‘New Zealand is at a crossroad between tribalism and democracy. The Maori tribal elite, backed by the Maori Party – and now the National Party – are gaining momentum, pushing the country towards a future where corporate iwi will control our key institutions and resources.
Thanks to decades of overly-generous taxpayer funding of Treaty of Waitangi claims, the Maori aristocracy has grown rich. Under their new protectorate – the National/Maori Party government – they are becoming New Zealand’s new power base. With race-based laws to elevate their status and a willing government keen to buy into the ‘Treaty partnership’ myth, the tribal elite are becoming the privileged class. Unless something changes, all other non-iwi New Zealanders are destined to become second-class citizens in our own country.
…’In response to questions, both the Prime Minister and the Attorney-General are already refusing to say categorically that even popular Auckland beaches (certainly not ones ‘exclusively occupied’ by Maori) will not have customary title awarded over them.”
Muriel Newman
The Maori tribes are now worth (thanks to working, taxpaying New Zealanders, certainly not by their own efforts) somewhere in the region of $25billion. In a country of around four and a half million people this makes them an enormously powerful special-interest group and it’s time Kiwis woke up to the threat this poses. “Cultural sensitivity” is now merely code for abject surrender to the primitives.