We are told to never doubt our scientists and experts in this pandemic environment who are wheeled out constantly.
Those same experts know that Māori contract cancer 10 years in advance of their fellow white New Zealanders. Are those Māori screened for these cancers early to ensure that they get a better shot at recovery or longevity?
The answer is NO.
Someone who is not a Māori has clearly made a decision that Māori will be consigned to a more gory death by blocking access to early cancer testing.
If the shoe was on the other foot, it would mean no white person in New Zealand would be screened for cancer until they were 70. Can you imagine the storming of Parliament by white folk if they had that visited upon them?
Right now in the largest city in this country, there are 60,000 Māori enrolled within the Primary Health Care services, run by and for general practioners. But this group, while enrolled, are not engaged by their GP.
If you do the maths, every Kiwi adult going to a GP is worth on an average $350 a year, paid by the government. This is before the GP charges their co-payment.
Doctors draw down every month this entitlement called a Capitation Fund – including the 60,000 Māori, even though the GP has never engaged with them.
That is taking money from Māori under false pretences - $24 million a year to be precise.
In one DHB area in the middle of the North Island where 34 per cent of enrolled patients are Māori, the District Health Board called me into a meeting to determine why Māori presented at their hospitals with severe and acute illnesses.
Why were us Māori in the room? Because we were costing the DHB too much money in secondary health care. Nothing to do with the fact that we are fellow New Zealanders.
Because of the size of population of Māori in this district, we were able to explore their primary health records. This showed that non-Māori received more blood checks and analyses, and far more referrals to specialists than a Māori from the same clinic.
The question is why did white New Zealanders receive a better deal across the whole of the primary health interface in that district than their fellow Māori citizens? It's because we receive a separate substandard service.
Māori rights to elective procedures and surgeries are also a telling piece of evidence. Māori, for some reason, are placed to the back of the queue.
Let's look at this separatism in another way.
Money is voted to the health system on a per capita basis. At times, extra weightings are provided on a deprivation status to communities in difficulty.
In simple terms. A dollar is voted to a Māori for their health from Treasury, through Parliament.
That dollar is handed over to the Ministry of Health. Without any knowledge or consent, 25 cents is deducted from the Māori dollar as soon as it lands at the Ministry of Health. Then 75 cents is handed to the District Health Board, where a further 65 cents is deducted. The rest is frittered across a wide health network – predominantly white New Zealand organisations. Ultimately, 2 cents of that dollar finally lands in the hands of a to Māori by Māori for Māori organisation in their community.
Ninety eight per cent of all decisions in health are made by white folk.
This is economic apartheid in practice. This is social apartheid in practice.
So when a politician like Judith "Crusher" Collins states that we have a health system that is separatist, she is absolutely right. Māori are consistently separated for second-class treatment, and this plays out across every government service.
Health must be the first mega ministry to be unbundled but other government departments will follow.
Bizarrely, we have just finished the numbers. Māori get 2 per cent of Oranga Tamariki funding to build capacity to fix their communities. For three decades we have been purposely locked out.
• John Tamihere is a former Labour MP and Cabinet Minister and is CEO of urban Māori organisation Te Whānau o Waipareira and the Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency