It seems National’s response to falling decisively behind in the polls is to launch an all out attack on David Shearer, presumably in the hope of somehow destabilizing Labour. The attack was signalled by an unusually active Mathew Hooten desperately trying to re-frame debate this way on every blog he thought might be read by a journalist and is being vigorously pushed by the right’s liars, repeaters and shills (Slater, Farrar and O’Sullivan) today. It is truly desperate stuff, but cunning in a shit house rat, Steven Joyce kind of way. Ot won’t work, but i would suggest we all start using the frantic mud slinging at Shearer as a reliable indicator of just how ugly the internal polling results are getting for forgetful John and his shambolic government.
In the last week, it looks like Shearer has started to lead the news agenda, rather than just respond to it: bringing up the issue of key talking at the GCSB staff cafe; announcing a joint parliamentary inquiry into manufacturing. National have been put in the position of having to respond to these stories.
On policy, I think Shearer is till too far to the right for me. But on leadership, I think Shearer is starting to show some.
In the last week, it looks like Shearer has started to lead the news agenda, rather than just respond to it:
Hi Karol –
What the above statement really indicates is that the media are seeking to shift control the debate – Shearer is not leading anything, and is no leader, never was, never will be which is why he was selected in the first place.
The aim of the media, as you will be aware is to control the context of the narrative, to shift and subvert, missdirect and deceive, thats what it exists for.
While it is too soon to say the writing is on the wall for NACT next election, the media are hedging their bets by attempting to make Shearer look like potentential (he is also their man), thats all the game is about…We know this because of the way the same media talks unfavourably, for the most part about DC. That said I do not see DC as any saviour of this country, he knows how the system is designed, and what its designed for, its the way a manufactured theatre must function, to mimic democracy
… its the way a manufactured theatre must function, to mimic democracy
From what I can make out, the present system is designed to keep democracy at bay. If we had democracy we certainly wouldn’t have capitalism or the “free-markets” which only benefit the owners.
Sorry Karol Shearer is not leading he is being led by the nose. And until the ‘leaders’ are dug out and gone, then Labour will just be a bunch of wanna be’s, and worst of all HAS BEENS!
down in wellington at work ( on wakefield st) and have posted from here numerous times over the last few years. This last week I am having a ridiculously impossible time posting from computers or phone, at work at home or on public machines.
past 24 hours I have been checking on downforeveryoneorjustme.com and usually get a yes it is down for everyone
On Phone: Most times site doesn’t load, or tells me the comment was not published, then i go to page and it was published, or does the super frustrating jump away from the text entry box when trying to add text etc which has been going on for ages now. Basically entering from the phone is impossible without a lot of patience.
I do nothing to my phone. I use ‘approved supplier aps’ i use it more a s acamera and memo book than i do a phone. It gets turned on. It gets turned off. Any issues with anything relating to software are not coming from me. Every other site i visit is fine, same as for the pc access. They load fine, run fine, text entry is fine. Every other site is fine. Something very screwy going on and i strongly suspect thestandard site is getting messed with.
Anyways, this is not a complaint just trying to understand what is going on
For the apologists and spinners the drive of the last few days has been to slide over the nub of matters, Key’s palpable dishonesty, into a story about the story.
However, as numerous commenters have said, the smell of shit is all over Key. Peoples’ nostrils are already, irreversibly, on alert.
Too late Johnny Boy. You’re in this business up to your neck and in a more or less way everyone knows it including your dissembling soldiers. That’s why we have the story about the story, the shrill attacks on Shearer, and pleas/directions towards indulgence.
Clay feet…….no clothes………fibbing little boy……..rabbit in the headlights.
The increasingly idiotic Fran O’S is advocating for Key to get the GCSB to investigate David Shearer, she obviously wrote the manual for Putin and before that Ol’Joe Stalin himself. She certainly looks and sounds old enough to have been in the shadows in the 40’s!
What these ‘journalists’ like franet, JA and their blog buddies don’t seem to realise because their heads are so far up NACTs butt that this shows just how biased and in the pocket of the hollowmen they are.
Readers of this site and other informed sources already know that but in terms of swaying any swingers it’s probably going to do the opposite and undermine what little credibility, if any, they had.
This is interesting though. It seems Mold’s partner wasn’t at the GCSB at the time of Key’s cafe talk to staff:
The Weekend Herald has been told Dr Rogers was not at the GCSB on the critical dates in the scandal. The Weekend Herald understands he was seconded to another government agency at the time of the Dotcom spying and during Mr Key’s visit….
[Shearer said] “Whether (the video) still exists now as a result of the searches that GCSB has made, I can’t tell you.”
He also gave more detail of Mr Key’s comments. “He mentioned the good work they had done with the Kim Dotcom case. There were a large number of people at that meeting who heard John Key speak.”
Seems increasingly probable there was GCSB surveillance of Dotcom, maybe right from the time he arrived in NZ. The NZ agencies would not have been ‘confused’ or ‘mistaken’ over Dotcom’s residency, they just treated it as irrelevant to their US instructions.
Key had had numerous GCSB briefings from the time he took office, and would surely have known about this before February 2012. A few words then to praise the troops would have been appropriate, given the Dotcom raid circus just weeks before.
If this jolly gathering happened as surmised, and was taped, it would be interesting to watch and maybe highly damaging to the PM. But it is only a small part of the big picture, which it seems stretched back a long time before.
As the minister in charge of GCSB, the real question is whether the admitted crime of illegal surveillance can be laid at the feet of John Key himself. But who watches the watchers?
Be interesting to see if the MSM do some serious follow ups in what Bennett says and does after the meeting, shades of the key visit to the aspirational family in goffs electorate, opportunistic and hollow like their backers.
Mmmm…Bennett (who let’s face it really avoided committing to a meeting with Sam as much as she could without conclusively proving she was a heartless bitch) is likely to meet with him just for show. Need to keep up the pressure on her or it will be shuffled to the back of the media pile quickly.
Sam for office sounds excellent. You can change the world from a wheelchair : )
Sam could take this in a number of directions. I’d like him to contact the Office of Disabilities (run by MSD) and see if he could work to influence MSD by using his experience to help other people on Sickness and IB’s. If Bennett suggests it to him, even better.
Below is the original article before it was edited a couple of days ago. Had to save as text, otherwise the html wanted to link itself to the update version.
Does that make Danya Levy more senior? as her name does not appear on the article below, but does on the 834am update
Rescuing vulnerable kids: Bennett’s master plan
KATE CHAPMAN
Last updated 05:00 11/10/2012
Share
The Government is encouraging people to dob
in suspected child abusers under a raft of changes aimed at reining in our
horrific child abuse rate.
Social Development Minister Paula Bennett will today launch the White Paper for
Vulnerable Children – the culmination of four years’ work and consultation with
thousands of community groups and concerned parents.
The cornerstone of the Government’s plan is raising awareness of the signs of
child abuse and neglect, and urging people to report it.
Recent high-profile cases have shown vulnerable children were often known to
multiple agencies but a failure to put the pieces together saw them horribly
reabused and even killed.
Mrs Bennett said the plight of vulnerable children had been her driving force
and the policy changes unveiled today simply had to work. “I feel like this is
what I came into Parliament for.”
The White Paper and accompanying Children’s Action Plan were the best that could
have been produced in the current environment, she said.
A Child Protect telephone line is planned for concerned neighbours, family,
friends and professionals to ring when they suspect a child is being badly
treated.
Comments made to the phone line, and information gathered by government and
community organisations, would be entered into a Vulnerable Kids Information
System to track those deemed at risk.
The system would also hold information on high-risk adults who had abused or
neglected children, regardless of whether they were convicted.
Such information sharing was crucial, Mrs Bennett said.
The system would be password-protected, users would be monitored, and
professionals would have restricted access to different levels of information.
Only children considered vulnerable – at risk of, or already experiencing,
maltreatment – would be entered into the system. While accounts could be made
inactive, it was unlikely they would ever be deleted. An expert panel would be
established to nut out details of the system. “The security and the checks to be
put on this information system is vital to its integrity. More than anything
we’re going to work to get that right.”
There would be children wrongly identified as being vulnerable, Mrs Bennett
said.
“If they’re not becoming a child of concern then, as such, they will effectively
drop out of the system.”
The Child Protect line would have a role in ensuring information in the system
was correct and updated. The contact service did not have to be run by the
Social Development Ministry; it could be contracted out to a non-government
organisation.
Ad Feedback The Government also wants those working with children to take
greater responsibility in reporting suspected neglect or abuse. Teachers and
medical professionals would be among those given training to recognise the
signs, and legislation would be introduced “requiring all agencies working with
children to have policies and reporting systems in place to recognise and report
child abuse and neglect”, the White Paper says.
Mrs Bennett said that was not mandatory reporting. “We’re going to really set
some clear rules around it . . . making sure that they follow through and they
do report; we’re also not making it mandatory so they use their professional
judgment better.”
There were concerns that mandatory reporting would mean at-risk children dropped
out of the system and services would be over-run with notifications.
Under the Children’s Action Plan, there would also be controls on who could have
contact with children. People who posed a continuing and serious threat to their
children could have their parental rights removed by a judge.
Mrs Bennett said it was an extreme step and not one that would be taken lightly.
Look at the opening paragraph of the updated article
DANYA LEVY AND KATE CHAPMAN
Last updated 08:34 11/10/2012
New measures to reduce New Zealand’s appalling rate of child abuse are being welcomed by child advocates but Opposition parties say the Government has failed to address poverty which can exacerbate the risk.
Look at the deliberate framing to pit so called child adovate groups (no mention of who), against the “opposition parties”, this is faux support for the NACT government, being created out of total thin air by the MSM!
The opening of the new article below – So between 5am and the 834am update, the “child advocate groups” gave their support did they – This sort of garbage neds to be called out, and in the original article, only a couple of hours earlier, no mention of suport at all, only mention of critics lower down the article…So the article was updated, sanitized and deliberate lies inserted by the looks of it.
KATE CHAPMAN
Last updated 05:00 11/10/2012
The Government is encouraging people to dob
in suspected child abusers under a raft of changes aimed at reining in our
horrific child abuse rate.
Social Development Minister Paula Bennett will today launch the White Paper for
Vulnerable Children – the culmination of four years’ work and consultation with
thousands of community groups and concerned parents.
psychiatry professor says the drugs are being over-prescribed.
Yup what there is , is deliberate misuse of “drugs” used to placate the sheep from wondering why they are feeling so fcked up in the first place…
There you go, have some fluoride, eat some nice lithium, prozac, fluoxetene, have a shed load of mental stress created by all these nice fake systems we are trapping you into, then when you feel bad, go see the nice Dr who will ensure that you stay docile, and if you really feel something is wrong we will send you to the quack who will certify you.
Welfare Justice Dunedin says humiliation of beneficiaries widespread and challenges Work and Income to drop their appeal and use those resources to follow Human Rights Tribunal’s ruling: http://community.scoop.co.nz/2012/10/beneficiary-battles-on/
Quote: ‘We challenge the Ministry to stop using bully tactics and taxpayer money to drag Mr Holmes through the High Court, and to take on board the tribunal’s recommendations. This isn’t an isolated incident. WJD has been inundated with appalling stories of breaches of privacy, humiliation, loss of dignity and a widespread disconnect from professional conduct among WINZ staff.’
I can’t believe I just heard that fool of a Housing Minister, Heatley whining on Radio NZ that Hone should quit bitching about the GI evictions and just be grateful his people up north are going to get hand-me-down houses.
Poor sam wasn’t given a lousy $40 for food,which he travelled miles for in a wheelchair,
but $600.000 of tax payers money can be given for the ‘elite’ to have a weekend of golf
in Queenstown,the Micheal Hill tournament.
My love and support go out to sam and hope that he is ok now and qudos to Hone
for supporting him.
lanth this is only a comparison between the major trading blocks .
They are all reducing the value of their currency at the same time which is not having an effect on their economic performance!
If these trading blocks had not all reduced their currency value at the same time their would be a different story!
Like New Zealand not doing any thing the Aussies have done it for us to a degree.
I dont condone violence but bennett was just on the nation,i actually felt she needed a
slap.
The ignoramace can’t even admit that ‘poverty’ is the problem.
Having hundreds of thousands of NZ go cold and hungry in this land of hydropower and milk is a direct attack on their daily wellbeing and therefore violence on a massive scale.
This illustrates the difference between the left and right when it comes to using humour in a political setting. Basically the right try to be amusing while making a point whereas the left are about as subtle as a sledgehammer.
Its a pleasent way to pass the time. Its interesting though the amount of times I’ve said something on here and got flack for it then a post is written later which is very similar to what I’ve written.
Any time I’ve written about the problems within Labour especially why they lost the last couple of elections theres been a post in similar content. Not saying I influence the posts (more likely that myself and the person writing it have similar ideas) but it seems its not what you say so much as who says it.
“but it seems its not what you say so much as who says it.”
Yep. The Standard (breaking the inconsistently applied policy of referring to The Standard as a singular entity) enjoys frothing and pointing fingers at those who break from the party line. The group think is weird and unwieldy.
“So no examples, then.”
I think you mean to say ‘So, no examples then?’ Grammar matters.
chris73
Humour with excess for the left? Just reminding everyone of the cleverness of Spitting Image in their British satirical forays on Youtube. Bit of fun for everyone – those not being lampooned felt left out.
Oh I’d agree it was juvenile humour. But no subtlety? Remember when you first looked at it – you had to look at it at least twice to figure out if it was real or not
A lot of thought is taken before the sledgehammer is used efficiently by the left,with the
right it is thrown around and aimed at those who just need a hug and some love.
To chris73
Why is this site soooo slow, it’s like stepping back to the days of dial up?
Great looking site but the usability is crap.
The Standard would have to be one of the slowest sites on the web, I don’t get it,the site is 99% text it should load in an instant.
BM
I have been finding that the site is extremely slow often. I haven’t noticed this before. It seems to take ages to get comments up often. Also I click on a recent comment from the right hand box and get sent to some other page or it takes ages to find though I have noticed that there is a difficulty with that when there are over say 100 comments.
I thought it was from my setup. It has been suggested that I use Firefox instead of Opera so I could possibly help from my side, but I haven’t had such problems in the past. I don’t know whether the constant upgrades I get with Opera may introduce some new routine.
Sites going OK for me, but if LPrent or someone can tell me how to stop the new post notifications from being emailed to me it would be really awesome. My smartphone dings non-stop..
The comment on Radionz this morning about the huge annual payments to heads of government agencies in money terms (rather than in percentage terms) sparked a memory of the right wing business interests talking about achieving lower wages for all by using tendering or an auction system to set the rates.
Review of pay for public sector heads wanted
The Green Party wants an urgent review of salaries of public sector chief executives after a report by the State Services Commission showed some are paid more than $600,000.
Now when top salaries are getting into the money gouging level for these executives working supposedly to deliver government efficiency and service to the people (often not achieved) in a non-profit situation, I think that tendering would be an excellent idea as part of the survey of candidates available to human resources. At present setting salaries seems very inflationary and similar to the model that used to be followed prior to 1984 by workers and their unions which the government has stamped out. I think we should be aiming for ability and track record rather than rabbiting on about getting ‘the best’. Let’s get away from high-flown language that builds images and go practical through tendering with the usual careful proviso which I think is – (lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted).
And economically it is counter-productive to combine departments and then multiply the salary of the top executive on that basis, instead of looking at economies of scale with a chance to get more productivity from the top banana. This is a slippery slope that the salary-setting body has started on and it’s time that our responsible? economic entities levelled this yellow brick road presently paved with gold bars.
You can always tell where the power lies in a society by the pay rates, but more easily by the buildings…
When the church has power they build great cathedrals.
When the military has power they build great garrisons and fortresses.
When business has power they build great glass towers.
When governments have power they build great offices etc. Currently the power in society rests with government. That is why pre-earthquake Christchurch’s most expensive building was the IRD building.
Similarly, the new Chch City Council building.
Similarly, the Court of Appeal building in Wellington.
I think a simple cap of $250k for a public servant, including the PM, would be fine. If the CEOs didn’t want to work for that they can wander off to the private sector. There is, after all, plenty of more people below them with the capability of doing the job just as well, if not better, than them.
What about tendering for the top pay? Has this been done anywhere in the world? Are we doing our usual and playing just part of a game that others have already left behind in our devotion to our free market version?
why is the standard so slow?
ask the GCSB
larfffs.
as for public service salaries.
this national party government does not believe in government but it believes in patronage, pelf, peculation and paying off its supporters.
figure it out for yourself.
captain hook
Like your alliteration. And pelf – didn’t know that – good word I see it comes right down from 14th century Old French pelfre meaning booty. The desire for which connects us down the centuries ay!
The crisis has with one stroke not only discredited the particular decisions by those responsible for the crisis—central bankers, financial regulators, and bankers—but it has disproved the entire mainstream “neo-classical” paradigm of thinking about economics and economic policy. The Washington Consensus, the basis for recent government and central bank policies all over the world, has been proven wrong.
But the current crisis is not the only piece of evidence that there has been something seriously amiss with the mainstream economic theories and the policies based on them. Other evidence includes the increasingly visible environmental destruction, or the many previous financial and economic crises the world has seen. Indeed, banking and financial crises have recurred with such frequency over the past centuries that their occurrence must be considered one of the few constants in economic life. Each time, much surprise is exhibited by the experts. Over the past three decades, the number of banking and financial crises has increased (to over 100 countries) and the swings of the business cycle have become more pronounced. (It is noteworthy that this happened, as central bank independence and power over economic policy has increased significantly during this time period).
Unfortunately Draco, the usual method of dealing with major issues will play out.
The conservatives will deny and ignore and do nothing about it. It will take the liberals to make the necessary changes, which will then be embraced by the conservatives.
Gawd I wish that Shane Jones would learn to STFU. Abusing the Greens over their perfectly appropriate suggestion that we should allow satirists to make fun of commercial ads is ridiculous.
If this sort of satire is not allowed the next thing the commercial interests will do is try and ban any sort of adverse comments about them, even when they do things like use slave labour or plunder depleted fish stocks or kill Maui’s dolphin.
Perhaps Shearer should be thinking about Jones when he does his next reshuffle.
How can Jones demoted when he has no portfolio areas in the first place? I don’t like rewarding poor performance, but perhaps he should be given something to keep him occupied. Sport or racing, for example.
A mistake by Helen long overdue for correction, he did well in the 2011 polls but up against Sharples a more credible candidate would have taken that Maori seat. They just needed a plausible alternative to PIta and didn’t get one from Labour, less of the duck more of the deserving is required.
ha ha that spoof is absolutely brilliant and absolutely spot on.
Shane Jones – fuck off and grow up you useless chook. If you can’t handle the heat then get out of the kitchen. Fancy trying to stop people doing this sort of thing …. You belong in the USA Shane Jones – see ya later.
Sealord, Meridian, all the oil companies, they all spout bullshit. Is Shane Jones seriously defending the image and perception they try to convey? What a fucking muppet.
“This is a bill which will definitely lead to the destruction of jobs, which makes it a crackpot idea. Jobs are not going to be maintained if brands are destroyed.”
If the brand can’t stand up to a little satire highlighting the truth behind the brand then it doesn’t deserve to continue. In fact, it probably should have been shut down by government.
exactly Draco, but rather than shut them down someone would certainly be able to take a case against Sealord under the Fair Trading Act – misleading and deceptive conduct in trade. The FTA is one of the easiest pieces of legislation to take court action under. Come on greenie activists, give it a go………
ms
The beef barons in USA actually got nasty when Ophra made some remark about why she wouldn’t eat hamburgers because of the beef not being healthy. Forgotten what happened.
By the look of it, that stats tab was what was causing the recent periodic slowdowns on the site.
It looks like it was locking up on the comment count query when a comment was being stored and queries were stacking up waiting for it. It effectively stalled the page display for many. I set up a graph to look for the numbers of threads active on the database at any one time – was getting these strange spikes.
I’ll have to recode that to do it on a periodic basis or to keep a running total. In the meantime it can go off. Enough playing about. Time to head back to work.
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Weak as I am, no tears for youWeak as I am, no tears for youDeep as I am, I'm no one's foolWeak as I amSongwriters: Deborah Ann Dyer / Richard Keith Lewis / Martin Ivor Kent / Robert Arnold FranceMorena. This morning, I couldn’t settle on a single topic. Too ...
Australian policy makers are vastly underestimating how climate change will disrupt national security and regional stability across the Indo-Pacific. A new ASPI report assesses the ways climate impacts could threaten Indonesia’s economic and security interests ...
So here we are in London again because we’re now at the do-it-while-you-still-can stage of life. More warm wide-armed hugs, more long talks and long walks and drinks in lovely old pubs with our lovely daughter.And meanwhile the world is once more in one of its assume-the-brace-position stages.We turned on ...
Hi,Back in September of 2023, I got pitched an interview:David -Thanks for the quick response to the DM! Means the world. Re-stating some of the DM below for your team’s reference -I run a business called Animal Capital - we are a venture capital fund advised by Noah Beck, Paris ...
I didn’t want to write about this – but, alas, the 2020s have forced my hand. I am going to talk about the Trump Tariffs… and in the process probably irritate nearly everyone. You see, alone on the Internet, I am one of those people who think we need a ...
Maybe people are only just beginning to notice the close alignment of Russia and China. It’s discussed as a sudden new phenomenon in world affairs, but in fact it’s not new at all. The two ...
The High Court has just ruled that the government has been violating one of the oldest Treaty settlements, the Sealord deal: The High Court has found the Crown has breached one of New Zealand's oldest Treaty Settlements by appropriating Māori fishing quota without compensation. It relates to the 1992 ...
Darwin’s proposed Middle Arm Sustainable Development Precinct is set to be the heart of a new integrated infrastructure network in the Northern Territory, larger and better than what currently exists in northern Australia. However, the ...
Local body elections are in October, and so like a lot of people, I received the usual pre-election enrolment confirmation from the Orange Man in the post. And I was horrified to see that it included the following: Why horrified? After all, surely using email, rather ...
Australia needs to deliver its commitment under the Seoul Declaration to create an Australian AI safety, or security, institute. Australia is the only signatory to the declaration that has yet to meet its commitments. Given ...
Ko kōpū ka rere i te paeMe ko Hine RuhiTīaho mai tō arohaMe ko Hine RuhiDa da da ba du da da ba du da da da ba du da da da da da daDa da da ba du da da ba du da da da ba du da da ...
Army, Navy and AirForce personnel in ceremonial dress: an ongoing staffing exodus means we may get more ships, drones and planes but not have enough ‘boots on the ground’ to use them. Photo: Lynn GrievesonLong stories short in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning:PM Christopher Luxon says the Government can ...
If you’re a qualified individual looking to join the Australian Army, prepare for a world of frustration over the next 12 to 18 months. While thorough vetting is essential, the inefficiency of the Australian Defence ...
I’ve inserted a tidbit and rumours section1. Colonoscopy wait times increase, procedures drop under NationalWait times for urgent, non-urgent and surveillance colonoscopies all progressively worsened last year. Health NZ data shows the total number of publicly-funded colonoscopies dropped by more than 7 percent.Health NZ chief medical officer Helen Stokes-Lampard blamed ...
Three billion dollars has been wiped off the value of New Zealand’s share market as the rout of global financial markets caught up with the local market. A Sāmoan national has been sentenced for migrant exploitation and corruption following a five-year investigation that highlights the serious consequences of immigration fraud ...
This is a guest post by Darren Davis. It originally appeared on his excellent blog, Adventures in Transitland, which we encourage you to check out. It is shared by kind permission. Rail Network Investment Plan quietly dropped While much media attention focused on the 31st March 2025 announcement that the replacement Cook ...
Amendments to Indonesia’s military law risk undermining civilian supremacy and the country’s defence capabilities. Passed by the House of Representatives on 20 March, the main changes include raising the retirement age and allowing military officers ...
The StrategistBy Alfin Febrian Basundoro and Jascha Ramba Santoso
So New Zealand is about to spend $12 billion on our defence forces over the next four years – with $9 million of it being new money that is not being spent on pressing needs here at home. Somehow this lavish spend-up on Defence is “affordable,” says PM Christopher Luxon, ...
Donald Trump’s philosophy about the United States’ place in the world is historically selfish and will impoverish his country’s spirit. While he claimed last week to be ‘liberating’ Americans from the exploiters and freeloaders who’ve ...
China’s crackdown on cyber-scam centres on the Thailand-Myanmar border may cause a shift away from Mandarin, towards English-speaking victims. Scammers also used the 28 March earthquake to scam international victims. Australia, with its proven capabilities ...
At the 2005 election campaign, the National Party colluded with a weirdo cult, the Exclusive Brethren, to run a secret hate campaign against the Greens. It was the first really big example of the rich using dark money to interfere in our democracy. And unfortunately, it seems that they're trying ...
Many of you will know that in collaboration with the University of Queensland we created and ran the massive open online course (MOOC) "Denial101x - Making sense of climate science denial" on the edX platform. Within nine years - between April 2015 and February 2024 - we offered 15 runs ...
How will the US assault on trade affect geopolitical relations within Asia? Will nations turn to China and seek protection by trading with each other? The happy snaps a week ago of the trade ministers ...
I mentioned this on Friday - but thought it deserved some emphasis.Auckland Waitematā District Commander Superintendent Naila Hassan has responded to Countering Hate Speech Aotearoa, saying police have cleared Brian Tamaki of all incitement charges relating to the Te Atatu library rainbow event assault.Hassan writes:..There is currently insufficient evidence to ...
With the report of the recent intelligence review by Heather Smith and Richard Maude finally released, critics could look on and wonder: why all the fuss? After all, while the list of recommendations is substantial, ...
Well, I don't know if I'm readyTo be the man I have to beI'll take a breath, I'll take her by my sideWe stand in awe, we've created lifeWith arms wide open under the sunlightWelcome to this place, I'll show you everythingSongwriters: Scott A. Stapp / Mark T. Tremonti.Today is ...
Staff at Kāinga Ora are expecting details of another round of job cuts, with the Green Party claiming more than 500 jobs are set to go. The New Zealand Defence Force has made it easier for people to apply for a job in a bid to get more boots on ...
Australia’s agriculture sector and food system have prospered under a global rules-based system influenced by Western liberal values. But the assumptions, policy approaches and economic frameworks that have traditionally supported Australia’s food security are no ...
Following Trump’s tariff announcement, US stock values fell by the most ever in value terms (US$6.6 trillion). Photo: Getty ImagesLong story shortest in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning:Donald Trump just detonated a neutron bomb under the globalised economy, but this time the Fed isn’t cutting interest rates to rescue ...
A listing of 36 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, March 30, 2025 thru Sat, April 5, 2025. This week's roundup is again published by category and sorted by number of articles included in each. The formatting is a ...
This is a longer read.Summary:Trump’s tariffs are reckless, disastrous and hurt the poorest countries deeply. It will stoke inflation, and may cause another recession. Funds/investments around the world have tanked.Trump’s actions emulate the anti-economic logic of another right wing libertarian politician - Liz Truss. She had her political career cut ...
We are all suckers for hope.He’s just being provocative, people will say, he wouldn’t really go that far. They wouldn’t really go that far.Germany in the 1920s and 30s was one of the world’s most educated, culturally sophisticated, and scientifically advanced societies.It had a strong democratic constitution with extensive civil ...
Skeptical Science is partnering with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. You can submit claims you think need checking via the tipline. Is Mars warming? Mars’ climate varies due to completely different reasons than Earth’s, and available data indicates no temperature trends comparable to Earth’s ...
Max Harris and Max Rashbrooke discuss how we turn around the right wing slogans like nanny state, woke identity politics, and the inefficiency of the public sector – and how we build a progressive agenda. From Donald Trump to David Seymour, from Peter Dutton to Christopher Luxon, we are subject to a ...
Max Harris and Max Rashbrooke discuss how we turn around the right wing slogans like nanny state, woke identity politics, and the inefficiency of the public sector – and how we build a progressive agenda. From Donald Trump to David Seymour, from Peter Dutton to Christopher Luxon, we are subject to a ...
The Green Party recognises the extension of visa allowances for our Pacific whānau as a step in the right direction but continues to call for a Pacific Visa Waiver. ...
The Government yesterday released its annual child poverty statistics, and by its own admission, more tamariki across Aotearoa are now living in material hardship. ...
Today, Te Pāti Māori join the motu in celebration as the Treaty Principles Bill is voted down at its second reading. “From the beginning, this Bill was never welcome in this House,” said Te Pāti Māori Co-Leader, Rawiri Waititi. “Our response to the first reading was one of protest: protesting ...
The Green Party is proud to have voted down the Coalition Government’s Treaty Principles Bill, an archaic piece of legislation that sought to attack the nation’s founding agreement. ...
A Member’s Bill in the name of Green Party MP Julie Anne Genter which aims to stop coal mining, the Crown Minerals (Prohibition of Mining) Amendment Bill, has been pulled from Parliament’s ‘biscuit tin’ today. ...
Labour MP Kieran McAnulty’s Members Bill to make the law simpler and fairer for businesses operating on Easter, Anzac and Christmas Days has passed its first reading after a conscience vote in Parliament. ...
Nicola Willis continues to sit on her hands amid a global economic crisis, leaving the Reserve Bank to act for New Zealanders who are worried about their jobs, mortgages, and KiwiSaver. ...
Today, the Oranga Tamariki (Repeal of Section 7AA) Amendment Bill has passed its third and final reading, but there is one more stage before it becomes law. The Governor-General must give their ‘Royal assent’ for any bill to become legally enforceable. This means that, even if a bill gets voted ...
Abortion care at Whakatāne Hospital has been quietly shelved, with patients told they will likely have to travel more than an hour to Tauranga to get the treatment they need. ...
Thousands of New Zealanders’ submissions are missing from the official parliamentary record because the National-dominated Justice Select Committee has rushed work on the Treaty Principles Bill. ...
Today’s announcement of 10 percent tariffs for New Zealand goods entering the United States is disappointing for exporters and consumers alike, with the long-lasting impact on prices and inflation still unknown. ...
The National Government’s choices have contributed to a slow-down in the building sector, as thousands of people have lost their jobs in construction. ...
Willie Apiata’s decision to hand over his Victoria Cross to the Minister for Veterans is a powerful and selfless act, made on behalf of all those who have served our country. ...
The Privileges Committee has denied fundamental rights to Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, Rawiri Waititi and Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, breaching their own standing orders, breaching principles of natural justice, and highlighting systemic prejudice and discrimination within our parliamentary processes. The three MPs were summoned to the privileges committee following their performance of a haka ...
April 1 used to be a day when workers could count on a pay rise with stronger support for those doing it tough, but that’s not the case under this Government. ...
Winston Peters is shopping for smaller ferries after Nicola Willis torpedoed the original deal, which would have delivered new rail enabled ferries next year. ...
The Government should work with other countries to press the Myanmar military regime to stop its bombing campaign especially while the country recovers from the devastating earthquake. ...
The Green Party is calling for the Government to scrap proposed changes to Early Childhood Care, after attending a petition calling for the Government to ‘Put tamariki at the heart of decisions about ECE’. ...
New Zealand First has introduced a Member’s Bill today that will remove the power of MPs conscience votes and ensure mandatory national referendums are held before any conscience issues are passed into law. “We are giving democracy and power back to the people”, says New Zealand First Leader Winston Peters. ...
Welcome to members of the diplomatic corp, fellow members of parliament, the fourth estate, foreign affairs experts, trade tragics, ladies and gentlemen. ...
In recent weeks, disturbing instances of state-sanctioned violence against Māori have shed light on the systemic racism permeating our institutions. An 11-year-old autistic Māori child was forcibly medicated at the Henry Bennett Centre, a 15-year-old had his jaw broken by police in Napier, kaumātua Dean Wickliffe went on a hunger ...
Confidence in the job market has continued to drop to its lowest level in five years as more New Zealanders feel uncertain about finding work, keeping their jobs, and getting decent pay, according to the latest Westpac-McDermott Miller Employment Confidence Index. ...
The Greens are calling on the Government to follow through on their vague promises of environmental protection in their Resource Management Act (RMA) reform. ...
The Government’s new planning legislation to replace the Resource Management Act will make it easier to get things done while protecting the environment, say Minister Responsible for RMA Reform Chris Bishop and Under-Secretary Simon Court. “The RMA is broken and everyone knows it. It makes it too hard to build ...
Trade and Investment Minister Todd McClay has today launched a public consultation on New Zealand and India’s negotiations of a formal comprehensive Free Trade Agreement. “Negotiations are getting underway, and the Public’s views will better inform us in the early parts of this important negotiation,” Mr McClay says. We are ...
More than 900 thousand superannuitants and almost five thousand veterans are among the New Zealanders set to receive a significant financial boost from next week, an uplift Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston says will help support them through cost-of-living challenges. “I am pleased to confirm that from 1 ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra It takes a bit for Labor not to preference the Greens but on Friday it was announced that in the Melbourne seat of Macnamara, where Jewish MP Josh Burns is embattled, the ALP will run ...
By Layla Bailey-McDowell, RNZ Māori news journalist Legal experts and Māori advocates say the fight to protect Te Tiriti is only just beginning — as the controversial Treaty Principles Bill is officially killed in Parliament. The bill — which seeks to redefine the principles of Te Tiriti o Waitangi — ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Wesley Morgan, Research Associate, Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW Sydney Australia’s relationship with its regional neighbours could be in doubt under a Coalition government after two Pacific leaders challenged Opposition Leader Peter Dutton over his weak climate stance. This week, ...
An additional tariff by the US on New Zealand exporters is harmful and the Minister of Trade has written to his American counterparts to tell them that. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sophia Staite, Lecturer in Humanities, University of Tasmania Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures Social media is ablaze with reports of kids going wild at screenings of A Minecraft Movie. Some cinemas are cracking down. There are reports of cinemas calling ...
The Treaty Principles Bill has been brutally defeated in Parliament. We have highlights from key speeches, and explain why its demise is so unusual. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hunter Fujak, Senior Lecturer in Sport Management, Deakin University Few issues in Australian sport generate as much media noise or emotional fan reactions as player movement, especially in our major winter codes the National Rugby League (NRL) and Australian Football League (AFL). ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Isabelle Ng, PhD candidate, College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University A couple of whip coral goby (_Bryaninops yongei_).randi_ang/Shutterstock Swim along the edge of a coral reef and you’ll often see schools of sleek, torpedo-shaped fishes gliding through the currents, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Charles Kemp, Professor, School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne Shutterstock Languages are windows into the worlds of the people who speak them – reflecting what they value and experience daily. So perhaps it’s no surprise different languages highlight different ...
A new poem by Daniel Frears. Pale Straw this season’s colour is pale straw a revelatory colour for an oh so special season it might mess with your head, or mine you can rub my belly like I was a dog. all actions are allowed in this .. phase. if ...
The only published and available best-selling indie book chart in New Zealand is the top 10 sales list recorded every week at Unity Books’ stores in High St, Auckland, and Willis St, Wellington.AUCKLAND1 The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins (Hay House, $32) “A truly helpful treatise on seeing ...
Tara Ward watches the return of The Handmaid’s Tale and discovers the dystopia of the future now feels all too real. If you like your television so bleak that you need to curl into a ball and rock back and forward afterwards, then clear the floor because I have great ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne A national YouGov poll, conducted April 4–10 from a sample of 1,505, gave Labor a 52.5–47.5 lead, a 1.5-point gain for Labor ...
Submissions close today on proposed reforms that would mark the most significant shakeup of fisheries in decades. Here’s what you need to know.On February 12, oceans and fisheries minister Shane Jones held up a wagging finger and a shiny, plastic-comb-bound document as Wellington’s downtown seagulls squawked overhead. Among a ...
This bill sought to fundamentally alter the meaning of Te Tiriti o Waitangi by selectively and incorrectly interpreting the reo Māori text, says E tū National Secretary Rachel Mackintosh. ...
Luxon has an opportunity to emerge as a stabiliser without the diplomatic risk of poking the bear in the White House. Last month, pundits from across the political spectrum were begging Christopher Luxon to add a modicum of clarity to the way he communicates after a disastrous interview with Mike ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brett Mitchell, Professor of Nursing and Health Services Research, University of Newcastle Annie Spratt/Unsplash Hospital-acquired infections are infections patients didn’t have when they were admitted to hospital. The most common include wound infections after surgery, urinary tract infections and pneumonia. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christina Hanna, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Planning, University of Waikato Christina Hanna, CC BY-SA Once floodwaters subside, talk of planned retreat inevitably rises. Within Aotearoa New Zealand, several communities from north to south – including Kumeū, Kawatiri Westport and parts ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Arian Wallach, Future Fellow in Ecology, Queensland University of Technology michael garner/Shutterstock In 1938, zoologist Ellis Le Geyt Troughton mourned that Australia’s “gentle and specialized creatures” were “unable to cope with changed conditions and introduced enemies”. The role of these ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Peetz, Laurie Carmichael Distinguished Research Fellow at the Centre for Future Work, and Professor Emeritus, Griffith Business School, Griffith University doublelee/Shutterstock Can the government actually make a difference to the wages Australians earn? A lot of attention always falls on ...
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Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dan Woodman, TR Ashworth Professor in Sociology, The University of Melbourne Securing the welfare of future generations seems like solid grounds for judging policies and politicians, especially during an election campaign. Political legacies are on the line because the stakes are so ...
Syria: who’s backing who?
http://kiaoragaza.wordpress.com/2012/10/12/syria-whos-backing-who/
Syria rebels sponsor Bahrain abuses and kills unarmed protestors
Pays CNN to cover up.
It seems National’s response to falling decisively behind in the polls is to launch an all out attack on David Shearer, presumably in the hope of somehow destabilizing Labour. The attack was signalled by an unusually active Mathew Hooten desperately trying to re-frame debate this way on every blog he thought might be read by a journalist and is being vigorously pushed by the right’s liars, repeaters and shills (Slater, Farrar and O’Sullivan) today. It is truly desperate stuff, but cunning in a shit house rat, Steven Joyce kind of way. Ot won’t work, but i would suggest we all start using the frantic mud slinging at Shearer as a reliable indicator of just how ugly the internal polling results are getting for forgetful John and his shambolic government.
In the last week, it looks like Shearer has started to lead the news agenda, rather than just respond to it: bringing up the issue of key talking at the GCSB staff cafe; announcing a joint parliamentary inquiry into manufacturing. National have been put in the position of having to respond to these stories.
On policy, I think Shearer is till too far to the right for me. But on leadership, I think Shearer is starting to show some.
Hi Karol –
What the above statement really indicates is that the media are seeking to shift control the debate – Shearer is not leading anything, and is no leader, never was, never will be which is why he was selected in the first place.
The aim of the media, as you will be aware is to control the context of the narrative, to shift and subvert, missdirect and deceive, thats what it exists for.
While it is too soon to say the writing is on the wall for NACT next election, the media are hedging their bets by attempting to make Shearer look like potentential (he is also their man), thats all the game is about…We know this because of the way the same media talks unfavourably, for the most part about DC. That said I do not see DC as any saviour of this country, he knows how the system is designed, and what its designed for, its the way a manufactured theatre must function, to mimic democracy
From what I can make out, the present system is designed to keep democracy at bay. If we had democracy we certainly wouldn’t have capitalism or the “free-markets” which only benefit the owners.
Remember
https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/548320_456194924419791_351635435_n.jpg
Thats right JM.
Which is why when people from any spectrum say “but its legal” – I wonder how little they understand that its coming to them some day too…
Legal doesn’t always equal right and that is the truth that people who always cry but it’s legal don’t seem to grok.
Sorry Karol Shearer is not leading he is being led by the nose. And until the ‘leaders’ are dug out and gone, then Labour will just be a bunch of wanna be’s, and worst of all HAS BEENS!
Could you clarify what you mean, please? Afaik, he’s not right wing at all, except in slurs from others.
Fran O’Sullivan, tempted with the baubles of back room banterings, does seem to have drifted to the opposing shore from that which she first patrolled
please help me to understand why this comment was put into moderation?
[Sorry – no idea – if it happens frequently then you share an IP range with a known spammer or troll – let us know if that is the case. r0b]
down in wellington at work ( on wakefield st) and have posted from here numerous times over the last few years. This last week I am having a ridiculously impossible time posting from computers or phone, at work at home or on public machines.
past 24 hours I have been checking on downforeveryoneorjustme.com and usually get a yes it is down for everyone
On Phone: Most times site doesn’t load, or tells me the comment was not published, then i go to page and it was published, or does the super frustrating jump away from the text entry box when trying to add text etc which has been going on for ages now. Basically entering from the phone is impossible without a lot of patience.
I do nothing to my phone. I use ‘approved supplier aps’ i use it more a s acamera and memo book than i do a phone. It gets turned on. It gets turned off. Any issues with anything relating to software are not coming from me. Every other site i visit is fine, same as for the pc access. They load fine, run fine, text entry is fine. Every other site is fine. Something very screwy going on and i strongly suspect thestandard site is getting messed with.
Anyways, this is not a complaint just trying to understand what is going on
For the apologists and spinners the drive of the last few days has been to slide over the nub of matters, Key’s palpable dishonesty, into a story about the story.
However, as numerous commenters have said, the smell of shit is all over Key. Peoples’ nostrils are already, irreversibly, on alert.
Too late Johnny Boy. You’re in this business up to your neck and in a more or less way everyone knows it including your dissembling soldiers. That’s why we have the story about the story, the shrill attacks on Shearer, and pleas/directions towards indulgence.
Clay feet…….no clothes………fibbing little boy……..rabbit in the headlights.
It’s hilarious.
The increasingly idiotic Fran O’S is advocating for Key to get the GCSB to investigate David Shearer, she obviously wrote the manual for Putin and before that Ol’Joe Stalin himself. She certainly looks and sounds old enough to have been in the shadows in the 40’s!
What these ‘journalists’ like franet, JA and their blog buddies don’t seem to realise because their heads are so far up NACTs butt that this shows just how biased and in the pocket of the hollowmen they are.
Readers of this site and other informed sources already know that but in terms of swaying any swingers it’s probably going to do the opposite and undermine what little credibility, if any, they had.
This is interesting though. It seems Mold’s partner wasn’t at the GCSB at the time of Key’s cafe talk to staff:
Just as I thought, Karol, a large number present – is one of them, at least, prepared to testify to what they heard? (Or have I missed something?)
That’s the million dollar question – will any more of these people who were there come forward?
And this sounds on the mark.
http://www.kiwipolitico.com/
Seems increasingly probable there was GCSB surveillance of Dotcom, maybe right from the time he arrived in NZ. The NZ agencies would not have been ‘confused’ or ‘mistaken’ over Dotcom’s residency, they just treated it as irrelevant to their US instructions.
Key had had numerous GCSB briefings from the time he took office, and would surely have known about this before February 2012. A few words then to praise the troops would have been appropriate, given the Dotcom raid circus just weeks before.
If this jolly gathering happened as surmised, and was taped, it would be interesting to watch and maybe highly damaging to the PM. But it is only a small part of the big picture, which it seems stretched back a long time before.
As the minister in charge of GCSB, the real question is whether the admitted crime of illegal surveillance can be laid at the feet of John Key himself. But who watches the watchers?
Which post at Kiwipolitico are you talking about?
Sorry..,,
http://www.kiwipolitico.com/2012/10/more-questions-about-the-dotcom-spying-case/#comment-248793
Gets right to the bone.
The only explanation I’ve seen that makes sense..so far….
Sam lives to fight another day!
http://www.northernadvocate.co.nz/news/sam-ends-30-day-hunger-strike/1580887/
Governments all over the world are making Sam Kuha, and thousands like him, bear the brunt of this crisis. Saddening really.
I hope this isnt the last we hear from him…sound opportunistic, but he should have a crack at running for office.
Be interesting to see if the MSM do some serious follow ups in what Bennett says and does after the meeting, shades of the key visit to the aspirational family in goffs electorate, opportunistic and hollow like their backers.
Mmmm…Bennett (who let’s face it really avoided committing to a meeting with Sam as much as she could without conclusively proving she was a heartless bitch) is likely to meet with him just for show. Need to keep up the pressure on her or it will be shuffled to the back of the media pile quickly.
Sam for office sounds excellent. You can change the world from a wheelchair : )
Sam could take this in a number of directions. I’d like him to contact the Office of Disabilities (run by MSD) and see if he could work to influence MSD by using his experience to help other people on Sickness and IB’s. If Bennett suggests it to him, even better.
Below is the original article before it was edited a couple of days ago. Had to save as text, otherwise the html wanted to link itself to the update version.
Does that make Danya Levy more senior? as her name does not appear on the article below, but does on the 834am update
Rescuing vulnerable kids: Bennett’s master plan
KATE CHAPMAN
Last updated 05:00 11/10/2012
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The Government is encouraging people to dob
in suspected child abusers under a raft of changes aimed at reining in our
horrific child abuse rate.
Social Development Minister Paula Bennett will today launch the White Paper for
Vulnerable Children – the culmination of four years’ work and consultation with
thousands of community groups and concerned parents.
The cornerstone of the Government’s plan is raising awareness of the signs of
child abuse and neglect, and urging people to report it.
Recent high-profile cases have shown vulnerable children were often known to
multiple agencies but a failure to put the pieces together saw them horribly
reabused and even killed.
Mrs Bennett said the plight of vulnerable children had been her driving force
and the policy changes unveiled today simply had to work. “I feel like this is
what I came into Parliament for.”
The White Paper and accompanying Children’s Action Plan were the best that could
have been produced in the current environment, she said.
A Child Protect telephone line is planned for concerned neighbours, family,
friends and professionals to ring when they suspect a child is being badly
treated.
Comments made to the phone line, and information gathered by government and
community organisations, would be entered into a Vulnerable Kids Information
System to track those deemed at risk.
The system would also hold information on high-risk adults who had abused or
neglected children, regardless of whether they were convicted.
Such information sharing was crucial, Mrs Bennett said.
The system would be password-protected, users would be monitored, and
professionals would have restricted access to different levels of information.
Only children considered vulnerable – at risk of, or already experiencing,
maltreatment – would be entered into the system. While accounts could be made
inactive, it was unlikely they would ever be deleted. An expert panel would be
established to nut out details of the system. “The security and the checks to be
put on this information system is vital to its integrity. More than anything
we’re going to work to get that right.”
There would be children wrongly identified as being vulnerable, Mrs Bennett
said.
“If they’re not becoming a child of concern then, as such, they will effectively
drop out of the system.”
The Child Protect line would have a role in ensuring information in the system
was correct and updated. The contact service did not have to be run by the
Social Development Ministry; it could be contracted out to a non-government
organisation.
Ad Feedback The Government also wants those working with children to take
greater responsibility in reporting suspected neglect or abuse. Teachers and
medical professionals would be among those given training to recognise the
signs, and legislation would be introduced “requiring all agencies working with
children to have policies and reporting systems in place to recognise and report
child abuse and neglect”, the White Paper says.
Mrs Bennett said that was not mandatory reporting. “We’re going to really set
some clear rules around it . . . making sure that they follow through and they
do report; we’re also not making it mandatory so they use their professional
judgment better.”
There were concerns that mandatory reporting would mean at-risk children dropped
out of the system and services would be over-run with notifications.
Under the Children’s Action Plan, there would also be controls on who could have
contact with children. People who posed a continuing and serious threat to their
children could have their parental rights removed by a judge.
Mrs Bennett said it was an extreme step and not one that would be taken lightly.
New civil child abuse prevention orders would give judges the power to place
restrictions on people who posed a high risk to a child or future children.
Critics may claim Mrs Bennett has ignored the real threat for a number of Kiwi
children – poverty.
“I was always blatantly targeting these most vulnerable, abused and neglected
children in this country and that’s what this piece of work was always about,”
Mrs Bennett said.
‘WE CAN DO MUCH BETTER FOR FAILED KIDS’
Social Development Minister Paula Bennett puts her mouth where her heart is:
that too many Kiwi kids are failed, but that we can do much better.
“The day I got offered the job of Minister of Social Development the first thing
I said to the prime minister on the phone, at 9pm on a Sunday, was ‘does it
include Child, Youth and Family?’
The former solo mum has a clear idea of what she wants and how to get it. She’ll
listen, but once a plan is set in motion there’s no stopping the determined
Waitakere MP.
New Zealand’s child abuse record is an embarrassment to everyone; none more so
than the woman charged with overseeing child welfare.
Ms Bennett said that was her driving force since entering Parliament.
“It is my key driver, without a doubt.
“I feel like [the White Paper] is one of the biggest and certainly most
significant changes that will be in my time as minister.”
Early in her first term as minister, Ms Bennett was in the United Kingdom when
she decided we needed a White Paper on vulnerable children.
First came the Green Paper – a discussion document launched amongst much
fanfare.
Almost 10,000 submissions later, the Government has released its reaction to the
suggestions: The White Paper and Children’s Action Plan, which Ms Bennett says
will make a difference in the life of the most vulnerable kids in our society.
“I’m unapologetic in my saying we can do a better job for them and that’s where
my focus is.”
– © Fairfax NZ News
Wonder if those “failed kids” she talks about are the same ones who are in the so-called “long tail of failure at school?”
muzza
Thanks for giving us the info.
Look at the opening paragraph of the updated article
DANYA LEVY AND KATE CHAPMAN
Last updated 08:34 11/10/2012
Look at the deliberate framing to pit so called child adovate groups (no mention of who), against the “opposition parties”, this is faux support for the NACT government, being created out of total thin air by the MSM!
The opening of the new article below – So between 5am and the 834am update, the “child advocate groups” gave their support did they – This sort of garbage neds to be called out, and in the original article, only a couple of hours earlier, no mention of suport at all, only mention of critics lower down the article…So the article was updated, sanitized and deliberate lies inserted by the looks of it.
KATE CHAPMAN
Last updated 05:00 11/10/2012
Well spotted muzza, Bennet is obviously looking for cheap/no cost things to promote.
Hang on …. weren’t the police just recently saying those numbers are because of increased reporting because of advertising, community participation?
4 years investigation, culminating in “Tell people to report it” ??
The womans a leech M8!
Thanks for the awhi muzza
There is no depression in new zealand
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/health/news/article.cfm?c_id=204&objectid=10839802
blam blam blam
Yup what there is , is deliberate misuse of “drugs” used to placate the sheep from wondering why they are feeling so fcked up in the first place…
There you go, have some fluoride, eat some nice lithium, prozac, fluoxetene, have a shed load of mental stress created by all these nice fake systems we are trapping you into, then when you feel bad, go see the nice Dr who will ensure that you stay docile, and if you really feel something is wrong we will send you to the quack who will certify you.
wishy washy!!!!
Welfare Justice Dunedin says humiliation of beneficiaries widespread and challenges Work and Income to drop their appeal and use those resources to follow Human Rights Tribunal’s ruling: http://community.scoop.co.nz/2012/10/beneficiary-battles-on/
Quote: ‘We challenge the Ministry to stop using bully tactics and taxpayer money to drag Mr Holmes through the High Court, and to take on board the tribunal’s recommendations. This isn’t an isolated incident. WJD has been inundated with appalling stories of breaches of privacy, humiliation, loss of dignity and a widespread disconnect from professional conduct among WINZ staff.’
Standard Bullying
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10840262
Thanks, was wondering what was happening with that. Anyone know much about the Welfare Justice group? Apparently they’re operating nationally.
I can’t believe I just heard that fool of a Housing Minister, Heatley whining on Radio NZ that Hone should quit bitching about the GI evictions and just be grateful his people up north are going to get hand-me-down houses.
National needs donations to pay for media training for their Ministers. It’s a Ministerial car crash.
Poor sam wasn’t given a lousy $40 for food,which he travelled miles for in a wheelchair,
but $600.000 of tax payers money can be given for the ‘elite’ to have a weekend of golf
in Queenstown,the Micheal Hill tournament.
My love and support go out to sam and hope that he is ok now and qudos to Hone
for supporting him.
Couldn’t agree more.
Lordy knows how they can play golf with those heavy blinkers on.
We are a society of haves and have nots and it is taking too long for most to realise we are no longer an equal and egalitarian society.
The economist, on why printing money is the new normal:
http://www.economist.com/node/21564210
From the article. “Currency trading is, by its nature, a zero-sum game. For some to fall, others must rise.” Russell Norman?
http://www.interest.co.nz/news/56861/double-shot-interview-bernard-hickey-talks-green-party-co-leader-russel-norman-about-inte
Surely it’s been the new normal for quite a while
lanth this is only a comparison between the major trading blocks .
They are all reducing the value of their currency at the same time which is not having an effect on their economic performance!
If these trading blocks had not all reduced their currency value at the same time their would be a different story!
Like New Zealand not doing any thing the Aussies have done it for us to a degree.
I dont condone violence but bennett was just on the nation,i actually felt she needed a
slap.
The ignoramace can’t even admit that ‘poverty’ is the problem.
Having hundreds of thousands of NZ go cold and hungry in this land of hydropower and milk is a direct attack on their daily wellbeing and therefore violence on a massive scale.
Well, that would explain John Roughan’s column that tries to tell us that poverty doesn’t exist in NZ.
http://www.whaleoil.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/GCSB-SPY.jpg
This illustrates the difference between the left and right when it comes to using humour in a political setting. Basically the right try to be amusing while making a point whereas the left are about as subtle as a sledgehammer.
I would have said that the right, or at least whaleoil are just juvenile. What is subtle about that jpg?
Oh well kiddie humour – I guess there must be a market for it, otherwise the wiggles would never have had a career.
Its subtle in comparison to the attempts at humour here.
Just in, a picture from last night’s Al Gore event. The audience was asked to vote on the priciples of NZ leadership after Al’s big speech.
http://www.jokeoverflow.com/picture-jokes/news-politics/an-inconvenient-truth
Yet you still feel the need to come here and try to “sock it to those dirty lefties”, and poorly at that.
Are you related to Gosman?…
Its a pleasent way to pass the time. Its interesting though the amount of times I’ve said something on here and got flack for it then a post is written later which is very similar to what I’ve written.
Examples please Chris.
Any time I’ve written about the problems within Labour especially why they lost the last couple of elections theres been a post in similar content. Not saying I influence the posts (more likely that myself and the person writing it have similar ideas) but it seems its not what you say so much as who says it.
So no examples, then.
“but it seems its not what you say so much as who says it.”
Yep. The Standard (breaking the inconsistently applied policy of referring to The Standard as a singular entity) enjoys frothing and pointing fingers at those who break from the party line. The group think is weird and unwieldy.
“So no examples, then.”
I think you mean to say ‘So, no examples then?’ Grammar matters.
The grammar was fine.
He wasn’t asking if there were examples to give, he was saying that there were no examples given, then.
Fair cop but nonetheless the syntax is odd.
A comma is a pause so if you say it out loud:
“So (pause) no examples then”
“So no examples (pause) then”
The latter is unwieldy, but admittedly grammatically correct.
Well, if we’re thinking of contexts, the functionary filling in the report and wanting to close the folder says “so, no examples then.”
Darth Vader goes “So no examples, then”.
Emphasises the lack of examples, rather than the conclusion implied by “so”.
http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/commas.asp
Look at that face. That face knows all there is to know about the comma.
From your link, Felix, I thought Rule 3 was pretty apt.
lolz yes I liked that too.
“lolz yes I liked that too.”
That reads as”Law’s yes!” like it is being spoken by some Midwestern US farmer.
As in:
“Law’s yes! I liked that too! M-O-O-N, that spells ‘liked that'”
Grammar
https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/156541_444714838927927_945638756_n.jpg
the net is deceptive
Yeah, Grammar matters, as do Kings, and Scots College, and Collegiate……..they all matter to the aspirational wannabee John Keez and other snob-dicks.
The real people are lashing back. That excites and warms me.
To hell with the clay feet of greedy bullshitters .
Oh, might that be Rodney Hyde and wee Stephen Joyce on the left of the picture?
chris73
Humour with excess for the left? Just reminding everyone of the cleverness of Spitting Image in their British satirical forays on Youtube. Bit of fun for everyone – those not being lampooned felt left out.
It certainly does illustrate the difference between left and right approaches to humour. It’s juvenile rubbish, with no subtlety involved at all.
Yeah, the left would never do anything juvenile like that…oh wait
http://bit.ly/PsW6NY
But I am sure this is totally different and you’ll find excuses as to why this is cutting edge and in know way comparable to the other pic from Whale.
errrr I mean ‘In no way…’
shit
So who did that one? They didn’t get the head right.
I was from Bomber.
I mean “it”. Dafuck is going on with my spelling?
Muphry’s law.
If you’re looking for juvenile rubbish with no subtlety involved how about this ?
http://thestandard.org.nz/caption-contest-40/
Oh I’d agree it was juvenile humour. But no subtlety? Remember when you first looked at it – you had to look at it at least twice to figure out if it was real or not
“Remember when you first looked at it – you had to look at it at least twice to figure out if it was real or not”
Really? Seemed pretty fucking obvious and not subtle in the slightest..
Yes, it is amusing. The totally stupid and dimwitted “hero” against a mastermind.
A lot of thought is taken before the sledgehammer is used efficiently by the left,with the
right it is thrown around and aimed at those who just need a hug and some love.
To chris73
John Campbell on media3,he is a great nz’er for what is right and what is wrong in nz,
he is a champion.
Why is this site soooo slow, it’s like stepping back to the days of dial up?
Great looking site but the usability is crap.
The Standard would have to be one of the slowest sites on the web, I don’t get it,the site is 99% text it should load in an instant.
BM
I have been finding that the site is extremely slow often. I haven’t noticed this before. It seems to take ages to get comments up often. Also I click on a recent comment from the right hand box and get sent to some other page or it takes ages to find though I have noticed that there is a difficulty with that when there are over say 100 comments.
I thought it was from my setup. It has been suggested that I use Firefox instead of Opera so I could possibly help from my side, but I haven’t had such problems in the past. I don’t know whether the constant upgrades I get with Opera may introduce some new routine.
It’s the page breaking mechanism they use, all the old links break.
(LPRent is aware of it, but the fix is bigger than a one liner unfortunately)
Sites going OK for me, but if LPrent or someone can tell me how to stop the new post notifications from being emailed to me it would be really awesome. My smartphone dings non-stop..
I’d expect you need to unsubscribe, and just surf to the rss, I don’t use a mobile so not sure bud.
BM for once I agree with you this site is always having problems maybe its popularity!
The comment on Radionz this morning about the huge annual payments to heads of government agencies in money terms (rather than in percentage terms) sparked a memory of the right wing business interests talking about achieving lower wages for all by using tendering or an auction system to set the rates.
http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/political
Now when top salaries are getting into the money gouging level for these executives working supposedly to deliver government efficiency and service to the people (often not achieved) in a non-profit situation, I think that tendering would be an excellent idea as part of the survey of candidates available to human resources. At present setting salaries seems very inflationary and similar to the model that used to be followed prior to 1984 by workers and their unions which the government has stamped out. I think we should be aiming for ability and track record rather than rabbiting on about getting ‘the best’. Let’s get away from high-flown language that builds images and go practical through tendering with the usual careful proviso which I think is – (lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted).
And economically it is counter-productive to combine departments and then multiply the salary of the top executive on that basis, instead of looking at economies of scale with a chance to get more productivity from the top banana. This is a slippery slope that the salary-setting body has started on and it’s time that our responsible? economic entities levelled this yellow brick road presently paved with gold bars.
You can always tell where the power lies in a society by the pay rates, but more easily by the buildings…
When the church has power they build great cathedrals.
When the military has power they build great garrisons and fortresses.
When business has power they build great glass towers.
When governments have power they build great offices etc. Currently the power in society rests with government. That is why pre-earthquake Christchurch’s most expensive building was the IRD building.
Similarly, the new Chch City Council building.
Similarly, the Court of Appeal building in Wellington.
I have no problems with governments having power – just so long as they’re democratic.
Yep – and not just operating units of corporate business interests, like those you see in the US.
I think a simple cap of $250k for a public servant, including the PM, would be fine. If the CEOs didn’t want to work for that they can wander off to the private sector. There is, after all, plenty of more people below them with the capability of doing the job just as well, if not better, than them.
What about tendering for the top pay? Has this been done anywhere in the world? Are we doing our usual and playing just part of a game that others have already left behind in our devotion to our free market version?
why is the standard so slow?
ask the GCSB
larfffs.
as for public service salaries.
this national party government does not believe in government but it believes in patronage, pelf, peculation and paying off its supporters.
figure it out for yourself.
captain hook
Got another p word – persiflage – light frivolous approach. Suits Jokey Hen I think.
captain hook
Like your alliteration. And pelf – didn’t know that – good word I see it comes right down from 14th century Old French pelfre meaning booty. The desire for which connects us down the centuries ay!
Think
https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/406325_434378686601415_1471360958_n.jpg
Roughan’s willful ignorance
There are none so blind as those who choose not to see…
Great article Jackal.
National promote the “wringing of hands” and “it’s too hard” when the science has been proven for hundreds of years.
Education is the only real answer.
PO
I would say expand that to – Applied education is the only real answer. That is an essential
addition.
Civics education too.
+1 Well said PlanetOrphan… We also need to re-educate the government about its function.
So true, quantified results, not excuses, failure to reach the “Standard” results in dismissal!
They should sit an exam before entering office, give democracy a chance M8!
Quantative easing, for politicians
To the jackyll
Good stuff you should run for parliament jackal.
Thanks tinfoilhat, although I’m not sure saying I’ve got the makings of a politician is strictly a complement.
Understanding and Forecasting the Credit Cycle—Why the Mainstream Paradigm in Economics and Finance Collapsed
Unfortunately Draco, the usual method of dealing with major issues will play out.
The conservatives will deny and ignore and do nothing about it. It will take the liberals to make the necessary changes, which will then be embraced by the conservatives.
‘Tis the way the moon passes ……
Remember
https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/60760_456607024378581_1434002361_n.jpg
DtB …
That’s a very good article and written by someone with all the credentials. Well worth the read.
Gawd I wish that Shane Jones would learn to STFU. Abusing the Greens over their perfectly appropriate suggestion that we should allow satirists to make fun of commercial ads is ridiculous.
If this sort of satire is not allowed the next thing the commercial interests will do is try and ban any sort of adverse comments about them, even when they do things like use slave labour or plunder depleted fish stocks or kill Maui’s dolphin.
Perhaps Shearer should be thinking about Jones when he does his next reshuffle.
How can Jones demoted when he has no portfolio areas in the first place? I don’t like rewarding poor performance, but perhaps he should be given something to keep him occupied. Sport or racing, for example.
How about “Spokesperson For Fucking The Fuck Off”?
Chief in charge of getting the fuck out and fucking off with his fucking fuck cunt in charge of sweet fuck all.
tsk tsk. language
anyhoo, this is for the right-wing Godless fasci
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasidic_Judaism
hey, thats what sharing is all about!
A mistake by Helen long overdue for correction, he did well in the 2011 polls but up against Sharples a more credible candidate would have taken that Maori seat. They just needed a plausible alternative to PIta and didn’t get one from Labour, less of the duck more of the deserving is required.
Jones = verbose potato.
Less puke inducing than that parliamentary bennie bludger Tau Henare (aka Ray Henry of “the union”) but a verbose potato nevertheless.
ha ha that spoof is absolutely brilliant and absolutely spot on.
Shane Jones – fuck off and grow up you useless chook. If you can’t handle the heat then get out of the kitchen. Fancy trying to stop people doing this sort of thing …. You belong in the USA Shane Jones – see ya later.
Sealord, Meridian, all the oil companies, they all spout bullshit. Is Shane Jones seriously defending the image and perception they try to convey? What a fucking muppet.
FFS, quoting Jones:
If the brand can’t stand up to a little satire highlighting the truth behind the brand then it doesn’t deserve to continue. In fact, it probably should have been shut down by government.
exactly Draco, but rather than shut them down someone would certainly be able to take a case against Sealord under the Fair Trading Act – misleading and deceptive conduct in trade. The FTA is one of the easiest pieces of legislation to take court action under. Come on greenie activists, give it a go………
Keeping up with the Jones’s
https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn1/545879_425545010844910_685665170_n.jpg
ms
The beef barons in USA actually got nasty when Ophra made some remark about why she wouldn’t eat hamburgers because of the beef not being healthy. Forgotten what happened.
It was over mad cow disease.
They sued her, and she won!
Hate Speech
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_speech
By the look of it, that stats tab was what was causing the recent periodic slowdowns on the site.
It looks like it was locking up on the comment count query when a comment was being stored and queries were stacking up waiting for it. It effectively stalled the page display for many. I set up a graph to look for the numbers of threads active on the database at any one time – was getting these strange spikes.
I’ll have to recode that to do it on a periodic basis or to keep a running total. In the meantime it can go off. Enough playing about. Time to head back to work.
RT: “the return of the Caliphate around the Pyramids
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Spirit_(Islam)
it’s an ill wind that blows no good…