What an ignoramus we currently have as Minister of Transport. Nothing more than a petrol head of extreme arrogance. A no nothing, and and full of himself. This latest revelation simply compounds the constant string of outrageous and incompetent decisions this idiot has made in the few months he has held office. The damage he will wreck on this country is unimaginable and could all have been avoided if he would only listen to advice and not his own narcissistic urgings.
I may be wrong but, I don't think I have seen one decision this clowns have made that is not against the advice of the people paid to know better than them
Does the government seriously think that we can still meet our climate targets and Paris commitments, even when they kick the can down the road like this? It's hard to believe they do – either they naively believe some technology will turn up and save them in the nick of time, or they just don't care if we fail. Probably the latter. And with Simeon Brown, possibly they even relish the prospect of that failure.
According to the Productivity Commission, New Zealand and Australia were the last developed countries to introduce tailpipe emissions standards on imports, aside from Russia.
Sounds like his elder, Penk, on home build standards (the less well insulated preferred by some builders who don't bother using good architecture design).
Grace Blakeley, a fine economist. Does a good job of explaining what is capitalism, why it is flawed and not the agent of freedom the idiots who defend it, harp on about.
Trump pledges "largest deportation" in U.S. history
Alayna Alvarez, Sep 13, 2024
"We're going to have the largest deportation in the history of our country," Trump said at a news conference at Trump National Golf Club in Rancho Palos Verdes, California.
Former President Trump on Friday promised, if elected, to carry out mass deportations of undocumented immigrants, starting in Springfield, Ohio, and Aurora, Colorado.
A vulnerable and therefore easy target for populist far right politicians (and fascists), – immigrants, especially vulnerable – undocumented immigrants.
…..Jews from eastern Europe, mostly from Russian and Polish territory, had been coming to Germany since the 19th century, driven from their homes by anti-Jewish laws, pogroms and poverty. In 1938 there were approximately 50,000 Jews with Polish citizenship living in Germany. Not infrequently they had been settled there for several generations; many had been born in Germany and considered it home.
After Austria was annexed to Germany in March 1938, the Polish government was afraid that the approximately 20,000 Austrian Jews with Polish citizenship would flee back to Poland. It thus suspended the validity of all Polish passports whose holders had been abroad for more than five years…..
…..In all, approximately 17,000 people were expelled in this way. However, the Polish authorities refused to accept them, and so most of them had to live for many long weeks in no man's land, or the Polish border area. In most cases they were driven into the surroundings of the Polish towns of Zbaszyn and Bytom. In Zbaszyn, according to various sources, between six and ten thousand Jews gathered in the space of a few days…..
…..Among those sent to Zbaszyn was the Grynszpan family, whose son Herschel was living in Paris at the time and decided to draw international attention to the plight of the expelled Polish Jews. He shot German diplomat Ernst vom Rath with a pistol, seriously wounding him. When vom Rath subsequently died, the Nazis used his death as a welcome pretext to unleash the anti-Jewish pogrom known as Kristallnacht.
The case of the Polish Jews expelled from Germany shows that Jewish refugees were having more and more difficulty finding a refuge from persecution. Not only Poland, but other countries were closing their borders in an effort to prevent a flood of Jewish immigrants.
However, the vast majority of Haitians in Springfield are in the US legally through a temporary protected status (TPS) that’s been allocated to them due to the violence and unrest in their home country. Citizens of 16 countries, including Afghanistan and Myanmar, are eligible for TPS. It is not a pathway to US citizenship and is valid for only 18 months, at which point it must be renewed by the federal homeland security department for a status holder to remain in the country legally.
Since animals such as dogs and cats are considered “honorary humans” in the US,…
….Trump was “in effect portraying immigrants as perpetrators of the most savage or heinous act that is humanly possible – cannibalism”.
Perpetrators of the most savage or heinous act that is humanly possible? The charge of cannibalism made against indigenous peoples, including Maori in this country, is a form of atrocity propaganda that Western imperialists and white supremacists use to portray themselves as morally superiour to justify committing atrocities, displacement, mass murder and genocide.
Whether 'cannibalism' is the 'most savage or heinous act that is humanly possible' is debatable.
Hitler famously was an animal lover who would never dream of eating a dog or a cat.
Westerners don't eat dead pets, we don't eat dead people. That makes us morally superior, morally superior enough to kill human beings on an industrial scale and bury the bodies in mass graves.
Europeans in Nazi Germany weren't cannibals. They didn't eat pets, they didn't eat people, they starved and gassed people to death, and then buried their dead bodies in mass graves or burnt them in specialy built industrial crematoria.
"There are two words in the English language, which when used in combination, signal that an obscene crime of historic proportions is taking place."
A key Trump White House adviser said the operation would be “greater than any national infrastructure project we've done to date” as a country.
[…]
Key allies and advisers aren’t mincing their words: In order to carry out Trump’s mass deportation agenda, the United States will need enormous prison camps for immigrant families, part of an effort to deport millions of people at a record pace.
The mass deportation operation will be a “bloody story,” Trump said last weekend. And key advisers have promised a historic infrastructure project to churn people out of the country.
The camps will be built “on open land in Texas near the border” and should have the capacity to house as many as 70,000 people, which would double the United States’ current immigrant detention capacity, Stephen Miller, the main point man on immigration in Trump’s White House, said last year. In multiple interviews, Miller has gleefully described daily flights out of the camps to all corners of the world, an undertaking he said would be “greater than any national infrastructure project” in American history.
“Trump comes back in January — I’ll be on his heels coming back, and I will run the biggest deportation force this country has ever seen,” Thomas Homan, who served as acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the Trump administration, said in July at a conference for Trump-aligned conservatives.
“They ain’t seen shit yet,” Homan said. “Wait until 2025.”
The actual size and the origin of the undocumented alien population of the United States is uncertain and is difficult to determine due to of difficulty in accurately counting individuals in this population. Figures from national surveys, administrative data, and other sources of information vary widely…..
….. Pew estimated the total population to be 11.1 million in 2014, or approximately 3 percent of the US population.[7][6][8] This "is in the same ballpark" as figures from the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which estimated that 11.4 million undocumented immigrants lived in the United States in January 2012.[3][9]
Just change the word ‘Jews’ to ‘Haitians’ or ‘Mexicans’, you get the picture.
And call it infrastructure.
To deport, at a minimum, 11.1 million undocumented people, in Stephen Miller words, that Joe90 pointed to, infrastructure will be needed.
Infrastructure was needed to commit the Holocaust.
A bureaucracy, to adminster the identification, forcible round up, deportation and transport of 6 million people, coordinating rail transport, comandeering rail wagons, constructing purpose built death camps,
….to carry out Trump’s mass deportation agenda, the United States will need enormous prison camps for immigrant families….
… camps will be built “on open land in Texas near the border” and should have the capacity to house as many as 70,000 people…
….Miller has gleefully described daily flights out of the camps to all corners of the world, an undertaking he said would be “greater than any national infrastructure project” in American history.
Just as the Nazis inevitably determined, their Madagascar plan to deport millions of Jews, could only be "partially successful". When Miller determines his plan to round up millions of immigrants, and herd them into camps and then fly them to "all corners of the world" as too impractical and expnsive, the infrastructure will be in place for another, more final, solution.
From wikipedia the online encyclopedia:
..The idea of re-settling Polish Jews to Madagascar was investigated by the Second Polish Republic in 1937,[1][2] but the task force sent to evaluate the island's potential determined that only 5,000 to 7,000 families could be accommodated, or even as few as 500 families by some estimates.[a] As the efforts by the Nazis to encourage the emigration of the Jewish population of Germany before World War II were only partially successful,…
….With Adolf Hitlers's approval, Adolf Eichmann released a memorandum on 15 August 1940 calling for the resettlement of a million Jews per year for four years,….
Key allies and advisers aren’t mincing their words: In order to carry out Trump’s mass deportation agenda, the United States will need enormous prison camps for immigrant families, part of an effort to deport millions of people at a record pace.
The numbers are mind boggling.
To transport 11.1 million people you would need tens of thousands of buses and drivers, and guards.
How much if any luggage would each undocumented person to be deported, be allowed to take on the bus with them on their way to the camps?
What happens to the mountains of private property left behind by the millions of undocumented immigrants forced into camps to be deported?
11 Sept 2017 — More than 3.4 million undocumented immigrants are homeowners, according to the Migration Policy Institute analysis of the 2014 U.S. census data.
Houses, cars, consumer goods, furniture, computers, art works, that the deportees can't take on the bus with them on their way to the camps?
Who gets it?
Will it all be confiscated by the state to pay for all the 'infrastructure' costs?
Trains are still the most efficient way to transport millions of people. This means a rail spur will have to be run out to each camp. If Miller is serious about flying all these people out of the country, airfields would have to be built beside each camp. That leads to the camps themselves, will lethal force be used to keep the millions of deportees behind the wire?
Will the wire be electrified?
“The economic benefits derived from chattel slavery contributed to the financial and imperial strength of Britain, which in turn supported its colonisation activities worldwide, including New Zealand.
“We take this opportunity to also let you know that we will be asking the New Zealand government to acknowledge these historical links to injustices that took place in the wider Caribbean.
“We share a history as descendants of both enslavers and the enslaved. Our history is intertwined with your history, and your history is intertwined with ours”
David Seymour wouldn’t like this to be acknowledged, I reckon.
Aidee Walker is one to watch. Not saying she's going to enter politics but she's increasingly active in that international advocacy of the disenfranchised space.
The end game for Atlas/ACT/National is to lock in the gains made by Westerners wherever they have made themselves apparent. It's important for them to eliminate any redress movements, and conveniently (for the historically wealthy) to ask for a reset where all peoples, with the swish of a pen, are now suddenly and miraculously equal.
Some of our Scottish ancestors were taken to the West Indies as slaves in the 16th Century during "The Killing Times", and the religious wars when the Scottish Covenanters were fighting the English Monarchy. Many descendants of these Covenanters from the Scottish villages migrated to the USA, Canada, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.
Seymore is no more than a jumped up little c**k doing the bidding for the likes of Sir Allan Gibbs whose family made a truck load of money with the Holyoke Family at the Kinloch Development at Lake Taupo which I believe is still under a TOW Claim.
Seymour is a young Roger Douglas – totally convinced that his brand of neo-liberal trickle down economic euthenics is the answer to all of society's problems.
But even Roger Douglas knew when he should back off.
Seymour has no such wisdom. He now tells us that he has a mighty tax dragon to unleash on us, to be announced sometime soon. We have a pretty fair idea of what it will involve – flat income tax which makes the rich a lot richer and the rest of us no better. Privatisation of pretty much anything in government that can be flogged off. Mass tolling of roads etc.
The man is intoxicated with delusions of grandeur.
He needs to be stopped, but National won't do anything because their survival in government depends on him.
At least Lange had the sense to stop Douglas before he could totally f… the economy.
John Roughan in the New Zealand Herald noted the lack of ‘strong comment’,5 while Bassett remarked upon the need for more explanation in respect to ‘the accusations levelled at Holyoake over his influence to get essential services into Kinloch that appears to have turned him and his partners into wealthy men’.6 Just what was Holyoake up to at the holiday resort of Kinloch, where from 1953 until his death in 1983 much of his private life was focused? There is much more to scrutinize than his influence in having a road built to his property. Most particularly, there are the circumstances of his acquisition of Mäori land there in 1956. The extent to which Gustafson chose to confront Holyoake’s manoeuvrings at Kinloch, therefore, is certainly a mark by which his account can be measured.7 Holyoake’s own narrative can introduce us to the origins of the Kinloch purchase. In the silver jubilee history of the settlement, an account written by Holyoake was made available by his family. In it he related how he was told in June 1953 by friend and National Party stalwart Theodore Nisbett (T.N.) Gibbs that the latter’s son, Ian, was interested in purchasing a block of land on the north-western shore of Lake Taupö. The land comprised the best part of Whangamata No.1, which had been purchased from Mäori in 1884, and after a succession of owners was now in the hands of Ian Gibbs’s employer, New Zealand Forest Products Ltd. The block comprised some 5385 acres and was largely covered in scrub and fern. Holyoake, who was Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture at the time, inspected paul hamer 158 the land the next weekend and ‘advised the purchase of the block.’8 Exactly when the purchase took place is unclear. Ian Gibbs had secured a 14day option to purchase by the time of Holyoake’s June 1953 inspection,9 but the certificate of title for the land states ‘Transfer N.Z. Forest Products Limited to Ian Ogilvie Gibbs of Tokoroa engineer and Theodore Nisbett Gibbs of Wellington public accountant as tenants in common in equal shares produced 23/11/53.’10 In any event, Holyoake was quickly in on the deal. He recorded that his experience as a ‘practical farmer’soon ledT.N. Gibbs to offer him a stake in the block, which he accepted. The partnership, which was called Whangamata Station, was formalized in October 1953. T.N. and Ian Gibbs held quarter shares each, Holyoake three sixteenths , and each of his five children a sixteenth each.11 By the time the partnership was formalized Holyoake had already made good use of the expertise at his disposal in the Department of…
Early Childhood Council chief executive Simon Laube does not want to teach, just babysit:
Do we really need all of the hours that parents want, to be at that premium level. Surely six hours per day is enough educational content to deliver to a child in one sitting and so then for the hours over and above six hours a day can we not have flexibility and move the quality of the service down a grade?
Capitalist theory demands two parents work. Under 5s are in these battery farms for 10 hours a day because ambitious parents place material gain over child bonding. Simon Laube is only too happy to double down on this practice, for huge profit.
There is a strong argument to be had that pre-school, the purpose of life is to play. That doesn't mean I'm all for the early child racket education.
As MB points out, the system we operate in deems wage slavery to be more important than a parent bringing up their children.
Wage slavery is more vital than supporting elderly parents in their twilight years too. Not to worry, we have a few foreign operators that can spend government money on making a return to their shareholders, employ migrants at as low wages as possible while also providing 'care' to our senior citizens.
VIENNA (AP) — A woman in Austria was found guilty of fatally infecting her neighbor with COVID-19 in 2021, her second pandemic-related conviction in a year, according to local media. A judge sentenced the 54-year-old on Thursday to four months’ suspended imprisonment and an 800-euro fine ($886.75) for grossly negligent homicide.
The victim, who was also a cancer patient, died of pneumonia that was caused by the coronavirus, according to Austrian news agency APA. A virological report showed that the virus DNA matched both the deceased and the 54-year-old woman, proving that the defendant “almost 100 percent” transmitted it, an expert told the court.
“I feel sorry for you personally — I think that something like this has probably happened hundreds of times,” the judge said Thursday. “But you are unlucky that an expert has determined with almost absolute certainty that it was an infection that came from you."
My daily news diet is not what it once was.It was the TV news that lost me first. Too infantilising, too breathless, too frustrating.The Herald was next. You could look past the reactionary framing while it was being a decent newspaper of record, but once Shayne Currie began unleashing all ...
Hit the road Jack and don't you come backNo more, no more, no more, no moreHit the road Jack and don't you come back no moreWhat you say?Songwriters: Percy MayfieldMorena,I keep many of my posts, like this one, paywall-free so that everyone can read them.However, please consider supporting me as ...
This might be the longest delay between reading (or in this case re-reading) a work, and actually writing a review of it I have ever managed. Indeed, when I last read these books in December 2022, I was not planning on writing anything about them… but as A Phuulish Fellow ...
Kia Ora,I try to keep most my posts without a paywall for public interest journalism purposes. However, if you can afford to, please consider supporting me as a paid subscriber and/or supporting over at Ko-Fi. That will help me to continue, and to keep spending time on the work. Embarrassingly, ...
There was a time when Google was the best thing in my world. I was an early adopter of their AdWords program and boy did I like what it did for my business. It put rocket fuel in it, is what it did. For every dollar I spent, those ads ...
A while back I was engaged in an unpleasant exchange with a leader of the most well-known NZ anti-vax group and several like-minded trolls. I had responded to a racist meme on social media in which a rightwing podcaster in the US interviewed one of the leaders of the Proud ...
Hi,If you’ve been reading Webworm for a while, you’ll be familiar with Anna Wilding. Between 2020 and 2021 I looked at how the New Zealander had managed to weasel her way into countless news stories over the years, often with very little proof any of it had actually happened. When ...
It's a long white cloud for you, baby; staying together alwaysSummertime in AotearoaWhere the sunshine kisses the water, we will find it alwaysSummertime in AotearoaYeah, it′s SummertimeIt's SummertimeWriters: Codi Wehi Ngatai, Moresby Kainuku, Pipiwharauroa Campbell, Taulutoa Michael Schuster, Rebekah Jane Brady, Te Naawe Jordan Muturangi Tupe, Thomas Edward Scrase.Many of ...
Last year, 292 people died unnecessarily on our roads. That is the lowest result in over a decade and only the fourth time in the last 70 years we’ve seen fewer than 300 deaths in a calendar year. Yet, while it is 292 people too many, with each death being ...
This is a re-post from Yale Climate Connections by Jeff Masters and Bob HensonFlames from the Palisades Fire burn a building at Sunset Boulevard amid a powerful windstorm on January 8, 2025 in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. The fast-moving wildfire had destroyed thousands of structures and ...
..Thanks for reading Frankly Speaking ! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.The Regulatory Standards Bill, as I understand it, seeks to bind parliament to a specific range of law-making.For example, it seems to ensure primacy of individual rights over that of community, environment, te Tiriti ...
Happy New Year!I had a lovely break, thanks very much for asking: friends, family, sunshine, books, podcasts, refreshing swims, barbecues, bike rides. So good to step away from the firehose for a while, to have less Trump and Seymour in your day. Who needs the Luxons in their risible PJs ...
Patrick Reynolds is deputy chair of the Auckland City Centre Advisory Panel and a director of Greater Auckland In 2003, after much argument, including the election of a Mayor in 2001 who ran on stopping it, Britomart train station in downtown Auckland opened. A mere 1km twin track terminating branch ...
For the first time in a decade, a New Zealand Prime Minister is heading to the Middle East. The trip is more than just a courtesy call. New Zealand PMs frequently change planes in Dubai en route to destinations elsewhere. But Christopher Luxon’s visit to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) ...
A listing of 23 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, January 5, 2025 thru Sat, January 11, 2025. This week's roundup is again published soleley by category. We are still interested in feedback to hone the categorization, so if ...
The decade between 1952 and the early 1960s was the peak period for the style of music we now call doo wop, after which it got dissolved into soul music, girl groups, and within pop music in general. Basically, doo wop was a form of small group harmonising with a ...
The future teaches you to be aloneThe present to be afraid and coldSo if I can shoot rabbits, then I can shoot fascists…And if you tolerate thisThen your children will be nextSongwriters: James Dean Bradfield / Sean Anthony Moore / Nicholas Allen Jones.Do you remember at school, studying the rise ...
When National won the New Zealand election in 2023, one of the first to congratulate Luxon was tech-billionaire and entrepreneur extraordinaire Elon Musk.And last year, after Luxon posted a video about a trip to Malaysia, Musk came forward again to heap praise on Christopher:So it was perhaps par for the ...
Hi,Today’s Webworm features a new short film from documentary maker Giorgio Angelini. It’s about Luigi Mangione — but it’s also, really, about everything in America right now.Bear with me.Shortly after I sent out my last missive from the fires on Wednesday, one broke out a little too close to home ...
So soon just after you've goneMy senses sharpenBut it always takes so damn longBefore I feel how much my eyes have darkenedFear hangs in a plane of gun smokeDrifting in our roomSo easy to disturb, with a thought, with a whisperWith a careless memorySongwriters: Andy Taylor / John Taylor / ...
Can we trust the Trump cabinet to act in the public interest?Nine of Trump’s closest advisers are billionaires. Their total net worth is in excess of $US375b (providing there is not a share-market crash). In contrast, the total net worth of Trump’s first Cabinet was about $6b. (Joe Biden’s Cabinet ...
Welcome back to our weekly roundup. We hope you had a good break (if you had one). Here’s a few of the stories that caught our attention over the last few weeks. This holiday period on Greater Auckland Since our last roundup we’ve: Taken a look back at ...
Sometimes I feel like I don't have a partnerSometimes I feel like my only friendIs the city I live in, The City of AngelsLonely as I am together we crySong: Anthony Kiedis, Chad Smith, Flea, John Frusciante.A home is engulfed in flames during the Eaton fire in the Altadena area. ...
Open access notablesLarge emissions of CO2 and CH4 due to active-layer warming in Arctic tundra, Torn et al., Nature Communications:Climate warming may accelerate decomposition of Arctic soil carbon, but few controlled experiments have manipulated the entire active layer. To determine surface-atmosphere fluxes of carbon dioxide and ...
It's election year for Wellington City Council and for the Regional Council. What have the progressive councillors achieved over the last couple of years. What were the blocks and failures? What's with the targeting of the mayor and city council by the Post and by central government? Why does the ...
Over the holidays, there was a rising tide of calls for people to submit on National's repulsive, white supremacist Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Bill, along with a wave of advice and examples of what to say. And it looks like people rose to the occasion, with over 300,000 ...
The lie is my expenseThe scope of my desireThe Party blessed me with its futureAnd I protect it with fireI am the Nina The Pinta The Santa MariaThe noose and the rapistAnd the fields overseerThe agents of orangeThe priests of HiroshimaThe cost of my desire…Sleep now in the fireSongwriters: Brad ...
This is a re-post from the Climate BrinkGlobal surface temperatures have risen around 1.3C since the preindustrial (1850-1900) period as a result of human activity.1 However, this aggregate number masks a lot of underlying factors that contribute to global surface temperature changes over time.These include CO2, which is the primary ...
There are times when movement around us seems to slow down. And the faster things get, the slower it all appears.And so it is with the whirlwind of early year political activity.They are harbingers for what is to come:Video: Wayne Wright Jnr, funder of Sean Plunket, talk growing power and ...
Hi,Right now the power is out, so I’m just relying on the laptop battery and tethering to my phone’s 5G which is dropping in and out. We’ll see how we go.First up — I’m fine. I can’t see any flames out the window. I live in the greater Hollywood area ...
2024 was a tough year for working Kiwis. But together we’ve been able to fight back for a just and fair New Zealand and in 2025 we need to keep standing up for what’s right and having our voices heard. That starts with our Mood of the Workforce Survey. It’s your ...
Time is never time at allYou can never ever leaveWithout leaving a piece of youthAnd our lives are forever changedWe will never be the sameThe more you change, the less you feelSongwriter: William Patrick Corgan.Babinden - Baba’s DayToday, January 8th, 2025, is Babinden, “The Day of the baba” or “The ...
..I/We wish to make the following comments:I oppose the Treaty Principles Bill."5. Act binds the CrownThis Act binds the Crown."How does this Act "bind the Crown" when Te Tiriti o Waitangi, which the Act refers to, has been violated by the Crown on numerous occassions, resulting in massive loss of ...
Everything is good and brownI'm here againWith a sunshine smile upon my faceMy friends are close at handAnd all my inhibitions have disappeared without a traceI'm glad, oh, that I found oohSomebody who I can rely onSongwriter: Jay KayGood morning, all you lovely people. Today, I’ve got nothing except a ...
Welcome to 2025. After wrapping up 2024, here’s a look at some of the things we can expect to see this year along with a few predictions. Council and Elections Elections One of the biggest things this year will be local body elections in October. Will Mayor Wayne Brown ...
Canadians can take a while to get angry – but when they finally do, watch out. Canada has been falling out of love with Justin Trudeau for years, and his exit has to be the least surprising news event of the New Year. On recent polling, Trudeau’s Liberal party has ...
This is a re-post from Yale Climate Connections Much like 2023, many climate and energy records were broken in 2024. It was Earth’s hottest year on record by a wide margin, breaking the previous record that was set just last year by an even larger margin. Human-caused climate-warming pollution and ...
Submissions on National's racist, white supremacist Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Bill are due tomorrow! So today, after a good long holiday from all that bullshit, I finally got my shit together to submit on it. As I noted here, people should write their own submissions in their own ...
Ooh, baby (ooh, baby)It's making me crazy (it's making me crazy)Every time I look around (look around)Every time I look around (every time I look around)Every time I look aroundIt's in my faceSongwriters: Alan Leo Jansson / Paul Lawrence L. Fuemana.Today, I’ll be talking about rich, middle-aged men who’ve made ...
A listing of 26 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, December 29, 2024 thru Sat, January 4, 2025. This week's roundup is again published soleley by category. We are still interested in feedback to hone the categorization, so if ...
Hi,The thing that stood out at me while shopping for Christmas presents in New Zealand was how hard it was to avoid Zuru products. Toy manufacturer Zuru is a bit like Netflix, in that it has so much data on what people want they can flood the market with so ...
And when a child is born into this worldIt has no conceptOf the tone of skin it's living inAnd there's a million voicesAnd there's a million voicesTo tell you what you should be thinkingSong by Neneh Cherry and Youssou N'Dour.The moment you see that face, you can hear her voice; ...
While we may not always have quality political leadership, a couple of recently published autobiographies indicate sometimes we strike it lucky. When ranking our prime ministers, retired professor of history Erik Olssen commented that ‘neither Holland nor Nash was especially effective as prime minister – even his private secretary thought ...
Baby, be the class clownI'll be the beauty queen in tearsIt's a new art form, showin' people how little we care (yeah)We're so happy, even when we're smilin' out of fearLet's go down to the tennis court and talk it up like, yeah (yeah)Songwriters: Joel Little / Ella Yelich O ...
Open access notables Why Misinformation Must Not Be Ignored, Ecker et al., American Psychologist:Recent academic debate has seen the emergence of the claim that misinformation is not a significant societal problem. We argue that the arguments used to support this minimizing position are flawed, particularly if interpreted (e.g., by policymakers or the public) as suggesting ...
What I’ve Been Doing: I buried a close family member.What I’ve Been Watching: Andor, Jack Reacher, Xmas movies.What I’ve Been Reflecting On: The Usefulness of Writing and the Worthiness of Doing So — especially as things become more transparent on their own.I also hate competing on any day, and if ...
This is a re-post from Yale Climate Connections by John Wihbey. A version of this article first appeared on Yale Climate Connections on Nov. 11, 2008. (Image credits: The White House, Jonathan Cutrer / CC BY 2.0; President Jimmy Carter, Trikosko/Library of Congress; Solar dedication, Bill Fitz-Patrick / Jimmy Carter Library; Solar ...
Morena folks,We’re having a good break, recharging the batteries. Hope you’re enjoying the holiday period. I’m not feeling terribly inspired by much at the moment, I’m afraid—not from a writing point of view, anyway.So, today, we’re travelling back in time. You’ll have to imagine the wavy lines and sci-fi sound ...
Completed reads for 2024: Oration on the Dignity of Man, by Giovanni Pico della Mirandola A Platonic Discourse Upon Love, by Giovanni Pico della Mirandola Of Being and Unity, by Giovanni Pico della Mirandola The Life of Pico della Mirandola, by Giovanni Francesco Pico Three Letters Written by Pico ...
Welcome to 2025, Aotearoa. Well… what can one really say? 2024 was a story of a bad beginning, an infernal middle and an indescribably farcical end. But to chart a course for a real future, it does pay to know where we’ve been… so we know where we need ...
Welcome to the official half-way point of the 2020s. Anyway, as per my New Years tradition, here’s where A Phuulish Fellow’s blog traffic came from in 2024: United States United Kingdom New Zealand Canada Sweden Australia Germany Spain Brazil Finland The top four are the same as 2023, ...
Completed reads for December: Be A Wolf!, by Brian Strickland The Magic Flute [libretto], by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Emanuel Schikaneder The Invisible Eye, by Erckmann-Chatrian The Owl’s Ear, by Erckmann-Chatrian The Waters of Death, by Erckmann-Chatrian The Spider, by Hanns Heinz Ewers Who Knows?, by Guy de Maupassant ...
Well, it’s the last day of the year, so it’s time for a quick wrap-up of the most important things that happened in 2024 for urbanism and transport in our city. A huge thank you to everyone who has visited the blog and supported us in our mission to make ...
Leave your office, run past your funeralLeave your home, car, leave your pulpitJoin us in the streets where weJoin us in the streets where weDon't belong, don't belongHere under the starsThrowing light…Song: Jeffery BuckleyToday, I’ll discuss the standout politicians of the last 12 months. Each party will receive three awards, ...
Hi,A lot’s happened this year in the world of Webworm, and as 2024 comes to an end I thought I’d look back at a few of the things that popped. Maybe you missed them, or you might want to revisit some of these essay and podcast episodes over your break ...
Hi,I wanted to share this piece by film editor Dan Kircher about what cinema has been up to in 2024.Dan edited my documentary Mister Organ, as well as this year’s excellent crowd-pleasing Bookworm.Dan adores movies. He gets the language of cinema, he knows what he loves, and writes accordingly. And ...
Without delving into personal details but in order to give readers a sense of the year that was, I thought I would offer the study in contrasts that are Xmas 2023 and Xmas 2024: Xmas 2023 in Starship Children’s Hospital (after third of four surgeries). Even opening presents was an ...
Heavy disclaimer: Alpha/beta/omega dynamics is a popular trope that’s used in a wide range of stories and my thoughts on it do not apply to all cases. I’m most familiar with it through the lens of male-focused fanfic, typically m/m but sometimes also featuring m/f and that’s the situation I’m ...
Hi,Webworm has been pretty heavy this year — mainly because the world is pretty heavy. But as we sprint (or limp, you choose) through the final days of 2024, I wanted to keep Webworm a little lighter.So today I wanted to look at one of the biggest and weirdest elements ...
A listing of 23 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, December 22, 2024 thru Sat, December 28, 2024. This week's roundup is the second one published soleley by category. We are still interested in feedback to hone the categorization, ...
We’ll have a climate change ChristmasFrom now until foreverWarming our hearts and mindsAnd planet all togetherSpirits high and oceans higherChestnuts roast on wildfiresIf coal is on your wishlistMerry Climate Change ChristmasSong by Ian McConnellReindeer emissions are not something I’d thought about in terms of climate change. I guess some significant ...
KP continues to putt-putt along as a tiny niche blog that offers a NZ perspective on international affairs with a few observations about NZ domestic politics thrown in. In 2024 there was also some personal posts given that my son was in the last four months of a nine month ...
I can see very wellThere's a boat on the reef with a broken backAnd I can see it very wellThere's a joke and I know it very wellIt's one of those that I told you long agoTake my word I'm a madman, don't you knowSongwriters: Bernie Taupin / Elton JohnIt ...
.Acknowledgement: Tim PrebbleThanks for reading Frankly Speaking ! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work..With each passing day of bad headlines, squandering tax revenue to enrich the rich, deep cuts to our social services and a government struggling to keep the lipstick on its neo-liberal pig ...
This is from the 36th Parallel social media account (as brief food for thought). We know that Trump is ahistorical at best but he seems to think that he is Teddy Roosevelt and can use the threat of invoking the Monroe Doctrine and “Big Stick” gunboat diplomacy against Panama and ...
Don't you cry tonightI still love you, babyAnd don't you cry tonightDon't you cry tonightThere's a heaven above you, babyAnd don't you cry tonightSong: Axl Rose and Izzy Stradlin“Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so”, said possibly the greatest philosopher ever to walk this earth, Douglas Adams.We have entered the ...
The Green Party welcomes the extension of the deadline for Treaty Principles Bill submissions but continues to call on the Government to abandon the Bill. ...
Complaints about disruptive behaviour now handled in around 13 days (down from around 60 days a year ago) 553 Section 55A notices issued by Kāinga Ora since July 2024, up from 41 issued during the same period in the previous year. Of that 553, first notices made up around 83 ...
The time it takes to process building determinations has improved significantly over the last year which means fewer delays in homes being built, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says. “New Zealand has a persistent shortage of houses. Making it easier and quicker for new homes to be built will ...
Minister of Internal Affairs Brooke van Velden is pleased to announce the annual list of New Zealand’s most popular baby names for 2024. “For the second consecutive year, Noah has claimed the top spot for boys with 250 babies sharing the name, while Isla has returned to the most popular ...
Work is set to get underway on a new bus station at Westgate this week. A contract has been awarded to HEB Construction to start a package of enabling works to get the site ready in advance of main construction beginning in mid-2025, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says.“A new Westgate ...
Minister for Children and for Prevention of Family and Sexual Violence Karen Chhour is encouraging people to use the resources available to them to get help, and to report instances of family and sexual violence amongst their friends, families, and loved ones who are in need. “The death of a ...
Uia te pō, rangahaua te pō, whakamāramatia mai he aha tō tango, he aha tō kāwhaki? Whitirere ki te ao, tirotiro kau au, kei hea taku rātā whakamarumaru i te au o te pakanga mo te mana motuhake? Au te pō, ngū te pō, ue hā! E te kahurangi māreikura, ...
Health Minister Dr Shane Reti says people with diabetes and other painful conditions will benefit from a significant new qualification to boost training in foot care. “It sounds simple, but quality and regular foot and nail care is vital in preventing potentially serious complications from diabetes, like blisters or sores, which can take a long time to heal ...
Associate Health Minister with responsibility for Pharmac David Seymour is pleased to see Pharmac continue to increase availability of medicines for Kiwis with the government’s largest ever investment in Pharmac. “Pharmac operates independently, but it must work within the budget constraints set by the government,” says Mr Seymour. “When this government assumed ...
Mā mua ka kite a muri, mā muri ka ora e mua - Those who lead give sight to those who follow, those who follow give life to those who lead. Māori recipients in the New Year 2025 Honours list show comprehensive dedication to improving communities across the motu that ...
Minister of Internal Affairs Brooke van Velden is wishing all New Zealanders a great holiday season as Kiwis prepare for gatherings with friends and families to see in the New Year. It is a great time of year to remind everyone to stay fire safe over the summer. “I know ...
From 1 January 2025, first-time tertiary learners will have access to a new Fees Free entitlement of up to $12,000 for their final year of provider-based study or final two years of work-based learning, Tertiary Education and Skills Minister Penny Simmonds says. “Targeting funding to the final year of study ...
“As we head into one of the busiest times of the year for Police, and family violence and sexual violence response services, it’s a good time to remind everyone what to do if they experience violence or are worried about others,” Minister for the Prevention of Family and Sexual Violence ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brendan Walker-Munro, Senior Lecturer (Law), Southern Cross University Elon Musk is no stranger to news headlines. His purchase of Twitter and subsequent decision to rebrand the platform as X has seen it called “a true black mirror of the most worrying parts ...
By Koroi Hawkins, RNZ Pacific editor in Port Vila The electoral commission in Vanuatu is trying its best to clear up some confusion with the voting process for tomorrow’s snap election. Principal Electoral Officer Guilain Malessas said this is due to the tight turnaround to deliver this election after Parliament ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gemma King, Senior Lecturer in French Studies, ARC DECRA Fellow in Screen Studies, Australian National University Universal Pictures In two of the biggest films released this summer, Gladiator II and Nosferatu, most actors seem to be speaking like they’re in a ...
Alex Casey reviews the first and possibly last ever musical biopic to star a CGI ape. Sometime over the fuzzy holiday break, I watched a Subway Take on Instagram which stuck with me. “Musician biopics should be illegal,” opined guest Charlene Kaye. “I’m so sick of the trope of the ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sarah Whitcombe-Dobbs, Senior Lecturer in Child and Family Psychology, University of Canterbury After last year’s budget cuts to social services, including a NZ$14 million cut to early home visits, social services providers in New Zealand raised concerns about what the move would ...
COMMENTARY:By Maire Leadbeater Aotearoa New Zealand’s coalition government has introduced a bill to criminalise “improper conduct for or on behalf of a foreign power” or foreign interference that echoes earlier Cold War times, and could capture critics of New Zealand’s foreign and defence policy, especially if they liaise with ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kristine Crous, Senior Lecturer, School of Science and Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University Researchers study leaves in the Daintree rainforest in North Queensland, Australia, using a canopy crane. Alexander Cheesman On the east coast of Australia, in tropical ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Louise Baur, Professor, Discipline of Child and Adolescent Health, University of Sydney World Obesity Federation Obesity is linked to many common diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, heart disease, fatty liver disease and knee osteoarthritis. Obesity is currently defined using ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kelvin (Shiu Fung) Wong, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, Swinburne University of Technology Sad, anxious or lacking in motivation? Chances are you have just returned to work after a summer break. January is the month when people are most likely to quit ...
Is warning people about police on Google Maps aiding your fellow citizens, or abetting dangerous drivers? Anna Rawhiti-Connell debates Anna Rawhiti-Connell.For over a decade, the navigation app Waze has used a crowdsourcing feature that allows you to report incidents on your route. With your phone plugged into Apple CarPlay ...
With dozens of Māori seats up for referendum, this year’s local elections will reveal where Aotearoa truly stands on representation.Last year, the government introduced legislation requiring all local authorities that had established Māori wards and constituencies to hold a referendum on these seats during this year’s local government elections. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Paul Williams, Associate Professor, Griffith University, Griffith University Queensland’s Bruce Highway is a bit like a 1980s family sedan: dated, worn in places, and often more than a little dangerous. But it’s also a necessary part of life for people just trying ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Julie Collins, Research Fellow and Curator, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia South Australian Home Builders’ Club members at work.SAHBC collection S284, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia Australians are no strangers to housing crises. Some will even remember the crisis ...
A new report from Australian charity Action Aid reveals how the New Zealand banks’ Australian owners manage to sign up to international climate goals while continuing to fund fossil fuel companies. Most people in New Zealand bank with four large banks, all of which are owned by overseas companies. BNZ’s ...
The only way forward is for workers to build a new party that fights for the socialist reorganisation of society, on the basis of human need, not private profit. This is the program of the Socialist Equality Group in New Zealand and the International ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Milad Haghani, Senior Lecturer of Urban Risk & Resilience, UNSW Sydney MIA Studio We are surrounded by random events every day. Will the stock market rise or fall tomorrow? Will the next penalty kick in a soccer match go left or ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Athena Lee, Lecturer and Researcher, Centre for Indigenous Australian Education and Research, Edith Cowan University When we think of writing systems we likely think of an Alphabetic writing system, where each symbol (letter) in the alphabet represents a basic sound unit, such ...
David Seymour has welcomed the huge amount of public interest in his controversial proposed law, explains The Bulletin’s Stewart Sowman-Lund. To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here. ...
Parliament's justice committee will find out tomorrow how many submissions were made on the Treaty Principles Bill after the deadline was extended by nearly a week after website issues. ...
A parent shares their experience and fears as public submissions are sought on the use of puberty blockers for gender-affirming care. Both the author and daughter’s names have been changed to protect their privacy.When my daughter Marie was born, everyone, including me, thought she was a boy. She started ...
Thrice thwarted previously, the Act Party’s Regulatory Standards Bill is set to pass in 2025, ushering in a new – and potentially controversial – era for government rule-making. Here’s everything you need to know. Before public submissions for the Treaty principles bill came to a close on Tuesday, a separate ...
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Summer reissue: Adopted in 1834 the first national flag of New Zealand (Te Kara o Te Whakaminenga o Ngā Hapū o Nu Tīreni) symbolises more than just necessity – it represents Māori autonomy and a legacy of self-determination that continues today.The Spinoff needs to double the number of paying ...
Summer reissue: Shortsightedness in kids is skyrocketing overseas. Is New Zealand next? The Spinoff needs to double the number of paying members we have to continue telling these kinds of stories. Please read our open letter and sign up to be a member today.“Hey bro, are you blind now?” ...
While mediator Qatar says a Gaza ceasefire deal is at the closest point it has been in the past few months — adding that many of the obstacles in the negotiations have been ironed out — a special report for Drop Site News reveals the escalation in attacks on Palestinians ...
In our latest in-depth podcast investigation, Fractured, Melanie Reid and her team delve deep into a complex case involving a controversial medical diagnosis and its fallout on a young family. While Fractured is a forensic examination of this case here in New Zealand, the diagnosis that started it all is ...
While last year was termed the ‘year of elections’, 2025 will see some highly significant elections set to take place throughout the world that could have significant impacts on countries, their regions, and the wider global picture.AfricaThe presidential elections in Cameroon this October see the world’s oldest head of state ...
ANALYSIS:By Ali Mirin Indonesia officially joined the BRICS — Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa — consortium last week marking a significant milestone in its foreign relations. In a statement released a day later on January 7, the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that this membership reflected Indonesia’s ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Milad Haghani, Senior Lecturer of Urban Risk & Resilience, UNSW Sydney Imagine a gathering so large it dwarfs any concert, festival, or sporting event you’ve ever seen. In the Kumbh Mela, a religious festival held in India, millions of Hindu pilgrims come ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Senior Lecturer, Canberra School of Politics, Economics and Society, University of Canberra Motortion Films/Shutterstock You may have seen stories the Australian dollar has “plummeted”. Sounds bad. But what does it mean and should you be worried? The most-commonly quoted ...
Summer reissue: Lange and Muldoon clash, two days after the election. Our live updates editor is on the case. The Spinoff needs to double the number of paying members we have to continue telling these kinds of stories. Please read our open letter and sign up to be a member ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gina Perry, Science historian with a specific interest in the history of social psychology., The University of Melbourne ‘Guards’ with a blindfolded ‘prisoner’.PrisonExp.org A new translation of a 2018 book by French science historian Thibault Le Texier challenges the claims of ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Susan Jordan, Professor of Epidemiology, The University of Queensland Peakstock/Shutterstock Many women worry hormonal contraceptives have dangerous side-effects including increased cancer risk. But this perception is often out of proportion with the actual risks. So, what does the research actually say ...
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South Islanders Alex Casey and Tara Ward reflect on their so-called summer break. Alex Casey: Welcome back to work Tara, how was your summer? Tara Ward: I’m thrilled to be here and equally as happy to have experienced my first New Zealand winter Christmas, just as Santa always intended. Over ...
Summer reissue: Five years ago, we voted against legalising cannabis. But what if the referendum had gone the other way? The Spinoff needs to double the number of paying members we have to continue telling these kinds of stories. Please read our open letter and sign up to be a ...
What an ignoramus we currently have as Minister of Transport. Nothing more than a petrol head of extreme arrogance. A no nothing, and and full of himself. This latest revelation simply compounds the constant string of outrageous and incompetent decisions this idiot has made in the few months he has held office. The damage he will wreck on this country is unimaginable and could all have been avoided if he would only listen to advice and not his own narcissistic urgings.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/528014/transport-minister-pushed-ahead-with-weaker-tailpipe-standards-to-meet-car-industry-s-deadline
I'm sure thame appropriate donations have been made and future offers of employment implied, soooo its allll goooood!!!
I may be wrong but, I don't think I have seen one decision this clowns have made that is not against the advice of the people paid to know better than them
Does the government seriously think that we can still meet our climate targets and Paris commitments, even when they kick the can down the road like this? It's hard to believe they do – either they naively believe some technology will turn up and save them in the nick of time, or they just don't care if we fail. Probably the latter. And with Simeon Brown, possibly they even relish the prospect of that failure.
That’s the joke.
Sounds like his elder, Penk, on home build standards (the less well insulated preferred by some builders who don't bother using good architecture design).
Grace Blakeley, a fine economist. Does a good job of explaining what is capitalism, why it is flawed and not the agent of freedom the idiots who defend it, harp on about.
The Guardian summarises Project 2025. Essentially, it is strategies to make the US more religiously conservative (Christian, of course).
A vulnerable and therefore easy target for populist far right politicians (and fascists), – immigrants, especially vulnerable – undocumented immigrants.
Just change the word ‘Jews’ to ‘Haitians’ or ‘Mexicans’, you get the picture.
Except
As you rightly point out above, this is a neo-nazi trope. As is, the regurgitation of the immigrants eating pets.
Indeed it is.
From the link you supplied;
Perpetrators of the most savage or heinous act that is humanly possible? The charge of cannibalism made against indigenous peoples, including Maori in this country, is a form of atrocity propaganda that Western imperialists and white supremacists use to portray themselves as morally superiour to justify committing atrocities, displacement, mass murder and genocide.
Whether 'cannibalism' is the 'most savage or heinous act that is humanly possible' is debatable.
Hitler famously was an animal lover who would never dream of eating a dog or a cat.
Westerners don't eat dead pets, we don't eat dead people. That makes us morally superior, morally superior enough to kill human beings on an industrial scale and bury the bodies in mass graves.
Europeans in Nazi Germany weren't cannibals. They didn't eat pets, they didn't eat people, they starved and gassed people to death, and then buried their dead bodies in mass graves or burnt them in specialy built industrial crematoria.
Here's a clue. It is not eating pets.
And call it infrastructure.
@StephenM
Yes. We started a new denaturalization project under Trump. In 2025, expect it to be turbocharged.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/26/us/politics/denaturalization-immigrants-justice-department.html
https://x.com/StephenM/status/1712094935820780029
A key Trump White House adviser said the operation would be “greater than any national infrastructure project we've done to date” as a country.
[…]
Key allies and advisers aren’t mincing their words: In order to carry out Trump’s mass deportation agenda, the United States will need enormous prison camps for immigrant families, part of an effort to deport millions of people at a record pace.
The mass deportation operation will be a “bloody story,” Trump said last weekend. And key advisers have promised a historic infrastructure project to churn people out of the country.
The camps will be built “on open land in Texas near the border” and should have the capacity to house as many as 70,000 people, which would double the United States’ current immigrant detention capacity, Stephen Miller, the main point man on immigration in Trump’s White House, said last year. In multiple interviews, Miller has gleefully described daily flights out of the camps to all corners of the world, an undertaking he said would be “greater than any national infrastructure project” in American history.
“Trump comes back in January — I’ll be on his heels coming back, and I will run the biggest deportation force this country has ever seen,” Thomas Homan, who served as acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the Trump administration, said in July at a conference for Trump-aligned conservatives.
“They ain’t seen shit yet,” Homan said. “Wait until 2025.”
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-deportation-camps_n_66e4793de4b03e3cc10020c3
From Wikipedia the online encyclopeida:
To deport, at a minimum, 11.1 million undocumented people, in Stephen Miller words, that Joe90 pointed to, infrastructure will be needed.
Infrastructure was needed to commit the Holocaust.
A bureaucracy, to adminster the identification, forcible round up, deportation and transport of 6 million people, coordinating rail transport, comandeering rail wagons, constructing purpose built death camps,
….to carry out Trump’s mass deportation agenda, the United States will need enormous prison camps for immigrant families….
… camps will be built “on open land in Texas near the border” and should have the capacity to house as many as 70,000 people…
….Miller has gleefully described daily flights out of the camps to all corners of the world, an undertaking he said would be “greater than any national infrastructure project” in American history.
Just as the Nazis inevitably determined, their Madagascar plan to deport millions of Jews, could only be "partially successful". When Miller determines his plan to round up millions of immigrants, and herd them into camps and then fly them to "all corners of the world" as too impractical and expnsive, the infrastructure will be in place for another, more final, solution.
From wikipedia the online encyclopedia:
Maybe the ability to forcibly deport millions of human beings against their will has improved since the 1930s and '40s, but I doubt it.
From Joe90's link
Key allies and advisers aren’t mincing their words: In order to carry out Trump’s mass deportation agenda, the United States will need enormous prison camps for immigrant families, part of an effort to deport millions of people at a record pace.
The numbers are mind boggling.
To transport 11.1 million people you would need tens of thousands of buses and drivers, and guards.
How much if any luggage would each undocumented person to be deported, be allowed to take on the bus with them on their way to the camps?
What happens to the mountains of private property left behind by the millions of undocumented immigrants forced into camps to be deported?
Houses, cars, consumer goods, furniture, computers, art works, that the deportees can't take on the bus with them on their way to the camps?
Who gets it?
Will it all be confiscated by the state to pay for all the 'infrastructure' costs?
Trains are still the most efficient way to transport millions of people. This means a rail spur will have to be run out to each camp. If Miller is serious about flying all these people out of the country, airfields would have to be built beside each camp. That leads to the camps themselves, will lethal force be used to keep the millions of deportees behind the wire?
Will the wire be electrified?
Fascinating read.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/nz-news/350397585/auckland-sisters-took-dna-test-and-ended-apologising-slavery-jamaica
“The economic benefits derived from chattel slavery contributed to the financial and imperial strength of Britain, which in turn supported its colonisation activities worldwide, including New Zealand.
“We take this opportunity to also let you know that we will be asking the New Zealand government to acknowledge these historical links to injustices that took place in the wider Caribbean.
“We share a history as descendants of both enslavers and the enslaved. Our history is intertwined with your history, and your history is intertwined with ours”
David Seymour wouldn’t like this to be acknowledged, I reckon.
Aidee Walker is one to watch. Not saying she's going to enter politics but she's increasingly active in that international advocacy of the disenfranchised space.
The end game for Atlas/ACT/National is to lock in the gains made by Westerners wherever they have made themselves apparent. It's important for them to eliminate any redress movements, and conveniently (for the historically wealthy) to ask for a reset where all peoples, with the swish of a pen, are now suddenly and miraculously equal.
Some of our Scottish ancestors were taken to the West Indies as slaves in the 16th Century during "The Killing Times", and the religious wars when the Scottish Covenanters were fighting the English Monarchy. Many descendants of these Covenanters from the Scottish villages migrated to the USA, Canada, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.
Seymore is no more than a jumped up little c**k doing the bidding for the likes of Sir Allan Gibbs whose family made a truck load of money with the Holyoke Family at the Kinloch Development at Lake Taupo which I believe is still under a TOW Claim.
Seymour is a young Roger Douglas – totally convinced that his brand of neo-liberal trickle down economic euthenics is the answer to all of society's problems.
But even Roger Douglas knew when he should back off.
Seymour has no such wisdom. He now tells us that he has a mighty tax dragon to unleash on us, to be announced sometime soon. We have a pretty fair idea of what it will involve – flat income tax which makes the rich a lot richer and the rest of us no better. Privatisation of pretty much anything in government that can be flogged off. Mass tolling of roads etc.
The man is intoxicated with delusions of grandeur.
He needs to be stopped, but National won't do anything because their survival in government depends on him.
At least Lange had the sense to stop Douglas before he could totally f… the economy.
It seems nothing will stop Seymour.
Gibbs and Holyoake. Thieving bastards.
John Roughan in the New Zealand Herald noted the lack of ‘strong comment’,5 while Bassett remarked upon the need for more explanation in respect to ‘the accusations levelled at Holyoake over his influence to get essential services into Kinloch that appears to have turned him and his partners into wealthy men’.6 Just what was Holyoake up to at the holiday resort of Kinloch, where from 1953 until his death in 1983 much of his private life was focused? There is much more to scrutinize than his influence in having a road built to his property. Most particularly, there are the circumstances of his acquisition of Mäori land there in 1956. The extent to which Gustafson chose to confront Holyoake’s manoeuvrings at Kinloch, therefore, is certainly a mark by which his account can be measured.7 Holyoake’s own narrative can introduce us to the origins of the Kinloch purchase. In the silver jubilee history of the settlement, an account written by Holyoake was made available by his family. In it he related how he was told in June 1953 by friend and National Party stalwart Theodore Nisbett (T.N.) Gibbs that the latter’s son, Ian, was interested in purchasing a block of land on the north-western shore of Lake Taupö. The land comprised the best part of Whangamata No.1, which had been purchased from Mäori in 1884, and after a succession of owners was now in the hands of Ian Gibbs’s employer, New Zealand Forest Products Ltd. The block comprised some 5385 acres and was largely covered in scrub and fern. Holyoake, who was Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture at the time, inspected paul hamer 158 the land the next weekend and ‘advised the purchase of the block.’8 Exactly when the purchase took place is unclear. Ian Gibbs had secured a 14day option to purchase by the time of Holyoake’s June 1953 inspection,9 but the certificate of title for the land states ‘Transfer N.Z. Forest Products Limited to Ian Ogilvie Gibbs of Tokoroa engineer and Theodore Nisbett Gibbs of Wellington public accountant as tenants in common in equal shares produced 23/11/53.’10 In any event, Holyoake was quickly in on the deal. He recorded that his experience as a ‘practical farmer’soon ledT.N. Gibbs to offer him a stake in the block, which he accepted. The partnership, which was called Whangamata Station, was formalized in October 1953. T.N. and Ian Gibbs held quarter shares each, Holyoake three sixteenths , and each of his five children a sixteenth each.11 By the time the partnership was formalized Holyoake had already made good use of the expertise at his disposal in the Department of…
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/879336/summary
Early Childhood Council chief executive Simon Laube does not want to teach, just babysit:
Capitalist theory demands two parents work. Under 5s are in these battery farms for 10 hours a day because ambitious parents place material gain over child bonding. Simon Laube is only too happy to double down on this practice, for huge profit.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/528048/education-body-calls-for-overhaul-of-early-learning-rules-ineffective-teacher-to-child-ratios
I would agree. There is no reason to have more "teacher" time than in a primary school (9 to 11, break and then lunch, and 1-3).
The before and after part is oversight and access to play areas, books and indoor activity.
There is a strong argument to be had that pre-school, the purpose of life is to play. That doesn't mean I'm all for the early child
racketeducation.As MB points out, the system we operate in deems wage slavery to be more important than a parent bringing up their children.
Wage slavery is more vital than supporting elderly parents in their twilight years too. Not to worry, we have a few foreign operators that can spend government money on making a return to their shareholders, employ migrants at as low wages as possible while also providing 'care' to our senior citizens.
Public health enforcement with teeth.
.
VIENNA (AP) — A woman in Austria was found guilty of fatally infecting her neighbor with COVID-19 in 2021, her second pandemic-related conviction in a year, according to local media. A judge sentenced the 54-year-old on Thursday to four months’ suspended imprisonment and an 800-euro fine ($886.75) for grossly negligent homicide.
The victim, who was also a cancer patient, died of pneumonia that was caused by the coronavirus, according to Austrian news agency APA. A virological report showed that the virus DNA matched both the deceased and the 54-year-old woman, proving that the defendant “almost 100 percent” transmitted it, an expert told the court.
“I feel sorry for you personally — I think that something like this has probably happened hundreds of times,” the judge said Thursday. “But you are unlucky that an expert has determined with almost absolute certainty that it was an infection that came from you."
https://apnews.com/article/austria-covid-conviction-court-coronavirus-ef341c5f6714526f05c67662a94eeb13