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MICHAEL BASSETT: WHY ARE LOUD MOUTHS FRIGHTENED ABOUT THE PRINCIPLES OF THE TREATY

It’s amazing to see the energy being invested in attacks on David Seymour and ACT over the proposed bill, that no one has yet seen, on the Principles of the Treaty. Four hundred religious leaders, Radio NZ, TV, the New Zealand Herald’s Julia Gabel, the newly unhinged Matthew Hooton, the Labour Party that should know better, the seriously weird Greens, and the unintelligible Maori Party are all piling on to Seymour with arguments that vary between the specious and the absurd. It’s for a reason. They all know that a majority of New Zealanders are sick to their back teeth of the never-ending new Treaty claims that are being advanced every day. One poll showed that 61% of Kiwis wanted Seymour’s bill, and many others weren’t yet sure. If a referendum were to be held it’s clear the game would be up. No more absurd rulings by the courts who have taken to reinterpreting what Parliament intended with legislation. As the late King Tuheitia said “There’s no principles. The Treaty has been written and that’s it!”


In 1890 when the Treaty was fifty years old, then at its centennial in 1940, and at the 150th anniversary of the signing in 1990, the Treaty that was celebrated was the original three clause translation of the Maori version signed by the chiefs. Sovereignty was passed for ever to Queen Victoria; in return she promised to guarantee Maori ownership of their lands, villages and treasures unless they had sold by an agreed process; and the Queen promised to protect Maori and give them the same rights and duties of citizenship as the people of Britain. In other words, New Zealand was founded on an agreement between Maori and Pakeha. It was not based on colonial conquest or any illegitimate invasion of settlers.


The current debate about the Treaty wouldn’t be occurring if it weren’t for those who have been reinterpreting the Treaty. To serve their own interests some jump up and down about the ills of colonialism; others argue that the Crown made an ongoing promise to provide special advantages for Maori. At least 400 have convinced themselves that the Crown owes Maori more than equal opportunities, and must guarantee the impossible – equal outcomes in life - no matter whether many fail to take the health and educational opportunities placed right under their noses. Others argue that the Treaty gives Maori the right to co-governance, and even to a Maori parliament, despite Article One. 


Right now, there is a growth industry in Maori bush lawyers arguing that, notwithstanding the fact that tribes or hapu sold land under the system outlined in the second article of the Treaty, the descendants of the original sellers still retain rights over that same land. In the Waikato, the Gore District, the Queenstown Lakes District Council and other parts of the country, stand-over tactics are being employed by iwi demanding monetary payments for “cultural impact assessments” to be performed by the iwi on any plans that a council or an individual owner might have for the development of the land long-since sold out of Maori ownership. The Treaty is being waved about in a menacing fashion, and councils and owners are expected to grease the palms of those who are using these mafia-like tactics. This was never anticipated in the original Treaty. Once sold, the application of Article Two to that land ceases to exist. Not surprisingly, the handful of Maori self-servers currently getting away with highway robbery want the status quo to continue, and don’t want David Seymour’s bill. It threatens their significant income stream. It is not clear to me that the additional words Seymour recently announced that he intends to add to his bill will clarify this issue, although they certainly should.


It’s my observation that many new claims are becoming repetitive and nonsensical, and are parroted by people – Maori and Pakeha - who usually haven’t bothered to read the Treaty. In the case of the Mainstream Media they are being promoted for political purposes. TV One and Radio NZ never miss an opportunity to quote wrong or misleading statements from Labour spokespeople. These days the New Zealand Herald might as well wave Labour’s flag from its masthead. Kiwis who just want to get on with their lives are sick of it, and they perceive in Seymour’s bill an opportunity to restrain extremism while also reminding our courts about what, precisely, the Treaty means and what it doesn’t mean. When push comes to shove, legislation can always over-rule any contracts made between robbers and councils, or anyone else.


Meantime, both National and New Zealand First wobble in the wind. They know that the status quo is wrong. But because they didn’t think the issue of the Treaty through carefully enough before stating their positions they are left looking like by-standers, with their eyes closed to rorts that are being perpetrated in plain sight.


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130 Comments


Gerard
Gerard
2 days ago

Aaron, where are you? Your voice is needed!

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pghayward
2 days ago

One obvious basic logical fact about land sales, is this. Looking at the current time, mature long-developed urban land is worth millions per acre. Rural land, even with networks of roads and water supply and other utilities, is worth around $10,000 per acre. A lot more if it is close to a growing city and it is expected that it will be zoned for development one day.

But imagine if someone owned a large chunk of total wilderness? What would it be worth? What would the government pay for it, having in mind to put in roads and services and make it useable? What would a large private sector developer pay? In fact, even if no development was intended and…

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Charles
a day ago
Replying to

I dont know if the number of people occupying or using the resources of an area is relevant, and lets face it the southern alps in Te Waipounamu were not occupied.


We only need to go back no earlier than 1840 and almost all historical claims have now been settled. Any new claims have to show there were breaches of the treaty and can be assessed by the courts or parliament.

Edited
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Administrator
Administrator
2 days ago

This is a link to the Sean Plunket/David Seymour interview today (Sept 16) about the bill, referred to below by Tiglath Pileser:

https://theplatform.kiwi/podcasts/episode/david-seymour-on-the-cabinet-confirmed-treaty-principles

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Bovverboy
Bovverboy
2 days ago

The alterations David Seymour made to the proposed Bill are obviously a compromise to appease National et al to garner wider support. It's far from ideal because it still leaves that second principle open to the same bastardised interpretations that we have now. Everyone who opposes the current racist system needs to get on board and make a submission and make it clear that they support the Bill as previously defined without the ambiguity that was added to the second Principle. Spread the word far and wide because there's a shit storm coming from the other side and the people of NZ can't be meek and mild on this issue any longer as the country slowly slides down the drain.

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Cameron Hunter
Cameron Hunter
2 days ago

David Seymour is overplaying his hand... the helping hand National extended by stepping aside in Epsom and our PM's oft expressed preference of a National/ACT co-governance arrangement.

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Jules
a day ago
Replying to

People aren’t voting for Labour because of their stance on the Maori stuff or because they agree with Labour’s support for a version of apartheid in NZ. They vote for them because they always have, they are under the illusion that Labour are still the party of the working classes or they think Labour will improve public services and/or look after them. They unfortunately can’t see (or choose to ignore) Maori stuff and don’t see it as important. That’s very different from actively supporting it.

Edited
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