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  1. “….because New Zealand’s public institutions, including universities, are founded in our settlement history and adhere to western university traditions and cultures….”

    Of course our universities adhere to Western traditions: they are a priori a Western concept. Which has stood the test of time.

    The report claims the following:
    “That these institutions therefore, are structurally, systemically, and casually
    discriminatory”

    To assert that, because unis are a Western concept, it follows that they are discriminatory, is an unjustifiable leap of logic, in my view.

    “…there is a case for structural, systemic, and casual discrimination at the University of Waikato.”

    I’m puzzled by this: I’m not sure what the authors mean.

    “….these structural and systemic issues of discrimination and racism.”

    What are these issues? Racism? That sounds implausible, given that this isn’t a racist society. Except, of course, for the Maori electoral system, which – on the definition of racism as being what governments do by way of laws and regulatory arrangements – is indisputably racist.

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