Racecourse Tyres

Racecourse Tyres Kumho Tyre shop based in Pukekohe at 214 Manukau rd opposite Carpet Court beside PLH ltd

That would be something
05/06/2024

That would be something

Scientists are on the verge of a dental miracle.

Here we come space man
05/06/2024

Here we come space man

The material might just revolutionize modern manufacturing.

05/06/2024

Too good to be true !

So K fried chicken in 1985 was 4.95 family pack and now should be 17.21. What a lot of Bull sh*teeee
22/07/2023

So K fried chicken in 1985 was 4.95 family pack and now should be 17.21. What a lot of Bull sh*teeee

Getting closer
17/07/2023

Getting closer

UK plans to build world’s first nuclear fusion-powered plant by 2040

17/07/2023

What happened to our country........

And so it begins...the pre-election posturing and promising. With just three months to the election, the noise and flashing around of shiny trinkets to entice voters is already well under way.

The noise isn't just about shouting slogans and making promises though. It is also about drawing attention away from the things political parties would rather we don't remember as we enter the voting booth.

In particular, there is one big scary elephant in the room that Labour wants us to ignore. They have actually done an impressive job of shifting the attention away from this political kryptonite. It is our job to stick the spotlight firmly back on it.

What is Labour's political elephant in the room? It is He Puapua and its stealthy enabler, the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP).

A little history...
In March 2019, then Maori Development and Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta, commissioned a working group to provide advice and recommendations on how to realise UNDRIP.

The working group called their report He Puapua.

Although completed in November 2019, the report and its radical recommendations avoided any public scrutiny until after the 2020 election when Labour secured a majority government.

As recommendations of the report have become a reality, Labour has been quick to distance themselves from this report, denying it is policy, denying it is a plan, and denying that they have acted on the recommendations.

Nothing to see here, folks.

Let’s take a closer look at what the report says...

Broadly, the report called for a focus on:

Self-determination by Maori
Maori participation in government
Increased influence and control of land and resources by iwi/hapu and whanau
Iwi, hapu and whanau ability to exercise authority over all aspects of culture and language
Equity for Maori in opportunity and outcomes
The general themes sound reasonable until the fine print is reviewed and the process to realise these lofty ideals are exposed.

Despite claims by Minister of Maori Development Willie Jackson that He Puapua is neither a plan nor Government policy, by a miraculous coincidence, they have just happened to implement a number of initiatives that align closely to its objectives:

Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act – established co-governed health with the separate Maori Health Authority
Water Services Entity Act – establishes 50/50 co-governance of the 10 water entities which will control the country’s entire water infrastructure
Resource Management reform – bills introduced to establish co-governed management of natural resources
Local Government and Electoral Reform – recommending legislative changes that differentiate democratic rights based on race and support co-government structures. This includes the entrenchment of Maori electoral seats.
Changes to the Local Government Act - that removed the opportunity to hold referenda on the establishment of Maori wards
Canterbury Regional Council (Ngai Tahu Representation) Act - Unelected Maori representation in local government established
New History Curriculum - rewrites significant parts of New Zealand's history and leaves other parts out
Mechanisms for transferring control of the Department of Conservation estate to tribal authorities
Insertion of requirement of compliance to the undefined principles of the Treaty of Waitangi into almost all legislation
National Action Plan Against Racism in NZ - put in place public education campaigns on structural racism
Expansion of Te Pae Oranga- $70m invested in 30 more iwi community panels or community justice panels by 2024/25
Handling of Ihumātao protest - put private land on the table for disputes
Insertion of matauranga Maori into the science curriculum - undermining of sciences considered 'Western'
This is by no means a complete list. New Zealand's democracy really is experiencing a death by a thousand cuts.

Every issue we grapple with inevitably has the distinct shadow of He Puapua over its foundations. Water, resource management, conservation, education, justice, and health...co-governance and the themes of the He Puapua Report are everywhere.

But while Labour has attempted to take some of the sting out of the He Puapua tail, Minister Jackson has also been eager to demonstrate the continued commitment to realising UNDRIP.

In April 2022, under the cover of COVID fallout, the Minister announced that the Government had completed the first stage of a two-step engagement process toward developing their declaration plan.

To be clear, UNDRIP places no obligation or burden on New Zealand to do anything! It was an 'aspirational' non-binding agreement. However, it has been the policy of this Government to overstate the importance of UNDRIP and the need for a declaration plan.

Of course, loading up the parliamentary schedule with the Maori Health Authority, Three Waters, and the RMA reforms, Minister Jackson and Labour pushed their co-governance luck too far. New Zealanders became alarmed and it was evident that more racially-divisive policy would not be tolerated.

Jackson announced that work on realising UNDRIP would be put on hold, although he was at pains to defend the policies. We now know that what he meant was that any publicity and transparency would be put on hold as the implementing of He Puapua has continued at pace.

Despite this frantic and radical reform, Minister Jackson is also on record acknowledging that Maori-specific services don't serve most Maori. In reference to the 2023 Budget, he said, "most Maori are not attached to a lot of our Maori organisations.”

These expensive co-governance policies and separate programmes and entities don't benefit Maori and most Maori don't ask to be divided in this way.

What Maori want and need has been confirmed by polling as being the same as what ALL New Zealanders want. We are all worried about the cost of living, law and order, housing, and education.

As we look forward to 14 October, let's not forget to look for the looming shadow of He Puapua, the elephant in Chris Hipkins' caucus room.

No matter how they dress it up, Labour has spent the last six years (particularly the last three) driving racial division through our institutions and dismantling the safeguards our democracy relies on.

Are you willing to take the risk and give them another three years to implement more of the He Puapua agenda?
I'm not.
Casey Costello
Trustee
Hobson’s Pledge

P.S. We are 100% funded by New Zealanders like you, your generosity helps us hold this out of control government to account. Thank you for your kind support.

Hobson's Pledge Trust · C/- CCHQ 125 Queen Street, Auckland 1010, New Zealand
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07/01/2022

Good record of Auckland

Something a bit different.
07/01/2022

Something a bit different.

Ford’s MEL V8 might not have a famous racing record, but it’s worthy of a closer look.

Still my favourite
03/01/2022

Still my favourite

Just for fun, here are some colorful facts about the Motor City’s most ubiquitous engine.

The beginning
25/12/2021

The beginning

Louis Chervolet was born on Christmas day, 1878. He would become the namesake of Chevrolet Motor Car Company.

02/12/2021

On December 1, 1913 Ford Motor Company begin using a moving assembly line to produce the Ford Model T. By 1925 production reached 10,000 a day

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