Ethno-Nationalism or Democratic-Nationalism?

Professor Elizabeth Rata writes:

With the sudden emergence into our political life of the revolutionary report He Puapua, it is clear New Zealanders are at a crossroads. We will have to decide whether we want our future to be that of an ethno-nationalist state or a democratic-nationalist one.

Ethno-nationalism has political categories based on racial classification – the belief that our fundamental identity (personal, social and political) is fixed in our ancestry. Here the past determines the future. Identity, too, is fixed in that past. In contrast, democratic-nationalism has one political category – that of citizenship – justified by the shared belief in a universal human identity.

These two opposing approaches to how the nation is imagined, constituted and governed are currently in contention. We will have to choose which form of nationalism will characterise New Zealand by 2040.

This is absolutely the choice ahead of us – whether to go down the path of (formerly) Fiji with ethno-nationalism or democracy based on citizenship.

Liberal democracy can accommodate identification with the ancestral group in the civil sphere. Inclusive biculturalism allows for the evolving social practice of a hybrid Maori and settler-descendant culture, one enriched by diverse migration. Exclusive biculturalism, on the other hand, takes those ethnically or racially categorised groups into the constitutional sphere of legislation and state institutions. 

No surprise that I support liberal democracy.

Ethnic fundamentalism is no better, no worse than the myriad of other fundamentalisms that some individuals impose upon themselves (or have imposed upon them) to give their lives meaning. It becomes a danger to liberal societies regulated by democratic politics when ethnicity is politicised. By basing a governance  system of classification and categorisation on historical rather than contemporary group membership, we set ourselves on the path to ethno-nationalism. ‘He Puapua’  means a break. It is used in the Report to mean “the breaking of the usual political and social norms and approaches.” The transformation of New Zealand proposed by He Puapua is indeed a complete break with the past. For this reason it is imperative that we all read the Report then freely and openly discuss what type of nation do we want – ethno-nationalism or democratic nationalism?

It’s a debate we should be having, rather than have it imposed bit by bit as a fait accompli.

Does Kainga Ora have no shame?

Sub-Zero Politics writes:

I have been highlighting my Parents’ Nightmare situation on Blogs (esp The Standard) & Twitter since April 2019 & speculated right from the start that this is probably happening throughout New Zealand, including to other elderly people … really relieved that this absolute scandal is finally, finally seeing the light of day. 

My Parents (aged 90 & 91) have been forced to endure 4 years of constant, prolonged violent intimidation and extreme anti-social behaviour (the latter including being very regularly kept awake until dawn, sometimes over 2 or 3 consecutive days) from the Kainga Ora tenant on the other side of their dividing-wall in a two-house Unit (My Parents have lived in their house for almost 60 years & have owned it since the 1970s).

This Nightmare situation has resulted in enforced chronic sleep deprivation over a very prolonged period (with all the associated symptoms of extreme exhaustion), severe stress & genuine fears for personal safety on a continuous basis (resulting in all the profoundly negative health consequences that inevitably follow … my Mother, usually healthy, has had to be hospitalised twice in the last 14 months, each time for a week or so, coming very close to dying on the first of these occasions & bordering on suffering a stroke on the second … & my Father, who has always been in exceptionally good health, has very recently suffered a heart attack).

No-one of any age, but especially a couple on their 90s, should have to endure four years of intimidation and harassment.

Based on my diary entires, my Parents have suffered precisely 116 – let me repeat that … 116 !!! – really large-scale explosions of violent intimidation since their neighbouring tenant arrived in late 2017. Together with several hundred mid-level, more minor & sporadic acts of violence & intimidation. The latter occur on an almost daily basis, except when he is away. This tenant has always been very violent & aggressive in his everyday behaviour, clearly a deeply-ingrained facet of his personality. Both he & his former Partner are well known to the Police & he appears to be on parole … he is loosely associated with the Mongrel Mob … but doesn’t appear to be an actual member.

Does Kainga Ora have no shame? How can they have let this continue for four years, when they could have stopped the intimidation after say the third or fourth event. They could have told the tenant that if he continues on, he will be evicted and not be allowed into a state house anywhere unless he behaves as a human being, not a thug.

In the very worst of the Major Explosions (and there have been 7 of these = out of 18), in the midst of his multi-hour intimidation, he has gone right along their fenceline, down to their letterbox & driveway, aggressively strutting back & forth straight outside their house, violently swearing & making loud threats – just the most blatant violent intimidation – interspersed with loud declarations of dominance / fighting prowess (essentially Maori Warrior-style ‘Proclaiming’) … and on 3 separate occasions he has actually rushed onto their front lawn in the middle of his explosion & vandalised their property (in one of the worst cases, for instance, smashing their concrete fence with a sledgehammer at 2am (in the midst of a very long explosion of intimidation throughout the early hours of the morning, that included violently assaulting his then girlfriend), followed by ripping my Parents’ letterbox off the fence & then throwing it onto their front lawn … all documented by Police).

I know Labour MPs read this blog. Do any of them really think a couple in their 90s should have to endure this?

Like I say, there’s One Hell of a lot more I want to say on this … including the ultimately dismissive Kainga Ora (& later Maori social housing provider) response to attempts by a range of concerned people to get this neighbour moved or evicted … 3 very good Policewomen (one of whom was a neighbour through 2018 & witnessed much of his violence), a social worker attached to my parents’ local medical centre specialising in the prevention of elder abuse, a nurse, various long-standing neighbours (who all gave evidence) & a few others.

My Parents are not only lifelong Labour voters but also long-term Party members with a long family history in the Labour Movement … they’ve been viciously betrayed by this Govt … having voted Left all my life, I swung into Non-Voting at the last Election.

There is a simple solution to this. Reverse the ban on evicting state house tenants who terrorise their neighbours and break the law. Stop prioritizing the rights of the criminals over the rights of the victims.

General Debate 08 January 2022

Why is the Govt making rapid testing so hard?

David Seymour released:

“The Government’s anti-science approach to Covid-19 testing means we’re unprepared for Omicron”, says ACT Leader David Seymour.

Amtech, a New Zealand medical product supplier, has been declined certification to import and distribute rapid antigen testing kits by the Ministry of Health.

“While Australia has approved 65 rapid antigen testing products, and is running out, New Zealand has just approved just four products.

“The Ministry says companies who would like to import and distribute RATs should conduct a ‘supplier independent evaluation’. That would take three to six months. It’s nuts that it would take so long to approve one in the middle of a pandemic.

“With a crunch in supply, why would we restrict ourselves like this?

“The Ministry should instead automatically approve for importation and distribution RATs which have been approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA). That would bring down the price of RATs and make them more widely available for New Zealanders.

Couldn’t agree more. I’d love to be able to buy some RATs. Like many I suspect, I won’t get a nasal swab if I have some mild cold symptoms, because I’d spend half my life self-isolating at home waiting for results. But if I could purchase RATs, I’d happily test myself whenever I get mild cold symptoms, as I get a result within 15 minutes.

“Rako Science has the capacity to do 10,000 saliva tests a day on top of Asia Pacific’s 3,500. Instead of working with the private sector, the Government simply passed a law that said: ‘If we need it, we’ll just take it.’

“Pharmacists say New Zealanders are shocked to learn they can’t buy rapid antigen tests. The effective ban on purchasing RATs, while the Ministry of Health stockpiles millions of them, is inexplicable.

“The Government’s approach has been anti-science and tech-phobic. People who have tried to partner with it from the private sector have expressed immense frustration.

“New Zealanders have endured significant restrictions on their lives which could have been reduced by taking an innovative, tech-led approach to Covid-19.

Why won’t the Government trust us, and allow us to buy them?

Simon says listen to Joe

Simon Bridges writes:

Most New Zealanders may not have heard of Joe Manchin. But 74-year-old Joe is a United States senator from West Virginia who has recently become one of the most important people in the world’s most powerful democracy.

The reason is that, in an evenly divided senate of 100, Manchin’s fellow Democrat, President Joe Biden, needs his support to pass the sweeping $2 trillion (yes, trillion) Build Back Better plan​.

Actually it is worse than that. The BBB plan will really cost closer to $5 trillion, or around $15,000 per US resident, if you ignore the accounting tricks.

Manchin, though, on the eve of Christmas, decided to vote against the bill. His view is that the US already has high inflation, that inflation is hurting workers and families in his state, and that all the spending in the proposal would simply fuel that inflation.

Currently, inflation in the US is 6.8 per cent​, the highest it has been since 1982​. In New Zealand, it isn’t that high, at 4.9 per cent, but again, if you take out one-off GST increases, it’s the highest we’ve seen it since the 1980s, and well above the global rate for 2021 of 3.5 per cent.

Yep inflation in NZ is at a 30 year high.

Finance Minister Grant Robertson has taken government spending up 40 per cent since National was in office, and has signalled a staggering $128 billion spendup this year, some 68 per cent higher. National accepts we needed to borrow and spend more at the height of the Covid crisis, and public spending is important for things like transport, health, education, and police.

But you can have too much of a good thing for too long, and the quality of the spending by Grant Robertson has been pretty loose. Now, in a tight economy, with supply chain and labour constraints, public spending is just competing with others for goods, services, and staff, and driving inflation higher.

The quality of much of the spending is abysmal, and every family pays for it through both inflation and increased debt.

Ben Thomas on the madness of the Govt’s new tobacco policy

Ben Thomas writes:

An under-reported legislative reform will, alongside the rising minimum age, drastically lower the amount of nicotine allowed in cigarettes on sale.

As a way of understanding how monstrous this anodyne-sounding proposal actually is, consider if the same proposal was floated for party drugs such as MDMA, which this Government recently legalised testing for at festivals and events. These drugs cause relatively few negative health consequences, but can be acutely dangerous when cut with impurities and unknown substances by dealers.

If the Ministry of Health suggested the solution to festival drug use was to intercept pills at testing stations and cut them with twice as much rat poison and chalk for users to ultimately ingest, it would be regarded as a psychopath with little regard for human life.

Yet the proposal will require addicts to inhale many more times the amount of deadly tar and burning ash – the elements of a cigarette which damage human health on an unprecedented level globally – and spend even more money, to get the same level of relatively harmless nicotine hit as before.

Yep, it is as crazy as it sounds.

General Debate 07 January 2022

Kiwis in Aussie screwed over

The Herald reports:

New Zealanders stranded in Australia will miss out on booking a spot in MIQ as the next batch of rooms are released tomorrow.

A further 1,250 rooms will be available to book using the online lobby system for people returning to New Zealand in March and April.

The MIQ room release was previously scheduled for December 23 but it was cancelled and moved to Thursday following a government announcement that the length of stay would be extended to 10 days, with no self-isolation component, due to the threat of the Omicron variant.

It’s the first room release since December 16.

But with the Omicron variant delaying the Government’s plan to open a “self-isolation pathway from Australia”, it means citizens in Australia will not be permitted to book a room in an MIQ facility.

“Airlines do not currently have any red flights scheduled from Australia for March or April,” it said on the Manged Isolation and Quarantine website.

“For this reason, those travelling from Australia will not be able to participate in tomorrow’s room release.

Is it beyond the capability of the Government to synchronize flights and room availability? This isn’t rocket science.

The result is that all the Kiwis in Australia wanting to return home get screwed over again.

Good news

The Herald reports:

The decrease in smoking rates is larger than usual according to the latest Government health survey 2020/2021.

Smoking rates have decreased across all ethnic groups, and for Māori adults, it’s down by 6.4 per cent. In 2019/2020 28.7 per cent of Māori adults were smoking, that figure is now sitting at 22.3 per cent.

Director for ASH (Action on Smoking and Health) Deborah Hart says all the work that has been put into smoke-free initiatives is kicking in including plain packaging, and taxes on cigarettes, but that in itself is not enough.

“We now have the evidence that vaping is helping decrease smoking rates.”

Vaping rates in Aotearoa have increased by 3.5 per cent in 2020/2021. In 2015/2016, these rates sat at just 0.9 per cent Today, 6.2 per cent of adults are using e-cigarettes daily. A study carried out between ASH and the University of Auckland showed that while some young people are experimenting with vaping, the daily use of an e-cigarette is occurring overwhelmingly in existing smokers.

“What we’re seeing is people transition from very harmful cigarette smoking to a much less harmful product in e-cigarettes or vaping, and that’s been going on for a few years and we’re going to continue to see that I would think,” Hart said.

Good to see substitution happening. Vaping, as ASH says, is far less harmful than smoking.

Yet another horror story from NZ’s worst landlord

Stuff reports:

Neighbours of a Kāinga Ora house frequented by gang members say they feel trapped in their homes and are sick of living in fear.

The property in Marlborough is rented by the state housing provider to a person associated with a gang that visits the property for parties and gatherings.

The Marlborough Express has decided not to identify the neighbours, the gang or the street, to protect the safety of the neighbours. They regularly deal with intimidation from patched gang members even just walking past the property.

But the residents say they felt compelled to speak publicly about their problems, having sought help from police and Kāinga Ora in the past year, but to no avail.

It is important people focus on who is responsible for this. It is deliberate Government policy introduced by Labour that no matter how much you terrorise your neighbours, you will never have your tenancy terminated. It is government policy that the rights of gang associates to give cheap taxpayer subsidised housing outweighs the rights of everyone else in the community.

The pensioner had woken one night to find a woman had broken into her lounge through her locked front door. The woman said she was looking for a smoke, and the pensioner gave her one and then asked her to leave, she said.

The pensioner said she slept with a knife, while another neighbour said he was considering getting a firearm for his own protection.

Labour is forcing them to live in fear like this. The obvious answer is to evict the tenants, but it goes against their ideology.

After complaining to Kāinga Ora, the pensioner said she was told the gang associates had to live somewhere, and suggested she consider moving instead.

This is the kind Government in action.

Kāinga Ora focused on housing New Zealanders based on their housing need, and did not discriminate against people with gang affiliations or criminal convictions, “who are equally part of the community with the right to a home”.

The problem with this statement is responsibilities should come with rights. But Kainga Ora no longer requires their tenants to do simple stuff such as not terrorise the neighbours, not operate criminal enterprises from their houses, nor damage the property etc etc

General Debate 06 January 2022

10 months jail for sexist language

NewstalkZB reports:

A cosmetic surgeon from Belgium has been handed a 10-month prison sentence for a lecture in which he complained that women were no longer willing to give sexual favours in exchange for protection and money from men. …

In his 2019 speech at Ghent University, Hoeyberghs called women “hysterical, lazy, weak, stupid” and “dirty creatures, who seek money and protection from men to whom they owe sex”. 

Women served “to satisfy men sexually and perform household chores”, he said, but “don’t want to open their legs anymore”. 

Women could be compared to “animals” with “udders”, the surgeon told his postgraduate audience. 

Specific women, including students in the auditorium, a TV broadcaster, and green activist Greta Thunberg, were targeted with insults. 

Women were “worthless” in the role of doctors, judges, teachers, scientists, journalists, and business executives, Hoeyberghs said. …

Hoeyberghs, who qualified as a cosmetic surgeon in the UK and is a frequent TV commentator in Belgium, was invited to speak by the university.

Hoeyberghs is a pretty reprehensible person and what he said is incredibly offensive. God knows, why he was invited to speak.

But I don’t think he should be going to prison for what he said. The best thing people could do would be to ignore him, not jail him.

What will be the final bill for the failed bike bridge?

Stuff reports:

The Government has set aside $150 million for an Auckland harbour crossing for cyclists and to also cover sunk costs arising from last year’s abandoned cycling and walking bridge project.

In October, the Government scrapped a proposed $785m cycling and walking bridge in Auckland, just three months after unveiling it.

As of late September, Waka Kotahi had spent $51m on designs, consultants and engineering plan fees.

Now, the Government has agreed to direct $150m of the project’s original $785m budget to cover sunk costs and conduct further work to get a ferry or bus shuttle service up and running.

Isn’t the Government great at wasting huge amounts of money, and producing nothing for it.

$35 million of damages footed by the taxpayer

Stuff reports:

The country’s state housing landlord admits it doesn’t keep records on damage done by tenants to its homes.

And while Kāinga Ora has charged tenants $35.3 million for property damage over the past five years, it can’t say how much has actually been paid back.

How incompetent do you have to be, to not even be able to know how much has actually been paid.

I suspect it is very little. Because it is taxpayer’s money, they have no incentive to collect it, or even monitor it.

General Debate 05 January 2022

Time for the NZ Govt to act on Prince Andrew

Prince Andrew is the Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal New Zealand Army Logistic Regiment.

His only real defence against the allegations he slept with a 17 year old teenager supplied by Jeffrey Epstein, is that he only slept with her in countries or states where the age of consent is 16, and didn’t in the areas where it is 18.

From a criminal law perspective this is of course very important. From the perspective of whether he should be the Colonel-in-Chief of a Royal NZ Army regiment, it is not important. His behaviour disqualifies him.

Surely it is time for the NZ Govt to remove him from this honorary role.

Why do the climate activists only target Western countries?

I was looking at some greenhouse gas emissions data from 1990 to 2018, and it is amazing that the countries that have increased their emissions the most are the ones least attacked for it, while those who have reduced them get all the protests. Here’s the change in GG emissions in Mt from 1990 to 2018 for the ten largest emitters.

  1. China +8,832
  2. India +2,338
  3. Iran +588
  4. Indonesia +447
  5. South Korea +429
  6. US +251
  7. Japan +46
  8. Brazil -221
  9. Russia -893
  10. EU -946

Stuff’s 2022 predictions

Below are Stuff’s 2022 predictions, along with my comments on them.

  • Omicron will continue to frustrate reopening plans. Double-jabbed Kiwis will not be able to skip MIQ and enter the country in the first quarter of the year, as previously planned. DPF: Agree. The Government is not going to let us return to normal.
  • Everyone who is currently a leader of a political party in Parliament is still the leader by the end of the year. DPF: Agree but if there is a change it will be the Greens
  • New Zealand’s external borders retain some Covid controls by the end of the year. DPF: And by the end of 2023
  • After two years of no foreign travel, Jacinda Ardern will visit Europe, the USA – and possibly even China. Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta will make numerous trips, and the most-travelled Cabinet minister, Damien O’Connor, will likely surpass his current record of three trips in a year. DPF: Not sure Ardern will visit China.
  • The US Democrats lose full control of Congress, either by losing the House, just a single Senate seat (maybe Nevada), or both. This hobbles the Joe Biden presidency. DPF: Timid prediction. I have predicted they will definitely lose both.
  • With the community having been exposed to Omicron, an area of the country will have a period of lockdown restrictions greater than the “red” traffic light curbs. They will be more akin to the “European-style” lockdown than what Auckland lived through in 2021. DPF: Interesting and plausible.
  • People will be able to buy rapid testing kits at supermarkets and pharmacies. The cost will cause some controversy. DPF: Should gave been available nine months ago.
  • The centre-left bloc of the Labour and the Greens remain ahead of the centre-right bloc in polling by the end of 2022, but the difference will be a lot smaller than it is now. DPF: Well the difference now is only 6% so for it to be a lot smaller must means 1% or 2%.
  • Jacinda Ardern’s Cabinet reshuffle sees Nanaia Mahuta lose the local government portfolio. Moving Mahuta away will help to dampen the vitriol from those riled by the prospect of Māori involvement in governance of water entities, and allow her to travel more as foreign minister. DPF: Plausible, but who to replace her?
  • The Government will not back down on its overall Three Waters reform plan, however. DPF: I think they will beack down on equal co–governance.
  • The reshuffle also sees Labour’s Deborah Russell become a minister, and Jan Tinetti promoted. DPF: Hopefully
  • At least two National MPs will announce they will retire at the end of this term. Among the contenders are: Michael Woodhouse​, Todd McClay​, Ian McKelvie​, Stuart​ Smith, and Jacqui​ Dean. DPF: More than two I’d say.
  • Labour’s Rongotai MP Paul Eagle will announce a run for mayor of Wellington. Those on the political left in Wellington will despair, but the Labour machine will get behind him. DPF: And he will win, despite breaking his word not to run.
  • Auckland will see a new mayor elected. DPF: But who?
  • Christchurch will elect Phil Mauger​ as mayor. DPF: Bold call, hopefully right.
  • Christopher Luxon will continue to struggle to pronounce te reo well, but will show improvement by the end of the year. DPF: What a silly one to include.
  • The massive rise in house prices seen over the past 24 months will not continue. DPF: They should define massive. A 10% increase is still massive I’d say, even if down from 30%.
  • The He Waka Eke Noa (Primary Sector Climate Action Partnership) process does not result in any proposals that would seriously bring down agricultural emissions, leaving James Shaw furious. But this won’t be enough of a trigger to send agriculture into the Emissions Trading Scheme early in 2023. As has happened so many times before, the issue will be kicked down the road. DPF: Of course
  • Jacinda Ardern’s wedding will attract some small political strife, with people accusing her of distracting from the real issues (despite holding the wedding outside an election year) or neglecting her job. DPF: Also a silly inclusion.

General Debate 04 January 2022

Hendy and Wiles vs Auckland Uni

Stuff reports:

High profile academics and Covid-19 commentators Shaun Hendy and Siouxsie Wiles say harassment towards them is escalating, and their employer the University of Auckland has not done enough to ensure their safety.

A recently released Employment Relations Authority determination says Hendy and Wiles brought separate but similar claims against the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Auckland.

Hendy and Wiles allege ongoing unjustified disadvantages at work arising from the university’s failure to appropriately address their safety concerns.

No one should be harrassed because of what they say, but there is a huge irony here in that Hendy and Wiles led the witch hunt against the seven professors who wrote the letter to the Listener on what qualifies as science, and have also attacked other academics whose work they disagree with. So it is hard to find much sympathy for them.

Harassment has included targeting via email, on social media and video sharing platforms, in person confrontations and threats of physical confrontations.

Wiles has been the subject of doxing with an associated threat to physically confront her at her home while Hendy has been physically confronted in his office on campus by an individual who threatened to “see him soon”.

Any threats of this nature should be reported to the Police.

Hendy and Wiles do not believe that it is reasonably practicable for them to limit their public commentary on Covid-19. They say such commentary is a key element of their academic roles and they have been asked by the university and the Prime Minister’s Office to provide such commentary, it says.

The part in bold seems newsworthy.

A good year for the union

Louis Holbrooke from the Taxpayers’ Union writes about the year:

  • The Government froze pay for high-earning public servants after months of petitioning and lobbying from our supporters. (They’re set to review this decision next year: we’ll be ready.)
  • We successfully lobbied the Labour Party’s trade union to repay their wage subsidies.
  • Our petition and billboard campaign protesting Auckland’s $785 million bike bridge saw the project scrapped.
  • We attracted extraordinary media interest and public outrage over our investigation into DOC’s absurd funeral and burial of a dead turtle.
  • We exposed examples of absurd and wasteful “COVID response” spending from Creative NZ, the Ministry for Culture and Heritage, and the “Public Interest Journalism Fund“.
  • We alerted the public to how the Government is using taxpayer money to fund anti-dairy propaganda, dodgy health ‘research’, and left-wing blog sites.
  • Our Jonesie Awards celebrating the worst exampels of government waste were a great success, racking up tens of thousands of view on Facebook and Youtube.
  • Half the 15,000 submissions made to the Climate Change Commission on its big emissions plan came from Taxpayers’ Union supporters.
  • The Taxpayer Talk podcast is now one of New Zealand’s most-listened political podcasts. We even got Nanaia Mahuta to front up for an interview on Three Waters.
  • Taxpayers’ Union supporters like you chipped into an ad campaign that ensured practically everyone in the country knows how the Government gave $2.75 million to Mongrel Mob affiliates.
  • Our bumper stickers to stop Labour’s car tax are now a regular sight up and down the country.
  • And our Stop Three Waters campaign has seen 85,000 New Zealanders and 60 local councils unite against Nanaia Muhata’s asset grab, spooking Cabinet to the point where they forced Nanaia Mahuta to delay the introduction of legislation until (at least) March next year.

Guest article: Dawn Freshwater kicks for touch on mātauranga Māori

A guest article by Graham Adams:

As international criticism mounts, Auckland University’s Vice-Chancellor pledges a symposium next year to debate the role of Māori knowledge in science education. Graham Adams suggests a public apology to the seven professors would show it was more than a PR stunt.

Reading the statement last week by Dawn Freshwater announcing a symposium to be held next year to debate the relationship between mātauranga Māori and science, it was impossible not to feel at least a little sceptical about her new-found enthusiasm for free speech.

After all, in late July the Vice-Chancellor of Auckland University effectively hung seven professors from her own university out to dry soon after their letter “In Defence of Science” was published in the Listener.

The professors’ 300-word letter was written in response to plans to include mātauranga Māori in the school science curriculum and to give it equal standing with “Western/ Pakeha epistemologies” — which means subjects such as physics, biology and chemistry.

The professors acknowledged the value of indigenous knowledge as “critical for the preservation and perpetuation of culture and local practices” and that it “plays key roles in management and policy”. But, while it “may indeed help advance scientific knowledge in some ways”, they concluded, “it is not science”.

Freshwater’s immediate reaction was to disown them. Her brief statement began:

“A letter in this week’s issue of The Listener magazine from seven of our academic staff on the subject of whether mātauranga Māori can be called science has caused considerable hurt and dismay among our staff, students and alumni.

“While the academics are free to express their views, I want to make it clear that they do not represent the views of the University of Auckland.”

Some were surprised the university actually has official “views” but apparently — in Freshwater’s eyes at least — it does.

In the wake of the firestorm sparked by the professors’ letter, Freshwater had another go at articulating her position in a longer statement on August 10. It appeared in part to be an attempt to remedy the evident shortcomings of her email on July 26. This time, the possibility of hurting other people’s feelings or dismaying them was ruled out as a reason for her academic staff to bite their tongues:

“The freedom to express ideas is constrained neither by their perceived capacity to elicit discomfort, nor by presuppositions concerning their veracity.”

Nevertheless, the idea that the university may deem some views acceptable and others unacceptable was repeated, although its chilling effect on freedom of expression was downplayed:

“Our seven academics were entirely free to express their views, however the University was also free to disagree with those views. That does not mean the University is censoring or trying to silence our academics, it is merely making clear that such views are not representative of the myriad views within the institution; and that the University may at times disagree with the views expressed by its academics. That is healthy in a university.”

It was hardly a convincing statement of academics’ rights to air their opinions. In what way, for instance, does your employer reserving the right to point out publicly that it does not approve of your views not function as an act of censorship or an attempt to silence?

And how could any particular group’s views ever be “representative of the myriad views within the institution”?

For that matter, in what universe is it “healthy” for a university to “disagree with the views expressed by its academics”? In fact, some would see it as a symptom of serious underlying illness.

In last week’s statement promising a symposium, Freshwater appeared to have given up on wrestling with the complex problem of what academic freedom and freedom of expression might mean in practice. She simply declared repeatedly that the university is in favour of it.

The question of the university approving some views and not others had disappeared and the whole debate was thrown over to the panel for discussion next year.

It is not impossible that in the past five months Freshwater has had a Road to Damascus experience about the value of free speech and academic freedom. But it is also evident that things have recently become a lot more uncomfortable for Auckland University and for the Royal Society Te Apārangi, our premier academy for the sciences and humanities, over their apparent hostility to views they find unacceptable.

In November, news broke that Robert Nola, Garth Cooper and Michael Corballis — the three Fellows among the seven professors who had signed the Listener letter — were to be put under disciplinary investigation by the society for their role in writing it. (Corballis has since died.)

New Zealand’s mainstream media has almost entirely avoided covering the debate but the society’s disciplinary action — and its earlier statement rejecting the professors’ views as “misguided” with the potential to cause “harm” — has sparked international outrage and condemnation from heavyweight public intellectuals.

Celebrated scientists — including Richard Dawkins, Steven Pinker and Jerry Coyne — have trained their sights variously on the Royal Society NZ; the open letter denouncing the professors’ views written by Auckland University academics Drs Shaun Hendy and Siouxsie Wiles; and Dawn Freshwater herself.

Influential journalists have joined the fray too. Toby Young, writing for The Spectator, described Freshwater’s July 26 statement as a “hand-wringing, cry-bullying email to all staff at the university” — a characterisation repeated in the Daily Mail.

Columnist Rod Liddle weighed in on the issue in the Sunday Times in an article headed “We’re Screeching into a New Dark Age” (and included Freshwater’s comment about “considerable hurt and dismay”), and Times Higher Education — the international bible for academics — has covered the debate in detail.

Given the fame of Dawkins, Pinker and Coyne — and the extensive reach of the media outlets mentioned — it’s easy to imagine the question of Auckland University’s international standing beginning to prey on a VC’s mind.

Perhaps that is why Freshwater felt compelled in her statement last week to remind us that her university is “a world-class, research-led university” — just in case anyone mistook it for a parochial institution struggling to understand the difference between science, myth and creationism.

Certainly, being blasted by Jerry Coyne — professor emeritus in the Department of Ecology and Evolution at the highly ranked University of Chicago — would have helped focus her mind about the damage to Auckland University’s international reputation.

A fortnight ago, the best-selling science author wrote on his blog: “It’s not clear whether the Vice-Chancellor has any authority to declare what the ‘views of the University of Auckland’ are, nor whether there are any official views.

“It’s clear she is demonising the professors at the same time she says well, they have the right of free speech — but note that the University can officially criticise them and the Royal Society can punish them!

“As for the Vice-Chancellor emphasising the ‘considerable hurt and dismay’ at the university, I consider that a ludicrous form appeal to emotion rather than reason.”

Coyne’s comments have been noticed at Auckland University. He reported that Todd Somerville, its Associate Director Communications, had sent him a “letter of complaint” about his original post, in which Somerville defended Freshwater ”at great length”.

Announcing a symposium at some as-yet-unspecified time in the first quarter of 2022 will undoubtedly seem to the VC to be a very effective circuit-breaker that will provide a breather for her and her beleaguered university.

Freshwater will no doubt also be hoping that by then the fates of Professors Cooper and Nola at the hands of the Royal Society NZ will be known — preferably, perhaps, concluding with a discharge on the grounds that a letter is not research and therefore isn’t covered by the society’s Code of Conduct — and that much of the heat in the debate will have dissipated over summer.

Such optimism is evident in her promise of a symposium “in which the different viewpoints on this issue can be discussed and debated calmly, constructively and respectfully”.

“I envisage a high-quality intellectual discourse with representation from all viewpoints: mātauranga Māori, science, the humanities, Pacific knowledge systems and others.”

It certainly sounds noble, but who exactly in New Zealand will want to put their head above the parapets to argue that matauranga Maori is not scientific, and should not be part of a science curriculum, as the seven professors did in July?

Perhaps some of the professors who signed the Listener letter will be willing to risk further public vilification and adverse consequences for their careers and reputations by arguing their case at a symposium. But why would they?

As well as the disciplinary action taken by the Royal Society against Corballis, Nola and Cooper, others among the seven professors may have suffered professionally as a result of signing the Listener letter — including evolutionary ecologist Kendall Clements.

As John Ross, Asia-Pacific editor for Times Higher Education, wrote: “Co-authoring the letter in the Listener may have taken a professional toll [on Clements]. Within 12 days of the letter’s publication, Clements was removed from two collaboratively taught ecology and evolution courses that he had helped deliver for years.

“And while an email criticising the authors was distributed to staff and graduate students in the School of Biological Sciences, [Garth] Cooper’s attempt to respond through the same channel was blocked.

“The university says the school email distribution list was ‘not the appropriate medium’ for this type of debate, so its moderators were told not to allow further emails on the topic. And Clements’ teaching duties were changed to balance his workload after another academic’s departure, ‘and to ensure that the best teaching teams were in place to deliver all courses. The Listener letter was a catalyst for actioning this, but not for the decision.’”

If such luminaries haven’t been protected by their status within the academic community, why would anyone who is looking to further their own careers in academia decide to stand up publicly to defend science? Why would any researcher with even vague hopes of securing grants from the public purse in the future put their head in that particular noose?

In contrast, more than 2000 (mostly New Zealand) academics felt free to sign the open letter co-authored by Drs Hendy and Wiles heavily criticising the professors’ letter — presumably without any need for concern about the consequences for their careers.

Some commentators have suggested that in the current climate not signing the open letter could have been more dangerous professionally for many academics than signing, given the pressure to be seen to take a stand against anything that can be alleged to be “racist”, no matter how far-fetched and divorced from reality that accusation might be.

Racism has been only one of the slurs directed at the professors. Others have included the extraordinary description of them on Twitter by a professor at Victoria University as “shuffling zombies”.

In short, in such a febrile atmosphere, Dawn Freshwater’s grand vision of a truth and reconciliation symposium featuring a “respectful, open-minded, fact-based exchange of views on the relationship between mātauranga Māori and science” seems extremely optimistic.

If the Vice-Chancellor really wants to set the symposium on a firm footing, and convince sceptics it is more than a PR ploy, she could start by apologising publicly to the Auckland University professors for not supporting — much more clearly and forthrightly — their right to voice their views in the first place.

General Debate 03 January 2022

$18k to paint a crossing!!

Stuff reports:

The rainbow crossing – at the intersection of Cuba Mall and Dixon St – will be repainted in early January, as Wellington City Council continues its commitment to being an inclusive capital.

The rainbow first appeared in 2018 and this is the first time it is being repainted, at a cost of $17,500.

How does it cost $17,500 to paint a crossing? It’s a few cans of paint and a few hours work.

Almost at 1.3%