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4 Comments

  1. Can you think of any other subgroup of the population with it’s own special interests and better exposure to compare Maori media time with (and prove your point)? Or should there not be any comparison. What about the unemployed, the sick/disabled, retirement aged people, people from Asian cultures, people who like intelligent political shows, people who live in the country or small towns, vegetarians…….get the point?

    You can, of course, argue that Maori are a special case, deserving not only of their own funded channels, but also an increased quota of specialized and positive content, (and, to be brutally honest, in many cases likely to be of interest almost exclusively to themselves), but that is a different argument from the simple “it’s not fair” you have adopted.

    I am happy to be proven wrong on this. Perhaps if you could analyse the amount of RNZ content which is specifically only of interest to non-Maori or certainly of no interest to any Maori, we can revisit the issue.

  2. We pakeha need the Maori voice to be strong as Maori are the ones who speak for the environment that is still somewhat safe due to their past strong voice so yes give the funding to them to retain a strong voice for our common good for gods sake Carol Hirschfield and the RNZ Chairman Richard Griffin need to front up and find a solution so that the Maori voice can be heard.

  3. Both the Maori and the English language can work well side by side
    – I have seen and heard some examples within our media, there are not a lot, but it is possible. The children’s programme ‘tiki tour’ is one of these examples.
    The Maori culture is unique to New Zealand, we need to embrace it – not shun it, as is happening at present.

  4. @Nick. Firstly Maori are not a “special” case.
    Maori are the Tangatawhenua of Aotearoa. Maori is one of the three official languages of New Zealand. English and Sign Language being the other two. Just take a moment to absorb and come to grips with those facts.

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