Features Australia

The hubris of identity politics

Look at us, Australia, and you’d never vote for the Voice

26 August 2023

9:00 AM

26 August 2023

9:00 AM

In New Zealand, we are facing the consequences of former prime minister Jacinda Ardern’s determined promotion not only of identity politics but of He Puapua, i.e. of our eventually being virtually ruled by tribal hierarchies under the supposed political power-sharing of ‘co-governance’. As a result, many thousands are now fleeing to Australia, as well as for far better wages and job conditions – professionals, tradespeople, and vital construction workers – with businesses closing down, unable to attract staff – although there is now a 46 per cent increase in the number of people on what used to be called the dole.

Given that Stats NZ shows live births are now down 28 per cent with disability up 37.4 per cent and that the Labour government is reportedly collecting an extra $100 million daily in tax than when it came to power – (although Minister Damien O’Connor has suggested, ‘We possibly don’t have enough tax in this country….’) we are demonstrably a country in decline with a trashed, now highly propagandised education system short-changing our children

The now claimed, although non-existent, partnership supposedly established between the Crown and Maori by the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi did not, as a genuine partnership would, ensure that both the Crown and Maori shared all legal and financial benefits and liabilities. What is now not addressed is the interesting question of where New Zealanders’ tax would be directed, if the basic partnership of co-governance was put in place. And what about a possible power of veto by one of the co-governance parties, similar to that proposed for the separatist Maori health authority over that representing all other New Zealanders?

Like so many New Zealanders, others worldwide are utterly over the exhibitionism of those playing the race card of identity politics to either claim superior insights and judgment or, often simultaneously, disadvantage and victimhood because of their racial inheritance. In this country, where promoting identity politics has been honed to a fine art, their adroitness is particularly striking, given that there are no longer any full-blooded Maoris. It is undoubtedly the case that Maori as a distinct and separate ethnic group no longer exist.

So far were we from being a racist society that intermarriage, from the very beginning, was taken for granted. So why today’s mischief-making, particularly given that very largely the small minority of racial activists – by no means representing the majority of part-Maori – are overwhelmingly of European or Eurasian descent – yet continually demand, as of right, special privileges, funding, and political advantages over all other New Zealanders, on the grounds of being Maori?


It takes a certain amount of adroitness to claim both superiority and victimhood, but well-paid part-Maori academics and others richly rewarded for heading local iwi  (today’s wealthy and powerful pseudo-tribal corporations) have been remarkably successful. Although the Maori economy is estimated at $70 billion, those claiming to be Maori – even if overwhelmingly not so, according to their genetic inheritance – are never-endingly handed multimillion dollars from taxpayers’ pockets.

However, the basic absurdity has been noted of requiring today’s New Zealanders – now many generations removed from their colonial ancestors’ time – together with more recent ethnic immigrants – to continue to pay – ‘compensation’ to those part-Maori who are also not part of that long-gone scenario.  Moreover, their own ancestors may well only have survived because of the stop put by the Crown to their horrific practices of cannibalism and internecine warfare. Indisputably, in spite of the inevitable injustices of the past, suffered by all participants, the arrival of our European pioneers was overwhelmingly of immense benefit. This of course includes those radicalised part-Maori who also share in this ancestry – although they take care to not acknowledge this.

And who is really Maori? It is well argued to be completely unacceptable that the reasonable definition of who can claim to be considered Maori, i.e. someone who has at least 50 per cent of Maori genetic inheritance, was conveniently removed in the 1970s, so that in today’s political world it is enough to be even remotely descended from Maori forebears to be considered ‘Maori’, with all the financial and political advantages which iwi – with extended membership and added weight – are very keen to claim.

So what has been underpinning this rampant rise of identity politics worldwide, with Australia now tailgating us? The foolish and destabilising promotion of a Yes vote for the Voice can only further encourage that divisiveness and resentment which does nothing whatever to help those in genuine need, but fractures the commonality of interest which stabilises a society.

That a great evil is abroad is simply undeniable. We should be aware that the virulently anti-Christian, never-abandoned attack on the West underpins the simultaneous promotion not only of racial, but also gender, identity politics. The far from elite hierarches in our various countries have cowardly caved in to the pernicious assertions that one can change one’s biological sex by simply claiming this to be the case. It is not a claim distinguished by its sanity, and worse, has led to the appalling attack on vulnerable children by apparently conscienceless adults, ultimately ruining many of their lives forever. Interestingly, Russia has outlawed transgenderism.

At the very centre of the downward spiral into the polarising of New Zealand are the language concerns voiced to politicians touring the country to drum up support in the upcoming elections, largely brushed off by National’s lacklustre leader, Christopher Luxon. Yet the forced renaming of all our government departments, private institutions, correspondence, and place names in newly coined, utterly inauthentic Maori is basically insulting to the approximately 96 per cent of New Zealanders who don’t speak this now overwhelmingly fake language. Take, for example, the Law Commission’s, ‘He Arotake I te Ture mo nga Huarahi Whakatau a nga Pakeke’… purportedly a review of adult decision-making capacity.

Are these totally intelligible ‘Maori’ titles deliberately designed to dissuade New Zealanders from following what our now largely radicalised institutions are up to? Or are they also part of the hubris of radicalised extremists well aware that those who control the language control the thinking?

At any rate, only one political party, New Zealand First, is focusing on reclaiming our language to reclaim this country. Yet it is absolutely pivotal – if we are to fight to regain what was once a democracy.

Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.

You might disagree with half of it, but you’ll enjoy reading all of it. Try your first month for free, then just $2 a week for the remainder of your first year.


Close