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    1. Whites are taught to see themselves as individuals, rather than as part of a racial group. Individualism enables us to deny that racism is structured into the fabric of society. This erases our history and hides the way in which wealth has accumulated over generations and benefits us, as a group, today. It also allows us to distance ourselves from the history and actions of our group. Thus we get very irate when we are “accused” of racism, because as individuals, we are “different” from other white people and expect to be seen as such; we find intolerable any suggestion that our behavior or perspectives are typical of our group as a whole.

  1. New Zealanders are simply unable to solve their racial and cultural issues and challenges, as they are totally divided, not one nation.

    1. what it means to be white in a society that proclaims race meaningless, yet is deeply divided by race. This is what I have learned: Any white person living in NZ will develop opinions about race simply by swimming in the water of our culture. But mainstream sources—schools, textbooks, media—don’t provide us with the multiple perspectives we need.

      Yes, we will develop strong emotionally laden opinions, but they will not be informed opinions. Our socialization renders us racially illiterate. When you add a lack of humility to that illiteracy (because we don’t know what we don’t know), you get the break-down we so often see when trying to engage white people in meaningful conversations about race.

    2. While individual whites may be against racism, they still benefit from the distribution of resources controlled by their group. Yes, an individual person of color can sit at the tables of power, but the overwhelming majority of decision-makers will be white. Yes, white people can have problems and face barriers, but systematic racism won’t be one of them. This distinction—between individual prejudice and a system of unequal institutionalized racial power—is fundamental. One cannot understand how racism functions in NZ today if one ignores group power relations.

    3. Anyway it is worth having the discussion, we are not even mature enough as a Nation to have an intelligent conversation about Immigration.

      Winston brings up the subject of Immigration and the former squash player and Race Relations Councilliator starts accusing him of Racism ?

      We are still a very immature, insular and reactionary type society who does not know where it stands in the Modern World and does not have a vision of where it wants to go in the future ?

  2. A nationawide poll on the Maori seats would be a clear example of the tyranny of the majority suppressing the needs of a minority.

    If this goes through, what other minority rights can be abolished by “majority” vote?

    This is a red line in the sand.

  3. Probably better to have just people of Maori ethnicity or bloodlines to vote in the Referendum otherwise the white majority will definitely vote to abolish the Maori Electorate Seats.

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