
A nasty theme is emerging in New Zealand politics. It鈥檚 come on gradually, particularly over the past year or so, but has become somewhat exaggerated recently, particularly in the months since the new government was sworn in.
I refer to the use of highly emotive and divisive language. We usually learn about the use of language through our own mistakes. And we now live in an age where it is easier to offend than it once was. As the saying goes, we have to 鈥渕ind our p鈥檚 and q鈥檚鈥 more than we once did.
However, our politicians are not setting a good example. Many of them are using language designed to drive us apart.
New Zealand is not alone in the challenges we are facing. However, I suspect that many of us would like to see those challenges faced in a manner that is civilised and constructive. Instead, we are seeing more and more political narrative that is delivered with disrespect, loathing and even hatred.
It鈥檚 almost as if political parties, and those who represent them, in their quest for a soundbite, are searching for terminology that is ever increasing in its intensity as they describe their disapproval of opposing policies or politicians.
But the reality is that we are not living in a 鈥渄ictatorship鈥 and neither is our government demonstrating an approach that anyone should describe as being 鈥渨hite supremist鈥. In fact, we just had a democratic election and the majority of people voted overwhelmingly for the government we now have.
The new government has put forward some modest reforms to our cigarette smoking laws. These changes do not represent 鈥済enocide鈥, and to suggest that they do is disrespectful of those who have genuinely suffered from the intentional destruction of a people.
The government policy to review the school lunches programme is not 鈥渞acist鈥 and parents advocating for a safe place for their teenage daughters to use a bathroom at school are not 鈥済ender bashing鈥.
This week we鈥檝e seen politicians and commentators suggesting that NZ First leader Winston Peters鈥 state of the nation speech referenced New Zealand鈥檚 co-governance policies alongside the holocaust. Anyone who has listened to the speech will vouch that he didn鈥檛 mention the holocaust. He did reference policies of the previous government as being consistent with what was seen in Nazi Germany, which in itself is unhelpful. But the holocaust wasn鈥檛 mentioned. And neither should it be. Holocaust has become a word that gets thrown around loosely, and every time it does, we are further desensitised to the horrors it is intended to describe.
Also this week, the government has announced a change in expectations of behaviour for those living in K膩inga Ora accommodation. The intention is to take stronger measures against persistent antisocial behaviour by tenants. The proposals don鈥檛 strike most of us as 鈥渂eneficiary bashing鈥 but that is the label that opposition parties throw around.
Sadly, we have people living in motels and worse, cars, in this country. If the government can eliminate homelessness for just one family, I would imagine people would be grateful. A K膩inga Ora tenant called talkback this week and said that 鈥渉aving a state house is a privilege and not a right鈥. Helping those who are struggling is something we Kiwis do well. Most people who are provided with housing are grateful and respectful of the opportunity. That is not too much to ask.
The media can play a role here too. We need to be better at talking about what is actually said, rather than someone鈥檚 opinion of what is said. This extends to members of the media who can be guilty of inflaming a situation by placing their own interpretation on a political announcement or an opposition comment.
And it seems unusual that a TV news organisation would broadcast the opposition leader鈥檚 reaction to a government announcement instead of the government announcement itself. If our goal is to inform the public, why would we do that?
If we allow our political debate to degenerate into name-calling, fictitious comments and extremist language, our society will be poorer for it. Because, when our political leaders use inflammatory language over and over again, people begin to believe what is said. Those who don鈥檛 are desensitised to it, as it starts seeping into other parts of life.
We鈥檝e seen a couple of examples lately. The Wellington women鈥檚 rugby team anti-government haka met quite a reaction the first time they did it a few weeks ago. The following week they did it again, to a more muted response. I don鈥檛 even know if they have done it a third time.
And when a ministerial visit to a high school results in a confrontational haka and a minister being spat at, supposedly because that minister is cancelling school lunches, which he is not, society is at risk of losing the plot.
There is no doubt that there are plenty of things that need to be said in this country. We should be thankful that people are prepared to enter the discussion. We all need to hear both sides of a story and we should be grateful that we live in a democracy that allows open debate.
But to be constructive, such debate needs to be respectful and the information delivered needs to be factual. Only then, will such discussions strengthen our democracy. Until then, the current behaviours will weaken it.
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