Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

21 Comments

  1. The cancel culture has reached a new government: Cancel; Cultural reports, gang patches, co-government, 3 waters, cell phones in classrooms, income insurance, Auckland fuel tax, clean car discount, Wellington moving, Maori health, Auckland rail project, health education, smoking reduction plans, fair employment, etc.

  2. I will soon be a comfortably retired mortgage free white boomer. But my children are maori and my grandson is on the road to being bilingual. My old broken body will be on the streets supporting any resistance against attacks on the integrity of the Treaty.

  3. I will soon be a comfortably retired mortgage free white boomer. But my children are maori and my grandson is on the road to being bilingual. My old broken body will be on the streets supporting any resistance against attacks on the integrity of the Treaty.

  4. I don’t recall another Right wing Government in my life time.
    This voters in NZ are far more comfortable with centrist Governments any day.

    Another 2 years and 11 months until we return to normality.

  5. Just get back to the intent of the Treaty in 1840. Three simple Articles. Forget about “partnership”, from which “co-governance” evolved. They only became fashionable from the 1970’s.

    1. So Maori get back all the stuff that was taken from them? All those treasures that were guaranteed?

    2. I did a workshop on the treaty earlier this year and it turns out that (amongst other things) it allowed for Maori to Govern Maori and for Queen Victoria’s representative to govern Pakeha. “Co-governance” has become a phrase that make people react violently but when you actually read The Treaty (AND Te Tiriti) it certainly looks like a form of co governance.

    3. While it probably seemed sensible to them at the time the treaty was actually 2 documents in English and Maori so the logical decision to honour the version that the Maori leaders signed is what causes problems with the colonial types who want to keep their material advantage gained by the theft of Maori land since that time

    4. Well that’s a bit bloody simplistic isn’t it. The three articles didn’t mention “by the way I the Crown will help myself to your land and generally stuff you over”. What became fashionable was trying to address that theft.

  6. It depends on whose intent you are talking about afaf. I am sure our Māori whanau did not sign a treaty document to be continually trampled. As for the concept of partnership, there has never been a true partnership as Pakeha has mostly taken and claimed everything they can get and more. In the early 70s when I was at college the TOW was being called a fraud and our people were made to feel ashamed to be Māori. This will never happen again our people will not allow it to, and we cannot and will not go backwards no matter who’s in government. There are calls from Maoridom for our people to unite, mobilize and prepare for a fight and we will. One of our Māori leaders has called this a Rangiriri moment, while another has referred to the manifestos (of those in power) akin to a declaration of war on Māori. This is shaping up to be a very controversial and difficult three years. Governments come and go but we as a people will be going nowhere the colonisers have tried to wipe us out before and failed.

  7. It depends on whose intent you are talking about afaf. I am sure our Māori whanau did not sign a treaty document to be continually trampled. As for the concept of partnership, there has never been a true partnership as Pakeha has mostly taken and claimed everything they can get and more. In the early 70s when I was at college the TOW was being called a fraud and our people were made to feel ashamed to be Māori. This will never happen again our people will not allow it to, and we cannot and will not go backwards no matter who’s in government. There are calls from Maoridom for our people to unite, mobilize and prepare for a fight and we will. One of our Māori leaders has called this a Rangiriri moment, while another has referred to the manifestos (of those in power) akin to a declaration of war on Māori. This is shaping up to be a very controversial and difficult three years. Governments come and go but we as a people will be going nowhere the colonisers have tried to wipe us out before and failed.

  8. It depends on whose intent you are talking about afaf. I am sure our Māori whanau did not sign a treaty document to be continually trampled. As for the concept of partnership, there has never been a true partnership as Pakeha has mostly taken and claimed everything they can get and more. In the early 70s when I was at college the TOW was being called a fraud and our people were made to feel ashamed to be Māori. This will never happen again our people will not allow it to, and we cannot and will not go backwards no matter who’s in government. There are calls from Maoridom for our people to unite, mobilize and prepare for a fight and we will. One of our Māori leaders has called this a Rangiriri moment, while another has referred to the manifestos (of those in power) akin to a declaration of war on Māori. This is shaping up to be a very controversial and difficult three years. Governments come and go but we as a people will be going nowhere the colonisers have tried to wipe us out before and failed.

  9. It depends on whose intent you are talking about afaf. I am sure our Māori whanau did not sign a treaty document to be continually trampled. As for the concept of partnership, there has never been a true partnership as Pakeha has mostly taken and claimed everything they can get and more. In the early 70s when I was at college the TOW was being called a fraud and our people were made to feel ashamed to be Māori. This will never happen again our people will not allow it to, and we cannot and will not go backwards no matter who’s in government. There are calls from Maoridom for our people to unite, mobilize and prepare for a fight and we will. One of our Māori leaders has called this a Rangiriri moment, while another has referred to the manifestos (of those in power) akin to a declaration of war on Māori. This is shaping up to be a very controversial and difficult three years. Governments come and go but we as a people will be going nowhere the colonisers have tried to wipe us out before and failed.

Comments are closed.