I read your piece “NZ Indians have been silent on the butter chicken row. So I’m speaking up” in the Sunday Star-Times today (here). If the Indians have not mentioned it, I can see a good reason why.
You say, “I’ve lived in New Zealand for 18 years. Yet, whenever the inevitable ‘where are you from’ question comes up, I hesitate. Am I Kiwi today or am I Indian today?”
On first acquaintance, I find the colour of a person’s skin the most interesting thing about them, and if there’s a story to go with it, all the better. The maligned “where are you from” question is more pertinent than the banal “how are you?” That’s the last thing I want to know. So, if people ask, “Where are you from?” tell them who you are in all its complexity, if you want. They did ask!
Also, forget about being a ‘Kiwi’, that is just a woke attempt at social engineering by propaganda. The fact is that New Zealand has one of the most diverse populations in the world with a wide variety of cultures. Claiming that there is a unifying ‘Kiwi’ stereotype is to ignore the reality.
What we all need to be individually doing is working within our diverse society to develop social cohesion. Your culture is your business and my curiosity, but together we need to have common objectives politically and economically. Whether we get there eating pork and potatoes or butter chicken is a separate issue. But lack of social cohesion is a present problem for New Zealand which needs addressing.
Certainly, immigration must be controlled and there is an expectation that immigrants will fit in with our way of life. That is, after all, the reason immigrants come here: The country that the British colonists built is one of the best in the world and we want it to continue that way.
I also expect that heritage New Zealanders are aware that immigrants are now doing jobs which they no longer want to do. We can see that Asians, including South Asians, are doing more than their fair share of sustaining our service industries.
Granted also, that you have a juggling act to fit your heritage into the relatively new country you now live in. But that is not really a difficult thing to do unless you make it so. If you are positive about it, you will find it an interesting challenge which provides satisfying results. Be aware that you live in the best of possible worlds, in time and in space.
Now, Shane Jones openly says he gets “cut through on debates by deploying hyperbole,” which means deliberate exaggeration, not to be taken literally. So, in this example, instead of “There is an increase in visa approvals from India due to policy settings,” he says “A butter chicken tsunami.”
Hyperbole is a recognized rhetorical tool in politics which determines how people feel about an issue before they think about it. Any possible problem gets lost in the rhetoric. Instead, Jones is deliberately using metaphorical images to get noticed and provoke a response, which is cut through. In an election year, there is only one thing worse than being talked about… But, he has moved the conversation away from technical policy and towards identity, values, and emotion.
Note, also, that the media have further exaggerated his manipulative language by repeating it in their content and selecting it for their headers. They have also added the views of politicians and community leaders who called Jones’ comments “distasteful,” “racist,” “unacceptable,” or “disrespectful”. (e.g., here and here) For the media, hyperbole is a strategy, not just a communication style.
Don’t forget that, underneath all this humbug, the vast majority of New Zealanders do not unfairly discriminate on the basis of race or culture. The racists and sexists here are few and far between. New Zealand really is an egalitarian nation.
I therefore suggest the reason why ordinary Indians, and other ordinary people, do not talk about Shane Jones is because they sense his motive. To respond is to bring attention to his rhetoric, and participate in a non-literal, meaningless discussion, including in the media, which diverts attention from any possible problem with immigration.
So, I suggest to just ignore Shane Jones, especially at the election.
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.

6 comments:
I can never understand the sensitivity about where from. Unless perhaps in the case of persons with a dubious background; Pol Phot etc. Many citizens have enquiring minds and take an interest in a myriad matters.
What would the reaction have been if Jones had simply referred to Indians? He always uses colouful language so was not creating a special case for Indians.
I wonder whether those doing jobs that our locals don't is because they have to. Are they eligible for the dole? Something to do with the dole for our lazy bludging locals being more attractive than work - just saying.
As per the article in nz herald today the per centage of nx europeans will soon drop to 45% of the population. Nz will end up like fiji, a nice place to visit but you wouldn't want to live there. And the iwi should be happy with all the " nasty' colonists leaving by the planeload. This is what they have been asking for. Decolonisation might happen naturally.
I was not interested where people came from, but I was always interested why they picked New Zealand. I asked one colleague from Macedonia why and he said that he did not pick New Zealand as such, but he looked at a map of the world and saw that it was as far away from Europe as he could get. He put a hand up level with his eyes, palm down, and shook it and said that "Europe is nearing boiling Point and soon will boil over, and I want to get as far away from there as possible". Perhaps he was right!
“He always uses colouful language so was not creating a special case for Indians”
Mate the cognitive dissonance needed to put out a statement like that is off the charts hey. My racist uncle talks like this all the time, and you know what? My uncle’s a racist.
@Kawena I did much the same 25 years ago as your Macedonian colleague did. I left the UK the day Blair got re-elected. I won't say NZ doesn't have problems but there's a lot of people moaning here who have never seen how bad things can really get. Rest assured, being several decades behind the rest of the world isn't bad in all cases!
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