Tuesday, September 5, 2017

If we could turn back time - to the good ole days

I have just been engaging with a thread where an activist talks abut the 30's and how Labour's socialist policies of the times saw housing etc for all. My issue with this statement is that underpinning Labours socialism of the time was colonisation', which as we know allowed a predominantly white male govt to offer stolen land up to build houses on for poor white people. Maori were discouraged from applying for racist reasons. Labours then progressive socialism, via Savage, was also underpinned by sexism - women were not encouraged to work and issues such as rape and abuse were neither acknowledged nor fully dealt with. Conversations on also saw also saw a of a lot of victim blaming from politicians. So under this progressive policy of housing the poor, poor women were trapped in their brand new state houses being abused. As far as your blatant homosexual was concerned - they did not need to be housed in anything but prisons or mental health care facilities. Harping back to a better an brighter time ignores the isms that underpinned much of the era spoken about as well as overlooking and the conservative political theories and practices of the time. I believe the outcomes of the hard fought for changes has been assimilation as women/queers/Maori are tagged onto coattails of white straight male ideology. Tweaking the margins has not offered much to those still living in the margins. Isn't it time to unpack then that we rethink the political ideologies of the left and right - of democracy - socialism - anarchy and demand something different? Assimilating into a political ideology grown from racism and all the other isms feels to me like a backhanded win. What something different looks like I do not know, however there are enough creative and exciting possibilities if we decided to critique the looking back on the golden ages and took our rose coloured glasses off whilst unpacking the contradictions that are woven into the political landscape.
I find that concept far more exciting then demanding Labour return to some whitewash socialism that helped white straight men get a house and then go on to live their nice white straight male orientated lives.

Monday, September 4, 2017

When I Was Very Young

Not certain if anyone over 45 years of age can remember actually being young, as in remember the realities of it, without romanticising it.  For some strange reason as we age young people and everything they do apparently annoys older people.  Their music hurts our ears and makes no sense to us. They are either not committed enough to causes or lacking in information about their commitment to a cause. They, according to us, seem reluctant to work, vote or participate in life in general.  They are too busy wasting their time on Xboxing, overusing apps and generally they seem to fail us as a cohort.  I am guessing some of this disillusionment with younger people is, to some degree, connected to having birthed them for a reason that is secreted away until they fail us, which seems to occur in their teens.  Whatever it is youth have always been an inadequate cohort for the aging population.

I don’t know about you but I sort of remember being young and without the rose coloured spectacles I remember enjoying some of it and hating other parts of it.  As a young person I was invincible and because of this I played close to the edge of everything I did, personally and politically.  But then I come from an abusive home so I was not an atypical teen?

So when I was first asked to write something about youth I was like ok what can I write, and nothing came. I was devoid of thought and tried to evade the request.  But today I am angry, very angry. National rolled out their solution to youth crime and as per usual it totally missed the mark and relies on punitive victim blaming.  Having been a youth (yes we all have and I truly think we should NOT forget this), who got into petty crime, having worked with youth, having lived with youth, and having supported young people I am ashamed to say that we get it wrong when it comes to our young people.

When I was a teen I left home headed to the big city and got fully embedded in a world of criminal activities, alcohol and drug taking.  I generally bummed around avoiding work, responsibility and planning for my future.  The system, whilst certainly not perfect in any shape or form did allow me to play within the margins.  I could fall down and be helped up. Ok I had to wear a label but I was still helped up.  There were recovery centres, a benefit that did not sanction me at the push of a button.  I had time.  Time to find out through various avenues who I was what I wanted and eventually how to get it.  Time is what we are no longer giving our young.  At primary school we get them to think about what they need to save for – like their pension.  We push them through school demanding they achieve at a level that must feel like they are constantly on fire or worse still at a rave 24/7.  By the time they get to uni they can take a bit of a breather in O week, but then they must figure out which degree is the right degree to get them that job which will see them through till they are either dead or needing to find another job because the market moves so quickly.

Young people today are expected to know exactly what it is they want to do and then get on to it and save for their future. If they trip they must immediately pick themselves back up and keep going. There is no breathing space.  Mistakes are punished in such a way as to think that we have forgotten how many times we fell and were helped up. Hannah McQueen the money guru who is welcomed with open arms and no critique argues that young people cannot waste time doing things that will make the taxpayer resentful. Really, what is it we are resentful about? So young people must know exactly what it is they will do with the rest of their lives even whilst the rest of their lives is being turned into mincemeat.

If you fall these days there are no longer space such as Hanmer Springs, an eight week recovery centre based in the south island, that allowed people the space to think, learn and test their new learnings.  I know it wasn’t perfect but for all its wrongs TIME was something we valued.  If you fall over now – you are sanctioned by WINZ, sent into programmes that make you race around barely learning anything outside how to yell YES/NO SIR.  This new programme the National Party are rolling out has been tried before and guess what – it didn’t work then.  Why? Because it was harsh and punitive and ignores the reality that young people need space and time to find out who they are.

It’s time to stop marching our young people through to a cut-off date as if they will run out of points if they are not sorted now and must then exit the room forever.  We need to slow things down for them. For all the shit I experienced I managed to meet some awesome people who shared important lessons that I am just putting into practice now. I have some of the best stories, and I can spin a yarn that is entertaining.  In my journey I managed to become an alcohol and drug counsellor, worked as the director of Rape Crisis, got a PhD and now works in various roles in my local community.  This for a kid who left home at 16 and lived on the margins of society.  Our kids need our stories and they need the space to create their own. I for one want them to have the world at their feet so that one day they will look back and say I made it even against the odds.  I do not want us standing around a freshly dug grave saying what the hell went wrong. 

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

are you my mother?


I have been extremely moved over the past week by posts Jan Logie has been putting up via FB with regards to the forced removal of children under the 1955 Adoption Law between the late 50s and 80’s and the trauma birth-mothers experienced.  Minister for Children Anne Tolley has said she will not be holding an inquiry as there is no proof that the practice of coercive adoption was endorsed by the government at the time. In 1997 the then social welfare department, a branch of the government, officially acknowledged that coercive adoptions occurred for more than 30 years.  They however shelved any opportunity to hold an inquiry arguing it would not necessarily help those hurt by past practices. in 2013 our Australian counterparts made an official apology on behalf of the Australian people, for the policies and practices that forced the separation of mothers from their babies.  Gillard told the audience that these practices “…created a lifelong legacy of pain and suffering"

I was born in 1960, in the height of the sexual revolution.  Whilst the rest of the world was leaving the stodgy conservativism of the 50s in their wake, the majority of New Zealanders were getting on with business; working and raising families.  Looking back at how parents raised their children most of us would cringe at their reliance on punishment.  Scolding, shouting, and smacking were considered as necessary and any thought of rewarding and or praising children was tantamount sparing the rod spoiling the child.  

Concomitantly women were experiencing a boom, with increases in job opportunities and for some chance to attend university; life was good.  However for those who found their new found freedom leading to a pregnancy, life was less rewarding.  Prior to the 1940s, it was believed that making mothers who fell pregnant (something I have never understood – the whole falling pregnant concept) keeping the illegitimate child was a fitting ‘…punishment for the mother’s sin and a warning to others’.  In the 1950s New Zealand’s welfare state focused on supporting married couples with young children.  Single, mothers were left to struggle financially and would often have any benefits they may receive withheld leaving them to rely on highly religious welfare organisations.  The 1955 Adoption Act produced a new regime of thought based on a complete break ideology.  The complete break and secrecy shaped our adoption policy for 30 years.” Women were coerced into giving their child away.  Birth-mothers and their adopted children were then to have no contact, ever.  Through government policy “…a wall of secrecy was placed between the adoptee and their origins.  This was sanctioned via a bilateral partnership between governments and church and buttressed by a patriarchal view of women as second-class citizens and ‘fallen-women’ as unfit.  The government, a bastion of maleness (I wonder how many illegitimate children they fathered), supported adoption through various actions such as making it illegal to sell contraceptives to anyone under 16 years of age (1954 and 1977).  Moreover, it was illegal to even discuss contraception with under-16-year-olds until 1989.  Adoption agencies and the bible reiterated the need to ensure those born outside wedlock be given the best opportunity.  Therefore single mothers found it difficult to receive support and were encouraged give up their children as there was morally, and financially no support for them and or their child. 
'
Whilst minister Tolley suggests that the government was not active in the forced removal of children she is certainly ignoring the lack of financial support and government policies that rendered women helpless to prevent pregnancy and once pregnant to bring their child up. Abortion was only dangerous it was illegal. 

Oblivious to the political and social environment that would construct a large part of my identity I was immediately whisked away to be put up for adoption.  Looking back on my adoption and childhood I cannot excuse either the system or my adopted parents for their callous mistreatment of myself as an ‘illegitimate children’’.  My adopted parents however, functioned within a structure that felt like a second-skin to them; what they did seemed ‘natural’.  For them it was natural / right for a woman to give up her child, did she not want better for her infant, a loving family, like them, who would offer security, normality and the opportunity to be a better human being than the infants birthmother, wasn’t their home then not the best place for this child. 

This romanticised notion of rescuing a child from bedlam helped construct the savior mentality of both my adopted mother and myself as something ‘special’ until the day, minute, hour – time it all changed.  Maybe it was my father’s sexual abusive nature that opened up the schism they tried so hard to hold shut.  Maybe it was my ongoing questions about whom my mother was, where she lived and why she left me behind, or maybe it was everything as life, my mother’s health, my fathers and mother’s violence erupted into the chaos of family life.  What I do know is that between Joyce, Stand and my adopted grandmother I learnt that the blood flowing through my veins was tainted and it was their responsibility to eradicate this infection.
I felt my abandonment deeply.  As a baby my adopted mother (Joyce) said I was the quietest baby she had met.  I have always wondered if deep within my being I stayed still and quiet so as not to be left again. The veneer of being ‘special’ certainly vanished as I grew older.  Misdemeanors were placed on my origins and it became clear that my parents used Christianity to try and eradicate the evil within my body.  Blood was understood to hold the sins of the mother and as a female child born out of wedlock I was tainted.   My grandmother believed beatings would help, my parents were not overly keen on this idea however tended to overlook and later participate in giving me a good hiding in the hope that it would correct me.

Worse still was the ridicule of some children I attended school with. They took it upon themselves to enforce my place in the school ground hierarchic.  Ridiculed and stigmatised I found solace in daydreaming and beside my friend Karen a young Māori girl who used violence to defend her sister from ridicule.  Like her it became my role to defend my younger brother and sister from children who truly believed we should not be allowed to be part of their world.   Eventually I internalised all this hatred finding an outlet in blaming my birthmother for having given birth to me.  I often swore that if I ever meet her I would spit on her.  This anger ran strongly beside a hope that one day she would arrive on my doorstep and take me away. 

In my early teens I would often find myself drawn to woman who look liked similar to me or who showed me kindness and wonder ‘are you my mother’?  I would construct elaborate stories acting them out in my head using them to protect me from the growing hate and violence that was becoming part and parcel of my everyday life.  Most puzzling to me was why two people would adopt children and then treat them with such hatred and violence.  I finally began to think that this was in fact the sole purpose of my adopted – I was brought into that home to be abused. There were times of great love, rarely occurring as I grew older but those moments fade in the assault of hatred, anger, violence and abuse.  By the time I was in my mid-teens my parents were outright aggressive towards me arguing that they had wished they had never adopted me and that any traits that caused strife were directly inherited from my birthmother.

In the mid 1980’s I finally received my original birth certificate.  In the mid 90’s I made finally found the courage to contact my birth mothers family, only to find out she was dead.  I have learnt to live with the conflicting dichotomy of being adopted - the love / hate confusion has played badly in my life but also given me insights into the human psyche.  Not that it has given me any really concrete answers.


For the minister to state that they play no part in the forced adoptions of children between the 1950’s and 70’s is ludicrous and as a child forcibly taken away from my mother I support those women who are standing up making a noise.  My only criticism of these women is that they have thoughtlessly left us behind.  For nine months those women carried us, a symbiotic being, we went through the good and the bad and on the day of our birth strangers separated us and guarantee our separation would in some cases be for life.  To fight this government’s refusal to acknowledge the evil of the past and to bring about a holistic solution for mothers and children I really believe that those of us who suffered through our adoption should work together with these women, as it is essential that healing plays a massive part of any challenge to a destructive inhumane system. 

Sunday, June 25, 2017

Heteronormativity



(thanks to Dayle Takitimu for inspiring me to write this)

Persecuted
Criminalised
Medicalised
Marginlised
Patronised


Yet we embrace them
Want to be like them

Overall clad dykes
Striding the heteronormative streets
Chanting challenging
Every woman can be a lesbian


Straights
Frozen in fear


Radicals demanding liberation
Not equality

Committed to destroying the institution of marriage
Not buying into it.


Master give me permission to breathe


Marriage and Family
Patriarchal prisons

We never wanted equality
We wanted liberation.
We were going to change the world

Conform – Never

Father which art in...
Please give us permission to look up


Conventional
Traditional
Normal

Words diametrically opposed to my dyke identity


State please give me permission to speak

Second class – never

But I quote:

The exclusion of a portion of the population from a major social institution creates a second-class citizenship for that group. This is a humiliating experience, whether as individuals we feel humiliated or not

I have never felt excluded because I was unable to marry
I was excluded because

I am dyke
I am tattooed
I am Butch

I was excluded because

Because I speak out

I have never felt like a second class citizen because I could not marry 
I was made a second class citizen because I would not be like you


Please straight gay people Permission

To live as you
To become you in everything
That is not me

It is not my mantra to beg
It is not my mantra to conform
To just be like everyone else


My mantra
our mantra

revolution

Demanding the right for all straight people
To live as
  • Monogamously
  • Non-monogamously
  • Single
  • Celibate
  • Child free
  • With children
  • With cats
  • With dogs
  • Without pets
As we do

To live as
  • Fabulously
  • Staunchly
  • Politically
  • Sportingly
  • Spectacularly

As we do

My challenge to all you normalisising homosexuals echoes my Māori sisters challenge
and I quote:

"It is frustrating when those seeking to emancipate themselves seek the approval of those who have assumed the right to enslave them...fundamentally undermining your own inherent mana - shows me you don't really believe in it, cause you won't back it unless the master gives you permission".


Master – god – state - man – heterosexuals –gayley normals

Marriage is an insidious social construct!






APPARENTLY I AM ANGRY


APPARENTLY I AM ANGRY

At a system that intentionally camouflages racism beneath a MULTICULTURAL discourse embedded in a neo-liberal mantle that blames the brown victim

for

Continuing to live in towns abandoned to the neo-liberal turns of economic necessity
Then blames the victim for WEARING THE WRONG COLOUR T-SHIRT


APPARENTLY I AM ANGRY

At the veneer that elevates the Left right and centre
Whilst abandoning those whose land form the foundation of our number 8 wire democracy

APPARENTLY I AM ANGRY

Because nice white folk take benign risks ensuring positionality
Whilst Māori risk life and limb daily in ways nice people will never comprehend

APPARENTLY I AM ANGRY

At us Pākehā who ask what is our commitment to the Treaty of Waitangi at job interviews
But cannot spell Te Tiriti o Waitangi without a Māori dictionary

MOSTLY I AM ANGRY

At playing the white game
Of trying to get ahead and in so doing become something more than I was
But ended up being exactly who I was trying to get away from

MOSTLY I AM ANGRY

At people who say 'get over it'
Yet have no idea what IT is I am meant to get over

I AM STILL ANGRY

With the women I was ready to share my life with but she went straight
For the beating I got and the fact that you never think you need to apologise because it was just me

BUT mostly I am angry
That racism killed your son
That I did not step up and be there for you
That all my shit got in the way of what was needed

I let you down

Apparently I am a lot fucking angrier than I realised I was...

FREEDOM of SPEECH

I am in agreement with Derek Fox. What he has pointed out is bang on. So good on you for saying what people do not wish to hear because racism and colonisation are too hard to deal with.
We have to remember that FREEDOM OF SPEECH inherently ignores colonisation.

Freedom of speech is centre on a small grouping of peoples being able to comment on all other peoples. On their ideas, religion, political hopes and dreams, activism etc. However, if those who are spoken at stand ...up and speak back then punishment will rain upon them through invasion, economic sanctions and it will be done in the name of spreading the freedom of speech and democracy.
Another flaw is the notion that the press is free and independent. It has been proven time and time again that the Western press is neither. It is part and parcel of the political right. And this conglomerate does not present unbiased - independent and free news. instead is upholds racism, drawing heavily on stereotyping, especially on indigenous activism. press stands alongside political party's, mainly the right and vomits out its propaganda without question. If you do not believe me then go read 'Dirty Politics'.

Of course no one should die over a cartoon. But was it merely a cartoon? No it was imperialism at its worst. As Fox so rightly points out

"The editor of the French magazine has paid the price for his assumption of cultural superiority and arrogance, he was the bully believing he could insult other people's culture and with impunity and he believed he would be protected in his racism and bigotry by the French state."
Freedom of Speech comes at a price. For those excluded from speaking it means living in the shadow of words meant to disempower, marginalised and demonise.

For those included in the right to speak - well it is time we thought about the fact that the freedom of speech ignores colonisation.