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ANSWER = ID RATHER BE RIDING!------------------------------------------------------
Well i'm probably still getting this wrong but...
maori appear to "expect entitlement" ie they expect money to be handed to them while on dole for nothing. Claiming cultural rights.
Kiwi's appear to "earn entitlement" ie they worked for years, lost their job for a month and are thankful for the help.
I don't have an issue with being described as a Pakeha.
To me it is a New Zealand term meaning "New Zealander of Caucasian descent".
Nothing too intimidating or demeaning in that I wouldn't have thought.
...she took the KT, and left me the Buell to ride....(Blues Brothers)
If you're 1/3 Maori by blood then you're a very rare breed indeed, and I understood no 1/2 Maoris remain at all. We are none of us "pure" anything, by breeding, and our culture is simply what set of myths, beliefs and behaviours we choose, as individuals, from amongst our perceived heritage.
I believe you're missing what I see as a fairly firm consensus. We seem to be declining to distinguish between one collection of mongrels and another when the only criteria is Culture with a capital C, a behaviour I believe is consistent with a dignified and peaceful co-existence.
A behaviour, further, I would have recognised by those setting your syllabus as both prevalent and valid, whether it agrees with their world view or otherwise. The sheer wast of time and effort such culturally sensitive “education” represents appals me, as it does the vast majority of students, who fail to see the relevance to their chosen field.
Edit:
Snap.![]()
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
Two social workers were walking off their $100 McDonalds lunch in South Auckland when they stumbled upon a white guy laying in the gutter, bloodied and bruised from a serious assault. They looked at each other and said, "Oh dear, I feel sorry for the fulla that did this."
I respect Maori culture, identity and values and therefore call Maori by the collective name they have given themselves - Maori.
I ask only that the same courtesy be extended to me. I have not chosen the name pakeha and am therefore offended any time someone uses this word to collectively describe me and my people.
I think that's fair enough don't you?
In space, no one can smell your fart.
My 2 cents before I go home... each of us carries our own unique world view, which is in turn constructed, or the summation of a variety of cultural world views. Also known as schemas or frameworks.
I grew up male - that gives me a particular view on things, as well as a particular way of understanding and relating to things. Men want sex which brings on romance, women want romance which brings on sex.
I grew up White. I see money as a mechanism I can acquire land with and do what the hell I want with it. As opposed to Maori where I am a steward of the land.
I was raised with a Christian ethos rather than Muslim. I was raised in a family with particular values and ways of doing things... etc...
As a specific example of who I am and what I identify with - I was raised a Kiwi rather than American.... There is not a drop of Maori blood in me and I am from white middle class NZ. Not a Maori free zone, but I only ever set foot on a Marae during the 2 school trips I did to the local one. But sitting in a hotel in Canada I was just absolutely awestruck, felt proud to the absolute core, when about 2 tables down a group of people huddled together and started singing a Waiata.
Why? I identified with them! I was proud to be one of them...
So what the hell happened to my pakeha view of the world? It turned out to be highly contextual.
I am the summation of all those influences, as we all are. My ethnicity and cultural identity are but a part of that and depending on the situation I will either stand apart, or stand together with others around me..
that's a lot of words to say ... it's not as simple as a Pakeha world view.
$2,000 cash if you find a buyer for my house, kumeuhouseforsale@straightshooters.co.nz for details
Good even-tempered and intelligent posts Trump-lady.: Your question is simple enough but finding images to represent it hmmmm..........
An effective social-worker will understand cultural differences so they can deal with all types of families. That is what lies behind the assignment.
NZ is dominated by English systems. (In fact so is India, but that's by the way). The prevailing social attitudes are Western ie. importance of the individual, democracy, equality, private ownership of property, admiration of wealth, ambitious.
Maori by contrast are communal, believe in the importance of extended family, ancestoral history, a sense of belonging to geographic locations of origin, the individual is less important than the group, share property and wealth, etc.
Gross generalisations certainly but also a fair summary.
To find images, have a look for contrasts between Caucasians and American Indians and/or Aboriginals. Same discussion and there should be plenty out there.
This has to be a troll. Fark sake I had a bit higher oppinion of you girl ,than this.
As I am what you are referring to as a honky, I think you are starting to appear to me as one those on the losing side, that just want to believe in a 150 plus year old setlement.
After visiting the Denpasar museum where it shows the Dutch attrocities committed agaist the Balianese. My daughter asked, "How do you feel about what happened to your grandparents in the 1900s" The guide smiled and said "We have to move on or we have no progress." She was 9 at the time and noticed in her next school project that, the Indonesians had stone buildings and metals tools. Why don't they have them in the Auckland museum. If she ever gets in to politics she believes in capital punishment. I don't.
You have let yourself down in my eyes "trump-lady"
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