Post by Kiwi Frontline on Jul 8, 2019 8:07:55 GMT 12
TV1 DOCO “THAT’S A BIT RACIST”
R M writes > I have just suffered watching right through the TV1 doco “That’s a bit Racist”. If ever a programme was designed to stir up hatred of the “whites’ and false sympathy for the maori, that was it. It was full of inaccuracies – even straight out lies, and with such a heavy one-sided bias that it is a wonder the TV did not tip over.
Interviews to show the public view were all completely white anti-maori views. Totally unbalanced.
Several “Old School plays” were shown, all of which were absolutely sickening – showing whites invading maori private houses and literally kicking the maori and all their belongings out so they could just take over the houses.
It was stated that the government are targeting and exterminating maori culture, when in fact at both local body and national government level we ratepayers and taxpayers are funding never-ending demands for maori to invade every aspect of our lives.
Maps were shown of NZ showing what had been paid for selected parcels of land in the early 1800’s, with horror being expressed at the “paltry” sums – not a mention of the true value of the money at the time. For example one piece of land was bought for £4,800. Consider that in those days a reasonable wage was 5/- a week, but let us assume that a week’s wages was 10/- a week to be VERY generous. Just as a remindfer to the younger, even as recently as 1949 I was 2IC of a Department of the DSIR – the Government Research Laboratories. My salary was £200 a YEAR - £4 a week – and that was enough for me to live on away from home quiter happily. So, this sum paid for the land equates to 200 years pay for a well; paid worker. Related to the present it would be around $2m on around minimum wages. For undeveloped land that was NOT being used by maori or anyone at the time and completely in the rough, that was a fair price – as were all the other deals. Of course there were some shonky deals, but they were in the minority, and in some cases where the government were being pressured by the maori, who were not skilled at bargaining, large lumps of land were GIVEN back to the maori with no recompense to the settlers, then bought again by the settlers.. Some of this has been the subject of cooked up and unsubstantiated claims by the modern whites with a little bit of maori blood and they have reveived large “settlements” through the Waitangi Tribunal. Some of the claims have resulted in up to five settlements for the same piece of land !!
Professor Hou-Fu Liu – a “specialist” in such affairs, talked about Parihaka – using the words “war crimes”, “raped” , “pillage”. Modern “manufactured” maori history made this event an international disgrace, with even the UN stating that this was one of the worst cases in any nation ever. That is all total BS. The maori were lawbreakers, but the settlers and army left them alone, even thought they were killing and eating settlers and destroying farms, however after a year or so, the rebels were in a bad way as far as food and health were concerned, so the army PLUS a heap of law-abiding maori moved in in a humane occupatiuon of the rebels’ campsite. Not a shot was fired at anyone. The ONLY casualty was one rebel boy, who had his foot trodden on by a horse, breaking a bone in his foot. That boy later became a Member of the NZ Parliament. He (among many others of the day), wrote about it all from the rebel’s point of view. Those written records still exist, but the maori – and TVNZ - just don’t want to know about them – they prefer the fairy stories that grew when the Waitangi Tribunal was established to hand out billions. They make for more sensation, even though they engender unearned hatred of the whites by the maori.
The figure of $2.2b was given for the total of all Treaty payouts. I have an idea that the true figure is much greater, but I do not have the figures on hand at the moment, however, a salient point is that the se fortunes have been squandered by most (not all) the tribes, with corruption flourishing and a total lack of accountability. VERY little has actually filtered down to the ordinary maori in the street to help with housing health, etc, but the administrators live lives of luxury. The government cannot step in and demand that it be used as intended, for it is “theirs” and is handled according to their “culture”, where the Rangatira can take the cream, and do as they like, whilst the ordinary hunga are lucky to get any crumbs that fall from their table – no questions asked.
There is another episode next week. If it is as bad, then that is an indictment against TVNZ for fostering hatred and racial tension in the interests of sensation. Besides, look at the image it projects on the world stage for New Zealand.
R M writes > I have just suffered watching right through the TV1 doco “That’s a bit Racist”. If ever a programme was designed to stir up hatred of the “whites’ and false sympathy for the maori, that was it. It was full of inaccuracies – even straight out lies, and with such a heavy one-sided bias that it is a wonder the TV did not tip over.
Interviews to show the public view were all completely white anti-maori views. Totally unbalanced.
Several “Old School plays” were shown, all of which were absolutely sickening – showing whites invading maori private houses and literally kicking the maori and all their belongings out so they could just take over the houses.
It was stated that the government are targeting and exterminating maori culture, when in fact at both local body and national government level we ratepayers and taxpayers are funding never-ending demands for maori to invade every aspect of our lives.
Maps were shown of NZ showing what had been paid for selected parcels of land in the early 1800’s, with horror being expressed at the “paltry” sums – not a mention of the true value of the money at the time. For example one piece of land was bought for £4,800. Consider that in those days a reasonable wage was 5/- a week, but let us assume that a week’s wages was 10/- a week to be VERY generous. Just as a remindfer to the younger, even as recently as 1949 I was 2IC of a Department of the DSIR – the Government Research Laboratories. My salary was £200 a YEAR - £4 a week – and that was enough for me to live on away from home quiter happily. So, this sum paid for the land equates to 200 years pay for a well; paid worker. Related to the present it would be around $2m on around minimum wages. For undeveloped land that was NOT being used by maori or anyone at the time and completely in the rough, that was a fair price – as were all the other deals. Of course there were some shonky deals, but they were in the minority, and in some cases where the government were being pressured by the maori, who were not skilled at bargaining, large lumps of land were GIVEN back to the maori with no recompense to the settlers, then bought again by the settlers.. Some of this has been the subject of cooked up and unsubstantiated claims by the modern whites with a little bit of maori blood and they have reveived large “settlements” through the Waitangi Tribunal. Some of the claims have resulted in up to five settlements for the same piece of land !!
Professor Hou-Fu Liu – a “specialist” in such affairs, talked about Parihaka – using the words “war crimes”, “raped” , “pillage”. Modern “manufactured” maori history made this event an international disgrace, with even the UN stating that this was one of the worst cases in any nation ever. That is all total BS. The maori were lawbreakers, but the settlers and army left them alone, even thought they were killing and eating settlers and destroying farms, however after a year or so, the rebels were in a bad way as far as food and health were concerned, so the army PLUS a heap of law-abiding maori moved in in a humane occupatiuon of the rebels’ campsite. Not a shot was fired at anyone. The ONLY casualty was one rebel boy, who had his foot trodden on by a horse, breaking a bone in his foot. That boy later became a Member of the NZ Parliament. He (among many others of the day), wrote about it all from the rebel’s point of view. Those written records still exist, but the maori – and TVNZ - just don’t want to know about them – they prefer the fairy stories that grew when the Waitangi Tribunal was established to hand out billions. They make for more sensation, even though they engender unearned hatred of the whites by the maori.
The figure of $2.2b was given for the total of all Treaty payouts. I have an idea that the true figure is much greater, but I do not have the figures on hand at the moment, however, a salient point is that the se fortunes have been squandered by most (not all) the tribes, with corruption flourishing and a total lack of accountability. VERY little has actually filtered down to the ordinary maori in the street to help with housing health, etc, but the administrators live lives of luxury. The government cannot step in and demand that it be used as intended, for it is “theirs” and is handled according to their “culture”, where the Rangatira can take the cream, and do as they like, whilst the ordinary hunga are lucky to get any crumbs that fall from their table – no questions asked.
There is another episode next week. If it is as bad, then that is an indictment against TVNZ for fostering hatred and racial tension in the interests of sensation. Besides, look at the image it projects on the world stage for New Zealand.