Scott Hamilton RTM Profile picture
Sep 14 13 tweets 4 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
1/9 'Don't listen to Julian Batchelor, he's not an expert. Don't listen to me, I'm not an expert. Go to the experts.' These rare & precious words were spoken by Pere Huriwai-Seger, at the last meeting of the Kaipara District Council. The meeting was a shambles. Image
2/9 If you order clowns, you get a circus. The circus started when Julian Batchelor addressed the council. Mayor Craig Jepson claimed Batchelor had approached him & asked to speak, but Huriwai-Seger showed the meeting an e mail that proved Jepson had invited Batchelor. Image
3/9 & Jepson's friend Clive Boonham spoke at the last meeting, using research provided by that noted scholar, Don Brash. Batchelor says that there's a 183 year old conspiracy to hide the true Treaty. Bonham says that the Treaty lost any legal relevance in 1840. Image
4/9 As Huriwai-Seger told the meeting, Batchelor has repeatedly claimed that Paul Moon supports his ideas. But Moon along with other experts has spoken out against, indeed ridiculed, the idea that a secret Treaty that was discovered in a Pukekohe attic in 1989. Image
5/9 Boonham says the Treaty lost all importance after Hobson declared sovereignty over NZ. But British administrators like Attorney General William Swainson & James Busby talk constantly about abiding by & implementing the Treaty in the early 1840s. So does the Colonial Office. Image
6/10 Boonham committed the ultimate absurdity when he quoted a Waitangi Tribunal report in an effort to prove the Treaty had never been part of NZ's constitution. The Tribunal would not exist if that were so. But if Boonham isn't an expert, how do we identify someone who is?
7/10 I'm not an expert on the Treaty & constitutional law. I read Alan Ward's A Show of Justice & Jock Brookfield's Waitangi & Indigenous Rights to get more understanding of these fields. I'd define an expert as someone who relies on other experts. It's a question of method. Image
8/10Unlike Batchelor or Boonham, who ask us to trust them as guides to esoteric mysteries, Ward & Brookfield constantly acknowledge other scholars, & give their readers footnotes to follow.Ward & Brookfield's books can be dense & dry, but that's because of their respect for truth
9/10 An expert always relies on other experts. If Ward or Brookfield could have addressed the Kaipara council about the Treaty & NZ's unwritten constitution, they would have situated what they had to say within the body of research on these subjects, not acted like prophets. Image
10/10 The Dunning-Kruger effect is often discussed nowadays. It asserts that the more incompetent a person is, the less they will be aware of it.Stand up, Boonham & Batchelor. An expert is aware, often painfully, of the limits of our knowledge & the diversity of scholarly opinion
@Parmenides44 1/2 I'm not an expert on the 1840 and constitutional law stuff, so I can only defer to those who are, but I have studied the Waikato War deeply, & it's notable that those who want to extinguish the Waikato's independence, like Premier Domett, hate the TOW & want to disregard it.
@Parmenides44 2/2 On the other hand, those who have built up the Waikato Kingdom, like Wiremu Tamihana, refer to the Treaty as justification for their actions. That tells me that to powerful Pakeha & Maori, the TOW was seen in the 1860s as affording at least some Maori sovereignty.
@Mintando 2/2 So Ngata was no fan of Pakeha. & he would be condemned by Pakeha conservatives today - just as he was at the time - for his land development schemes, which were aimed specifically at Maori & aimed at strengthening them. I think Ngata would realise today he was too pessimistic

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More from @SikotiHamiltonR

Sep 7
1/15 Jill Bender teaches history at the Uni of North Carolina. She's dived into NZ archives, & returned with a story about alliances between Maori & Irish anti-imperialists in the 19th C Waikato & King Country. Bender has also found an old, long-forgotten, potent name: Piniana. Image
2/15 Bender gives us new facts about the small Fenian army that formed in Thames & sent men into Te Rohe Potae or the King Country, then an independent state, in 1869. The army appears to have been carefully organised, with ranks, sashes, & flags. Image
3/15 Bender shows Fenian-Maori contact did not end in 1869. In 1871 Captain McDonnell travelled up the Whanganui River, & found Fenians living as guests of Maori, who had given them the name Piniana. The Fenians had s'posedly promised a force of 500 to fight the British. Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 5
1/4 I've got a simple question for Julian Batchelor. It's about this man, James Busby, who along with Hobson drafted the Treaty of Waitangi. According to Batchelor, their true version of the Treaty was suppressed. Image
2/4 Batchelor says that the authentic Busby and Hobson text and its Maori translation were hidden by sinister forces shortly after the February 6 1840 signing, & a phoney, much more pro-Maori text was substituted.
3/4 According to the conspiracy theory Batchelor is pushing, the true version of the Treaty was discovered in a Pukekohe house in 1989. It's known to conspiracy theorists as the Littlewood Treaty.
Read 8 tweets
Jul 1
1/10 Yesterday was the 171st anniversary of the Constitution Act, the most tragically neglected law in NZ history. Created by Britain as NZ prepared for self-government, the law concretised the 'two people, two systems' pragmatism of early governors, especially FitzRoy.
2/10 Most early governors had allowed iwi wide autonomy, except where their activities clashed with those of whites. Early laws like the Juries Act had established separate systems for Maori & Pakeha. Section 71 of the Constitution Act allowed iwi self-government.
3/10 Section 71 allowed for iwi to make & enforce their own laws in their rohe, if authorised by parliament. The Act also called 'householders' & 'all who have a stake in the colony' to vote. Maori were the vast majority of NZers in 1853, when our first election to a was held.
Read 12 tweets
Jun 30
1/9 This property was the stronghold of two Pakeha capitalists. One thrived in the 19th C, the other in the 21st. Both saw the property as the model for a new & sinister society. Both hoarded art here. Both uprooted communities of less fortunate NZers. & both suffered vengeance.
2/9 I'm talking about Thomas Russell & James Wallace, & the property named Pah Homestead. Russell was the founder of the Bank of New Zealand & a string of less successful business institutions. He entered politics, & was part of the govt that invaded the Wakato Kingdom in 1863
3/9 Russell acquired swathes of land confiscated from Maori after the invasion. He also bought Pah Homestead, & turned it into a model for the Anglicised landscape he wanted to create in the Waikato. Maori earthworks were landscaped away. European trees replaced native species.
Read 11 tweets
Apr 2
1/5 In 1852 Robinson Crusoe became the first novel to appear in Maori. According to an Elsdon Best article I've just read, the story had quite an impact on a group of Manawatu Maori. They launched an expedition to search for Crusoe.
2/5 Crusoe's would-be rescuers searched for him at the mouth of the Manawatu, where were there are small islands. Best mocks the Maori who went searching for Crusoe as 'primitive'. But weren't they simply assimilating a new story to their worldview?
3/5 Didn't Blake do the same as the Manwatu Maori, when he sought to make Jerusalem in England? On the northern Vanuatu island of Vanua Lavu, another story has been localised.
Read 6 tweets
Apr 2
1/4 I feel overwhelmed by high culture here in Warkworth. Today the NZ String Quartet turned up to give a concert in the same hall where Pasifika dancers performed on Friday. They performed a piece by Shostakovich, who is surely a composer with new relevance in the era of Putin.
2/4 At the end of April the NZ Symphony Orchestra will be performing Shostakovich's 10th Symphony, where he dared to portray the dictator who tormented him for decades. The symphony's furious noise is an attempt to convey Stalin's brutal paranoia.
3/4 Some misguided people called for a boycott of Russian culture after the invasion of Ukraine, but the country's greatest artists, from Pushkin to Malevich to Mandelstam to Shostakovich, have always been targets of their rulers, rather than propagandists.
Read 4 tweets

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