The Cheaty of Waitangi & how it has failed us all in 2022

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The First
The chiefs of the Confederation and all the chiefs who have not joined that Confederation give absolutely to the Queen of England for ever the complete government over their land.

The Second
The Queen of England agrees to protect the chiefs, the subtribes and all the people of New Zealand in the unqualified exercise of their chieftainship over their lands, villages and all their treasures. But on the other hand the chiefs of the Confederation and all the chiefs will sell land to the Queen at a price agreed to by the person owning it and by the person buying it (the latter being) appointed by the Queen as her purchase agent.

The Third
For this agreed arrangement therefore concerning the government of the Queen, the Queen of England will protect all the ordinary people of New Zealand and will give them the same rights and duties of citizenship as the people of England.

I am tired of Waitangi Day.

I’m tired because no matter how much Māori try, Pakeha in this country still don’t get the reason why many Māori protest at Waitangi Day. It’s like living in an abusive home where dad spends most of the year beating his children and then complains when no one wants to celebrate Christmas dinner.

In less than 1 century, Māori lost 95% of their land and their population was decimated to almost extinction levels. That reality of colonialism is at odds with the idea of a ‘treaty’ between two peoples and is the reason why Māori are over represented in every single negative social statistic. Rob a people of 95% of their economic base and then ignore that impact on their current position in society is adding insult to injury.

We should be thankful in this country that Māori have been so generous in their forgiveness of this atrocity. Watch the fury of pakeha having to mow their berms to appreciate how one sided our preciousness of ownership is in this country.

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This country’s wealth has been built upon one simple concept, steal as much indigenous land as possible and NEVER pay it back!

For me, I love the Treaty because of the relationship of responsibility it immediately sets up between the Crown and its people. I believe the Treaty needs to be expanded to all NZers and not just Maori because it sets out the obligations of the Crown to protect the rights of its people. We deserve as a nation to entrench the Treaty as the basis of our constitution so we can force Governments to protect our rights rather than strip us of them.

Pakeha want to gloss over the theft and confiscation of indigenous lands because it’s a shameful denial of the promise of a Treaty between two peoples and when you consider the paltry compensation that has been paid back to Maori via the Waitangi Tribunal, it’s a mere $2Billion.

$2 Billion for confiscating the majority of NZ??? What is most egregious is that some Pakeha have the audacity to claim that pathetic reparation is a ‘gravy train’.

It’s not the Treaty of Waitangi – it’s the Cheaty of Waitangi and until Māori get their fair share it’s a national day of embarrassment, not celebration and Māori have every right to use the day to voice their anger at being cheated.

The beauty of the Treaty is that it spells out the power dynamic between the State and all the peoples of New Zealand.

It is the State’s obligation to protect the rights, agency and self sovereignty of all people and seen within that lens, the State has not only failed Māori appallingly, it has failed us all.

Intergenerational poverty, widening inequality, skyrocketing suicide rates, domestic violence rates that never stop, racist justice systems.

The State has failed in its obligations to us all!

Rather than pointlessly demand everyone speaks Māori, why not demand no child is hungry and in poverty?

The enormity of the number of vulnerable children abused by the State in NZ must force reflection…

Royal Commission into Abuse in Care: Estimated 250,000 victims

The numbers are astounding – figures out this morning from the Royal Commission into Abuse in Care estimate there are up to 250,000 victims over 70 years.

They are children, young people and vulnerable adults who suffered beatings, sexual assault and other cruelty while in state or religious care between 1950 and 2019.

The cost to society of the physical and mental injuries, criminal behaviour, homelessness, lack of education and unemployment is calculated at $217 billion.

…at least quarter of a million NZ children abused, costing over $200billion and causing immeasurable social carnage.

200 000 kids in poverty, another 800 000 adults in poverty and entire generations locked out of home ownership, that’s the legacy of NZ, that is the legacy of the State failing to protect our collective rights under the Treaty.

The neoliberal welfare state is an underfunded punitive stick with which to beat the Christ out of the weakest members of society.

We must all hang out heads in collective shame.

This is what happens when a punitive culture of mini tyrants are left in charge of an underfunded process designed to punish the poor.

Once upon a time in New Zealand, the agencies of state welfare were constructed as an instrumental and direct means to ensure our egalitarian values.

Social welfare was seen as a way to redistribute back to the most vulnerable amongst us and these agencies were critical in carrying out that redistribution.

There was a pride involved in this public service, our compassion made us unique and it built the values from which we as New Zealanders have benefitted from.

That simply is no longer the case.

Between the 1950s-1980s, a perverse mix of ignorance, zero oversight and the darker side of our nature dominated large insinuations that acted more like an abusers paradise than a socially progressive democratic welfare system.

For the last 30+ years, the neoliberal experiment has turned our once egalitarian welfare state into a neoliberal welfare state. The branches of social welfare, the MoD, CYFS, Corrections, Parole Services, Housing NZ, WINZ and Mental health have all been warped and mutated into weapons to punish the poor for being vulnerable.

In a culture of me first and gimme, gimmies where success is private and failure is personal , we see the poor as victims of their own circumstance rather than as a result of the hegemonic structures of power.

The poor, the vulnerable, the weak, the sick and the disabled do everything in their power not to be needing assistance from these Government agencies, because these Government agencies don’t help, they only punish.

We have a MoD who put homeless people into illegal housing.

We have a WINZ service who break people each day and force them to grovel on their belly to make ends meet. Who perform mass surveillance spying on beneficiaries to catch them out in ‘relationships’ despite WINZ not telling anyone what the actual relationship equation is and we have 60% of beneficiaries oweing WINZ money because WINZ claims they’ve defrauded the system by having a ‘relationship’.

We have a Corrections department that is more interested in hiding prisoner suicide stats than actually looking after their prisoners.

We have a Paroles Service that almost every NGO despises having to work with because it’s staffed by people who enjoy the power they have over prisoners lives and are concerned with  only throwing them back into prison.

We have an agency that sexually molests, abuses and assaults the children they are supposed to look after while continuing to remove children from families.

We have a mental health system that still sees skyrocketing suicide rates.

We have a Housing NZ more focused on throwing people out of their homes based on flawed meth testing than providing shelter to the poorest amongst us.

22000 are on social housing waiting lists, 1 in 5 children live in poverty and speculators are pricing home ownership out of reach for every generation who isn’t a boomer.

For me, nothing  sums up the horror of our neoliberal welfare state more than what happened in 2016 with the Auckland Action Against Poverty beneficiary clinic they held for 3 days outside a South Auckland WINZ office. Over a 1000 people lined up to beg for help from activists to gain some type of assistance from WINZ.

Just comprehend that.

WINZ are so evil to these people that a 1000 of them lined up to gain assistance from AAAP. Some had walked since before dawn to arrive in time to get help. Many were in tears and emotionally distraught by the way WINZ had treated them.

What kind of an indictment is that?

Right now we have Oranga Tamariki, a neoliberal welfare experiment that argues early intervention will save the State downstream costs and we are seeing the exact same types of State abuses occur again!

Which demands questions of us on the Left.

Is this abuse because of grotesque underfunding of a welfare system that is about punishing the vulnerable or is there something innate about the State that means its lack of oversight and accountability will always be reduced to an abusers paradise?

The older I get, the more convinced I am that the biggest abuser of rights in NZ is the State.

Every passing year I become more of an anarchist at a time when the State will be essential for surviving the climate crisis.

Elections change Governments.

Revolutions change the State.

We need a revolution at the ballot box to seriously reform the State or we are simply enabling it to continue to damage our fellow citizens.

Our forefathers died and bled on foreign shores to prevent Governments from damaging their own people like this, perhaps the real fight was always here.

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11 COMMENTS

  1. The basis of capitalism is theft and so we really shouldn’t be surprised that theft happened.

    Be upset about it? Yes
    Try to do something about the injustice? Yes

    But I suspect that will never happen while the world celebrates the theft that is capitalism.

  2. The way to fix the mess is simple.

    1- Parliamentary terms limited to 3×3. This to discourage wet wipe woke’s like Richard Hills being forever on the public’s teat as a party disciple. Same for local body candidates. After 3 terms go. Same for head of departments in state run organisations. If you have not improved the value of the dollar spent after 9 years, just go.

    2- Decentralise the public service. Break up the Wellington beltway and stop the incessant addition of managerial layers that serve no function. Would strengthen the regions. There is no reason the proposed 3 Watewrs state entity needs to reside in Wellington and add 6000 more public servants. Simply strengthen Auckland’s Watercare infrastructure to cover New Zealand. Same with the new Health board. Set it up based on existing infrastructure in Christchurch. No reason why a new Ministry of Works head office could not be in Palmerston North.

    3- A multi party parliamentary expenditure committee (on which our elected members can serve no more than 2×3 terms) to bring the various head of state departments (and the reserve bank) in for questioning on direction and expenditure (in front of live camera’s) to make sure they continue to get the biggest bang for tax payers dollars spent. Chair person could be from outside the parliament whose sole role is a non voting director (as in orchestral director) to steer the committee. Some one like Sir Ian Taylor. Even Sir Bob Jones (maybe not). Plenty of senior figures from an administrative background to keep the expenditure committee focused.

    4- Get rid of the state services commission (replaced by the parliamentary expenditure commission). Replace the un-elected poacher turned gamekeeper with the tax payers representatives.

  3. “Our forefathers died and bled on foreign shores to prevent Governments from damaging their own people like this, perhaps the real fight was always here.”
    Absolutely!
    There will never be a revolution at the ballot box Bomber, democracy has been destroyed in NZ by Neo- Liberalism.
    Mao said “power comes out of the barrel of a gun” .
    As I too get older with every passing year I have come to realise that violent revolution is the only way change will ever happen.Unfortunately we are too fragmented as a society for that to happen.
    However mother nature will almost certainly force change with her own brand of violence that no human can challenge.
    Watch this space.

  4. Martyn, if this is not your Magnum Opus, it should be. Thank you for your effort and for spelling out a future direction for the country – if only …….

  5. “Our forefathers died and bled on foreign shores to prevent Governments from damaging their own people like this, perhaps the real fight was always here.”
    Absolutely!
    There will never be a revolution at the ballot box Bomber, democracy has been destroyed in NZ by Neo- Liberalism.
    Mao said “power comes out of the barrel of a gun” .
    As I too get older with every passing year I have come to realise that violent revolution is the only way change will ever happen.Unfortunately we are too fragmented as a society for that to happen.
    However mother nature will almost certainly force change with her own brand of violence that no human can challenge.
    Watch this space.

  6. It makes a nice change to read a balanced vision of possible Treaty outcomes. One of the best actually. One of peace, love for fellow man and enduring universal prosperity.
    We know we are failing so we know we have to change, drastically. Starting with massive street protests? This will send a message but only garner more spin and confusion but I would be out there.
    Alternatively a new political movement with honourable people and policies. Surely there is enough willpower, passion, decency and talent to come forward. A grass roots revolution, a mix of old and wise, young and keen. Judge them not on what they say they will do – but on what they have already achieved. Even young ones have a track record from college and Uni.
    No Communist Youth leaders required…no idealogues…thanks.
    The ferry is about to leave, are we going to make it to our preferred destination or will we be stranded on the shore of unfulfilled possibilities?
    Come on Nzers, lets do something.

  7. Unfortunately most NZers are greedy and couldnt give a shit about The Treaty or the less fortunate, poor, etc – its human nature. This has been especially so with National except when Douglas and Prebble started their tickle down ( mimi) theory under Lange. Can you see the grumpy old men and new capitalists (tradesmen) suddenly thinking, ‘we must help our first nation people by changing our neo-lib views”. At least with a social democracy under Labour there is a better chance to address those social issues.

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