Home > Issues > Race > Submission on the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Bill

The Black Ribbon Campaign

Empowering Men:

fighting feminist lies

Submission on the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Bill

Peter Zohrab 2021

Home Page Articles about Issues 1000 links
alt.mens-rights FAQ Sex, Lies & Feminism Quotations
Male-Friendly Lawyers, Psychologists & Paralegals Email us ! Site-map

 

I submit that the proposal to create a Maori Health Authority and Iwi-Maori partnership boards should be deleted from the Bill.  I say this after having read the text of the lecture "Pae Ora: Maori Health Horizons" by Professor Sir Mason Durie.

My reasons are as follows:

  1. This is a very short and unacademic document.  However, the author is apparently what passes for the most prominent Maori theoretician on Maori health and this document appears to be the closest available approximation to a theoretical argument for the proposed changes to Maori health delivery. 

  2. Maori health, as measured by longevity, is already improving under the current system.  On page 3, Durie states:

  3. "Importantly over the past 25 years there has been a significant increase in Maori life expectancy....  Moreover, whereas the difference between Maori and non-Maori life expectancies was increasing during the 1980s and 1990s..., by 2002 there were signs that the gap was narrowing...."

  4. If we project the increase in Maori life expectancy cited by the Professor Durie, we see that by 2035 Maori women will have an average life expectancy of 79 years and Maori men an average life expectancy of 73.4 years. 

  5. I can see no evidence in this document that the proposed changes will actually improve Maori health.

  6. The main motivation for the proposed changes seems to be political -- to siphon off tax money from the non-Maori majority and give it to Maoris to use, as they see fit.  That is theft!  There should be no taxation without representation.  On page 1, Professor Durie states:

    "Yet despite the uncertainties ahead and the rapidly changing nature of New Zealand society, Pae Ora  concludes that Maori health will be a function of Maori determination and Maori know-how." 

    However, he gives no evidence to justify this conclusion. 

  7. There is nothing in the Treaty of Waitangi or its principles which authorises the diminution of the Crown's authority over Maoris -- especially at the expense of the non-Maori taxpayers in the population. 

  8. Maori know-how in health is limited by the small Maori population base, the relatively small (but probably growing) number of Maoris who obtain educational qualifications and the relatively small (but probably growing) number of Maoris with qualifications in health disciplines.

  9. There is no evidence in this document that traditional Maori medicine (any more than traditional Chinese medicine or Western herbal or other supplements) is a useful supplement or replacement for mainstream medicine. 

  10. For all we know, traditional Maori medicine may be one cause of Maoris' relatively bad health statistics. 

 

See also:

 

 

 

Someone has let women out of the kitchen -- and they have been telling lies ever since!

 

FAQ

Webmaster

Peter Douglas Zohrab

Latest Update

26 February 2022

Top