a retired Barrister and Solicitor of the High Court of New Zealand, here. I expect it will be an essential source for the impending debate.
Of course laws, that is to say rules, are an essential part of our
democratic constitution. But they are not necessarily accurate or just, and
Boonham includes his own views on the relationship of the Treaty with the laws
of New Zealand. It is often not what law considers, but what law leaves out
that is a problem. Take the Maori parliamentary seats, for example, and compare
that arrangement with, say, London with a population of 8 million which is now
less than half indigenous British. It would be howled down as racist if it were
proposed to have exclusive indigenous seats on the Greater London Council, yet
that is the arrangement we have here. The salient difference is the colour of
the indigenous skin. Irrespective of the legality of the Maori seats, they are
not consistent with what is internationally unacceptable. We should want to
consider how to reconcile these apparently opposing perspectives in our
debate.
History is another aspect to consider. For example, Boonham points
out that the Treaty was between the British Crown and Maori chiefs and so the
new colony of New Zealand subsequently became a Dominion of the British Empire.
In 1931, the British Parliament passed the Statute of Westminster, which meant
that the Crowns in each of the Dominions became legally distinct entities. So
New Zealand’s new ruler was the New Zealand Crown as a separate legal entity to
the British Crown, even though they were embodied in the same Monarch. So why
has the New Zealand Parliament agreed to compensate Maori iwis for supposed
breaches by the British Crown, going back to 1840, of principles of the Treaty
of Waitangi that were not conjectured until the 1975 and remain unspecified?
Hence there are other dimensions to the Treaty issue in addition
to law. Of course the media mentions issues within those dimensions, but it
seems to me that the mainstream media is biased to the Left which, with respect
of the Treaty, means biased towards the Maoris. The tactic they mostly use is
to exclude points that do not suit their purpose and to keep repeating those
that do. As a consequence, we have become conditioned to some degree. We need
to identify the missing information and include it in our debate. Here I offer
some points that have occurred to me along with my opinion on those points.
Feel free to disagree with my points or add your own.
An often used claim is that the Maoris have been disadvantaged by
Europeans in some way. Maoris must therefore be compensated for these ‘wrongs’.
But is this true? Did the Europeans really somehow wrong the Maoris?
A couple of statistics suggest not. It is often mentioned that
Maoris presently have a lower life expectancy than Europeans. But that can also
be considered historically. Maori life expectancy has more than doubled since
the time of the Treaty and that is almost certainly due to the good that
Europeans brought to New Zealand, such as medical science. Everything the
Maoris have today, from the food they eat, the clothes they wear and the houses
they live in, to the devices they thumb, the SUVs they drive and the
internationally used language they speak and can now write, they have because
Europeans came to New Zealand. As a consequence, there were about 100,000
Maoris at the time of the Treaty and about 800,000 part-Maoris now. The fact
is, the Maoris flourished under colonialism, as did the colonists and now the
Islanders and Asians.
That does not entail that we should ignore the fact that Maoris
have a lower life expectancy than Europeans. However, discussions on this issue
disregard the possibility that it is at least in part because of poorer health
choices by Maoris, including drinking, smoking, and poor diet leading to
obesity. Instead, the state is held responsible for equity of outcome, in this
case life expectancy, and excluded is the role of individual responsibility.
Yet people are less likely to make good choices if they are led to believe they
are not responsible for their own behaviour. So I propose a broad principle:
let the state have collective responsibility for equal opportunity and the
individual have responsibility for equity of outcome. It is then up to the
individual to realize the equally available opportunity.
Nevertheless, to the degree that we all have an individual
responsibility, the Maoris as a group do less well at fulfilling that
responsibility than Europeans, as given by statistics for health for example.
The cause of that difference may be due to nature or nurture; that is, to
genetics or environment which is largely cultural. In her 2021 book, The
Genetic Lottery: Why DNA Matters for Social Equality, academic Kathryn
Paige Harden says there is now sufficient evidence, following two decades of
genome sequencing studies, to show that genetics is important. She says that
both genetics and culture determine income, educational attainment, cognitive
performance, well being and other outcomes, and that these things are
heritable. Studies of IQ tests also identify race differences in intelligence.
Some relevant average IQs are, North East Asians 102, Europeans 99,
Maoris 90 and Islanders 85. (Richard Lynn, Race Differences in Intelligence,
2015) Harden (p. 16-7) says, “I also believe that intelligence tests measure an
aspect of a person’s psychology that is relevant for their success in
contemporary educational systems and labor markets”.
Harden suggests, “One approach is to sweep genetic research under
the rug, ignoring a large and remarkably consistent body of scientific
knowledge, lest the eugenics genie be let out of the bottle.” But she further
says that is a mistake and claiming to “not see race” doesn’t make racism go
away. She argues that it is necessary to understand both cultural and genetic
differences to improve opportunity with appropriate programs. Yet here in New
Zealand we ignore that the Maoris were overwhelmed by a more developed culture
for fear of being called racist (just as we ignore the Maori genocide of the
Morioris). That will result in a one-sided and hence errant debate.
I’m committed to the idea of democracy despite its problems
because, as Churchill pointed out, it is better than the other things we have
tried. For democracy to work effectively, it is necessary that the voters are
properly informed. By not publishing issues such as those above, the mainstream
media is lying by omission. We have also been deceived as the MSM has been paid
tax payer money via NZ on Air to promote unspecified ‘principles’ of the Treaty
that we have not had the opportunity to consider and vote on. Consequently, our
democracy is significantly compromised and so also is the effectiveness of our
government and the efficiency of our country.
I am concerned that New Zealand will end up somewhere between
indigenous governed Samoa, half the population of which has migrated to New
Zealand to participate the pakeha taonga, and South Africa, which
suffers water and electricity shortages brought about by the ineffective
indigenous ANC Government. We are now forecast to have the same shortages as
our infrastructure comes to the end of its economic life and because of increasing
population due to net migration increase. While we are not even able to maintain
our existing infrastructure, including roads, water and power, we nevertheless
vilify the colonists who originally built it. Instead of praising the colonists
for building one of the best countries in the world for us to live in, we blame
the colonists for purported unsubstantiated wrongs to the Maoris.
Another example is the often mentioned complaint that Maoris had
their language taken from them by European colonists. However, Wiremu Parker
says in a chapter essay “The Substance that Remains” (in Wards, Thirteen
Facets, 1978, p. 187):
Maori Language
Those who say that the suppression of Maori culture in schools was
a deliberate pakeha device to do away with Maori culture would be well advised
to do a little research. The truth is that well-intentioned, but as we now know
misguided, Maoris and pakehas were convinced that they were acting in the best
interests of the Maori people. Mr Takamoana, one of the first newly elected
Maori members of Parliament said in Parliament in 1871 ‘that the whole of the
Maoris in this Island request that the Government should give instruction that
the Maoris should be taught in English only.’9 Another petition by
Renata Kawepo and 790 others, and also one from Piri Ropata and 200 others
asked for every endeavour to have schools established throughout the country so
that Maori children could learn the English language.
As early as 1876 a petition to Parliament from We Te Hakiro and
316 others, asked that all children of two years of age, when just able to
speak, should be taught the English language, so that their first language
should be English. The petition also asked that not a word of Maori be allowed
to be spoken in the school, and that the schoolmaster, his wife, and children
be altogether ignorant of the Maori language.
For years the leaders of the Young Maori Party preached up and
down the country what both A. T. Ngata and Dr Maui Pomare believed that ‘the
first subject in order of priority in the school curriculum was English, the
second most important subject was English, the third most important subject was
English and then arithmetic and other subjects.’
Furthermore, Peter Fraser, the Minister of Education, wrote to Sir
Apirana Ngata in 1936 asking him to “let me know what your people would expect
of our school system.” Ngata replied: “the question you pose is one that I have
raised with my people of the Tairawhiti [Eastern electorate] and the reply has
always been the same – we send our children to school to learn the ways of the
Pakeha.”
Whereas the Maoris are still struggling with that despite being immersed in it in their own country, the Chinese quickly assimilated European science and technology. That implies an intrinsic difference between Maoris and Chinese. Note the higher average IQ of NE Asians given above.
The Government via the mainstream media has been continuously feeding us this sort of stuff for decades now until we have largely come to believe it. It is then used as the basis of Maori grievance and state compensations. Packaged as the He Puapua report, which was hidden from us until after the 2020 election, it was subsequently being frantically written into legislation until the next recent election when we unsurprisingly voted to be rid of it.
I’m not asking that you necessarily agree with me. Please make your own conclusions. However, I do ask that, as best you can, when making your argument, to base it on facts associated by logical links. That’s not as easy as it sounds, even Einstein could get it wrong and did.
Bearing in mind that the keyboard is mightier than the haka, I hope that New Zealanders will use the Referendum debate to identify all of the significant issues, to get all the relevant facts on the table and to satisfy ourselves with a rational argument leading to a workable arrangement for our country, for now and the future. We need input from the pundits, the academics and the politicians; and we should write letters to the editor as well as to our politicians to make points and solicit comments. I believe that the outcome of this debate will determine the viability of our country going forward. It is not enough to simply leave it to ACT and NZ First; they need our input, encouragement and support. Your country needs you.
Happy Christmas!
Dr Barrie Davis is a retired telecommunications
engineer, holds a PhD in the psychology of Christian beliefs, and can often be
found gnashing his teeth reading The Post outside Floyd’s cafe at Island Bay.
4 comments:
You are so right about Māori recognising the need to become fluent English speakers. This generation can’t seem to grasp that thinking. Unfortunately “blame everyone else for your inadequacies” is the mantra, and if you’re lucky a handsome payout will materialise.
Our Prime Minister needs to have crystal clear clarity in his head 24/7 if he is to breathe democratic life back into this country.
He seems to think that if he speaks te reo and speaks nicely to the media they will cut him some slack.....NO Prime Minister, they won't!!!!
The game is on, either democracy wins OR (part) Maori racism wins?
Which is it?
Do you want equality/democracy, in this country – OR APARTHEID?
Has anyone ever produced/published a thesis on the probable course/s of development of the Land of the Long White Cloud without colonisation? Without the ability to acquire land and the slight associated security, even the devoted missionaries would likely have given the place a miss. Is there any country which can be taken as a model?
The three coalition partners were elected into govt. because the electorate were happy with what they promised to do. If they fail to deliver I think they will suffer badly in 2026.
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