Finally cracked my way through the issues fixing the search system. Problem was that I was too good at hacking the system to add comments to the search system back in 2010 .
I did it without actually understanding the fundamentals of how the search, templates, and callbacks operated. It costed me at this end of time.
Fast forward to 2024 and a plugin that was discontinued in 2007 didn't survive the transition from PHP 7.4 to PHP 8.3. There was a a feature that was deprecated in PHP 7.0 which was turned off between 8.2 and 8.3, and the original code and my updates depended far too heavily on it. Plus the language had moved on, and I wanted to rewrite in the current tip syntax of PHP.
It has been a fast learning curve in PHP, and in a new programming editor – Jetbrains rather nice PhpStorm.
Have some tidy up work to do. But I should be able to slide the new plugin into the main site this evening when most of you are asleep.
Don't know about anyone else. But I have been missing the search especially when wanting to look up comments by a another commenter or even myself. I have resorted to doing SQL queries on the database.
That leaves the plugin replacement for the Feeds on the right column. I have long finished the server code for that in c++ and protobuf.
But I still have to finish the translator to make it look like a set of posts to wordpress code framework. Same structural issues as the search plugin so this should be a lot easier..
Then I can rebuild the server with a clean install of ubuntu 24.04 because this boot system started with 16.04 back in 2016. It has been upgraded every two years since. But now had a lot of accumulated rubbish that could do with a spring clean.
Then I will hand the server over to its new operator and organisation, and it should be stable for another decade. I will probably be handing some of the technical side. But hopefully after I push these wordpress plugins to wordpress.org, it should be easy to hand to most programmers.
Then I can start concentrating on writing posts.
BTW the site is now at
29,705 published Posts (and 1503 draft posts – time to clean again).
1,895,383 published Comments
and
14 published Pages
Done that before. Both on my parents hobby farm of 88 acres in steep hill county above Puhio in the 70s and 80s and on the lambing beats at bloody enormous Kinloch station in Taupo in 77.
But I was a lot younger then. I went to the army training for territorials and university after that having figured out that while farming was fun, it wasn't particularly profitable.
I think that writing code is easier physically provided you keep the weight down. But definitely more stressful while you're fighting against your own inability to figure out a problem. Ewes birth assists are relatively mentally benign by comparison, but way more physical and messy.
Bravo and ditto re: envying your skills. Thanks for the work lprent and look forward to your contributions. Happy to have fortuitously met you lot here.
I have a post I'm writing right now. But it will have to wait until I catch up on bit of sleep (started working about 0500 this morning). I need a clearer head for reviewing it. I may need to smooth it out with nastier burrs and find the correct words in our wonderfully expressive English language…
There is nothing quite as stupid as watching political parties trying to make the real world fit around some stupid message that their dickhead PR people thought would win them an election. And that is what we are seeing. The truth is that Nicola Willis was completely at putting a shadow budget together, over-estimated the ability to cut costs in already stretched areas like health. That was known when she released her shadow budget back in 2023 and nothing has changed since.
Or not. I at least need to find a couple of links.
There's the hastily arranged press conference on Sunday afternoon by Luxon and Mitchell around the claimed drop in crime rates. It transpired the only part of the country which has seen a drop is Auckland's CBD and we all know that is unlikely to be sustained. The rest of Auckland rose 7% and the rest of the country also rose around the same margin – give or take a few percentages either way. A perfect example of trying to make the stats fit around a much vaunted promise to lower the crime rates in twelve months.
I wonder if the media will point out the press conference was a fraudulent attempt to pull the wool over the voters' eyes and save Mitchell's political skin.
It was intentional misinformation since at the time of the press conference they KNEW crime was increasing across the entire country – including and particularly, violent crime.
I wonder lprent if you should make most of the Standard pay per view BUT (and this is important) make the subscription only $50 a year.
I'm sure most people would pay this….the blurb would say less than a dollar a week…..and at least it would cover some of your opportunity costs in terms of time spent maintaining TS.
I have long thought that if The Guardian, for instance, halved it's subscription rates it would gain more than double the subscribers….more money and more readership in other words.
I have thought about various schemes for funding before.
For instance, we did have advertising for a number of years in the early 2010s. The problem was that it chewed up excessive amounts of time chasing payments and I usually wound up paying the costs it was meant to cover anyway.
It also made the site much slower because the advertising servers were pretty slow. That tended to stack connections up waiting especially when leaving comments – which meant that we needed far more capacity than was required for a non-advertising site.
It was actually cheaper for me to expend time to make the hardware and site faster and cheaper to run. That is because my time is usually quite expensive but is generally predicable for when I am working. I have to make sure that TS doesn't cut into my working time when someone else is paying for that time. So I make the hardware and site as robust as possible.
Dropping logins (as I did in 2009) and not having subscriptions means that there was virtually no overhead in managing that. At one point I was dealing multiple emails per day about lost user ids, changed emails, people who couldn’t generate repeatable passwords, and people complaining that their details were being leaked (they weren’t). Dropping the logins to just authors made that really irritating workload disappear.
Not having advertising meant that I wasn't having to follow up missing payments or adverts that broke the site.
I don't get too many arbitrary and unpredictable calls on my time during my extremely expensive working time.
To not have advertising or logins meant that the operating costs had to be low.
From 2007 to the present, we went from a single home server with minimal loads. Then moving to a Bluehost (a shared web hosting site) and getting booted because we started getting excessive loads. Back to the home server and then leasing a machine in the US with pretty high monthly cost. Then shifted to AWS after dumping advertising and having dynamic servers loading which gave us peak loading capacity.
In 2015 I specced up a local home machine as a server and started using CDNs more heavily. With changes in hardware and CDN providers that is where it has stayed ever since. Running on my home network via fibre with offsite backups, massive protection systems, offsite warm server if I need it, and only occasional hardware update periods.
The server cost less than $2000 and I used it as a raid storage device for our files. It also reduced the costs to minimal and I didn’t get provider related issues like late payment issues to them. Over all it saved me a lot of time.
Good thing too as I'd started going offshore for work deployments in 2015. I've operated the server from extensive periods in Italy and Singapore on deployments. I've operated it while building some very time consuming projects where I barely get enough sleep.
The peak monthly TS only costs were about $1k (dynamic servers on AWS and the 2014 election). Currently they are less than $50 per month over the whole year and still falling as I replace and drop paid plugins.
Since 2015 the main expenses and time wasting from TS has been a silly private prosecution from. I helped bankrupt the prosecutor for unpaid court ordered costs of about $30k after they lost.
But also time-wasting when authors have gotten into some pretty pointless fish slapping exercises between themselves. And the similar occasional periods when we get attempts by ideologues to control the comments.
Biggest hassle is finding time to bring on new authors to write posts and keeping an eye on moderation.
The problem with subscriptions is the time to manage them and the logins and lost passwords that they bring with them.
Only just read this lprent. I can understand the hassle with subscriptions and advertising. I guess you would take donations and suggest $50 a year? No admin with that.
I have run an environmental society for 29 years where people are always suggesting to me funding sources and how to increase members, but that all takes time and administration….I prefer to spend my time making submissions and appealing things at the coalface.
But when the new legislation comes in replacing the RMA there will be no opportunity for the public or community groups to be involved in development applications AT ALL, so I will dissolve the society. Scandalous.
I can understand the hassle with subscriptions and advertising. I guess you would take donations and suggest $50 a year? No admin with that.
Effectively that is what we already have.
But when the new legislation comes in replacing the RMA there will be no opportunity for the public or community groups to be involved in development applications AT ALL, so I will dissolve the society. Scandalous.
Goes back to the retrospectively dragging companies and organisations into court under equity. Which is as far as I am aware still part of our legal base – in particular injunctive relief.
Or using protest, sabotage, and intimidation to achieve some form of equity. Personally I’m in favour of tar and feathering and exile to Australia.
Chris Bishop is insane if he thinks that this will make ‘growth’ simpler. It will merely make it far more ugly, divisive, and drawn out.
What really is behind the Merkat Seymore's Treaty Principles Bill, FFS the TOW was signed in good faith by all parties in 1840, however one party did not adhere to the principles and the other party got the rough end of the pineapple. How can this jumped up little j*** from Epsom get so much traction with his Racist Treaty Principles Bill supported by Luxon and the perennial racist Winston Peter's.
How? MMP's major flaw at least in NZ is that a relativly small part of the constituency can have an outsized influence on politics and government.
Previously that influence has been relativly benign ie Provincial Growth Fund, Waka jumping law and im sure there are others.
This time Act finally had an opportunity to wield power and are using it. I expect they're also aware that they need to keep themselves in the news etc so they dont fade away once in govt. They only need to appeal to a small portion of the population so expect more of yhe same for the next couple of years.
Yep, they really cocked it up and the big reforms attempted in Water, Health and Education were poorly explained and or delivered and now dead or dying.
tinker here, review there, careful now, don't frighten the horses
the big reforms attempted in Water, Health and Education
Tinker/review, versus "big reforms" – all depends on your point of view. Imho, Labour's pandemic response was big – too big for some. But I appreciated it.
You can't see any inconsistency between "tinker here, review there, careful now" and "big reforms attempted in Water, Health and Education"?
Re “the Covid excuse“, maybe our response will be better next time.
Oceania standouts: New Zealand and Australia
If there is a common theme emerging, it’s this—countries that responded earlier and aggressively tended to have better responses. If there’s a second theme, it’s that the Oceania countries of New Zealand and Australia have knocked it out of the park in terms of initial response… and from opposite sides of the political spectrum, no less.
Look at the UK for the evils of a first-past-the-post electorate. Luxon is not a friend of the National Party either, because he has reneged control to ACT and NZF. I bet there are many Nats who are grinding their teeth over his toothlessness.
Theres no perfect system, honestly I dont think Nat voters will be that unhappy that Act are pulling the govt further right than they otherwise would have been. They might not like the social division Act is stirring but fiscally speaking I'd say theyre pretty happy.
I am not talking policies, I am talking about the value of the Nats' electoral brand. Those Nats voters that like ACT's brouhaha will just give ACT their party vote next election. The Nats I'm thinking of are those who run the Party, or are on the Party list, and see their sinecure disappearing in 2026.
National always happy to get down on their knees and do what their donors want, over and above what is logical. Or indeed the right thing to do. Great video from BHN on road speeds limits.
Theres no doubt the costs were excessive, but its where you end up when you hire a big multinational like Ventia and every job outside of normal contract scope has layers of margin added (like compounding interest) as the job passes through the different layers of contractors involved.
It's almost impossible to prevent with the various contract clauses about extra work etc.
The rush to bundle contracts into these huge one stop shop multinationals is an absolute disaster I was very unhappy the a Phil Goff lead council went down that path.
Basically contracts should be kept small enough for locally owned business to at least tender and undertake. Yes there's more contract admin needed but at least the money stays onshore.
Ventia has sub contracted aussie owned firms to undertake for example the grounds work so basically everything except the piss poor wages leaves the country probably with minimal or no tax paid and zero social responsibility ie they dont give a fuck.
I think Wayne Brown will be a one term mayor. The alternative was Efeso Collins and too many did not want him. Wellington have Tory and Efeso would have been similar. I think Tory will only be one term too. I don't think she will get much sympathy from todays article in NZH, struggling to get by on $190k salary and having apparently had a large lotto win a few years back. Does not fill you with confidence on her financial ability.
I'm sure there are many other Wellingtonians struggling more.
[I’m starting to get fed up with your troll-ish comments again, lately, Judge Jimmy – this is diversion trolling.
Does not fill you with confidence on her financial ability.
You may want to check the facts and correct your attempted smear of Tory Whanau; your blatant & ignorant bias is better suited for SM. This is your only warning – Incognito]
The only things Wayne Brown has delivered for Auckland residents are those stupid scrap bins which no-one uses, and the cancellation of free off-peak and weekend parking.
Despite the fact our myopic media never look up from their provincialism and navel gazing NZ exists in a wider context. Seymour has made no secret he'd like to replace National as the main vehicle of the political right and the strange, self-radicalising collapse of modern conservatism is helping him. Conservatism used to be about moral superiority, prudent finances and patriotism. Nowadays it stands for moral sadism, looting the state for cronies and nativist xenophobia. Nonetheless, National still professes to believe in the institutions of state.
What people, and especially The MSM, fail to grasp is that Seymour is a new kind of radical politician, the narcissistic anti-constitutional conservative. He's looking around the world at the crisis of confidence in centrist institutions and he's looking at Trump and Orban and Fico and Farage and the rise of right wing strongmen and he fancies himself riding that wave all the way to the top, and to hell with democracy. For the narcissist anti-constitutional conservative the likes of Costello and McKee engaging in brazen – corrupt in many people's opinion – behaviour isn't a bug – it's a feature. Attacking the place of the treaty is exactly the sort of anti-constitutional action you'd expect from someone who sees institutions and the rule of law as barriers to their rise to power. The more he can destroy faith in institutions the more he thinks it advantages his right wing authoritarianism.
Oh, hi Mountain Tui. Thanks for that. Re the Bicycles…I always try to walk bike the talk, literally as much as I can. Lost count..over 200 saved from scrap metal or ..worse, landfill. And such a satisfying feeling pedalling something that hadnt turned a wheel for years : )
I been reading your latest Post…such an indictment on NACT1. I'm torn between anger..and sadness. So I went and worked on a Bike.
And thought to put up those links.
Re your Post, thankyou for saying what should be self evident..and already proven to fail. World wide.
I couldn't find an emoji to say what I wanted but it's respect and admiration.
Unfortunately I feel more and more my role is moot. Yes the reality/news is depressing, but it also feels past the point where I need to "prove" anything – therefore what is my role?
I don't want to be a Mike Hoskings of the left so I'm left pondering as to the value of now stating and repeating the obvious.
Also I feel more and more people are now clue-ing onto the new government and where before my information was helpful to see things, I believe now they've made it self-evident.
Again hugest respect to you and what you do. So nice to chat anytime I see you here!
I have been doing the Bikes for a long time. RSE workers got a lot (which they also took back to the Islands) , and I recently donated some more to a Hospice shop …
I just thought, have Luxon, Seymour et al ever been into, or needed to, a Salvo or Hospice shop?
IMO we on the Leftmust all utilise our (natural? learned?) skills/gifts for, what I would like to think of as.." the Greater Good."
I see you M.T., and the other Standard authors as having a skill/gift I dont .
So please keep on putting it out there. I have learned a lot. More..to learn. Also have to say, the morale booster from reading Like Minds..is much needed during these disturbing times.
Just listening (and watching) QT in the house, and, I must say, both Luxon and Willis are sounding very Trumpian in their language – i.e. Nicola saying Labour would (and has) destroyed the economy!
Luxon making a pathetic attempt to get the opposition on side by suggesting they join his government in his punching down!
And Tama Potaka getting a right roasting from TPM and others! I sure don’t envy his ‘Uncle Tom’ position.
A little bit of good news, E Tu has organised a hui for noon October 23.
From the email; "It’s about our rights as workers. It’s about our rights as tāngata whenua and tauiwi to honour Te Tiriti o Waitangi. It’s about protecting a public health system that is vital for our community wellbeing. Let our voices be loud and clear against the Government’s destructive and divisive agenda."
11 different regional locations up and down the motu.
If yr interested, contact a colleague and you can plus one on their invite.
I will be going to the Manawatu hui, any Standardistas want to tag along let me know I can add you to the list and I could help with transport.
I had a day off today, so I thought I would tune into parliament this afternoon and listen to question time.
What do I hear?
The same old National mantra bleating that everything that happened under Labour was bad, everything that happens under National is good and if it isn't good it is because of Labour.
National cannot and will not ever take responsibility for their own actions. It is like the old defence "the devil made me do it" except swap devil for Labour.
Like something out of a science fiction movie.
Cyber War enters a new dangerous phase.
Eight killed, 2,750 wounded in pager detonations across Lebanon, health minister says
….The Israeli military declined to comment on Reuters enquiries about the detonations.
Hezbollah confirmed in a statement the deaths of at least three people, including two of its fighters. The third person killed was a girl, it said, adding that an investigation was being conducted into the causes of the blasts.
One of the fighters killed was the son of a Hezbollah member of the Lebanese parliament, two security sources told Reuters.
Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, suffered a minor injury when a pager exploded, Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency reported…..
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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 ...
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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 ...
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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 Manisha Caleb, Senior Lecturer in Astrophysics, University of Sydney Artist’s impression of ASKAP J1839-0756.James Josephides When some of the biggest stars reach the end of their lives, they explode in spectacular supernovas and leave behind incredibly dense cores called neutron stars. ...
Democracy Now!AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman.We turn now to Gaza, where Israel’s assault on the besieged strip continues despite ongoing talks over a possible ceasefire. Palestinian authorities say 5000 people are missing or have been killed in this ...
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 ...
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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 ...
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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 ...
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Finally cracked my way through the issues fixing the search system. Problem was that I was too good at hacking the system to add comments to the search system back in 2010 .
I did it without actually understanding the fundamentals of how the search, templates, and callbacks operated. It costed me at this end of time.
Fast forward to 2024 and a plugin that was discontinued in 2007 didn't survive the transition from PHP 7.4 to PHP 8.3. There was a a feature that was deprecated in PHP 7.0 which was turned off between 8.2 and 8.3, and the original code and my updates depended far too heavily on it. Plus the language had moved on, and I wanted to rewrite in the current tip syntax of PHP.
It has been a fast learning curve in PHP, and in a new programming editor – Jetbrains rather nice PhpStorm.
Have some tidy up work to do. But I should be able to slide the new plugin into the main site this evening when most of you are asleep.
Don't know about anyone else. But I have been missing the search especially when wanting to look up comments by a another commenter or even myself. I have resorted to doing SQL queries on the database.
That leaves the plugin replacement for the Feeds on the right column. I have long finished the server code for that in c++ and protobuf.
But I still have to finish the translator to make it look like a set of posts to wordpress code framework. Same structural issues as the search plugin so this should be a lot easier..
Then I can rebuild the server with a clean install of ubuntu 24.04 because this boot system started with 16.04 back in 2016. It has been upgraded every two years since. But now had a lot of accumulated rubbish that could do with a spring clean.
Then I will hand the server over to its new operator and organisation, and it should be stable for another decade. I will probably be handing some of the technical side. But hopefully after I push these wordpress plugins to wordpress.org, it should be easy to hand to most programmers.
Then I can start concentrating on writing posts.
BTW the site is now at
29,705 published Posts (and 1503 draft posts – time to clean again).
1,895,383 published Comments
and
14 published Pages
I envy your skills and work ethic both are without peer IMO
Sounds more challenging than reaching in trough a bearing ewe and extracting twin lambs, 😁
Done that before. Both on my parents hobby farm of 88 acres in steep hill county above Puhio in the 70s and 80s and on the lambing beats at bloody enormous Kinloch station in Taupo in 77.
But I was a lot younger then. I went to the army training for territorials and university after that having figured out that while farming was fun, it wasn't particularly profitable.
I think that writing code is easier physically provided you keep the weight down. But definitely more stressful while you're fighting against your own inability to figure out a problem. Ewes birth assists are relatively mentally benign by comparison, but way more physical and messy.
Especially as the hired help!
One must celebrate the wins when doing a lambing beat as ,there's plenty of rough moments.
Bravo and ditto re: envying your skills. Thanks for the work lprent and look forward to your contributions. Happy to have fortuitously met you lot here.
Glad to hear you are going to write more posts. Unlike some, I love your caustic approach – calling a spade a spade. Warms the cockles of me heart. 😉
Ditto.
Actually usually more acerbic than that.
I have a post I'm writing right now. But it will have to wait until I catch up on bit of sleep (started working about 0500 this morning). I need a clearer head for reviewing it. I may need to smooth it out with nastier burrs and find the correct words in our wonderfully expressive English language…
Or not. I at least need to find a couple of links.
There's the hastily arranged press conference on Sunday afternoon by Luxon and Mitchell around the claimed drop in crime rates. It transpired the only part of the country which has seen a drop is Auckland's CBD and we all know that is unlikely to be sustained. The rest of Auckland rose 7% and the rest of the country also rose around the same margin – give or take a few percentages either way. A perfect example of trying to make the stats fit around a much vaunted promise to lower the crime rates in twelve months.
I wonder if the media will point out the press conference was a fraudulent attempt to pull the wool over the voters' eyes and save Mitchell's political skin.
It was intentional misinformation since at the time of the press conference they KNEW crime was increasing across the entire country – including and particularly, violent crime.
Not to mention their fudged statistics.
I wonder lprent if you should make most of the Standard pay per view BUT (and this is important) make the subscription only $50 a year.
I'm sure most people would pay this….the blurb would say less than a dollar a week…..and at least it would cover some of your opportunity costs in terms of time spent maintaining TS.
I have long thought that if The Guardian, for instance, halved it's subscription rates it would gain more than double the subscribers….more money and more readership in other words.
I have thought about various schemes for funding before.
For instance, we did have advertising for a number of years in the early 2010s. The problem was that it chewed up excessive amounts of time chasing payments and I usually wound up paying the costs it was meant to cover anyway.
It also made the site much slower because the advertising servers were pretty slow. That tended to stack connections up waiting especially when leaving comments – which meant that we needed far more capacity than was required for a non-advertising site.
It was actually cheaper for me to expend time to make the hardware and site faster and cheaper to run. That is because my time is usually quite expensive but is generally predicable for when I am working. I have to make sure that TS doesn't cut into my working time when someone else is paying for that time. So I make the hardware and site as robust as possible.
Dropping logins (as I did in 2009) and not having subscriptions means that there was virtually no overhead in managing that. At one point I was dealing multiple emails per day about lost user ids, changed emails, people who couldn’t generate repeatable passwords, and people complaining that their details were being leaked (they weren’t). Dropping the logins to just authors made that really irritating workload disappear.
Not having advertising meant that I wasn't having to follow up missing payments or adverts that broke the site.
I don't get too many arbitrary and unpredictable calls on my time during my extremely expensive working time.
To not have advertising or logins meant that the operating costs had to be low.
From 2007 to the present, we went from a single home server with minimal loads. Then moving to a Bluehost (a shared web hosting site) and getting booted because we started getting excessive loads. Back to the home server and then leasing a machine in the US with pretty high monthly cost. Then shifted to AWS after dumping advertising and having dynamic servers loading which gave us peak loading capacity.
In 2015 I specced up a local home machine as a server and started using CDNs more heavily. With changes in hardware and CDN providers that is where it has stayed ever since. Running on my home network via fibre with offsite backups, massive protection systems, offsite warm server if I need it, and only occasional hardware update periods.
The server cost less than $2000 and I used it as a raid storage device for our files. It also reduced the costs to minimal and I didn’t get provider related issues like late payment issues to them. Over all it saved me a lot of time.
Good thing too as I'd started going offshore for work deployments in 2015. I've operated the server from extensive periods in Italy and Singapore on deployments. I've operated it while building some very time consuming projects where I barely get enough sleep.
The peak monthly TS only costs were about $1k (dynamic servers on AWS and the 2014 election). Currently they are less than $50 per month over the whole year and still falling as I replace and drop paid plugins.
Since 2015 the main expenses and time wasting from TS has been a silly private prosecution from. I helped bankrupt the prosecutor for unpaid court ordered costs of about $30k after they lost.
But also time-wasting when authors have gotten into some pretty pointless fish slapping exercises between themselves. And the similar occasional periods when we get attempts by ideologues to control the comments.
Biggest hassle is finding time to bring on new authors to write posts and keeping an eye on moderation.
The problem with subscriptions is the time to manage them and the logins and lost passwords that they bring with them.
Only just read this lprent. I can understand the hassle with subscriptions and advertising. I guess you would take donations and suggest $50 a year? No admin with that.
I have run an environmental society for 29 years where people are always suggesting to me funding sources and how to increase members, but that all takes time and administration….I prefer to spend my time making submissions and appealing things at the coalface.
But when the new legislation comes in replacing the RMA there will be no opportunity for the public or community groups to be involved in development applications AT ALL, so I will dissolve the society. Scandalous.
Effectively that is what we already have.
Goes back to the retrospectively dragging companies and organisations into court under equity. Which is as far as I am aware still part of our legal base – in particular injunctive relief.
Or using protest, sabotage, and intimidation to achieve some form of equity. Personally I’m in favour of tar and feathering and exile to Australia.
Chris Bishop is insane if he thinks that this will make ‘growth’ simpler. It will merely make it far more ugly, divisive, and drawn out.
What really is behind the Merkat Seymore's Treaty Principles Bill, FFS the TOW was signed in good faith by all parties in 1840, however one party did not adhere to the principles and the other party got the rough end of the pineapple. How can this jumped up little j*** from Epsom get so much traction with his Racist Treaty Principles Bill supported by Luxon and the perennial racist Winston Peter's.
How? MMP's major flaw at least in NZ is that a relativly small part of the constituency can have an outsized influence on politics and government.
Previously that influence has been relativly benign ie Provincial Growth Fund, Waka jumping law and im sure there are others.
This time Act finally had an opportunity to wield power and are using it. I expect they're also aware that they need to keep themselves in the news etc so they dont fade away once in govt. They only need to appeal to a small portion of the population so expect more of yhe same for the next couple of years.
I think part of the frustration stems from a party with single digit support, last election, being so impactful.
Contrast that with Labour's last turn at the helm, tinker here, review there, careful now, don't frighten the horses.
Yep, they really cocked it up and the big reforms attempted in Water, Health and Education were poorly explained and or delivered and now dead or dying.
Tinker/review, versus "big reforms" – all depends on your point of view. Imho, Labour's pandemic response was big – too big for some. But I appreciated it.
https://www.health.govt.nz/strategies-initiatives/programmes-and-initiatives/emergency-management/pandemics
https://www.treasury.govt.nz/information-and-services/nz-economy/covid-19-economic-response
C'mon mate. It's time to drop the Covid excuse.
The time before that it was Winston's fault.
It clearly falls on deaf ears unless you are only interested in preaching to the choir.
You can't see any inconsistency between "tinker here, review there, careful now" and "big reforms attempted in Water, Health and Education"?
Re “the Covid excuse“, maybe our response will be better next time.
It means luxon is either weak or complicate,
….complicit
Thanks was so far off it even the atuo correct gene couldn't solve the riddle!
Look at the UK for the evils of a first-past-the-post electorate. Luxon is not a friend of the National Party either, because he has reneged control to ACT and NZF. I bet there are many Nats who are grinding their teeth over his toothlessness.
Theres no perfect system, honestly I dont think Nat voters will be that unhappy that Act are pulling the govt further right than they otherwise would have been. They might not like the social division Act is stirring but fiscally speaking I'd say theyre pretty happy.
I am not talking policies, I am talking about the value of the Nats' electoral brand. Those Nats voters that like ACT's brouhaha will just give ACT their party vote next election. The Nats I'm thinking of are those who run the Party, or are on the Party list, and see their sinecure disappearing in 2026.
If you haven't had your intelligence insulted, this interview should do the trick.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/morningreport/audio/2018955860/minister-defends-proposed-ge
When asked about councils wishing to remain GE free, Collins bought up the subject of soy milk in supermarkets. Disingenuous much.
Once again this government is serving business interests before the interests of the citizenry.
Once the genetic modification genie is out of the bottle there is no going back.
Great for Monsanto not so much for organic farmers.
National always happy to get down on their knees and do what their donors want, over and above what is logical. Or indeed the right thing to do. Great video from BHN on road speeds limits.
Putin is upping size of military forces to 1.5 mi, to have a force second only to China.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/disgraceful-auckland-mayor-wayne-brown-slams-council-staff-over-263000-milford-beach-stair-cost/CWLG6QE3GNCAJBBIGRBO3GKD2U/
He's running.
There was never any doubt. And I reckon Auckland will vote for him.
This is a guy who has lied and is all about grandstanding, no vision, no collaboration.
The above happened on his watch – let alone, the engineers and Council explained the rationale to him.
"We get the politicians we deserve" so I have to accept that.
Theres no doubt the costs were excessive, but its where you end up when you hire a big multinational like Ventia and every job outside of normal contract scope has layers of margin added (like compounding interest) as the job passes through the different layers of contractors involved.
Yes I hear you, but to me, the point is it happened under Wayne Brown's watch yet he saw still fit to rave and rant about it.
Leadership is much more than showmanship.
It's almost impossible to prevent with the various contract clauses about extra work etc.
The rush to bundle contracts into these huge one stop shop multinationals is an absolute disaster I was very unhappy the a Phil Goff lead council went down that path.
Basically contracts should be kept small enough for locally owned business to at least tender and undertake. Yes there's more contract admin needed but at least the money stays onshore.
Ventia has sub contracted aussie owned firms to undertake for example the grounds work so basically everything except the piss poor wages leaves the country probably with minimal or no tax paid and zero social responsibility ie they dont give a fuck.
I think Wayne Brown will be a one term mayor. The alternative was Efeso Collins and too many did not want him. Wellington have Tory and Efeso would have been similar. I think Tory will only be one term too. I don't think she will get much sympathy from todays article in NZH, struggling to get by on $190k salary and having apparently had a large lotto win a few years back. Does not fill you with confidence on her financial ability.
Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau sells car to help pay the bills – NZ Herald
I'm sure there are many other Wellingtonians struggling more.
[I’m starting to get fed up with your troll-ish comments again, lately, Judge Jimmy – this is diversion trolling.
You may want to check the facts and correct your attempted smear of Tory Whanau; your blatant & ignorant bias is better suited for SM. This is your only warning – Incognito]
Mod note
What is SM?
Social Media
The only things Wayne Brown has delivered for Auckland residents are those stupid scrap bins which no-one uses, and the cancellation of free off-peak and weekend parking.
Thanks, idiot.
And despite being consulted on the parking, he later denied knowing about it.
Despite the fact our myopic media never look up from their provincialism and navel gazing NZ exists in a wider context. Seymour has made no secret he'd like to replace National as the main vehicle of the political right and the strange, self-radicalising collapse of modern conservatism is helping him. Conservatism used to be about moral superiority, prudent finances and patriotism. Nowadays it stands for moral sadism, looting the state for cronies and nativist xenophobia. Nonetheless, National still professes to believe in the institutions of state.
What people, and especially The MSM, fail to grasp is that Seymour is a new kind of radical politician, the narcissistic anti-constitutional conservative. He's looking around the world at the crisis of confidence in centrist institutions and he's looking at Trump and Orban and Fico and Farage and the rise of right wing strongmen and he fancies himself riding that wave all the way to the top, and to hell with democracy. For the narcissist anti-constitutional conservative the likes of Costello and McKee engaging in brazen – corrupt in many people's opinion – behaviour isn't a bug – it's a feature. Attacking the place of the treaty is exactly the sort of anti-constitutional action you'd expect from someone who sees institutions and the rule of law as barriers to their rise to power. The more he can destroy faith in institutions the more he thinks it advantages his right wing authoritarianism.
Lies and corruption "not a bug, but a feature". Agree with you 100%.
For those who would like to meet/talk with Rail for NZ minded people, there are some Future is Rail meetings coming up.
Also our NZ Society (like the World) is becoming ever increasingly a throwaway one….
For those who would like to try and change that….Repair Festival
I already repair/rebuild Bicycles…but there are lot more things that could and should be repairable.
Bravo PsyclingLeft.Always
Oh, hi Mountain Tui. Thanks for that. Re the Bicycles…I always try to
walkbike the talk, literally as much as I can. Lost count..over 200 saved from scrap metal or ..worse, landfill. And such a satisfying feeling pedalling something that hadnt turned a wheel for years : )I been reading your latest Post…such an indictment on NACT1. I'm torn between anger..and sadness. So I went and worked on a Bike.
And thought to put up those links.
Re your Post, thankyou for saying what should be self evident..and already proven to fail. World wide.
I couldn't find an emoji to say what I wanted but it's respect and admiration.
Unfortunately I feel more and more my role is moot. Yes the reality/news is depressing, but it also feels past the point where I need to "prove" anything – therefore what is my role?
I don't want to be a Mike Hoskings of the left so I'm left pondering as to the value of now stating and repeating the obvious.
Also I feel more and more people are now clue-ing onto the new government and where before my information was helpful to see things, I believe now they've made it self-evident.
Again hugest respect to you and what you do. So nice to chat anytime I see you here!
Thanks muchly for that M.T.
I have been doing the Bikes for a long time. RSE workers got a lot (which they also took back to the Islands) , and I recently donated some more to a Hospice shop …
I just thought, have Luxon, Seymour et al ever been into, or needed to, a Salvo or Hospice shop?
IMO we on the Left must all utilise our (natural? learned?) skills/gifts for, what I would like to think of as.." the Greater Good."
I see you M.T., and the other Standard authors as having a skill/gift I dont .
So please keep on putting it out there. I have learned a lot. More..to learn. Also have to say, the morale booster from reading Like Minds..is much needed during these disturbing times.
Power to you : )
Just listening (and watching) QT in the house, and, I must say, both Luxon and Willis are sounding very Trumpian in their language – i.e. Nicola saying Labour would (and has) destroyed the economy!
Luxon making a pathetic attempt to get the opposition on side by suggesting they join his government in his punching down!
And Tama Potaka getting a right roasting from TPM and others! I sure don’t envy his ‘Uncle Tom’ position.
I know this came up a week or so ago but there wasn't a definitive answer.
Is it true the state is funding Tana's judicial review? You know, employee with an issue with their (her?) employer.
I assume the Greens legal fees would be paid for out of the public coffers.
A new gang has formed in response to the Crime Bill before parliament.
Membership is open to all those banned from their current gang patch.
https://thedailyblog.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Screenshot-2024-07-02-at-8-1.26.28%E2%80%AFAM.png
Organiser Damien Grant
Treasurer B Bradbury
Sperm recipient Ani OBrien
https://thedailyblog.co.nz/2024/09/17/surprise-surprise-gang-patch-ban-secretly-given-vast-search-powers-just-like-tdb-warned-you/
Not the Civilian – maybe not suitable for linking.
A little bit of good news, E Tu has organised a hui for noon October 23.
From the email; "It’s about our rights as workers. It’s about our rights as tāngata whenua and tauiwi to honour Te Tiriti o Waitangi. It’s about protecting a public health system that is vital for our community wellbeing. Let our voices be loud and clear against the Government’s destructive and divisive agenda."
11 different regional locations up and down the motu.
If yr interested, contact a colleague and you can plus one on their invite.
I will be going to the Manawatu hui, any Standardistas want to tag along let me know I can add you to the list and I could help with transport.
https://etu.nz/fight-back-together-maranga-ake/
I had a day off today, so I thought I would tune into parliament this afternoon and listen to question time.
What do I hear?
The same old National mantra bleating that everything that happened under Labour was bad, everything that happens under National is good and if it isn't good it is because of Labour.
National cannot and will not ever take responsibility for their own actions. It is like the old defence "the devil made me do it" except swap devil for Labour.
Like something out of a science fiction movie.
Cyber War enters a new dangerous phase.
Presumably these pagers were remotely hacked to cause the lithium batteries in these devices to explode.
This attack, begs the question;
Are other electronic communication devices vulnerable to this sort of remote attack?
Can your smart phone be used to kill you?