These days, when reading statements from Te Partly Maori it’s often hard to trust one’s eyesight. A few days ago, Hana-Rawhiti Maipi Clarke who faces suspension from the House for participating in the haka against David Seymour in opposition to his Treaty Principles Bill, was reported to be proposing legislation that would require MPs to learn about the Treaty and uphold its principles. What’s that again? Uphold its principles? She had a chance earlier in the year, but she ripped up her fellow Maori Seymour’s Bill rather than contribute to the debate, or make submissions on it. But TPM dances to its own music, and only its own, it seems. Why won’t she tell us what she has been reading that led her to disagree with Seymour? And, why won’t she and her colleagues engage in activities that really could improve Maori lives?
These days, irrationality is one of TPM’s biggest hurdles. Their persistence in asserting that Maori are so deprived that every aspect of Maori life needs special assistance that is available only to them is a key example, until one realises that it is the well-paid jobs that go with special assistance that they are really chasing. By themselves, and without help from the holders of those jobs, many Maori have over the last two decades increased their life expectancy and lifted their educational achievements. Thanks to Treaty settlements and a bit of honest get-up-and-go, most Maori household incomes today are close to Pakeha standards. Nor is there any evidence that Maori are conspicuously less well treated by any aspect of the health system. No wonder the new government after 2023 abolished the separate Maori health authority. According to fellow columnist Tony Vaughn, its racially-selected bureaucrats “produced a mountain of consultancy invoices, a glossy logo, and a thriving cottage industry of diversity experts billing taxpayers for sermons on cultural safety”. It didn’t, and couldn’t, reduce the length of hospital waiting lists for either Maori or Pakeha. And when Maori so-called education specialists got anywhere near schools where Maori were enrolled in significant numbers, all that happened was that their bureaucrats insisted on kapa haka in the mornings and Te Reo lessons in the afternoon. Little wonder that many young Maori leave schools in an unemployable state, move on to welfare, and then drift off into crime and to prison. Maori who are 17% of the total New Zealand population are 51% of today’s prison population.
Why are the likes of TPM not concentrating on the real causes of the problems experienced by growing numbers of their people? If the likes of Maipi-Clarke, Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa Packer concentrated their energies on encouraging their tribal kinsmen to take a personal interest in the 30% or so of their number who are consistently falling behind because of the cultural racism they insist on inflicting on Maori, the lives they lead would inevitably improve. There is no future for those who immerse themselves in resentment, call for race-based hiring quotas, or denounce Captain Cook, colonialism, or Pakeha standards of education.
Instead, what has benefited Maori over the last few decades is self-help. Knocking off smoking was good for their wallets, and for their health. Encouraging young Maori to select long-lasting sexual partners would do wonders for the huge numbers of children who are fecklessly conceived and left with minimal support in their early years. That only 18% of new born Maori babies arrived into married households in 2024 is a national disgrace. I’m yet to hear of any steps TPM is taking to improve this situation. The Budget’s restraining of access to welfare for school leavers and encouragement from Maori leaders for those children to avail themselves instead of the plethora of trade training and other forms of higher education will always produce better results for young people than constantly organising rent-a-crowds outside Parliament to shout and roar against issues like the principles of the Treaty, especially since some Maori leaders like Maipi Clarke say they believe in them. Confusing your followers seldom produces good political outcomes.
Another area where TPM might produce a spectacular improvement in the standing of Maori in the wider community would be if they put some real energy into encouraging their disaffected young into greater participation in sport. Why has it been left to Pacific Islanders? I come from a generation where Maori figured largely in the All Blacks and League in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. Those sports provided goals for young Maori men whose aimlessness these days leads to welfare-created chaos, with catastrophic results.
Modern failure on so many fronts of Maori society points to the worthlessness of their leaders. The continuing damage they inflict on their people by preaching nothing but racial division, victimhood, absurd assertions about the Treaty, and a desire to push Maori, who are all more Pakeha in their ancestry than Maori, into belligerent, ignorant racial separatism is having no positive outcomes. So many things bind us all together. But the likes of Maipi Clarke, Ngarewa Packer and Waiititi refuse to acknowledge them, preferring the pursuit of needless legislation and goals that have “dead end” stamped all over them.
Why are the likes of TPM not concentrating on the real causes of the problems experienced by growing numbers of their people? If the likes of Maipi-Clarke, Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa Packer concentrated their energies on encouraging their tribal kinsmen to take a personal interest in the 30% or so of their number who are consistently falling behind because of the cultural racism they insist on inflicting on Maori, the lives they lead would inevitably improve. There is no future for those who immerse themselves in resentment, call for race-based hiring quotas, or denounce Captain Cook, colonialism, or Pakeha standards of education.
Instead, what has benefited Maori over the last few decades is self-help. Knocking off smoking was good for their wallets, and for their health. Encouraging young Maori to select long-lasting sexual partners would do wonders for the huge numbers of children who are fecklessly conceived and left with minimal support in their early years. That only 18% of new born Maori babies arrived into married households in 2024 is a national disgrace. I’m yet to hear of any steps TPM is taking to improve this situation. The Budget’s restraining of access to welfare for school leavers and encouragement from Maori leaders for those children to avail themselves instead of the plethora of trade training and other forms of higher education will always produce better results for young people than constantly organising rent-a-crowds outside Parliament to shout and roar against issues like the principles of the Treaty, especially since some Maori leaders like Maipi Clarke say they believe in them. Confusing your followers seldom produces good political outcomes.
Another area where TPM might produce a spectacular improvement in the standing of Maori in the wider community would be if they put some real energy into encouraging their disaffected young into greater participation in sport. Why has it been left to Pacific Islanders? I come from a generation where Maori figured largely in the All Blacks and League in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. Those sports provided goals for young Maori men whose aimlessness these days leads to welfare-created chaos, with catastrophic results.
Modern failure on so many fronts of Maori society points to the worthlessness of their leaders. The continuing damage they inflict on their people by preaching nothing but racial division, victimhood, absurd assertions about the Treaty, and a desire to push Maori, who are all more Pakeha in their ancestry than Maori, into belligerent, ignorant racial separatism is having no positive outcomes. So many things bind us all together. But the likes of Maipi Clarke, Ngarewa Packer and Waiititi refuse to acknowledge them, preferring the pursuit of needless legislation and goals that have “dead end” stamped all over them.
Historian Dr Michael Bassett, a Minister in the Fourth Labour Government. This article was first published HERE
9 comments:
The " woke" world is irrational and emotive . Its inhabitants are intent on attaining their weird and often dangerous goals starting with autocratic political authority
socio- cultural control and economic power which will earn them mega-wealth.
Common sense is the last thing that matters to these people - in fact they despise and ridicule this attribute. TPM is more like a cult than a normal political party.
Alarmingly, far too many people in Aotearoa seem to admire the TPM agenda and its methodology.
They keep doing it because the likes of Luxon appear to think their claims are quite reasonable. His naïveté will ruin this country and he’ll walk away without a backward look- as per John Key and those that opened a Pandora’s box when the Waitangi Settlements were accepted back to 1840.
Yes, yes and yes. Another candidate for insertion in local papers and a leaflet that should be distributed to schools and parliamentarians.
That's why so many maori nz'ers are moving to Australia, because they just get treated like everyone else and aren't told they are victims every 5 minutes. Te partly party are themselves the racists, in my opinion.
Luxon is not naive - his action is totally programmed.
Is that too many people in NEW ZEALAND ?
My focus is on our totally shameful statistic of having the longest tail of underachievement in the developed world.
Maori are over-represented in this tail by being about a third of it at least .
This is an educational fiasco , but I'm the only one, it seems who persists in mentioning it.
Of course Maori have many self-destructive behaviours but for me our present education system should also be challenged on their woke-Marxist -Progressive ideology which results in producing a great underclass destined for welfare dependence or prison.
It is so destructive and selfish of Te Pati Maori to claim Maori are the only victims in our society . Not for one moment do they think of other groups who are also victims of our iniquitous education system and also at the bottom of the heap. How does Te Reo or Mataurangi help them ?
Marxism is a big factor in causing Maori social disadvantages and more Matxism is never going to be the solution. Colonisation is not the culprit , rather our rotten education system is in failing children particularly in the basics of English literacy including written work and arithmetic .
And yet, we now have Minister Stanford chucking a $100M at Maori centric education and further embedding it by way of legislation in our schools.
Hands-up those that think this will honestly improve the outcomes of all, or will it just provide another opportunity for victimhood indoctrination of the many, and grift for just the few?
“Maori who are 17% of the total New Zealand population are 51% of today’s prison population.”
There are many NZers of Māori descent who have no interest in Māori language and culture, who identify solely as New Zealanders.
Let’s assume maybe one third of this number are brown supremacist part-Māori, by which I mean individuals of mixed European-Maori descent who opt to self-identify as ‘Māori.’
That means just over 5% of our population provides 51% of the prison muster.
The vast majority of those of Māori descent are no more inclined towards criminality than their fellow-citizens.
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