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  1. Māori doesn’t have a fiscal union with the crown. The crown just showed up one day and traded all Taonga and income producing assets for lovely bits of paper. Not having a fiscal Union is something the Europen Union is painfully illustrating. If Māori and the crown where to have a real Union then at least 15% of the budget so about $12 billion or 75% of that would go directly into the Māori economy. Then you can slap trade rules on it.

  2. An important contribution. Everything you say and do is impressive Annette Sykes. You give me hope for the future

  3. Umm
    Putting aside syphilis and other diseases deposited by Cook’s merry men which later decimated the Pacific populations, try the following spin from a bloke named Connolly.

    “Happy Killing of Captain Cook Day! “On February 14, 1779 Captain James Cook of the british royal navy was killed by natives in Kealakekua Bay, on the Big Island of Hawaii. Cook was a true savage, who sailed across the world bringing murder, rape, disease, and colonialism to native peoples all over the Pacific.

    “When he was killed, Cook was trying to kidnap the Hawaiian Aliʻi (tribal chief) Kalaniʻōpuʻu in response to an unknown person stealing a small boat. In the process, he had threatened to open fire on the islanders.

    “At this point, the Hawaiians decided they had enough of Cook’s bullshit, threatened with mass murder and the kidnapping of one of their tribal leaders, the Hawaiian islanders finally gave this piece of shit what he deserved: a beatdown on the beach, and a knife to the chest. This put an end to a lifetime of predatory behavior and conquest of lands in the service to the british empire.

    “So how about instead of celebrating a boring consumerist holiday like Valentine’s Day, we celebrate something awesome, like the death of Captain Cook …” James Connolly

    Notwithstanding the above (if its true) Cook was an intrepid traveller, in my view. Just take a peek at the routes he travelled in his time and space and , well – pretty impressive I reckon.

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