In a shaameful outburst in Parliament today, Te Pāti Māori MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi spewed more anti-Pākehā venom, snarling at Pākehā MPs, “And you’re welcome that you get to live here at all.” The implication? They’re mere guests in New Zealand, tolerated only by her grace. This is raw, unfiltered racism on full display.
As expected, the mainstream media, wedded to their simplistic “white bad, brown good” dogma, turned a blind eye. They’ll scream outrage over any hint of offense against Māori, but when Te Pāti Māori hurls bigotry at Pākehā, they’re conveniently mute. The double standard is glaring.
ACT’s Simon Court, to his credit, refused to let this pass. He called out Kapa-Kingi’s divisive rhetoric with force: “Mr. Speaker, that reference that that member made to ‘we should be thankful that we should be allowed to live here at all,’ I find offensive... That member is creating disorder in the House by suggesting that some members don’t deserve to live here. I ask that you ask that member to withdraw and apologise.” Court’s demand for accountability cut through the fog of cowardice that too often clouds the House.
Te Pāti Māori isn’t a party, they’re a blight on New Zealand’s democracy. They’re not advocates for justice; they’re Māori supremacists peddling racial hatred under the guise of “decolonisation.” Their obsession with demonising Pākehā is matched only by their denial of their own mixed ancestry, as thin as watered-down green tea. They rail against “colonisers” while ignoring their own Pākehā bloodlines - a hypocrisy so blatant it’s almost laughable.
This is extremism. Te Pāti Māori’s relentless race-baiting doesn’t just fracture Parliament - it tears at the soul of the nation. New Zealand deserves better than a party fueled by division and duplicity. They are, without question, the most racist group to ever taint our halls of power.
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