Our ambitious, not-for-profit enterprise seeks dynamic, multi-talented National Director to lead the organisation and revitalise progressive campaigning in Aotearoa New Zealand.
As National Director you will lead this exciting not-for-profit from its launch, shaping its day-to-day operations and overall direction as a major new presence in New Zealand progressive politics through the next election and beyond its launch to financial sustainability. The employment is a full time equivalent role.
The domain registrant is Joseph Cederwell – he describes himself on his Linkedin profile:
My passion is for protecting and reclaiming the commons by educating, and facilitating social innovation and co-operative community action and enterprise.
As a director of Freerange Co-operative and ActionStation Aotearoa I have been exploring methods for community led governance and action.
I am also writing freelance and editing for Project Freerange on the theme of the commons.
From googling Joseph Cederwell and reading a couple of things quickly, I am already impressed! But early days etc etc …
His community action ideas and values appear to align with a lot if what has been discussed on TS recently about getting community engagement and involvement – eg Rosie posts, the Dunedin Saturday get-togethers etc
Here are a few links from Google – there are more if you google “Joseph Cederwell”
http://info.scoop.co.nz/StandUp – April 2012; StandUp appears to be the forerunner of Action Station; Salole appears to have been involved since this press release.
Could it be something to do with this article on MSN?
“A new political party representing the global Kiwi diaspora has been formed with plans to contest the New Zealand general election later this year.
The Expatriate Party of New Zealand (the Expats) say they’ve gained the minimum 500 paid members required to register their party over the weekend in Perth, Western Australia.
The membership forms collected in Perth by 10 volunteers, with a take-up rate above 90 per cent, will be submitted to the Electoral Commission over the next 48 hours for review.”
Now to our new export goldrush, education. Universities are businesses now. Don’t you know that? The Vice Chancellor at Otago University states the business bit peremptorily in her USA sounding voice. But may be from Canada, good right-wing things come out of Canada.
And the 2 year contract to sponsor Otago rugby is under wraps, to keep the information warm and sheltered. Expect it to be $100,000 ish.
If there was a tie-up with their athletic – sport studies, that would be more understandable, but nothing has been said of that. It all seems to be exposure to the brand on shirts and blah. I have heard complaints about large advertising expenditure by I think Canterbury Uni, under the influence of a financial staff member wearing a business hat (bowler?) rather than the expected academic cap and gown.
Looks like the website actionstation.org.nz is registered to an Joseph Cedarwall who is a director of Action Station Limited along with Megan Salole who I believe used to be a national campaign manager for the Green Party. Looks like it’s more about a Get Out The Vote campaign than anything else.
You couldn’t go far wrong campaigning on climate change
From the BBC:
‘Exceptional’
Speaking ahead of the launch of a Met Office report – produced by the Centre of Ecology and Hydrology – into recent climatic events, Dame Julia said the UK had seen the “most exceptional period of rainfall in 248 years”.
Unsettled weather at this time of year was not unexpected – but the prolonged spell of rain, as well as the intensity and height of coastal waves, was “very unusual”.
“We have records going back to 1766 and we have nothing like this,” she said. “We have seen some exceptional weather. We can’t say it is unprecedented but it is exceptional.”
The report links the recent extreme weather in Europe and North America to “perturbations” in the North Atlantic and Pacific jet streams, partly emanating from changing weather patterns in South East Asia and “associated with higher than normal ocean temperatures in that region”.
At Prime Minister’s Questions last month, Mr Cameron said he “suspected” that the recent storms to batter the UK and the extreme weather in North America were connected to global temperature changes – an argument challenged by some Conservative MPs and peers.
He subsequently clarified the remarks, saying that although “you can’t point to one weather event and say that is climate change”, many scientists were talking of a link between the two.
“The point I was really trying to make is, whatever you think – even if you think that (climate change) is mumbo-jumbo – because these things are happening more often, it makes sense to do all you can to… prevent these floods affecting so many people and that is exactly what we are doing.”
Friends of the Earth climate campaigner Guy Shrubsole said this assessment was a “warning sign that cannot be ignored”.
“By appointing an environment secretary who doesn’t take climate change seriously this government has turned its back on the science and cut flood defence spending when it should be cutting emissions.”
“an argument challenged by some Conservative MPs and peers”
The term ‘Conservative MPs and peers’, should be replaced with the term ‘Ridiculous Right Wing loonies’.
As John Key prepares to bring Right Wing climate change denier, Colin Craig into his government. The sensible thing would be to make climate change a political issue here too.
Will it happen?
Climate change is the government’s weak point.
For National government their record on climate change is a “disgrace” and arguably their worst performing portfolio.
If David Cunliffe got up and said that a government led by him, will consider canceling all deep sea oil drilling, and all planned new coal mines on climate change grounds, it would blow the whole election campaign wide apart.
The government would be left gasping like landed guppies out of water, flapping their mouths speechless and without answers.
60% of the population want the government to do more on climate change.
80% oppose deep sea oil drilling.
Can Labour and the other opposition parties continue to afford ignoring this huge constituency?
Further to amirite at 3. My comment is about Labour leaders having differing viewpoints being relayed to the media, on the attitude to passports and freedom to make one’s own moral commitments outside the country. And not a discussion on the earlier assistance and heroism in Spain and other places.
Can you Labour people not focus your minds on vital matters for advancement in the public mind in this election year? Can you win an election, hold a successful cake stall even?
You don’t have democratic discussions about what view the Party is taking – on radio, tv, on-line or in the paper. It’s a 101 in Political Party Management – you have immediate discussions between the Leader, the spokesperson, and a small quorum of internal leaders who then know what is happening. We live in an age of immediate communication, not written or spoken word through an intermediary travelling by sailing ship over the wide seas FFS.
Police stressed that marine flares should only be used at sea and for real emergencies.
Police should have been saying that setting off flares is illegal unless you happen to be at sea and having an emergency.
And, no, I don’t see you problem with the article. People don’t actually have the right to set off fireworks whenever they please. This is because it interferes with other peoples right not to be disturbed.
David Cunliffe and Phill Goff seem to be at odds with each other regarding NZ nationals fighting in Syria. Cunliffe would change current laws to stop them, Goff thinks some rightful fighting causes should be supported.
WTF is going on in the Labour Party?
What’s going on? A democratic discussion. And one that’s been had in Labour many times. For mine, I’d like to think I’d have gone to Spain if I was around in the thirties.
Everyone? Only Germany and Italy had boots on the ground. England’s response was to make it illegal for leftists to fight for the Spanish Government, but thousands went anyway, mainly via France. I had a comrade who left England claiming he was going to Paris on holiday. On leaving, he was told by customs they knew where he was really going and the only way he’d come back would be in a pine box. Happily, he survived, but many didn’t.
edit: There were a small number of semi official Soviet troops, but nowhere near the thousands of Italian and German troops formally sent to support the falangists.
I met and had a few long discussions with three blokes in Aussie who had all fought in the Spanish civil war. They joked about being the only Australians to have fought fascism for nearly ten years. One thing the never talked about was the fighting, just never. The politics and the factionalism, always, but never the fighting, – I learnt pretty quick not to ask.
When I came back in NZ at the turn of the century, I did a lot of research into the war and the involvement of kiwis. During that I discovered this guy, Dr Douglas Jolly. Who is amazing, actually, bloody amazing, and I wonder to this day why he is not held up as a national hero and icon. He’s a bloody legend.
If George Orwell and Laurie Lee were to return from the Spanish civil war today, they would be arrested under section five of the Terrorism Act 2006. If convicted of fighting abroad with a “political, ideological, religious or racial motive” – a charge they would find hard to contest – they would face a maximum sentence of life in prison. That they were fighting to defend an elected government against a fascist rebellion would have no bearing on the case. They would go down as terrorists.
He notes the lack of charges for people who go to fight for financial motives.
Discussion, as it should.
My take on it is that if someone wants to be a mercenary, why should we stop them? And how do you prove the organisation they are fighting for is “terrorist”
The legal authority to cancel a passport is in section 8A of the Passports Act 1992 and states:
“8A Cancellation of passport on grounds of national security
(1) The Minister may, by notice in writing, recall any New Zealand passport, and cancel it or retain possession of it, if the Minister believes on reasonable grounds that—
(a) the person is a danger to the security of New Zealand because the person intends to engage in, or facilitate,—
(i) a terrorist act within the meaning of section 5 of the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002; or
(ii) the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction; or
(iii) any unlawful activity designed or likely to cause devastating or serious economic damage to New Zealand, carried out for purposes of commercial or economic gain; and
(b) the danger to the security of New Zealand cannot be effectively averted by other means; and
(c) the cancellation of the passport, or its retention by the Minister, will prevent or effectively impede the ability of the person to carry out the intended action.”
Seems to me there are some rather high hurdles to jump and I would be interested to see how the Government justified the cancellation of Syrian mercenary’s passports.
I wondered about that. They said that the parents had contacted a government department. I didn’t hear that the parents had asked for the cancellation of the passports. To withhold their passports might have been their desire. Cancellation is serious, and particularly bad for those already over there.
Paul Buchanan thinks that it is an announcement that indicates to everybody that the NZ intelligence is working! And that it itself makes this public before Edward Snowden’s expected release of data.
(iii) any unlawful activity designed or likely to cause devastating or serious economic damage to New Zealand, carried out for purposes of commercial or economic gain; and
SO and one who worked for merrill lynch should have their passport cancelled!!!!
If they are and the nearest embassy (eg if you are in Syria behind the lines and the nearest embassy or consulate is somewhere like Israel) won’t help then you effectively become stateless because you can’t cross borders.
Perhaps Goff would be better at the job of Mayor of Auckland – before the General Election.
Brown is doing Labour no favours as seen by his putdown in the Herald today over his railway.
He has no dignity but should resign.
Phil would make a great Mayor.
The poor little dear got upset that she and her farmer mates are actually being held to account on how animals are treated and the sustainability of their practices.
featuring journalist Glenn Greenwald and funded by the billionaire founder of eBay was unveiled early Monday, with two stories about US government surveillance.
The site, called the Intercept, reported Monday that the National Security Agency has used cell phone geolocation to help pinpoint targets for US drone strikes overseas, and published previously unseen photographs of major US intelligence facilities.
The Intercept is part of a suite of planned sites to be published by First Look media, founded by eBay chairman Pierre Omidyar. Its editors are Greenwald and fellow journalists Laura Poitras and Jeremy Scahill.
The Intercept will focus on reporting based on documents released by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the site’s editors said in an introductory statement. “Our focus in this very initial stage will be overwhelmingly on the NSA story,” the statement said.
May be well worth keeping an eye on Intercept. KDC has put up links on his Twitter site.
I heard Paul Buchanan on Morning Report earlier talking about the expected publication of Snowden’s revelations re NZ. He thinks this will be in about two months’ time – and that Key talking about cancellation of passports of NZ citizens wanting to go to Syria is an attempt to get in first.
KDC has also tweeted this link to Techdirt re Snowden’s response to a recent NY Times article. Techdirt article is titled “Gov’t Officials Leak Classified Info To Journalists To Discredit Snowden For Leaking Classified Info To Journalists”. Interesting read.
Re Techdirt: A large part of the energy used by the “authorities” over there and probably here as well (MrKey?) is aimed at discrediting. Thanks veutoviper.
Leaks of classified information which support the narrative and position of the power elite are permissible, and in fact, both tacitly and actively encouraged.
However, leaks of classified information which counter and discredit the narrative and the position of the power elite shall be punishable by decades behind bars in a military detention facility.
It is not all politically correct and roses out here. If farming is intrinsically cruel, that does not necessarily make farmers cruel people but it probably makes them realists.
If the only meat you see is wrapped in cling film at the supermarket and even then it is a little bit icky for you to touch it – or you are so privileged that you can spurn animal protein and bore everyone to death about your veganism – then count your lucky stars because you are one of the world's privileged.
Agriculture has kept this country going and it is hard work.
The economy built on the back of this hard-fought industry might allow you to have a cushy government job, or indulge yourself in some accountancy, journalism or art and give you the power to concentrate on some highbrow thinking.
But when your thoughts turn to farmer bashing (and you don’t grow all your own food) then have caution, you are setting sail on the sea of hypocrisy in a leaky boat.
Stop biting the hand that literally feeds you.
I know I’m setting myself up for the full ure treatment here but…
Lyn Webster doesn’t take prisoners and everyone is in her sights – don’t criticise farmers? If the attitudes displayed in this article are even slightly indicative (and i think they are) then they deserve everything they get. i once started writing a short story about after the end – of oil/global warming and so on – one slight story arc was a farmer having to front up to what they had done to the environment and the animals – it didn’t end well for them…
She could have saved herself an awful lot of computer time and the rest of us from wasting our time reading this drivel if she’d just come out and said “We’re dairy farmers, NZ’s aristocracy. We run this country and we can do whatever the fuck we want ‘cos you all owe us”.
Webster is a pretty nasty lady. I have read some of her writings, and a lot of them are a lot worse than that one — I think she let rip at one struggling couple who had the cheek to wish that their landlord would insulate their home or something.
Yes, farming kills animals, etc, but it is not “farmer bashing” to suggest it should be done humanely.
The farmers are getting more and more sensitive each day. We soon will start seeing critics of farmers being denounced in town squares by young FF members as counter-revolutionary critics of the Agricultural road.
The irony in discussing this here marty is that Webster and Ure are the two sides of the same coin, or the extreme ends of the spectrum. Webster basically says if you eat meat, then animals have to suffer, so shut the fuck up. Phil says, if you eat meat, then animals have to suffer, so you are evil. Not so very different.
The thing that bothers me is that both positions leave the animals to their cruel fate. It is possible to farm humanely and it’s possible to eat meat and diary ethically. Which farmers and eaters are heading in the right direction?
My wife and son eat meat – organically grown and ethically killed – it is not for me but i gave up many years ago trying to impose my beliefs around (not) eating meat on others. A sustainable approach imo is based on respecting the animal throughout its life, and death. And that respecting is towards the animal for the glory and wonder that it is as a living entity and a part of the holistic whole. The big issue is scale as i’m sure you’ve mentioned before – when profit becomes the motive, big becomes better, and respecting the animal is discarded.
* the death of the stock need not be a cruel affair, as it is today even under the regulations. I favour, where possibly that stock are slaughtered on the farm, avoiding the transport to a killing factory and the stress and terror that causes animals. Any idiot who wishes to argue that the freezing work does not terrify the stock has never been to, or worked in one.
* the life of the stock can be made so much better. Stock like humans require shelter and shade. NZ farmers routinely overcrowd stock in vast open areas despite the rigours of the climate. That is just plain cruel and unnecessary. Recently I was in a paddock on a really hot day and wondering where the cows were, I found them in a copse the farmer had left in the paddock (most farmers would have cut it down).
I don’t think farmers are per se necessarily cruel, I do think that they work to the economics of the industry and that may inure them to the suffering of the stock. The answer is we need to demand more of them, and as a consequence be prepared to pay for it.
Her main point seems to be that because death is the outcome, all treatment and methods of killing up to that point are equivalent.
Personally, I do not think that (at one extreme) a lifetime of abuse and torture ended by a careless and painful method is equivalent to (at the other extreme) a happy cow prancing in rainbow fields suddenly blinking out like a light bulb are equivalent.
Without farming the cow wouldn’t exist. But that doesn’t mean it is acceptable to make the cow suffer.
Leaving aside the flannel in the article, there appears to be one telling statement that may disprove Key’s indifference to politics at the time. (1981 and all that).
“… John Key was a good student, Mr Hughes recalled. Subject matter was closely linked to the politics of the day, with Mr Key’s future party often in the cross-hairs. “Economics was great to teach in those days, because all of Muldoon’s controls were still there, and we were sort of free-market evangelistic … it was a great time to be able to criticise the Government and prove they were wrong.”
Has anyone proved conclusively that Muldoon and Keynesian economics were wrong?
Secondly, I can just imagine what might happen to a teacher today who “preached” evolution in a secondary school with such conviction.
“I’m no wowser, but I’m not comfortable with the promotion of excessive alcohol use. We have some real issues with alcohol in NZ, as we see in the domestic abuse figures, and problems at the sevens and in other sports. And when it comes to public drunkenness, John Key has already won the Troty, three hands down”.
lprent
A couple of points. I have changed to Firefox and it seems a bit better than Opera.
But I wanted to place a comment to you under my earlier one. The site took me to the Radio program site from December, twice. I scrolled along to get here.
And second, I have no comments in my archive after midday yesterday.
I put some time-consuming ones through late yesterday and would like to look them up. Are they still to be recovered somewhere?
lprent
I note that I can access all my archives from the Opera browser but the Firefox I cannot though otherwise it seems to duplicate what is on Opera.
Rod Oram will be on Radionz after 11am news talking about the naughty, haughty OZ supermarkets. He is always worth listening to for good thinking.
Geoff Bertram was on morning news about the electricity market which is so competitive that the sector PR says we are lucky and are constantly spinning round looking for the best deal. (Slight translation here.) How very tiring this competition is, who needs walking and cycle tracks and how can you afford them, when you have to stick to your computer or phone checking prices, ready to catch the latest .05c drop, so you can get a phone bill that’s affordable?
Not sure that it has become clear to Paddy yet. Personally I want a few more instances before I believe it.
However, that TV3 article at least appears to quote what Cunliffe and Norman actually said re the Dotcom extradition saga and what they would do, rather than twisting their words or misquoting them. Cunliffe’s comments were thankfully very measured and recognised the legal process currently underway.
Gower seems to think that KDC can stand for parliament.
“But what a delicious irony: Kim Dotcom might actually help John Key win the 2014 election.”
Call me old fashioned, but isn’t the point of political opinion by journalists to express their opinion about the politics, not what they personally wish for?
1. The courts are unlikely to send the extradition warrant to the Minister for approval.
2. If Paddy doesn’t know this he’s incompetent, and yet for the purposes of his magnificent theory he assumes it’s a done deal.
3. The thought doesn’t seem to have occurred to Paddy that Dotcom may not like this government because they broke the law while waving guns in his face.
The whole article reeks of the unseemly bias we’ve come to expect from this wannabe.
I agree that Norman should probably have been a little more circumspect but he is in a different position to Cunliffe.
KDC certainly knows that he cannot stand for Parliament – but IIRC correctly, he (and Mona etc) will be able to vote, being over 18 years old; permanent residents of NZ; and in NZ for over one year. My weird sense of humour is looking forward to very large, expensive billboards on KDC’s Coatsville mansion ground for the Internet Party and against voting for Key in his own Helensville electorate.
KDC has just tweeted two relevant tweets
“I don’t need the help of Labour/Greens in my extradition case. John Key & his gang are already doing that with their serial-law-breaking.”
and
“If the Internet Party won’t poll 5+% before ballot papers are printed we’ll self destruct and put our weight behind a party adopting our policies.”
@ OAB
It remains to be seen, but IMO the longer things drag out and the GCSB etc fail to meet court demands re the return of data etc to KDC, the less likely the courts will agree to extradition. But it is all so complicated. I am currently trying to put a summary together of where things are at on the complicated string of legal processes underway and will post this if I get it completed. It is a really fascinating legal situation.
Re Gower, a candidate for post-natal abortion? LOL.
Norman’s comments on the other hand are very scary.
It seems that the reason for his trip to see Dotcom is starting to leak out. Russel has admitted that he went to Dotcom’s mansion twice in an attempt to persuade him not to start a party to run in the election. I would say that Norman is quite sure, and quite worried, that any such party would syphon votes predominantly from the Green pool of supporters.
He says that he tried to get Dotcom not to run such a group. Now we are beginning to see what Dotcom’s price is. If you guarantee, regardless of the Courts decision, not to allow me to be extradited, I’ll not run a party in the election and will, in fact support your Green Party, seems to be the Dotcom price.
The really scary part is that Norman appears quite willing to promise such a political interference, without even waiting for the Court’s decision in the case. Is he really willing to put justice up for sale?
You’re confusing the tory method of doing things (corruption) with the fact that norman is against the extradition anyway. KDC isn’t dumb enough to blackmail someone into doing something they were going to do anyway.
And the main thing that with stop KDC party from significantly siphoning green votes is he donated 50k to john banks.
..i wouldn’t place too much credence in the deterrent effect of dotcom donating to banks..
..that was clearly a purpose-donation/connection..
..as the deal was that banks would quid pro quo by helping dotcom with his immigration-issues..
..i don’t think you can necessarily tie dotcom ideologically to banks..
..just ‘cos of that donation..
..as with all parties (esp smaller ones)..this election..(more so than any other in recent times)..it will be policies..and not ‘branding’.. that will decide peoples’ votes..
Actually, yeah – I do hope that, if given the opportunity to bribe a government official, I would turn it down, and report them.
In the long run it usually works out better – I know some folks who ship stuff internationally, and they have a rule to never pay bribes e.g. to customs. They’re ethical folk, but it turns out that they still get their stuff processed faster and cheaper than folk who get tapped at every stage of the cycle.
Basically, You’re arguing that greens would lose significant (i.e. election-changing) support to someone who gave 50k to john banks because they think him corrupt, rather than ideologically tory. Unprincipled rather than wrong principles.
That’s pretty harsh on greens, and I’m not exactly a hippy-lover.
So your argument is that if he makes the right sounds before the election, green voters will forget that he (according to you) bribes public officials. Because all the policies, just like all the funding, will come from him.
Why don’t schools get told to run comparative religion and caring society lessons? I would like all children to come up against ideas of thinking that society members should care about each other, and it is a vital part of living in a happy society. And learning about different ways that people try to put this idea over in each country and refer to the major religions so kids know what they are.
I am Christian but am concerned at the way that the USA has turned it all into a business, and further are rewriting the bible and then copyright their version, and of course spread their erroneous ideas about creationism, and the bible being like a scientific document. Scrambled eggs anyone!
Northshoreguynz
You asked me a question and here is what I think, on and on and on
But I think it all is relevant. Sorry I couldn’t be snappy and concise.
You won’t lose any marks if you don’t read it. It is Not Compulsory!
The quick get-out of here answer is I don’t know what I want you to drop. You’re the smart ones, you work it out! And it’s riroriro to you.
I know I know it’s tough for teachers. Seeing that education is being used as the main measure for how well a country is doing, and how advanced it is, and unemployment must not be looked at, must be presented as if it doesn’t matter. Education is the cure for all ills. It’s education that will save us, and (taking a deep breath and throwing out chest) enable us to stride into the 21st century – after a shaky start. Blah.
On religion in schools and how it can be fitted in. All I know is that it is important that children are taught about how to get on with others, how to be strong in themselves, and then how to step back from oneself a little so as to make room for understanding others and let them have their share. And if not, it’s important to understand why, and why you don’t like them and how to deal with that.
Sounds woolly but it’s at the base of knowing how to mediate, how to get what’s right happening and the lack of this knowledge causes a lot of the disagreements, the fights, and wars. So teaching about the ways of handling oneself, then understanding about others, their ways of understanding the world, how it is expressed through their religions and why they might be different to yours, is necessary and useful when there are demarcation and resource fights.
And that is something that should be passed on with the three r’s, and have pride of place in the curriculum for older children as a subject perhaps to be called Society, problem solving and human values. So it is a top subject and growing more important as society gets brutalised by isolating technology and distant, disinterested, amoral parents and government.
The other stuff can be covered in a 101 fashion so youngsters have the basics and then can go full on with something they are really interested in, in conjunction with something that will be practically useful.
So not the short answer you would hope for. But there is a lot of importance beyond just traditional support for school to cover religion, stories about religious figures, history and how to be good.
That’s my idea for secondary education. Knowing how to learn, knowing how to gather information and analyse it are vital skills. Knowing how humans think, and allowing for real and compassionate understandings of people and behaviour should be be incorporated into policy. This is thinking about ourselves as real people in the round (not the cold, judgmental self-portrait of perfectionist, disdainful economist’s perceptions – thinking that everyone should be judged alongside themselves, as the model base standard.)
It’s a new world already. We are not ready for it now, and the changes are happening and we can’t conceive it, can’t perceive it, and in our minds it’s still 1970-1990. That’s when things seemed possible but we didn’t have a clear path to the future, and while we thought and fought, neo lib came along and said “We know the way.”
“Follow us pilgrims, it will be a rocky road sometimes but we will climb and get to the heights.” Our modern Pilgrim’s Progress to Consumer Land, where bright lights shine on us from plastic angels at the mall. Until it is flooded out in one of the weather bombs that will wipe out so much of our growing and built environment. Then what do we do with all our fine arcane knowledge? Boat building and botanics anyone?
Rather than religion as such it seems to me your arguing more for good old fashioned manners and a concern for the well being of others. In addition the teaching of critical thinking.
I can only give you what I have experienced in the schools I have taught, Intermediate Schools, teaching Year 8s, (Form 2 in the old money.) In all cases there has been what is called a “Values Program”, where children are both taught and encouraged to value themselves, others and the environment. The teaching is not so much explicit, but is discussed in class and reinforced all the time.
Critical Thinking is also taught, as part of every unit.
But, and it is a big but, we only have students for 6/7 hours a day. What happens at home has more influence on “social matters” than anything a school can do.
Greywarbler every Empire uses religion to sujugate its peasants CofE Roman Catholics Now we have thw fastest growing US colonial subjugaters the Morons. Door to Door salesman.
Soon they wll have a drive thru version mc morons!
McMorons. How useful a term. This morning there was an item about residents around Eden Park and the trouble they have with drunken people especially those that are turned away because of bad behaviour.
Then they are out on the street and venting their feelings there.
The authorities can be petitioned not to let a brothel start up in your street, of the sort that can give aggro, or street people might be able to be moved along (unless they are Mongrel Mob members from Christchurch like the ones talked about in the news today in connection with poor Mallory’s death. She hadn’t paid her protection money, so they weren’t going to protect her from themselves any more. And were very brutal and vengeful about it)
You can’t get a Park shifted easily. But it brings together all the McMorons in the city, and drops them around your district. What fun.
Yes, tricledrown – those bloody C of Es or Anglicans as they are known in N Z. I blame them for having me listen to those sermons on the Gospels which convinced me Jesus was a socialist, which has kept me from voting National for the past 48 years.
I only heard snippets of this section of Nine to Noon today; but what I heard was interesting in relation to the growth in blogging in NZ and its importance, role, risks etc in respect of the upcoming general election. Will relisten to it later, but thought others may be interested if you did not hear it.
Big time Ouch, shingles a very painful malady, my sympathies go out to Her having recently had the grandly painful experience of what might have been shingles…
Yes you and I would! But seriously, I have had shingles twice and it is nasty and takes months to recover. Kia kaha to Wendy and I fully understand her resigning to allow someone who has the energy; etc that you do not have when recovering from shingles to take over.
Teaching of Values in schools and Religious instruction.
The religion in schools programmes is governed by a strict curriculum.
The problem appears to be for some schools like St Heliers that no one is monitoring the instructors. They are usually well intentioned lay people who confuse values with Christian indoctrination.
There are many good values programmes that can be delivered in the schools.
The KiwiCan trust is one. Not a hint of Christrianity anywhere to be seen or heard.
Morning Report update:
“Morning Report co-host Simon Mercep will follow his co-host and step down from the show when Geoff Robinson leaves in April, said Radio New Zealand sources familiar with the situation.
It is understood one option being considered by RNZ would see Mercep moved to a revamped afternoon show and current host Jim Mora joining Mary Wilson on a evening current format for Checkpoint.”
Wonder who will replace him? Mary Lamb or some kindly friend of David Farrar? http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=11200047
My point is that the dogs are sitting on chairs. Not eating. In fact there’s no food present. Because they’re not eating and there’s no food present that means the dogs aren’t actually eating off fine china on the taxpayers’ dime.
The key thing that SHG has missed is how out of touch the power elite are to what is happening in their nation.
Of course, this always happens towards the end of empire. The wealthy capital of the Hunger Games with the starvation of the outer provinces, except this is real life, not fiction.
CV
I notice we can get sidetracked into being very haughty about what we mean and how other people are getting it wrong, and quite often it isn’t the important point at all. I’m beginning to get antsy at this cropping up too often. We all need to rein ourselves in. Not get het-up on a bit of trivia or unimportant meme.
CV 😀
Your settings seem pretty right, objectively. But the sort of spats and spits that have happened over some minor or misunderstood point lately bother me. Hares and hounds galloping over the place, when here and now the attention and concentration of thought, must be the focus.
Shakespeare said that the world is a stage, and we are all players. If we think on lines of organising light and sound shows on the problems and events to draw and hold people’s attention, we will get better results, at the least because we are focussed on best approach and the matter of concern.
We have to dramatise the things that need to receive audience attention, spotlight the important matters, and then shift that attention to another scenario. This is where we show a definite image of people, business enjoying the positive effects that will result from doing whatever will improve it. Show and tell, as with children with eager minds to learn. And try to encourage that approach to the minds of the voters, ‘We can do better by adopting this way’. Convey that to them, and make it an ongoing basic slogan for the left communication strategy this year.
Yet another crazed performance by Stephen Franks
Radio New Zealand seems to have no system of quality control The Panel, Radio NZ National, Tuesday 11 February 2014
Jim Mora, Lindsey Dawson, Stephen Franks
What do we think about Schapelle Corby? Well, just before 4 p.m. today we learned what one of the S.S. Trust lawyers thinks of her….
STEPHEN FRANKS: Neither she nor her family look particularly worthy. [1] We just look, errrr, errrrr—-what’s the word?—errrr, frivolous. I mean, is there anyone the Australian government WON’T go into bat for?
……Awkward silence…..
ZARA POTTS:[dismissively, clearly unimpressed] Hmmmmm…. JIM MORA: Okay, onto things that matter: seat widths on airplanes…..
Later, after the 4 o’clock news, the topic for discussion was the government’s canceling of passports for New Zealanders who intend to go to Syria to fight against Assad. Franks’s fertile mind started fertilizing prodigiously….
STEPHEN FRANKS: There’s really no difference between a New Zealand citizen going over to fight against Assad and someone going over to fight for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. LINDSEY DAWSON:[gravely] Mmmmmm, mmmmm. Indeed. MORA: Indeed.
To discuss the matter, the expert talent was Otago University politics professor Robert Patman, [2] who for the first time ever in his many appearances on the Panel, was not mealy-mouthed. Today he actually had the gumption to speak plainly…..
ROBERT PATMAN: I find it curious that the Prime Minister has claimed that this somehow justifies the recent increase in government surveillance of New Zealand citizens. It was established last year that the government’s surveillance of us went beyond the law. STEPHEN FRANKS: No they didn’t really. ROBERT PATMAN: You don’t think they did? STEPHEN FRANKS: It wasn’t a contumelious breach of the law…. [Franks continued in harebrained fashion for several minutes]….
After the 4:30 news, Franks was given more rope….
JIM MORA: Stephen Franks what’s on your mind? STEPHEN FRANKS: I see that iwi are to be consulted on the disposal of the Rena. I can’t believe the credence we give to identity politics, and people who are ignorant. Compare it to Singapore, which is a meritocracy. LINDSEY DAWSON: They had a benign dictator didn’t they? STEPHEN FRANKS: Well no he wasn’t really…. MORA: He didn’t like chewing gum much! STEPHEN FRANKS:[with increasing urgency] No he was NOT a dictator!…
Franks proceeded to rave disconnectedly, very much like a NewstalkZB early morning caller. He damned the “sense of entitlement” of Māori, and praised Singapore several more times. The other two were careful not to provoke him too much; although they seemed to be mildly amused by what he said, gently contradicting him every now and again, they mostly just let him rave. Animals in the wild will steer clear of a creature that is rabid; Jim Mora and Lindsey Dawson wisely treated Stephen Franks with similar trepidation.
Sadly, Stephen Franks will appear on this programme again in the near future. Nothing he says, no matter how mad, no matter how depraved, seems to make any difference. It’s more obvious than ever that The Panel is moribund.
No wonder he employed/cloned the Jordan Williams ass-wipe.
Good point. Jordan Williams is almost a perfect mimic of Stephen Franks. He speaks with the same inflexion, the same halting delivery (to convey complexity of thought) and the same muted tone (to convey gravitas).
These armies of bureaucrats serve a corporate system that will quite literally kill us. They are as cold and disconnected as Mengele. They carry out minute tasks. They are docile. Compliant. They obey. They find their self-worth in the prestige and power of the corporation, in the status of their positions and in their career promotions. They assure themselves of their own goodness through their private acts as husbands, wives, mothers and fathers. They sit on school boards. They go to Rotary. They attend church. It is moral schizophrenia. They erect walls to create an isolated consciousness. They make the lethal goals of ExxonMobil or Goldman Sachs or Raytheon or insurance companies possible. They destroy the ecosystem, the economy and the body politic and turn workingmen and -women into impoverished serfs. They feel nothing. Metaphysical naiveté always ends in murder. It fragments the world. Little acts of kindness and charity mask the monstrous evil they abet. And the system rolls forward.
Why do we think that these actions are happening before the TPP? Tobacco v Aussie… US against India…
Is it to “reassure” the good dissenting folks of the world that nothing will really change under the TPP…. and yet it will…. cos if nothing changes why do we need a TPP?
Fancy there being no information through the OIA to this perfectly reasonable request for information concerning John Key being a – shape-shifting reptilian alien ushering humanity towards enslavement E&OE
The person typing this letter in the Prime Minister’s office must have cracked up. What a change from the usual po-faced stuff.
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“China remains a strong commercial opportunity for Kiwi exporters as Chinese businesses and consumers continue to value our high-quality safe produce,” Trade and Agriculture Minister Todd McClay says. Mr McClay has returned to New Zealand following visits to Beijing, Harbin and Shanghai where he met ministers, governors and mayors and engaged in trade and agricultural events with the New ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has completed a successful trip to Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines, deepening relationships and capitalising on opportunities. Mr Luxon was accompanied by a business delegation and says the choice of countries represents the priority the New Zealand Government places on South East Asia, and our relationships in ...
New Zealand is demonstrating its commitment to reducing global greenhouse emissions, and supporting clean energy transition in South East Asia, through a contribution of NZ$41 million (US$25 million) in climate finance to the Asian Development Bank (ADB)-led Energy Transition Mechanism (ETM). Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Climate Change Minister Simon Watts announced ...
The Government is today releasing a list of organisations who received letters about the Fast-track applications process, says RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop. “Recently Ministers and agencies have received a series of OIA requests for a list of organisations to whom I wrote with information on applying to have a ...
Attorney-General Judith Collins today announced the appointment of Wellington Barrister David Jonathan Boldt as a Judge of the High Court, and the Honourable Justice Matthew Palmer as a Judge of the Court of Appeal. Justice Boldt graduated with an LLB from Victoria University of Wellington in 1990, and also holds ...
Education Minister Erica Stanford will lead the New Zealand delegation at the 2024 International Summit on the Teaching Profession (ISTP) held in Singapore. The delegation includes representatives from the Post Primary Teachers’ Association (PPTA) Te Wehengarua and the New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI) Te Riu Roa. The summit is co-hosted ...
A stopbank upgrade project in Tairawhiti partly funded by the Government has increased flood resilience for around 7000ha of residential and horticultural land so far, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says. Mr Jones today attended a dawn service in Gisborne to mark the end of the first stage of the ...
Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters will represent the Government at Anzac Day commemorations on the Gallipoli Peninsula next week and engage with senior representatives of the Turkish government in Istanbul. “The Gallipoli campaign is a defining event in our history. It will be a privilege to share the occasion ...
Science, Innovation and Technology and Defence Minister Judith Collins will next week attend the OECD Science and Technology Ministerial conference in Paris and Anzac Day commemorations in Belgium. “Science, innovation and technology have a major role to play in rebuilding our economy and achieving better health, environmental and social outcomes ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon held a bilateral meeting today with the President of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos Jr. The Prime Minister was accompanied by MP Paulo Garcia, the first Filipino to be elected to a legislature outside the Philippines. During today’s meeting, Prime Minister Luxon and President Marcos Jr discussed opportunities to ...
The Government has announced that $20 million in funding will be made available to Westport to fund much needed flood protection around the town. This measure will significantly improve the resilience of the community, says Local Government Minister Simeon Brown. “The Westport community has already been allocated almost $3 million ...
The Government is proud to support the first ever Repco Supercars Championship event in Taupō as up to 70,000 motorsport fans attend the Taupō International Motorsport Park this weekend, says Economic Development Minister Melissa Lee. “Anticipation for the ITM Taupō Super400 is huge, with tickets and accommodation selling out weeks ...
Local Government Minister Simeon Brown has announced an increase to the Rates Rebate Scheme, putting money back into the pockets of low-income homeowners. “The coalition Government is committed to bringing down the cost of living for New Zealanders. That includes targeted support for those Kiwis who are doing things tough, such ...
The Coalition Government is investing in a project to boost survival rates of New Zealand mussels and grow the industry, Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones has announced. “This project seeks to increase the resilience of our mussels and significantly boost the sector’s productivity,” Mr Jones says. “The project - ...
Benefit figures released today underscore the importance of the Government’s plan to rebuild the economy and have 50,000 fewer people on Jobseeker Support, Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston says. “Benefit numbers are still significantly higher than when National was last in government, when there was about 70,000 fewer ...
The Government’s commitment to doubling New Zealand’s renewable energy capacity is backed by new data showing that clean energy has helped the country reach its lowest annual gross emissions since 1999, Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says. New Zealand’s latest Greenhouse Gas Inventory (1990-2022) published today, shows gross emissions fell ...
The Government is bringing the earthquake-prone building review forward, with work to start immediately, and extending the deadline for remediations by four years, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says. “Our Government is focused on rebuilding the economy. A key part of our plan is to cut red tape that ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and his Thai counterpart, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, have today agreed that New Zealand and the Kingdom of Thailand will upgrade the bilateral relationship to a Strategic Partnership by 2026. “New Zealand and Thailand have a lot to offer each other. We have a strong mutual desire to build ...
RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop and Transport Minister Simeon Brown have today announced the Coalition Government’s intention to extend port coastal permits for a further 20 years, providing port operators with certainty to continue their operations. “The introduction of the Resource Management Act in 1991 required ports to obtain coastal ...
Today’s announcement that inflation is down to 4 per cent is encouraging news for Kiwis, but there is more work to be done - underlining the importance of the Government’s plan to get the economy back on track, acting Finance Minister Chris Bishop says. “Inflation is now at 4 per ...
Refreshed health guidance released today will help parents and schools make informed decisions about whether their child needs to be in school, addressing one of the key issues affecting school attendance, says Associate Education Minister David Seymour. In recent years, consistently across all school terms, short-term illness or medical reasons ...
Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones is streamlining high-level oceans management while maintaining a focus on supporting the sector’s role in the export-led recovery of the economy. “I am working to realise the untapped potential of our fishing and aquaculture sector. To achieve that we need to be smarter with ...
Associate Agriculture Minister Mark Patterson is speaking at the International Wool Textile Organisation Congress in Adelaide, promoting New Zealand wool, and outlining the coalition Government’s support for the revitalisation the sector. "New Zealand’s wool exports reached $400 million in the year to 30 June 2023, and the coalition Government ...
The Government is making legislative changes to make it easier for new early learning services to be established, and for existing services to operate, Associate Education Minister David Seymour says. The changes involve repealing the network approval provisions that apply when someone wants to establish a new early learning service, ...
Changes to the Resource Management Act will align consenting for coal mining to other forms of mining to reduce barriers that are holding back economic development, Resources Minister Shane Jones says. “The inconsistent treatment of coal mining compared with other extractive activities is burdensome red tape that fails to acknowledge ...
Trade, Agriculture and Forestry Minister Todd McClay has concluded productive discussions with ministerial counterparts in Beijing today, in support of the New Zealand-China trade and economic relationship. “My meeting with Commerce Minister Wang Wentao reaffirmed the complementary nature of the bilateral trade relationship, with our Free Trade Agreement at its ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Simon Wilmot, Senior Lecturer, Film, Deakin University Among the many Australian who served during the second world war, there is a small group of people whose stories remain largely untold. These are the Muslim men and women who, while small in number, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kelly Saunders, PhD Candidate, University of Canberra There has been much analysis and praise of Justice Michael Lee’s recent judgement in Bruce Lehrmann’s defamation case against Channel Ten. Many people were openly relieved to read Lee’s “forensic” and “nuanced” application of law ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kathy Gibbs, Program Director for the Bachelor of Education, Griffith University zEdward_Indy/Shutterstock Around one in 20 people has attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). It’s one of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders in childhood and often continues into adulthood. ADHD is diagnosed ...
The Fairer Future coalition of anti-poverty groups say Whaikaha must be properly funded going forward, and that to argue that poor financial management of the new Ministry is a red herring by the Prime Minister. ...
The Taxpayers’ Union is today congratulating Hon. Paul Goldsmith on his appointment as Minister for Media and Communications and urges him to rule out state intervention in the private media sector. ...
Asia Pacific Report The West Papuan resistance OPM leader has condemned Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and US President Joe Biden, accusing their countries of “six decades of treachery” over Papuan independence. The open letter was released today by OPM chairman Jeffrey P Bomanak on the eve of ANZAC Day ...
Welcome to The Spinoff Books Confessional, in which we get to know the reading habits and quirks of New Zealanders at large. This week: writer and one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people of 2024, Lauren Groff.The book I wish I’d writtenIf I wish I’d written a ...
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“Three Strikes is a dead-end policy proposed by a dead-end government. The Three Strikes law ignores the causes of crime, instead just brutalising people already crushed by the cost of living.” ...
By Don Wiseman, RNZ Pacific senior journalist An Australian-born judge in Kiribati could well face deportation later this week after a tribunal ruling that he should be removed from his post. The tribunal’s report has just been tabled in the Kiribati Parliament and is due to be debated by MPs ...
With its clear mandate for police use, political nuances, and nuanced public trust, Denmark's insights provide valuable considerations for Australia and New Zealand. ...
Books editor Claire Mabey reviews poet Louise Wallace’s debut novel. A famous poet once said to me that he’s always suspicious when a poet publishes a novel. I never really understood why but maybe it’s something to do with cheating on your first form. Louise Wallace is a poet. She’s ...
For a few months at the turn of the millennium, TrueBliss burned bright as the biggest pop stars in the country. Alex Casey chats to two superfans who still hold the flame. During a humble backyard wedding in Nelson, 1999, one of the cordially invited guests had to excuse themselves ...
How will the recent wave of job cuts impact ethnic diversity in the media? In November last year, I was working a very busy day in the newsroom of a large online news site, interviewing whānau about their concerns over the imminent closure of one of the few puna reo ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ruth Knight, Researcher, Queensland University of Technology Have you ever felt sick at work? Perhaps you had food poisoning or the flu. Your belly hurt, or you felt tired, making it hard to concentrate and be productive. How likely would you be ...
Despite heavy criticism and an ongoing select committee process, the Police Minister says the Government will forge ahead with a ban on gang patches. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sam Whiting, Lecturer – Creative Industries, University of South Australia Shutterstock Everyone has a favourite band, or a favourite composer, or a favourite song. There is some music which speaks to you, deeply; and other music which might be the current ...
A new survey says ‘outlook not great’ for those charged with building infrastructure, while RMA changes delight farmers and depress environmentalists, writes Anna Rawhiti-Connell in this excerpt from The Bulletin, The Spinoff’s morning news round-up. To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here. First RMA changes announced ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Olli Hellmann, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Waikato Getty Images When New Zealanders commemorate Anzac Day on April 25, it’s not only to honour the soldiers who lost their lives in World War I and subsequent conflicts, but also ...
A leaked document shows the Canterbury/Waitaha arm of health agency Te Whatu Ora is scurrying to save $13.3 million by July. The “financial sustainability target”, which was “allocated” to Waitaha, is consistent with what’s happening in other districts, says Sarah Dalton, executive director of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists. ...
A look at the state of the previous government’s affordable housing scheme, and what could come next.Remind me: What’s KiwiBuild again?First announced in 2012, KiwiBuild was a flagship policy of the Labour Party heading into both its 2014 and 2017 election campaigns. With Jacinda Ardern as prime minister, ...
Labour in opposition will be shocked to learn which party had six years in power but squandered any chance to make real change. Grant Robertson’s valedictory speech was a predictably entertaining trip down memory lane. The acid-tongued incoming Otago University chancellor administered a sick burn to the coalition government. He ...
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The following interview with former Green Party MP Sue Kedgley came about because she features in the new memoir Hine Toa by activist Ngāhuia te Awekōtuku; the two knew each other at the University of Auckland in the early 70s, when they were both took on leadership roles in the ...
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There’s relief for building owners bending under the weight of earthquake strengthening rules – and costs – that came into force seven years ago. Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk has announced a scheduled 2027 review of the earthquake-prone building regulations will now start this year. Owners will also get ...
Opinion: It has been announced that nine percent of roles at Oranga Tamariki will be disestablished, presumably to help fund the tax cuts promised by the coalition Government. I am reminded of the graphics used to illustrate pandemic events, where five thousand people are standing in a field and then ...
After more than two sleepless days, running through savage terrain, Greig Hamilton didn’t know if he was going to finish one of the most gruelling psychological assaults in sport. He was metres away from the finish line, a yellow gate made famous in a Netflix documentary; a race he’d dreamed ...
COMMENTARY:By Murray Horton New Zealand needs to get tough with Israel. It’s not as if we haven’t done so before. When NZ authorities busted a Mossad operation in Auckland 20 years ago, the government didn’t say: “Oh well, Israel has the right to defend itself.” No, it arrested, prosecuted, ...
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The government's plan to reintroduce a three strikes regime is being strongly opposed by lawyers, who argue there is no evidence it reduces crime or helps people rehabilitate. ...
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While police are "broadly in favour", the government's proposed anti-gang laws are facing pushback from lawyers, rights groups and former gang members. ...
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The solo show from Ana Scotney is both sprawling and intimate, and a must-see, writes Mad Chapman. In the opening moments of Scattergun: After the Death of Rūaumoko, writer and performer Ana Scotney lays out the groundwork, literally. Silently moving around the square stage, Scotney is not so much dancing ...
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We repeat our call for criminal justice policy to be based on evidence, something the three strikes regime neglects to recognise – with no evidence that it either reduces crime or assists with rehabilitation. ...
This is a curious job add.
Metiria tweeted about it.
Here’s the ad.
It begins:
What orgainsation is this?
sounds like the sort of weasel words Jordan Williams would write – full of corporate-speak
Authorised by a one-time National Campaign Manager for the Green Party.
Little Big Horn linked its evil twin yesterday.
The person behind Action Station appears to be Megan Salole who at some stage was the National Campaign Manager for the Greens.
Could be beneficial but do we have too many progressive organisations?
*snap* 🙂
Bet me to it! The power of Google …
The domain registrant is Joseph Cederwell – he describes himself on his Linkedin profile:
From googling Joseph Cederwell and reading a couple of things quickly, I am already impressed! But early days etc etc …
His community action ideas and values appear to align with a lot if what has been discussed on TS recently about getting community engagement and involvement – eg Rosie posts, the Dunedin Saturday get-togethers etc
Here are a few links from Google – there are more if you google “Joseph Cederwell”
http://info.scoop.co.nz/StandUp – April 2012; StandUp appears to be the forerunner of Action Station; Salole appears to have been involved since this press release.
nz.linkedin.com/pub/joe-cederwall/34/766/799
http://www.projectfreerange.com/author/joe-cederwall/
http://www.teawaroa.com/team/
Sorry – cannot get the Linked In link to work; but just google name.
Thing is we have none doing what ActionStation appears to be doing – making it all more democratic and widespread through the use of online tools.
Could it be something to do with this article on MSN?
“A new political party representing the global Kiwi diaspora has been formed with plans to contest the New Zealand general election later this year.
The Expatriate Party of New Zealand (the Expats) say they’ve gained the minimum 500 paid members required to register their party over the weekend in Perth, Western Australia.
The membership forms collected in Perth by 10 volunteers, with a take-up rate above 90 per cent, will be submitted to the Electoral Commission over the next 48 hours for review.”
No, it isn’t as it’s not a political party.
Q. ‘What organisation is this?’
A. Ask the GCSB.
Now to our new export goldrush, education. Universities are businesses now. Don’t you know that? The Vice Chancellor at Otago University states the business bit peremptorily in her USA sounding voice. But may be from Canada, good right-wing things come out of Canada.
And the 2 year contract to sponsor Otago rugby is under wraps, to keep the information warm and sheltered. Expect it to be $100,000 ish.
If there was a tie-up with their athletic – sport studies, that would be more understandable, but nothing has been said of that. It all seems to be exposure to the brand on shirts and blah. I have heard complaints about large advertising expenditure by I think Canterbury Uni, under the influence of a financial staff member wearing a business hat (bowler?) rather than the expected academic cap and gown.
Looks like the website actionstation.org.nz is registered to an Joseph Cedarwall who is a director of Action Station Limited along with Megan Salole who I believe used to be a national campaign manager for the Green Party. Looks like it’s more about a Get Out The Vote campaign than anything else.
Thanks everyone. It looks to me like it’s more than just a get out the vote campaign. The website mentions an issues based campaign.
Looking for “an issues based campaign”?
You couldn’t go far wrong campaigning on climate change
From the BBC:
British floods become political:
“an argument challenged by some Conservative MPs and peers”
The term ‘Conservative MPs and peers’, should be replaced with the term ‘Ridiculous Right Wing loonies’.
As John Key prepares to bring Right Wing climate change denier, Colin Craig into his government. The sensible thing would be to make climate change a political issue here too.
Will it happen?
Climate change is the government’s weak point.
For National government their record on climate change is a “disgrace” and arguably their worst performing portfolio.
If David Cunliffe got up and said that a government led by him, will consider canceling all deep sea oil drilling, and all planned new coal mines on climate change grounds, it would blow the whole election campaign wide apart.
The government would be left gasping like landed guppies out of water, flapping their mouths speechless and without answers.
60% of the population want the government to do more on climate change.
80% oppose deep sea oil drilling.
Can Labour and the other opposition parties continue to afford ignoring this huge constituency?
Or, will they do a repeat of 2011?
Will it be Deja vue all over again.
susan wood has a bit of a first world problem..
..and in raising this..
..wood highlights perhaps the most well-known philosophical-question/conundrum..
..she’s quite ‘deep’..eh..?..that wood..
http://whoar.co.nz/2014/susan-wood-is-having-a-bit-of-a-tizzy-eh/
phillip ure..
she’s just another one suffering from chronic entitleditis
+1 Great word, entitleditis, it trips up and off the tongue. amirite and Dr Seuss.
Further to amirite at 3. My comment is about Labour leaders having differing viewpoints being relayed to the media, on the attitude to passports and freedom to make one’s own moral commitments outside the country. And not a discussion on the earlier assistance and heroism in Spain and other places.
Can you Labour people not focus your minds on vital matters for advancement in the public mind in this election year? Can you win an election, hold a successful cake stall even?
You don’t have democratic discussions about what view the Party is taking – on radio, tv, on-line or in the paper. It’s a 101 in Political Party Management – you have immediate discussions between the Leader, the spokesperson, and a small quorum of internal leaders who then know what is happening. We live in an age of immediate communication, not written or spoken word through an intermediary travelling by sailing ship over the wide seas FFS.
not a smart activity by any means, but what a sensationalist headline
A parachute flare “crashes” in the same way a ping pong ball plummets !
Police should have been saying that setting off flares is illegal unless you happen to be at sea and having an emergency.
And, no, I don’t see you problem with the article. People don’t actually have the right to set off fireworks whenever they please. This is because it interferes with other peoples right not to be disturbed.
i think draco..i was using it as an example of unthought-out/unintended consequences..
..for wood..
..eh..?
..and all her own work..
..(we so love it when the smug/hubris-riddled get flustered/first-worldy-problemy..eh..?.
…and that reaction to their self-centered whines..is only human..
..eh..?..)
..phillip ure..
David Cunliffe and Phill Goff seem to be at odds with each other regarding NZ nationals fighting in Syria. Cunliffe would change current laws to stop them, Goff thinks some rightful fighting causes should be supported.
WTF is going on in the Labour Party?
What’s going on? A democratic discussion. And one that’s been had in Labour many times. For mine, I’d like to think I’d have gone to Spain if I was around in the thirties.
What ? to fight the fascists or just for a nice relaxing holiday on the Costa Brava ?
What to the Spanish Civil War? A nasty war, as everyone seemed to use it to train their troops. Germany especially.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Civil_War
Everyone? Only Germany and Italy had boots on the ground. England’s response was to make it illegal for leftists to fight for the Spanish Government, but thousands went anyway, mainly via France. I had a comrade who left England claiming he was going to Paris on holiday. On leaving, he was told by customs they knew where he was really going and the only way he’d come back would be in a pine box. Happily, he survived, but many didn’t.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Brigades
edit: There were a small number of semi official Soviet troops, but nowhere near the thousands of Italian and German troops formally sent to support the falangists.
Tom Spiller:
http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/photo/tom-spiller
And a sobering interview with Tom:
http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/spanishcivilwar/audio/2501692/spanish-civil-war-%27i-remember-jarama%27
I met and had a few long discussions with three blokes in Aussie who had all fought in the Spanish civil war. They joked about being the only Australians to have fought fascism for nearly ten years. One thing the never talked about was the fighting, just never. The politics and the factionalism, always, but never the fighting, – I learnt pretty quick not to ask.
When I came back in NZ at the turn of the century, I did a lot of research into the war and the involvement of kiwis. During that I discovered this guy, Dr Douglas Jolly. Who is amazing, actually, bloody amazing, and I wonder to this day why he is not held up as a national hero and icon. He’s a bloody legend.
Here is a link to his History NZ page. http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/people/douglas-jolly
“He’s a bloody legend.”
+1
Thanks for that info. I’ve long been interested in the Spanish Civil War but didn’t think to check out the involvement of New Zealanders,
Thanks adam, very interesting read.
+ Lives he saved
The originator of M.A.S.H.
Read Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia on the Spanish Civil War.
+1
Christy Moore – Viva la Quinta Brigada
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQbXO828Vio#t=81
Timely…
Monbiot’s take on individuals heading off to fight for foreign causes.
He notes the lack of charges for people who go to fight for financial motives.
Discussion, as it should.
My take on it is that if someone wants to be a mercenary, why should we stop them? And how do you prove the organisation they are fighting for is “terrorist”
The legal authority to cancel a passport is in section 8A of the Passports Act 1992 and states:
“8A Cancellation of passport on grounds of national security
(1) The Minister may, by notice in writing, recall any New Zealand passport, and cancel it or retain possession of it, if the Minister believes on reasonable grounds that—
(a) the person is a danger to the security of New Zealand because the person intends to engage in, or facilitate,—
(i) a terrorist act within the meaning of section 5 of the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002; or
(ii) the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction; or
(iii) any unlawful activity designed or likely to cause devastating or serious economic damage to New Zealand, carried out for purposes of commercial or economic gain; and
(b) the danger to the security of New Zealand cannot be effectively averted by other means; and
(c) the cancellation of the passport, or its retention by the Minister, will prevent or effectively impede the ability of the person to carry out the intended action.”
Seems to me there are some rather high hurdles to jump and I would be interested to see how the Government justified the cancellation of Syrian mercenary’s passports.
It was said on Morning Report this morning that the parents of the two brothers requested the cancellation of passports.
I wondered about that. They said that the parents had contacted a government department. I didn’t hear that the parents had asked for the cancellation of the passports. To withhold their passports might have been their desire. Cancellation is serious, and particularly bad for those already over there.
Paul Buchanan thinks that it is an announcement that indicates to everybody that the NZ intelligence is working! And that it itself makes this public before Edward Snowden’s expected release of data.
It’s extremely sad to see the so-called sovereign NZ Govt dancing like a puppet to someone elses tune.
That accounts for two people; but these appear to be the only NZers of Syrian origin that the Syrian spokesman knew of.
IIRC Key talked about 8 (?) passports being cancelled/withdrawn. So who were the others? And were they all NZers of Syrian origin or not?
(iii) any unlawful activity designed or likely to cause devastating or serious economic damage to New Zealand, carried out for purposes of commercial or economic gain; and
SO and one who worked for merrill lynch should have their passport cancelled!!!!
AND who else???
Just to clarify – cancelling passports is not the same as revoking citizenship and leaving a person stateless, right?
Depends if they are out of the country or not.
If they are and the nearest embassy (eg if you are in Syria behind the lines and the nearest embassy or consulate is somewhere like Israel) won’t help then you effectively become stateless because you can’t cross borders.
If in-country
We have a lot of ex military employed off shore in various rolls. They too could fall under the same scrutiny.
Yes we do. Some masquerading as security guards in iraq and Afghanistan. .. and this govt knows exactly who they are.
Perhaps Goff would be better at the job of Mayor of Auckland – before the General Election.
Brown is doing Labour no favours as seen by his putdown in the Herald today over his railway.
He has no dignity but should resign.
Phil would make a great Mayor.
Anyone else see this mad ranting tirade on stuff:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/farming/opinion/9707476/Harden-up-NZ-farming-kills-animals
The poor little dear got upset that she and her farmer mates are actually being held to account on how animals are treated and the sustainability of their practices.
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2014/feb/10/the-intercept-glenn-greenwald-nsa-revelations”
A new website for the Snowden files
https://firstlook.org/theintercept/
May be well worth keeping an eye on Intercept. KDC has put up links on his Twitter site.
I heard Paul Buchanan on Morning Report earlier talking about the expected publication of Snowden’s revelations re NZ. He thinks this will be in about two months’ time – and that Key talking about cancellation of passports of NZ citizens wanting to go to Syria is an attempt to get in first.
http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/morningreport/audio/2585278/expert-questions-wisdom-of-passport-cancellation-announcement
KDC has also tweeted this link to Techdirt re Snowden’s response to a recent NY Times article. Techdirt article is titled “Gov’t Officials Leak Classified Info To Journalists To Discredit Snowden For Leaking Classified Info To Journalists”. Interesting read.
http://t.co/0Y9ms21270
Re Techdirt: A large part of the energy used by the “authorities” over there and probably here as well (MrKey?) is aimed at discrediting. Thanks veutoviper.
Leaks of classified information which support the narrative and position of the power elite are permissible, and in fact, both tacitly and actively encouraged.
However, leaks of classified information which counter and discredit the narrative and the position of the power elite shall be punishable by decades behind bars in a military detention facility.
jeepers this is ugly from Lyn Webster a dairy farmer in Northland
http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/farming/opinion/9707476/Harden-up-NZ-farming-kills-animals
I know I’m setting myself up for the full ure treatment here but…
Lyn Webster doesn’t take prisoners and everyone is in her sights – don’t criticise farmers? If the attitudes displayed in this article are even slightly indicative (and i think they are) then they deserve everything they get. i once started writing a short story about after the end – of oil/global warming and so on – one slight story arc was a farmer having to front up to what they had done to the environment and the animals – it didn’t end well for them…
edit: Snap with ScottGN above
She could have saved herself an awful lot of computer time and the rest of us from wasting our time reading this drivel if she’d just come out and said “We’re dairy farmers, NZ’s aristocracy. We run this country and we can do whatever the fuck we want ‘cos you all owe us”.
lol very true Scott
+1
Webster is a pretty nasty lady. I have read some of her writings, and a lot of them are a lot worse than that one — I think she let rip at one struggling couple who had the cheek to wish that their landlord would insulate their home or something.
Yes, farming kills animals, etc, but it is not “farmer bashing” to suggest it should be done humanely.
The farmers are getting more and more sensitive each day. We soon will start seeing critics of farmers being denounced in town squares by young FF members as counter-revolutionary critics of the Agricultural road.
The irony in discussing this here marty is that Webster and Ure are the two sides of the same coin, or the extreme ends of the spectrum. Webster basically says if you eat meat, then animals have to suffer, so shut the fuck up. Phil says, if you eat meat, then animals have to suffer, so you are evil. Not so very different.
The thing that bothers me is that both positions leave the animals to their cruel fate. It is possible to farm humanely and it’s possible to eat meat and diary ethically. Which farmers and eaters are heading in the right direction?
My wife and son eat meat – organically grown and ethically killed – it is not for me but i gave up many years ago trying to impose my beliefs around (not) eating meat on others. A sustainable approach imo is based on respecting the animal throughout its life, and death. And that respecting is towards the animal for the glory and wonder that it is as a living entity and a part of the holistic whole. The big issue is scale as i’m sure you’ve mentioned before – when profit becomes the motive, big becomes better, and respecting the animal is discarded.
Yes it is possible to farm humanely:
* the death of the stock need not be a cruel affair, as it is today even under the regulations. I favour, where possibly that stock are slaughtered on the farm, avoiding the transport to a killing factory and the stress and terror that causes animals. Any idiot who wishes to argue that the freezing work does not terrify the stock has never been to, or worked in one.
* the life of the stock can be made so much better. Stock like humans require shelter and shade. NZ farmers routinely overcrowd stock in vast open areas despite the rigours of the climate. That is just plain cruel and unnecessary. Recently I was in a paddock on a really hot day and wondering where the cows were, I found them in a copse the farmer had left in the paddock (most farmers would have cut it down).
I don’t think farmers are per se necessarily cruel, I do think that they work to the economics of the industry and that may inure them to the suffering of the stock. The answer is we need to demand more of them, and as a consequence be prepared to pay for it.
+1
@ weka..
“..Phil says, if you eat meat, then animals have to suffer, so you are evil..”
i have never said people are ‘evil’..
..(please do not put words into my mouth..)
..most (children especially) are just unaware of the realities behind their packaged-meat/bye-products..
..the pain beneath their plates..
..with farmers smashing in the skulls of uneconomic calves with hammers/blunt-objects..just the latest revelation..
..and i have long advocated abbattoirs/charnal-houses had glass walls..
..’cos if people saw/knew what is done in their name/diet..
..many would stop eating flesh/fat/bye-products..
..and yes..those people doing the actual torture of those animals are fucken ‘evil’..
..(and don’t get me started on that lowest example of the human being..the vivisector..
..those who earn their money from deliberately torturing/experimenting with animals..
..380,000 animals are tortured/killed by those ‘evil’ fucks..
..each and every year..)
..but most consumers are not ‘evil’..they are at worst ignorant/brainwashed/addicted..
..but of course the confirmation (pre-xmas) that dairy-products have joined meat..as proven causes of cancers..
..will just further advance the arguments i make on this issue..
..phillip ure..
@ weka..
..”.. It is possible to farm humanely and it’s possible to eat meat and diary ethically..”
complete and utter fucken self-deluding bullshit..
..and you a ‘green’..eh..?
..f.f.s..!
..phillip ure..
Her main point seems to be that because death is the outcome, all treatment and methods of killing up to that point are equivalent.
Personally, I do not think that (at one extreme) a lifetime of abuse and torture ended by a careless and painful method is equivalent to (at the other extreme) a happy cow prancing in rainbow fields suddenly blinking out like a light bulb are equivalent.
Without farming the cow wouldn’t exist. But that doesn’t mean it is acceptable to make the cow suffer.
Teacher: Key a ‘good kidd’ Today’s Herald.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11199548
Leaving aside the flannel in the article, there appears to be one telling statement that may disprove Key’s indifference to politics at the time. (1981 and all that).
“… John Key was a good student, Mr Hughes recalled. Subject matter was closely linked to the politics of the day, with Mr Key’s future party often in the cross-hairs. “Economics was great to teach in those days, because all of Muldoon’s controls were still there, and we were sort of free-market evangelistic … it was a great time to be able to criticise the Government and prove they were wrong.”
Has anyone proved conclusively that Muldoon and Keynesian economics were wrong?
Secondly, I can just imagine what might happen to a teacher today who “preached” evolution in a secondary school with such conviction.
Nope but, then again, basic common sense (something that RWNJs don’t have) tells us that economics is wrong anyway.
oh dear I think going down this road is a big mistake david
http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/auckland/news/nbpol/1638566970-i-could-drink-key-under-the-table—cunliffe
I suppose if you are after the same middle then you act the same, say the same sort of things, you know to be a regular bloke – what a spew.
Good call, Marty.
Correct response:
“I’m no wowser, but I’m not comfortable with the promotion of excessive alcohol use. We have some real issues with alcohol in NZ, as we see in the domestic abuse figures, and problems at the sevens and in other sports. And when it comes to public drunkenness, John Key has already won the Troty, three hands down”.
That reply’s too long, TRP. All Cunliffe needed to say was that he’s never approached drinking as a competitive sport.
+1
Please – what is Beer Pong – it does not seem to be a straight drinking competition ?
‘beer pong’ is a hangover-fart..
..phillip ure..
I don’t think that’s going after the middle but after the lowest form of life – the drunk.
That’s no way to label half a million voting NZers.
Perhaps the shock of hearing the truth will wakes the fuckers up.
Autoscaler was giving me a problem this morning. Was failing to turn on the web servers under load. Eventually did a nasty stall on the database.
I’ve added a larger server and it looks like it is all ok. Heading to work.
Thanks. There was such a delay thought something was up, have a good day lprent. With Cool Runnings.
lprent
A couple of points. I have changed to Firefox and it seems a bit better than Opera.
But I wanted to place a comment to you under my earlier one. The site took me to the Radio program site from December, twice. I scrolled along to get here.
And second, I have no comments in my archive after midday yesterday.
I put some time-consuming ones through late yesterday and would like to look them up. Are they still to be recovered somewhere?
lprent
I note that I can access all my archives from the Opera browser but the Firefox I cannot though otherwise it seems to duplicate what is on Opera.
Appears to be fixed now. I’ll have a look at what it does later tonight as the load drops off.
Rod Oram will be on Radionz after 11am news talking about the naughty, haughty OZ supermarkets. He is always worth listening to for good thinking.
Geoff Bertram was on morning news about the electricity market which is so competitive that the sector PR says we are lucky and are constantly spinning round looking for the best deal. (Slight translation here.) How very tiring this competition is, who needs walking and cycle tracks and how can you afford them, when you have to stick to your computer or phone checking prices, ready to catch the latest .05c drop, so you can get a phone bill that’s affordable?
I meant electricity bill. I’m sure you knew what I meant (at the end of the comment).
“.How To Shop For Weed Like A True Expert:
“..Think of Leafly as a Wine Spectator or a Goodreads.
But instead of wine or books –
– it’s a place to gather – rate – and talk about marijuana.
The Leafly experience doesn’t conjure images of tie-dyed shirts and Cheech and Chong jokes.
On a slick interface – with an index of over 600 cannabis strains –
– nearly 60,000 reviews of those strains –
– and over 36,000 reviews of thousands of dispensaries around the world –
– it’s far more sophisticated.
Leafly – which has been described as the “Yelp of cannabis” –
– represents the new mainstreaming of marijuana culture-
– bringing the oft-stigmatized leaf and its users into the daylight..”
(cont..)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/10/leafly-marijuana-app_n_4717647.html
phillip ure..
They are a changin’.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhTYI3DeNgA
Astronomers have found evidence of life on Planet Gower.
It’s visions now. It’s all become clear to Paddy, apparently.
Not sure that it has become clear to Paddy yet. Personally I want a few more instances before I believe it.
However, that TV3 article at least appears to quote what Cunliffe and Norman actually said re the Dotcom extradition saga and what they would do, rather than twisting their words or misquoting them. Cunliffe’s comments were thankfully very measured and recognised the legal process currently underway.
Norman seemed a bit all over the place.
Gower seems to think that KDC can stand for parliament.
“But what a delicious irony: Kim Dotcom might actually help John Key win the 2014 election.”
Call me old fashioned, but isn’t the point of political opinion by journalists to express their opinion about the politics, not what they personally wish for?
1. The courts are unlikely to send the extradition warrant to the Minister for approval.
2. If Paddy doesn’t know this he’s incompetent, and yet for the purposes of his magnificent theory he assumes it’s a done deal.
3. The thought doesn’t seem to have occurred to Paddy that Dotcom may not like this government because they broke the law while waving guns in his face.
The whole article reeks of the unseemly bias we’ve come to expect from this wannabe.
@ weka.
I agree that Norman should probably have been a little more circumspect but he is in a different position to Cunliffe.
KDC certainly knows that he cannot stand for Parliament – but IIRC correctly, he (and Mona etc) will be able to vote, being over 18 years old; permanent residents of NZ; and in NZ for over one year. My weird sense of humour is looking forward to very large, expensive billboards on KDC’s Coatsville mansion ground for the Internet Party and against voting for Key in his own Helensville electorate.
KDC has just tweeted two relevant tweets
“I don’t need the help of Labour/Greens in my extradition case. John Key & his gang are already doing that with their serial-law-breaking.”
and
“If the Internet Party won’t poll 5+% before ballot papers are printed we’ll self destruct and put our weight behind a party adopting our policies.”
@ OAB
It remains to be seen, but IMO the longer things drag out and the GCSB etc fail to meet court demands re the return of data etc to KDC, the less likely the courts will agree to extradition. But it is all so complicated. I am currently trying to put a summary together of where things are at on the complicated string of legal processes underway and will post this if I get it completed. It is a really fascinating legal situation.
Re Gower, a candidate for post-natal abortion? LOL.
“If the Internet Party won’t poll 5+% before ballot papers are printed we’ll self destruct and put our weight behind a party adopting our policies.”
My hitherto cautious respect for the man just went up a notch.
Norman’s comments on the other hand are very scary.
It seems that the reason for his trip to see Dotcom is starting to leak out. Russel has admitted that he went to Dotcom’s mansion twice in an attempt to persuade him not to start a party to run in the election. I would say that Norman is quite sure, and quite worried, that any such party would syphon votes predominantly from the Green pool of supporters.
He says that he tried to get Dotcom not to run such a group. Now we are beginning to see what Dotcom’s price is. If you guarantee, regardless of the Courts decision, not to allow me to be extradited, I’ll not run a party in the election and will, in fact support your Green Party, seems to be the Dotcom price.
The really scary part is that Norman appears quite willing to promise such a political interference, without even waiting for the Court’s decision in the case. Is he really willing to put justice up for sale?
You’re confusing the tory method of doing things (corruption) with the fact that norman is against the extradition anyway. KDC isn’t dumb enough to blackmail someone into doing something they were going to do anyway.
And the main thing that with stop KDC party from significantly siphoning green votes is he donated 50k to john banks.
@mcflock..
..i wouldn’t place too much credence in the deterrent effect of dotcom donating to banks..
..that was clearly a purpose-donation/connection..
..as the deal was that banks would quid pro quo by helping dotcom with his immigration-issues..
..i don’t think you can necessarily tie dotcom ideologically to banks..
..just ‘cos of that donation..
..as with all parties (esp smaller ones)..this election..(more so than any other in recent times)..it will be policies..and not ‘branding’.. that will decide peoples’ votes..
phillip ure..
so he’s not a tory supporter, he’s only corrupt (bribing elected officials for advantageous treatment)?
Might want to work on that spin, phil
i’m not spinning for him..mcflock..
..those are just the facts of the matter..
..so..if you were him..
.and were told you could grease a politicians hand with some anonymous/’legal’-donations..
..and get help with yr immigration-problems..
..you would be too high-minded to do that..eh..?
..all i was doing was pointing out how false yr ‘greens won’t vote for dotcom..’cos he gave banks money’ thesis is..
..and for why..
..that’s all..
..phillip ure..
Actually, yeah – I do hope that, if given the opportunity to bribe a government official, I would turn it down, and report them.
In the long run it usually works out better – I know some folks who ship stuff internationally, and they have a rule to never pay bribes e.g. to customs. They’re ethical folk, but it turns out that they still get their stuff processed faster and cheaper than folk who get tapped at every stage of the cycle.
Basically, You’re arguing that greens would lose significant (i.e. election-changing) support to someone who gave 50k to john banks because they think him corrupt, rather than ideologically tory. Unprincipled rather than wrong principles.
That’s pretty harsh on greens, and I’m not exactly a hippy-lover.
“..Basically, You’re arguing that greens would lose significant (i.e. election-changing) support..”
i’m not arguing that at all..mcflock..
..in fact i didn’t even say that..
..i’m sayng it will be forgotten by then..
..and won’t be a vote-determiner..
..as you argued it will be..
..i repeat..policies will determine votes..
..phillip ure..
Riiiight, whatever.
So your argument is that if he makes the right sounds before the election, green voters will forget that he (according to you) bribes public officials. Because all the policies, just like all the funding, will come from him.
Why don’t schools get told to run comparative religion and caring society lessons? I would like all children to come up against ideas of thinking that society members should care about each other, and it is a vital part of living in a happy society. And learning about different ways that people try to put this idea over in each country and refer to the major religions so kids know what they are.
I am Christian but am concerned at the way that the USA has turned it all into a business, and further are rewriting the bible and then copyright their version, and of course spread their erroneous ideas about creationism, and the bible being like a scientific document. Scrambled eggs anyone!
So riorio, what do you want us to drop? Not disagreeing, but given the crowded curriculum we have now, something would have to give.
Northshoreguynz
You asked me a question and here is what I think, on and on and on
But I think it all is relevant. Sorry I couldn’t be snappy and concise.
You won’t lose any marks if you don’t read it. It is Not Compulsory!
The quick get-out of here answer is I don’t know what I want you to drop. You’re the smart ones, you work it out! And it’s riroriro to you.
I know I know it’s tough for teachers. Seeing that education is being used as the main measure for how well a country is doing, and how advanced it is, and unemployment must not be looked at, must be presented as if it doesn’t matter. Education is the cure for all ills. It’s education that will save us, and (taking a deep breath and throwing out chest) enable us to stride into the 21st century – after a shaky start. Blah.
On religion in schools and how it can be fitted in. All I know is that it is important that children are taught about how to get on with others, how to be strong in themselves, and then how to step back from oneself a little so as to make room for understanding others and let them have their share. And if not, it’s important to understand why, and why you don’t like them and how to deal with that.
Sounds woolly but it’s at the base of knowing how to mediate, how to get what’s right happening and the lack of this knowledge causes a lot of the disagreements, the fights, and wars. So teaching about the ways of handling oneself, then understanding about others, their ways of understanding the world, how it is expressed through their religions and why they might be different to yours, is necessary and useful when there are demarcation and resource fights.
And that is something that should be passed on with the three r’s, and have pride of place in the curriculum for older children as a subject perhaps to be called Society, problem solving and human values. So it is a top subject and growing more important as society gets brutalised by isolating technology and distant, disinterested, amoral parents and government.
The other stuff can be covered in a 101 fashion so youngsters have the basics and then can go full on with something they are really interested in, in conjunction with something that will be practically useful.
So not the short answer you would hope for. But there is a lot of importance beyond just traditional support for school to cover religion, stories about religious figures, history and how to be good.
That’s my idea for secondary education. Knowing how to learn, knowing how to gather information and analyse it are vital skills. Knowing how humans think, and allowing for real and compassionate understandings of people and behaviour should be be incorporated into policy. This is thinking about ourselves as real people in the round (not the cold, judgmental self-portrait of perfectionist, disdainful economist’s perceptions – thinking that everyone should be judged alongside themselves, as the model base standard.)
It’s a new world already. We are not ready for it now, and the changes are happening and we can’t conceive it, can’t perceive it, and in our minds it’s still 1970-1990. That’s when things seemed possible but we didn’t have a clear path to the future, and while we thought and fought, neo lib came along and said “We know the way.”
“Follow us pilgrims, it will be a rocky road sometimes but we will climb and get to the heights.” Our modern Pilgrim’s Progress to Consumer Land, where bright lights shine on us from plastic angels at the mall. Until it is flooded out in one of the weather bombs that will wipe out so much of our growing and built environment. Then what do we do with all our fine arcane knowledge? Boat building and botanics anyone?
It will take me a few hours to formulate a decent reply.
Rather than religion as such it seems to me your arguing more for good old fashioned manners and a concern for the well being of others. In addition the teaching of critical thinking.
I can only give you what I have experienced in the schools I have taught, Intermediate Schools, teaching Year 8s, (Form 2 in the old money.) In all cases there has been what is called a “Values Program”, where children are both taught and encouraged to value themselves, others and the environment. The teaching is not so much explicit, but is discussed in class and reinforced all the time.
Critical Thinking is also taught, as part of every unit.
But, and it is a big but, we only have students for 6/7 hours a day. What happens at home has more influence on “social matters” than anything a school can do.
Greywarbler every Empire uses religion to sujugate its peasants CofE Roman Catholics Now we have thw fastest growing US colonial subjugaters the Morons. Door to Door salesman.
Soon they wll have a drive thru version mc morons!
McMorons. How useful a term. This morning there was an item about residents around Eden Park and the trouble they have with drunken people especially those that are turned away because of bad behaviour.
Then they are out on the street and venting their feelings there.
The authorities can be petitioned not to let a brothel start up in your street, of the sort that can give aggro, or street people might be able to be moved along (unless they are Mongrel Mob members from Christchurch like the ones talked about in the news today in connection with poor Mallory’s death. She hadn’t paid her protection money, so they weren’t going to protect her from themselves any more. And were very brutal and vengeful about it)
You can’t get a Park shifted easily. But it brings together all the McMorons in the city, and drops them around your district. What fun.
Yes, tricledrown – those bloody C of Es or Anglicans as they are known in N Z. I blame them for having me listen to those sermons on the Gospels which convinced me Jesus was a socialist, which has kept me from voting National for the past 48 years.
I only heard snippets of this section of Nine to Noon today; but what I heard was interesting in relation to the growth in blogging in NZ and its importance, role, risks etc in respect of the upcoming general election. Will relisten to it later, but thought others may be interested if you did not hear it.
http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/ninetonoon/audio/2585305/media-with-wayne-hope
nice that he mentioned whoar..eh..?
..phillip ure..
Media reporting that Wendy Brandon, David Cunliffe’s Chief of Staff, has resigned.
According to the Herald, Wendy has been suffering from a bad case of shingles for some time now http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11200043
Big time Ouch, shingles a very painful malady, my sympathies go out to Her having recently had the grandly painful experience of what might have been shingles…
Yep she has soldiered on but obviously it has taken its toll. I would not wish shingles on the National Cabinet …
Yes you and I would! But seriously, I have had shingles twice and it is nasty and takes months to recover. Kia kaha to Wendy and I fully understand her resigning to allow someone who has the energy; etc that you do not have when recovering from shingles to take over.
Teaching of Values in schools and Religious instruction.
The religion in schools programmes is governed by a strict curriculum.
The problem appears to be for some schools like St Heliers that no one is monitoring the instructors. They are usually well intentioned lay people who confuse values with Christian indoctrination.
There are many good values programmes that can be delivered in the schools.
The KiwiCan trust is one. Not a hint of Christrianity anywhere to be seen or heard.
http://www.fyd.org.nz/Programmes/KiwiCan(Year18)/AboutUs.aspx
Point of note (and with due regard to Stephanie Rodgers “The Politics of Nastiness” post.
Anyone watching QT today will note Pulla Bent’s efforts to change her umij.
Rebranding in process YES. Change in substance NO
Point of note (and with due regard to Stephanie Rodgers “The Politics of Nastiness” post.
Anyone watching QT today will note Pulla Bent’s efforts to change her umij.
Rebranding in process YES. Change in substance NO
Oh and Hek Yea is still stuck with the colonial look, albeit with a softer ‘look and feel’
A quiet thinker moves on.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/02/10/274789348/stuart-hall-godfather-of-multiculturalism-dies
i have kicked off my q-time commentaries for the yr..where i attempt..as much as possible..
..to take the piss..
http://whoar.co.nz/2014/new-zealand-parliament-list-of-questions-for-oral-answer-tuesday-11-february-2014/
(excerpt:..)
“..(and just as joyce stands to speak..in camera next to him..brownlee lets rip with an (obviously satisfied/post-lunch) belch..
..and yep..!..now he’s yawning..as that lunch settles in..and he will likely go on the nod before too long..(what’s known as ‘doing a banksy’..)
(and kate ‘collars’ wilkinson has got a big blue one on today..(collar..that is..)
(brownlee update:..his body is still doing battle with his lunch..attempting to stifle serial-yawns..(are we keeping him up..?..)..”
..and the jaw-dropping ‘news’ from the session..is the admission from parata..
..that charter schools will receive govt funding of up to $40,000 per student..
..this is 8 times the funding a state school student receives..
..whoar..!
..eh..?
..and if that ‘news’..of such govt largesse to these charter schools doesn’t make the 6pm news..
..mainstream journos are obviously asleep at the wheel..
..eh..?
phillip ure..
Morning Report update:
“Morning Report co-host Simon Mercep will follow his co-host and step down from the show when Geoff Robinson leaves in April, said Radio New Zealand sources familiar with the situation.
It is understood one option being considered by RNZ would see Mercep moved to a revamped afternoon show and current host Jim Mora joining Mary Wilson on a evening current format for Checkpoint.”
Wonder who will replace him? Mary Lamb or some kindly friend of David Farrar?
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=11200047
Oh God, NOOOOO!!! Not Farrar, surely?
Would Mary Wilson like that? She may want an occasional stand in but some one at her level, not good ol; Jim and his easy-peasy friends.
Michelle Obama’s Marie Antoinette moment
Nothing like having your pets feasting on fine china on the tax payers dime.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-10/good-thing-us-only-has-66-unemployment
The poor can stop dreaming of finding that non-existent job, and start wishing they were a dog instead..
The answer is simple. Cut benefits further so that people are “incentivised” to work.
And simultaneously raise corporate tax to incentivise them to employ?
No silly billy, you have to reduce corporate taxes. The last thing you’d do is raise taxes and punish “job creators.”
Yeah that should cause the non-existent trickle-down to become an avalanche!!
You know that when dogs are allowed on chairs the End Times can not be far away.
Filet mignon for the Presidential pooches
Food stamp cuts for the children in poverty
My point is that the dogs are sitting on chairs. Not eating. In fact there’s no food present. Because they’re not eating and there’s no food present that means the dogs aren’t actually eating off fine china on the taxpayers’ dime.
They’re sitting. On chairs.
Children in poverty, homeless
Sheltering in damp cardboard boxes
Presidential pooches on fine antique perches
It sounds like the Oval Room in the White House has been turned into a Circus Ring. Oh, that happened a decade ago. Well i’m behind the times.
The key thing that SHG has missed is how out of touch the power elite are to what is happening in their nation.
Of course, this always happens towards the end of empire. The wealthy capital of the Hunger Games with the starvation of the outer provinces, except this is real life, not fiction.
CV
I notice we can get sidetracked into being very haughty about what we mean and how other people are getting it wrong, and quite often it isn’t the important point at all. I’m beginning to get antsy at this cropping up too often. We all need to rein ourselves in. Not get het-up on a bit of trivia or unimportant meme.
Which is the bit of trivia/unimportant meme? The dog tweet from Michelle Obama?
Haughty suggests an air of superiority, of turning ones nose up at another.
Whereas I was aiming for a simmering anger and mild disgust. I will try and recalibrate.
CV 😀
Your settings seem pretty right, objectively. But the sort of spats and spits that have happened over some minor or misunderstood point lately bother me. Hares and hounds galloping over the place, when here and now the attention and concentration of thought, must be the focus.
Shakespeare said that the world is a stage, and we are all players. If we think on lines of organising light and sound shows on the problems and events to draw and hold people’s attention, we will get better results, at the least because we are focussed on best approach and the matter of concern.
We have to dramatise the things that need to receive audience attention, spotlight the important matters, and then shift that attention to another scenario. This is where we show a definite image of people, business enjoying the positive effects that will result from doing whatever will improve it. Show and tell, as with children with eager minds to learn. And try to encourage that approach to the minds of the voters, ‘We can do better by adopting this way’. Convey that to them, and make it an ongoing basic slogan for the left communication strategy this year.
Solicitor-General expected to advise by 28 Feb 2014 if leave to be granted for private prosecution of Auckland Mayor Len Brown:
http://www.pennybright4mayor.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/LEN-BROWN-LEAVE-TO-PROSECUTE-Solicitor-General-Response-3-Feb-2014-1.pdf
Penny Bright
For more information – http://www.pennybright4mayor.org.nz
Will be interesting to see what the Solicitor General has to say, hopefully reasons are given which-ever way such a decision goes…
Yet another crazed performance by Stephen Franks
Radio New Zealand seems to have no system of quality control
The Panel, Radio NZ National, Tuesday 11 February 2014
Jim Mora, Lindsey Dawson, Stephen Franks
What do we think about Schapelle Corby? Well, just before 4 p.m. today we learned what one of the S.S. Trust lawyers thinks of her….
STEPHEN FRANKS: Neither she nor her family look particularly worthy. [1] We just look, errrr, errrrr—-what’s the word?—errrr, frivolous. I mean, is there anyone the Australian government WON’T go into bat for?
……Awkward silence…..
ZARA POTTS: [dismissively, clearly unimpressed] Hmmmmm….
JIM MORA: Okay, onto things that matter: seat widths on airplanes…..
Later, after the 4 o’clock news, the topic for discussion was the government’s canceling of passports for New Zealanders who intend to go to Syria to fight against Assad. Franks’s fertile mind started fertilizing prodigiously….
STEPHEN FRANKS: There’s really no difference between a New Zealand citizen going over to fight against Assad and someone going over to fight for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War.
LINDSEY DAWSON: [gravely] Mmmmmm, mmmmm. Indeed.
MORA: Indeed.
To discuss the matter, the expert talent was Otago University politics professor Robert Patman, [2] who for the first time ever in his many appearances on the Panel, was not mealy-mouthed. Today he actually had the gumption to speak plainly…..
ROBERT PATMAN: I find it curious that the Prime Minister has claimed that this somehow justifies the recent increase in government surveillance of New Zealand citizens. It was established last year that the government’s surveillance of us went beyond the law.
STEPHEN FRANKS: No they didn’t really.
ROBERT PATMAN: You don’t think they did?
STEPHEN FRANKS: It wasn’t a contumelious breach of the law…. [Franks continued in harebrained fashion for several minutes]….
After the 4:30 news, Franks was given more rope….
JIM MORA: Stephen Franks what’s on your mind?
STEPHEN FRANKS: I see that iwi are to be consulted on the disposal of the Rena. I can’t believe the credence we give to identity politics, and people who are ignorant. Compare it to Singapore, which is a meritocracy.
LINDSEY DAWSON: They had a benign dictator didn’t they?
STEPHEN FRANKS: Well no he wasn’t really….
MORA: He didn’t like chewing gum much!
STEPHEN FRANKS: [with increasing urgency] No he was NOT a dictator!…
Franks proceeded to rave disconnectedly, very much like a NewstalkZB early morning caller. He damned the “sense of entitlement” of Māori, and praised Singapore several more times. The other two were careful not to provoke him too much; although they seemed to be mildly amused by what he said, gently contradicting him every now and again, they mostly just let him rave. Animals in the wild will steer clear of a creature that is rabid; Jim Mora and Lindsey Dawson wisely treated Stephen Franks with similar trepidation.
Sadly, Stephen Franks will appear on this programme again in the near future. Nothing he says, no matter how mad, no matter how depraved, seems to make any difference. It’s more obvious than ever that The Panel is moribund.
[1] To get endorsed by the S.S. Trust, Corby should have chased down a boy on the street in the small hours of the morning and stabbed him to death….
[2] http://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-11092013/#comment-694967
Good stuff Morrissey. That Franks asshole is a disgusting piece of shit. No wonder he employed/cloned the Jordan Williams ass-wipe.
No wonder he employed/cloned the Jordan Williams ass-wipe.
Good point. Jordan Williams is almost a perfect mimic of Stephen Franks. He speaks with the same inflexion, the same halting delivery (to convey complexity of thought) and the same muted tone (to convey gravitas).
And when he’s contradicted, even slightly, Jordan Williams becomes shrill and incoherent, just like his boss….
http://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-17042013/#comment-620413
The Careerists – by Chris Hedges
I will also repost this tomorrow.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_careerists_20120723
The invaders.
http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2010/12/invaders-from-mars.html
http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/02/political-failure-modes-and-th.html
oh very nice
Very good. Sobering reading.
you will have quite an argument about this piece of nasty slippery-slope, unengaged, hopeless, nihilistic trash if you do.
Since 6pm tonight, many webstes are hosting a fightback banner as part of internet action against surveillance.
Green Party explains – see also the fightback banner at the bottom of their webpage.
NRT also has one of these banners.
Added.
Great. Thanks, Lynn. Just saw it at the bottom of TS page.
TPP Caution:
Here is a news item that drew my attention about the draw backs of trade related agreements such as the TPP.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/world/americas/9709477/US-launches-new-trade-action-against-India
Why do we think that these actions are happening before the TPP? Tobacco v Aussie… US against India…
Is it to “reassure” the good dissenting folks of the world that nothing will really change under the TPP…. and yet it will…. cos if nothing changes why do we need a TPP?
Proof: https://scontent-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-frc3/l/t31/q71/s720x720/1781149_10152062709032529_1382776655_o.jpg
😀
Fancy there being no information through the OIA to this perfectly reasonable request for information concerning John Key being a – shape-shifting reptilian alien ushering humanity towards enslavement E&OE
The person typing this letter in the Prime Minister’s office must have cracked up. What a change from the usual po-faced stuff.
Can not read it clearly. Perhaps you should either increase the font or copy and paste the message.
Cheers!
Not mine sorry, cannot change it. Perhaps try pressing CONTROL+
i fukn knew it!
LOL
Not being able to show he is not, is enough for the Christians, why not for our PM?
Heh. You could always ask Colin Craig I suppose, but I can predict his answer:
‘He might be a reptile but I can’t say for sure if he is or not, I haven’t looked into it enough to form an opinion.’