Growing up in New Zealand during the Vietnam war era, my father would not allow us to have Coca Cola as his protest against the war. This habit of eschewing Coca Cola for more healthy branded drinks followed me into adulthood. Which probably accounts for my full perfect set of teeth at age 66.
Coca Cola the unofficial globally recognised badge of US imperialism.
Imperialism is not just militaristic and colonialist or neocolonialist system, imperialism is at its core an economic system. Selling things and making money.
Coca Cola more than any other single licensed product, has come to be the symbol of US economic penetration and domination of the globe.
'Things go better with coke" including imperialism.
Aggressive marketing verging on propaganda, anti-competitive behaviour, resource theft, plastic pollution, when you cut through all the bullshit about its benefits, Coca Cola, apart from rotting your teeth, can even kill you. Pretty much like imperialism itself.
US imperialism's domination of the world's sugar water market is a side show compared to US imperialism's control and domination of the most profitable global product of all, oil, and US neo-colonial domination of the Middle East the richest oil producing region of the world.
It was Coca Cola's efforts to distance itself from US imperialism in the Middle East that led to one of Coca Cola's biggest ever advertising disasters.
Every single piece of plastic ever made still exists.
But Coke isn't the problem. Once again we are the problem.
As you eluded to recently, the silence concerning the genocide of Palestinians is deafening.
Jordan Peterson points this out in regards Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. Germany wasn't full of rampant racists, it was, like here and elsewhere, populated by folk who could turn a blind eye or easily justify to themselves how it isn't their problem.
You hit the nail there. In the past, it was common for people to wonder about the holocaust, " how on earth did people allow this to happen??"
Well. Now we know. Denial and obfuscation, demonizing the victims and glorifying the perpetrators.
In his latest piece, Nelson genocide scholar, Kieran Kelly looks at Al Haq's report on the concentrating of civilians in (un)safe zones.
There should be no official or scholarly doubt over the gravity, lethality, unjustifiability, and criminality of Israel’s acts in Gaza; and above all there should be no denying their intrinsically genocidal nature. Instead there is yet another powerful and heartrending report trying to break through the wall of equivocation that our media, politicians, scholars and civil society create. (By “equivocation” I mean the practice of portraying the most unambiguous issue of our time as being a quagmire of uncertainty and controversy.)
And on the issue of concentration zones he writes
In concentration zones structural violence is intensified by the destruction of normal social arrangements that allow for mutual aid and collective self-defence. Victims in concentration zones are stripped naked of all but the most primitive protection and reduced to a status akin to that of livestock unable to resist being herded or separated or ultimately culled.
And now a group of eight Israeli lawmakers are demanding intensification of the siege across the whole of Gaza.
They demand three basic points of action, after the “encirclement and evacuation of the population:”
Remote elimination of all energy sources, that is fuel, solar panels and any relevant means (pipes, cables, generators etc.)
Elimination of all food sources including warehouses, water and all relevant means (water pumps etc.)
Remote elimination of anyone who moves in the area and does not exit with a white flag during the days of the effective siege. (although white flags have been largely ineffectual)
“After these actions and the days of siege upon those who remain, IDF must enter gradually and conduct a full cleansing of the enemy nests.”
Since Christmas, six babies under a month old have frozen dead. Makeshift tents leak water and flooding saturates everything. It is winter. No warmth, no heating. No food or water, no Healthcare.
Very good points Jenny. Don't forget the United Fruit Corporation as a front for US interests in Central & Southern America. At least bananas are better for us than Coca Cola
I'm astounded how benign the Trump pondering about Greenland is being written up in some media. Greenland does not belong to the US. The US has no more right to 'save' Greenland, presumably from the Danes /sarc, than they did to go to Vietnam or Afganistan or Iraq etc. The excuse is that there are US bases there. He is also pondering the Panama Canal.
Undoubtedly there will be rah, rah Americans who will support this but let's hope our US loving PM does not come out in support.
NZ First deputy leader Shane Jones blew up the paepae at Dame Tariana Turia’s tangi when he called on the former MP to “arise and teach your people not to shame your distinguished visitors” after the marae tikanga did not allow English speakers to pay their respects.
Three prime ministers – Christopher Luxon, Sir Bill English and Chris Hipkins – were unable to speak or allowed the opportunity to speak in English at Whangaehu Marae, near Whanganui.
Note that the Herald no longer recognises the ex-PM political category! Their editorial process approved their co-reporters' innovation, which they got from the man himself:
“The three PMs present as manuhiri should have been invited to speak." “So what if they had spoken English – expressions of aroha and sadness are universal.” Despite not speaking at the pōwhiri, Labour leader Hipkins said it was “important to be here”. Spokespeople from the marae did not wish to comment on Jones’ criticism.
Probably because their discrimination policy would seem racist to enough kiwis already without fanning the flames…
People see what they want to see: scientists call it confirmation bias. Depends if you want to live perpetually in a world in which reciprocal racism gets recycled. Transcending racism always seems the best way forward…
“policy would seem racist to enough kiwis already without fanning the flames…”
‘Seem” is the operative word here. A quick, gut reaction based on one’s own beliefs is not argument enough.
How can a policy based on one's language ability be seen as racist? The ability to speak te reo is not race based. Many Māori do not speak te reo.
Some Pakeha however do. I have spoken in te reo on six marae to help bring onto the marae various groups. Sometimes I asked permission to continue in English. I understood tikanga was that te reo Māori was spoken.
Yeah, but Shane's point seems to be that a bilingual default is common courtesy. Whilst the locals have a natural to exclude nonlocal speakers, they risk creating the impression of separatism in the minds of neutral observers…
Neutral observers run the risk of becoming partisan by pronouncing before investigating.
One of the blessings of education is that people become aware.
Hence the teaching of NZ custom and belief, for example in social studies, should have made pupils aware of this tikanga. This is why I support 'civics' as a school curriculum subject.
A visit to a marae would also help us as a nation to understand what we do, and why.
'Courtesy' is something given. A visitor to a marae should seek to know what is respectful, as that is also courtesy.
People should ask, seek information and listen to information given.
I sailed on a full Cook Strait ferry last night. How many people actually listened to the inportant announcements made at the start of the voyage? How many ignored them and kept on talking, to the point where the announcement became difficult to hear?
How many would have complained if they had suffered harm consequently?
"I didn't know. No-one told me. They should have…. "
Given that the filthy ACT Party and the White supremacist Hobsons Choice have six months to stir up divisive racism in Aotearoa NZ it is quite justifiable to have an extension for submissions on Treaty Principles Bill as TPM have called for following probs with Govt. www site.
The Labour Party is calling for an extension to the deadline for online submissions on the Treaty Principles Bill, in light of reports of people encountering error messages on the website on its final day.
RNZ heard from people trying to submit on Monday night and Tuesday who had faced problems with the portal amid unprecedented numbers. Speaking to RNZ on Tuesday, legal expert Andrew Geddis said Parliament's IT systems should be set up to meet the needs of the people, rather than asking people to change their behaviour.
It really is quite a spectacular flip-flop by Willie isn't it?
Three months ago he was demanding that the bill should be dropped and that no one be allowed to contribute to the debate at all. Now he wants to extend the debate.
Looks like you can’t read? Your link clearly states…
“The Prime Minister and National Party Ministers should lead in the best interests of the country, rather than by the interests of a minor coalition partner.
“Stop wasting everybody’s time, energy and resources on a Bill that ultimately is not going to pass anyway. Cabinet should end this divisive debate today,” Willie Jackson said.
It appears that you need to see a doctor or an optometrist. Or possibly a arborist to clean up the shrubs and other vegetation that have been clearly growing in your rocky crevices and causing you to hallucinate like a AI.
I had the same problem yesterday, when making my submission from the library computer. However, going back to the start (nothing had been deleted) and working through the form again got it admitted on the second go, about 30 s later.
Wouldn't be surprised if it was a programmed feature and not a glitch. The message was something about buffers, and non-support of browsers. I wonder if those submitting from their phones would have been able to recapture their input and resend as I did.
As part of my submission I called for all submissions to the bill be limited to citizens retroactively; and for any ongoing blah blah, such as a Parliamentary petition on the topic, with possible resulting referendum, be also limited to citizens. My reason was that The Treaty is a founding document tied to our nationhood. There is no room for citizens of other countries, or for non-citizen corporate shills to have any electoral power whatsoever regarding issues to do with The Treaty.
Isn't whatsoever a cute word? Makes me fe4el like I'm wearing a black gown and horsehair wig. Came up in my word-maker ninegram the other day.
OED's earliest evidence for whatsoever is from around 1320, in the Castle of Love. There are eight meanings listed in OED's entry for the word whatsoever, three of which are labelled obsolete. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/whatsoever_pron?tl=true
Happenstance is also rather cool, eh? With regard to them technoglitches, the RNZ news reporting has featured stuff like "I entered it all, hit the send button, but nothing happened." Debbie N-P then told the govt to pull its socks up, which reminded me of the old socks up to the knee below walk-shorts thing that mainstreamers once exhibited like a uniform.
I felt it was unfair to file the 3-headed dogster politicians into this category but could be departmental heads still feature that antiquated style.
We Facebook hold-outs can't access that link in the OP.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the extension were allowed – it would encourage people to go on concentrating on opposition to the TPB instead of the much more dangerous Regulatory Standards Bill.
… instead of the much more dangerous Regulatory Standards Bill.
The Regulatory Standards Bill is a major threat to evidence-based impartial regulation. If (when) the bill progresses to select committee, I recommend that committee be given at least six months to consider its 'merits'.
However, the reality can fall short of the ideal, so much so on some occasions that the regulatory approach is considered to have failed and a new ideal is articulated. This pattern of optimism followed by disappointment followed by optimism can be observed over time and across different regulatory areas. It can also be observed in pendulum swings between different regulatory approaches, which often take the form of slogans – such as ‘light-handed’ versus ‘heavy-handed’, ‘prescriptive’ versus ‘principles’ or ‘more’ versus ‘less’ government.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is making sweeping changes to the social internet, all in line with the desires of President-elect Donald Trump and his supporters. Out with the fact-checkers that conservatives deride. In with more permissive rules for posting conservative opinions.
The recent elections “feel like a cultural tipping point towards once again prioritizing speech,” Zuckerberg said in his announcement, justifying relaxed new content moderation rules on Facebook, Instagram and Threads.
Zappa & the Mothers of Invention did a song about the Brain Police in the '60s, in the vanguard of the rebellion. Bit of a puzzle why the left has been so keen to revive the practice of controlling the thoughts of others, but no doubt someone here will have a go at accounting for political correctness. Or not, as usual. The CNN analyst doesn't like the implications of truthiness…
“Governments and legacy media have pushed to censor more and more,” Zuckerberg said, repeating a right-wing talking point used to undermine fact checking.
Whilst I agree that rightists are often delusional in the media, to the point of even asserting alternative facts, it all depends on the old question of balance. Both sides of any story need airing to form an holistic view. Often commentators are highly selective when it comes to citing relevant facts, so others need to counter-balance them.
He said that removing some restrictions on content on topics such as gender and immigration would “make sure that people can share their beliefs and experiences on our platforms” and he said the focus of filters that scan posts for policy violations would be shifted to only tackling illegal and high severity violations with Meta, relying on users to report lower severity violations before it takes action.
In other words, give the transphobes and xenophobes and every other phobe carte blanche to have a field day, and we all know that actual facts will not come into it, and any attempts to provide 'balance' will result in nothing but a massive pile-on.
In reality, I have no idea about how people who weren't at all interested in certain topics find xyz random posts in their threads, which sends the really gullible down the rabbit hole.
My experience with FB is being an administrator of a well moderated health-related group, (a positive side for the site, as it's the only way for people to connect with others over a shared condition) and needing it as the only way to make contact with businesses who won't respond via normal channels, but seem to very quickly via FB. I have a false account.
Zuckerberg and you seem to be confused about fact-checking vs. censorship. In Zuckerberg’s case, it’s politically (and financially) motivated, but what’s your excuse, this time?
Bit of a puzzle why the left has been so keen to revive the practice of controlling the thoughts of others, but no doubt someone here will have a go at accounting for political correctness. Or not, as usual.
Nice straw man there to have a go at ‘the left’, which is one of your favourite targets. Don’t you ever get tired of taking potshots at the same old targets time after time?
That's a pretty big steer for Germany's President if AfD gets to 20% or more in the March German Federal elections.
It is another knell for Ukraine and millions of Ukrainian and Syrian refugees holed up in Austria. Also a pretty good chance that the US and Austria will start mass deportations of undocumented or refugee people at the same time.
Also a very big signal for the Balkan states and Hungary to start mass deportations of their own.
”US President-elect Donald Trump has ramped up threats to seize control of the Panama Canal and Greenland, calling both critical to US national security.
Asked on Tuesday if he would rule out using military or economic force in order to take over the Danish territory or the Panama Canal, he responded: "I'm not going to commit to that."
Would Denmark invoke Article 5 of the NATO Treaty?? They would be entitled to.
Whilst the continual mass beaching of whales suggests something is driving that behaviour, I'm as sceptical of causation by windmills as by those UFOs using bases on the bottom of the ocean that we used to hear about.
Panama is “ripping off” the US with “ridiculous” fees to use the interoceanic waterway and principal conduit for global commerce. As Trump sees it, the Central American country’s behaviour is especially objectionable “knowing the extraordinary generosity that has been bestowed to Panama by the US”. https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2025/1/2/donald-trump-and-the-great-panama-canal-tantrum
Narcissist leaders are real good at generating media headlines. Doesn't matter what they say, since it's all just about them really, but tantalising possibilities are liable to catch the fancy of the public regardless. Same principle as the circus in ancient Rome.
"He also tossed this in:" Well, he is a tosser. Well spotted, Dennis.
The Roman analogy is good. The Roman elite used slavery, patronage and war to make millions and then gave some back as bread and circuses to curry favour with the masses.
An American billionaire here in NZ owns several vineyards and a football team. He knows how to work that system…….
He doesn't rule out military intervention if Denmark and Panama won't play ball. Someone else did that back in the day only it wasn't Greenland and Panama but most of Europe.
So, would the US military comply or would they conduct their own form of insurrection and refuse to comply?
Following up on my post the other day on software to optimise rental income, via cartel pricing strategies, unprovoked evictions, etc, I read in comments under a Guardian article the other day that rents in the UK have risen 30% in the last three years. The rents along my PN street have jumped from the high $200's to $600 pw in that last 8 years. Oz, the US, all follow a similar trend.
If people must sacrifice the majority of their income on rent, then all other economic woes derive from that. In turn, inflated rent prices create inflated house prices, with banks encouraging larger and larger lending amounts for purchase, as landlords charge more and more.
I can see that affordable housing as a human right, with rent control (and forced reductions), plus breaking rental market cartel-pricing MUST be a cornerstone election issue for lw parties from now on. Expose the 'free' market for what it really is.
Luxon’s rent-decrease promises were empty, of course, because no landlord or property manager will decrease rent when their costs go down.
Implementation "includes registering a “senior person”… who will be held accountable should Ofcom decide your site isn’t safe enough…moderation teams need to be fully staffed with quick response times if bad (loosely defined) content is found on the site…[and] need to take proactive measures to protect children. While all of this may make sense for larger sites, it’s impossible for a small one-person passion project forum.. these requirements are not just burdensome, but existential."
"When you regulate the internet as if it’s all just Facebook, all that will be left is Facebook. Policymakers have repeatedly brushed off warnings about these consequences, insisting that concerns are overblown or merely fear-mongering from big tech companies looking to avoid regulation. But it’s not. And we’re seeing the impact already."
Both sides of any story need airing to form an holistic view.
FFS so not true. Mainly the right promote such a notion in order to get their non-sensical bullshit across. Fact checking as opposed to censorship helps mitigate people spouting shit.
You form a holistic view by incorporating broad evidence i.e. the woods instead of just focusing on the trees. Adding into the mix that pile of random dogshit sitting in a paddock adds nothing to looking at the wood and just creates confusion and unnecessary distraction.
False balance is a bias which usually stems from an attempt to avoid bias and gives unsupported or dubious positions an illusion of respectability. It creates a public perception that some issues are scientifically contentious, though in reality they are not, therefore creating doubt about the scientific state of research. This can be exploited by interest groups such as corporations like the fossil fuel industry or the tobacco industry, or ideologically motivated activists such as vaccination opponents or creationists.
Perhaps my generalisation doesn't apply too well in politics, huh? I agree that the false balance media posturing was a problem for years in climate change advocacy. I was generalising a common sense tradition though: weighing the pros & cons of an issue to inform a decision. People have always done it to optimise the effect of their deciding.
So when confronted with the tendency of the right & left to cite only the evidence that supports their partisan views, a sensible person does what Odysseus did on the way home from Troy: sailed midway between cliff and whirlpool in the Straits of Messina.
In October, less than a month before the US presidential election, the Biden administration sent a letter to the Israeli government demanding it act to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza within 30 days or risk violating US laws governing foreign military assistance, suggesting US military aid could be in jeopardy.
Now
$8 billion in arms to Israel.
—
There was no improvement in the humanitarian situation, it has got worse because more food aid, fuel for generators and vehicles, heating oil and medical supplies was needed for winter.
Israel is considering limiting humanitarian aid to Gaza after Donald Trump comes into office later this month in a bid to deprive Hamas of resources, according to an Israeli official familiar with the matter.
Limiting aid from what, not enough to a more obvious breach of the ICC determination that blocking aid?
The ICJ found it plausible that Israel’s acts could amount to genocide and issued six provisional measures, ordering Israel to take all measures within its power to prevent genocidal acts, including preventing and punishing incitement to genocide, ensuring aid and services reach Palestinians under siege in Gaza, and preserving evidence of crimes committed in Gaza.
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This morning’s six standouts for me at 6.30 am include:Kāinga Ora is quietly planning to sell over $1 billion worth of state-owned land under 300 state homes in Auckland’s wealthiest suburbs, including around Bastion Point, to give the Government more fiscal room to pay for tax cuts and reduce borrowing.A ...
Hi,It’s my birthday on Christmas Day, and I have a favour to ask.A birthday wish.I would love you to share one Webworm story you’ve liked this year.The simple fact is: apart from paying for a Webworm membership (thank you!), sharing and telling others about this place is the most important ...
The last few days have been a bit too much of a whirl for me to manage a fresh edition each day. It's been that kind of year. Hope you don't mind.I’ve been coming around to thinking that it doesn't really matter if you don't have something to say every ...
The worms will live in every hostIt's hard to pick which one they eat the mostThe horrible people, the horrible peopleIt's as anatomic as the size of your steepleCapitalism has made it this wayOld-fashioned fascism will take it awaySongwriter: Twiggy Ramirez Read more ...
Hi,It’s almost Christmas Day which means it is almost my birthday, where you will find me whimpering in the corner clutching a warm bottle of Baileys.If you’re out of ideas for presents (and truly desperate) then it is possible to gift a full Webworm subscription to a friend (or enemy) ...
This morning’s six standouts for me at 6.30am include:Rachel Helyer Donaldson’s scoop via RNZ last night of cuts to maternity jobs in the health system;Maddy Croad’s scoop via The Press-$ this morning on funding cuts for Christchurch’s biggest food rescue charity;Benedict Collins’ scoop last night via 1News on a last-minute ...
A listing of 25 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, December 15, 2024 thru Sat, December 21, 2024. Based on feedback we received, this week's roundup is the first one published soleley by category. We are still interested in ...
Well, I've been there, sitting in that same chairWhispering that same prayer half a million timesIt's a lie, though buried in disciplesOne page of the Bible isn't worth a lifeThere's nothing wrong with youIt's true, it's trueThere's something wrong with the villageWith the villageSomething wrong with the villageSongwriters: Andrew Jackson ...
ACT would like to dictate what universities can and can’t say. We knew it was coming. It was outlined in the coalition agreement and has become part of Seymour’s strategy of “emphasising public funding” to prevent people from opposing him and his views—something he also uses to try and de-platform ...
Skeptical Science is partnering with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. This fact brief was written by Sue Bin Park from the Gigafact team in collaboration with members from our team. You can submit claims you think need checking via the tipline. Are we heading ...
So the Solstice has arrived – Summer in this part of the world, Winter for the Northern Hemisphere. And with it, the publication my new Norse dark-fantasy piece, As Our Power Lessens at Eternal Haunted Summer: https://eternalhauntedsummer.com/issues/winter-solstice-2024/as-our-power-lessens/ As previously noted, this one is very ‘wyrd’, and Northern Theory of Courage. ...
The Natural Choice: As a starter for ten percent of the Party Vote, “saving the planet” is a very respectable objective. Young voters, in particular, raised on the dire (if unheeded) warnings of climate scientists, and the irrefutable evidence of devastating weather events linked to global warming, vote Green. After ...
The Government cancelled 60% of Kāinga Ora’s new builds next year, even though the land for them was already bought, the consents were consented and there are builders unemployed all over the place. Photo: Lynn Grieveson / The KākāMōrena. Long stories short, the six things that mattered in Aotearoa’s political ...
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on UnsplashEvery morning I get up at 3am to go around the traps of news sites in Aotearoa and globally. I pick out the top ones from my point of view and have been putting them into my Dawn Chorus email, which goes out with a podcast. ...
Over on Kikorangi Newsroom's Marc Daalder has published his annual OIA stats. So I thought I'd do mine: 82 OIA requests sent in 2024 7 posts based on those requests 20 average working days to receive a response Ministry of Justice was my most-requested entity, ...
Welcome to the December 2024 Economic Bulletin. We have two monthly features in this edition. In the first, we discuss what the Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update from Treasury and the Budget Policy Statement from the Minister of Finance tell us about the fiscal position and what to ...
The NZCTU Te Kauae Kaimahi have submitted against the controversial Treaty Principles Bill, slamming the Bill as a breach of Te Tiriti o Waitangi and an attack on tino rangatiratanga and the collective rights of Tangata Whenua. “This Bill seeks to legislate for Te Tiriti o Waitangi principles that are ...
Open access notables An intensification of surface Earth’s energy imbalance since the late 20th century, Li et al., Communications Earth & Environment:Tracking the energy balance of the Earth system is a key method for studying the contribution of human activities to climate change. However, accurately estimating the surface energy balance ...
I don't knowHow to say what's got to be saidI don't know if it's black or whiteThere's others see it redI don't get the answers rightI'll leave that to youIs this love out of fashionOr is it the time of yearAre these words distraction?To the words you want to hearSongwriters: ...
Our economy has experienced its worst recession since 1991. Photo: Lynn Grieveson / The KākāMōrena. Long stories short, the six things that matter in Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, climate and poverty on Friday, December 20 in The Kākā’s Dawn Chorus podcast above and the daily Pick ‘n’ Mix below ...
Twas the Friday before Christmas and all through the week we’ve been collecting stories for our final roundup of the year. As we start to wind down for the year we hope you all have a safe and happy Christmas and new year. If you’re travelling please be safe on ...
The podcast above of the weekly ‘Hoon’ webinar for paying subscribers on Thursday night features co-hosts & talking about the year’s news with: on climate. Her book of the year was Tim Winton’s cli-fi novel Juice and she also mentioned Mike Joy’s memoir The Fight for Fresh Water. ...
The Government can head off to the holidays, entitled to assure itself that it has done more or less what it said it would do. The campaign last year promised to “get New Zealand back on track.” When you look at the basic promises—to trim back Government expenditure, toughen up ...
National has only been in power for a year, but everywhere you look, its choices are taking New Zealand a long way backwards. In no particular order, here are the National Government's Top 50 Greatest Misses of its first year in power. ...
The Government is quietly undertaking consultation on the dangerous Regulatory Standards Bill over the Christmas period to avoid too much attention. ...
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 ...
Kiwis planning a swim or heading out on a boat this summer should remember to stop and think about water safety, Sport & Recreation Minister Chris Bishop and ACC and Associate Transport Minister Matt Doocey say. “New Zealand’s beaches, lakes and rivers are some of the most beautiful in the ...
The Government is urging Kiwis to drive safely this summer and reminding motorists that Police will be out in force to enforce the road rules, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says.“This time of year can be stressful and result in poor decision-making on our roads. Whether you are travelling to see ...
Health Minister Dr Shane Reti says Health New Zealand will move swiftly to support dozens of internationally-trained doctors already in New Zealand on their journey to employment here, after a tripling of sought-after examination places. “The Medical Council has delivered great news for hardworking overseas doctors who want to contribute ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has appointed Sarah Ottrey to the APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC). “At my first APEC Summit in Lima, I experienced firsthand the role that ABAC plays in guaranteeing political leaders hear the voice of business,” Mr Luxon says. “New Zealand’s ABAC representatives are very well respected and ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has announced four appointments to New Zealand’s intelligence oversight functions. The Honourable Robert Dobson KC has been appointed Chief Commissioner of Intelligence Warrants, and the Honourable Brendan Brown KC has been appointed as a Commissioner of Intelligence Warrants. The appointments of Hon Robert Dobson and Hon ...
Improvements in the average time it takes to process survey and title applications means housing developments can progress more quickly, Minister for Land Information Chris Penk says. “The government is resolutely focused on improving the building and construction pipeline,” Mr Penk says. “Applications to issue titles and subdivide land are ...
The Government’s measures to reduce airport wait times, and better transparency around flight disruptions is delivering encouraging early results for passengers ahead of the busy summer period, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says. “Improving the efficiency of air travel is a priority for the Government to give passengers a smoother, more reliable ...
The Government today announced the intended closure of the Apollo Hotel as Contracted Emergency Housing (CEH) in Rotorua, Associate Housing Minister Tama Potaka says. This follows a 30 per cent reduction in the number of households in CEH in Rotorua since National came into Government. “Our focus is on ending CEH in the Whakarewarewa area starting ...
The Government will reshape vocational education and training to return decision making to regions and enable greater industry input into work-based learning Tertiary Education and Skills Minister, Penny Simmonds says. “The redesigned system will better meet the needs of learners, industry, and the economy. It includes re-establishing regional polytechnics that ...
The Government is taking action to better manage synthetic refrigerants and reduce emissions caused by greenhouse gases found in heating and cooling products, Environment Minister Penny Simmonds says. “Regulations will be drafted to support a product stewardship scheme for synthetic refrigerants, Ms. Simmonds says. “Synthetic refrigerants are found in a ...
People travelling on State Highway 1 north of Hamilton will be relieved that remedial works and safety improvements on the Ngāruawāhia section of the Waikato Expressway were finished today, with all lanes now open to traffic, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says.“I would like to acknowledge the patience of road users ...
Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – REVIEW: By David Robie Three months ago, a group of lawyers in Aotearoa New Zealand called for a first-of-its-kind inquiry into New Zealand spy agencies over whether they have been helping Israel’s war in Gaza. In a letter to the ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ned Watt, PhD Candidate, Digital Media Research Centre, Queensland University of Technology Meta has announced it will abandon its fact-checking program, starting in the United States. It was aimed at preventing the spread of online lies among more than 3 billion people ...
The large number of New Zealanders sharing their thoughts on the Bill means that the select committee needs to take the appropriate time to process all submissions and not be tempted to arbitrarily dismiss submissions that have come via a third ...
Despite recent footage revealing extreme cruelty and violence, the wool industry has failed to stop this rampant abuse, even on so-called “sustainable” and “responsible” farms. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anna Clark, Professor in Public History, University of Technology Sydney Shutterstock/Nils Versemann From the Torres Strait to Tasmania, and from the east coast to the west, beach shacks are an iconic part of Australian coastal history. Beach shacks have a ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christine Carson, Senior Research Fellow, School of Medicine, The University of Western Australia Kaboompics.com/Pexels A doctor’s visit often ends with you leaving with a pathology request form in hand. The request form soon has you filling a sample pot, having blood ...
Over half a million dollars has been wasted by one government department alone teaching bureaucrats how to use a desk and chair, Taxpayers’ Union Policy and Public Affairs Manager James Ross said. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rossana Ruggeri, Lecturer and ARC DECRA Fellow, The University of Queensland An illustration of the death of a massive star.NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Dana Berry By looking at light from distant exploding stars called supernovas, in 1998 astronomers discovered the universe isn’t ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anna Clark, Professor in Public History, University of Technology Sydney Shutterstock/Nils Versemann From the Torres Strait to Tasmania, and from the east coast to the west, beach shacks are an iconic part of Australian coastal history. Beach shacks have a ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nicholas Davis, Industry Professor of Emerging Technology and Co-Director, Human Technology Institute, University of Technology Sydney Oselote/Shutterstock In November 2023, the estates of two now-deceased policyholders sued the US health insurer, United Healthcare, for deploying what they allege is a flawed ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Caroline Spry, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Department of Archaeology and History, La Trobe University Earth ring on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung Country, near Sunbury, Victoria.David Mullins On the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia, there is a series of large rings which rise mysteriously out ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kylie Message, Professor of Public Humanities and Director of the ANU Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University National Museum of Australia Pompeii: Inside a Lost City at the National Museum of Australia in Canberra depicts life in the flourishing Roman city ...
Complaints have poured in from people who say they couldn't get their submission in because of problems with the website, and parties are weighing in. ...
The chorus of praise for Turia underscores the fact that TPM does not represent any real alternative to the political establishment. It is a right-wing party that for the past two decades has represented the interests of indigenous capitalists, who ...
“This is a massive project,” says Stephen Horn, of a plan to eradicate introduced pests from Auckland Island/Maukahuka. The manager of the Department of Conservation’s national eradication team says that’s something a feasibility project, published in 2021, unearthed – “that the scale is enormous, and it’s complex”.The scale and complexity ...
Opinion: Let’s face it. Sitting on a beach or by the lake with a dry text on economic theory is hardly what you would describe as compelling summer reading, perhaps except if you happen to be the Reserve Bank governor!For the rest of us, economics is probably off our holiday ...
Analysis: According to three vital global metrics for ocean temperatures, 2024 was the warmest year on record. The coincidence of all three global metrics being highest on record is unusual. The last time was 2016. The three metrics are the global mean surface temperature (GMST), the global sea surface temperatures (SST), ...
Summer reissue: Simon Palenski journeys home to fossick through Ōtautahi’s secondhand bookshops offerings. 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.After finishing undergraduate studies and ...
Summer reissue: Checkered Flag director Natalie Wilson on her lifelong love of motorsport, and the allure of Pukekohe Park Raceway. 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 ...
Summer reissue: Alex Casey returns to a New Zealand classic on its 30th birthday. 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.First published October 14, ...
Summer reissue: As her family home goes on the market, Lucy Black reflects on a childhood full of books, libraries and reading.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 ...
Summer reissue: The CEOs of two major New Zealand banks say Facebook is rife with fraud – and that Meta is too busy making money from scam ads to try and stop them. Duncan Greive reports. The Spinoff needs to double the number of paying members we have to continue ...
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Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Allen Cheng, Professor of Infectious Diseases, Monash University Five years on from the first news of COVID, recent reports of an obscure respiratory virus in China may understandably raise concerns. Chinese authorities first issued warnings about human metapneumovirus (hMPV) in 2023, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Andrea Jean Baker, Senior Lecturer in Journalism, Monash University Nominations galore, but no wins for Aussiewood at the 82nd Golden Globes on Sunday. Formerly, the Golden Globes were voted on by the nonprofit Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which consisted of about ...
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Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Frank Bongiorno, Professor of History, ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences, Australian National University The Oxford English Dictionary defines a gaffe as a “blunder, an instance of clumsy stupidity, a ‘faux pas’.” It evokes a sense of triviality rather than high ...
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Israelis were frustrated that captives remained in Gaza and surprised that, in recent weeks, Israeli military activity there had intensified, Liel said. ‘Surprised’ over military intensity“Generally speaking, Israelis are quite surprised that the intensity of the military activity is growing. I think the general feeling here was a month or ...
Growing up in New Zealand during the Vietnam war era, my father would not allow us to have Coca Cola as his protest against the war. This habit of eschewing Coca Cola for more healthy branded drinks followed me into adulthood. Which probably accounts for my full perfect set of teeth at age 66.
Coca Cola the unofficial globally recognised badge of US imperialism.
Imperialism is not just militaristic and colonialist or neocolonialist system, imperialism is at its core an economic system. Selling things and making money.
Coca Cola more than any other single licensed product, has come to be the symbol of US economic penetration and domination of the globe.
'Things go better with coke" including imperialism.
https://www.historyoasis.com/post/things-go-better-with-coke#:~:text=%C2%A9%20History%20Oasis-,What%20is%20this?,Other%20stars%20included
Aggressive marketing verging on propaganda, anti-competitive behaviour, resource theft, plastic pollution, when you cut through all the bullshit about its benefits, Coca Cola, apart from rotting your teeth, can even kill you. Pretty much like imperialism itself.
US imperialism's domination of the world's sugar water market is a side show compared to US imperialism's control and domination of the most profitable global product of all, oil, and US neo-colonial domination of the Middle East the richest oil producing region of the world.
It was Coca Cola's efforts to distance itself from US imperialism in the Middle East that led to one of Coca Cola's biggest ever advertising disasters.
Then there is the pollution and the recycling myth.
Coca cola is the world's biggest plastic polluting company by a long way.
https://www.greenpeace.org/aotearoa/story/unbottling-the-truth-coca-colas-role-in-plastic-pollution/
Coke pushed the recycling myth too.
Every single piece of plastic ever made still exists.
But Coke isn't the problem. Once again we are the problem.
As you eluded to recently, the silence concerning the genocide of Palestinians is deafening.
Jordan Peterson points this out in regards Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. Germany wasn't full of rampant racists, it was, like here and elsewhere, populated by folk who could turn a blind eye or easily justify to themselves how it isn't their problem.
You hit the nail there. In the past, it was common for people to wonder about the holocaust, " how on earth did people allow this to happen??"
Well. Now we know. Denial and obfuscation, demonizing the victims and glorifying the perpetrators.
In his latest piece, Nelson genocide scholar, Kieran Kelly looks at Al Haq's report on the concentrating of civilians in (un)safe zones.
And on the issue of concentration zones he writes
And now a group of eight Israeli lawmakers are demanding intensification of the siege across the whole of Gaza.
Since Christmas, six babies under a month old have frozen dead. Makeshift tents leak water and flooding saturates everything. It is winter. No warmth, no heating. No food or water, no Healthcare.
https://ongenocide.com/2025/01/07/gazas-safe-zone-is-a-concentration-camp/
https://mondoweiss.net/2025/01/israeli-lawmakers-demand-military-destroy-all-food-and-energy-resources-in-gaza/
Very good points Jenny. Don't forget the United Fruit Corporation as a front for US interests in Central & Southern America. At least bananas are better for us than Coca Cola
I'm astounded how benign the Trump pondering about Greenland is being written up in some media. Greenland does not belong to the US. The US has no more right to 'save' Greenland, presumably from the Danes /sarc, than they did to go to Vietnam or Afganistan or Iraq etc. The excuse is that there are US bases there. He is also pondering the Panama Canal.
Undoubtedly there will be rah, rah Americans who will support this but let's hope our US loving PM does not come out in support.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gzn48jwz2o is not so benign.
Shane complained: https://www.nzherald.co.nz/kahu/shane-jones-criticises-tikanga-at-dame-tariana-turias-tangi-after-non-maori-speakers-barred/2Z33ABUAYNFBHAC6IELIBCK72A/
Note that the Herald no longer recognises the ex-PM political category! Their editorial process approved their co-reporters' innovation, which they got from the man himself:
Probably because their discrimination policy would seem racist to enough kiwis already without fanning the flames…
Jones signalling to their racist base is what I see there.
People see what they want to see: scientists call it confirmation bias. Depends if you want to live perpetually in a world in which reciprocal racism gets recycled. Transcending racism always seems the best way forward…
Absolutely.
IMO its why shane has highlighted what appears to a be normal practice with faux outrage for the peeps to lap up.
“policy would seem racist to enough kiwis already without fanning the flames…”
‘Seem” is the operative word here. A quick, gut reaction based on one’s own beliefs is not argument enough.
How can a policy based on one's language ability be seen as racist? The ability to speak te reo is not race based. Many Māori do not speak te reo.
Some Pakeha however do. I have spoken in te reo on six marae to help bring onto the marae various groups. Sometimes I asked permission to continue in English. I understood tikanga was that te reo Māori was spoken.
Te Ara confirms this.
"Speak in Māori, not English, if giving a speech (unless expressly allowed). Basic marae etiquette – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand
Yeah, but Shane's point seems to be that a bilingual default is common courtesy. Whilst the locals have a natural to exclude nonlocal speakers, they risk creating the impression of separatism in the minds of neutral observers…
Neutral observers run the risk of becoming partisan by pronouncing before investigating.
One of the blessings of education is that people become aware.
Hence the teaching of NZ custom and belief, for example in social studies, should have made pupils aware of this tikanga. This is why I support 'civics' as a school curriculum subject.
A visit to a marae would also help us as a nation to understand what we do, and why.
'Courtesy' is something given. A visitor to a marae should seek to know what is respectful, as that is also courtesy.
People should ask, seek information and listen to information given.
I sailed on a full Cook Strait ferry last night. How many people actually listened to the inportant announcements made at the start of the voyage? How many ignored them and kept on talking, to the point where the announcement became difficult to hear?
How many would have complained if they had suffered harm consequently?
"I didn't know. No-one told me. They should have…. "
Why should they get to speak ? And who cares what Jones says.
[You’re trolling again. Last warning – Incognito]
Mod note
Given that the filthy ACT Party and the White supremacist Hobsons Choice have six months to stir up divisive racism in Aotearoa NZ it is quite justifiable to have an extension for submissions on Treaty Principles Bill as TPM have called for following probs with Govt. www site.
https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/pressrelease?__eep__=6&__cft__%5B0%5D=AZVLGUu9uG9HYRwFgQTe4zBBbwurVC77ffu1M-fdlikl5vIaxNYxebjm9Jk-n6qXmRLmpXFX3j5wz9GFiAlmiLXTZVcXIyXpcC0fMcJ2DJaAVY9VYe7FQlJQ0F09-auWgaJgHTpDVmiRU2n1mOB4riWyMB923JghOBuDHrqSyaU5fBK_I_ZaG5CY1LMMsCWOM74&__tn__=*NK-R
Yep, Labour's onto it already: https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/538401/extension-of-treaty-principles-bill-submissions-deadline-called-for
It really is quite a spectacular flip-flop by Willie isn't it?
Three months ago he was demanding that the bill should be dropped and that no one be allowed to contribute to the debate at all. Now he wants to extend the debate.
https://www.labour.org.nz/news-release_cabinet_should_stop_the_treaty_principles_bill
Seems straightforward enough to me – don't debate it all, but if Parliament is going to debate, ensure everyone who wants to be heard, is heard.
Trolling again Alwyn. Your post is entirely without merit as you know.
Must try harder not to look like a troll.
You don't need any principles in Opposition. They're a hindrance.
Looks like you can’t read? Your link clearly states…
It appears that you need to see a doctor or an optometrist. Or possibly a arborist to clean up the shrubs and other vegetation that have been clearly growing in your rocky crevices and causing you to hallucinate like a AI.
I had the same problem yesterday, when making my submission from the library computer. However, going back to the start (nothing had been deleted) and working through the form again got it admitted on the second go, about 30 s later.
Wouldn't be surprised if it was a programmed feature and not a glitch. The message was something about buffers, and non-support of browsers. I wonder if those submitting from their phones would have been able to recapture their input and resend as I did.
As part of my submission I called for all submissions to the bill be limited to citizens retroactively; and for any ongoing blah blah, such as a Parliamentary petition on the topic, with possible resulting referendum, be also limited to citizens. My reason was that The Treaty is a founding document tied to our nationhood. There is no room for citizens of other countries, or for non-citizen corporate shills to have any electoral power whatsoever regarding issues to do with The Treaty.
Isn't whatsoever a cute word? Makes me fe4el like I'm wearing a black gown and horsehair wig. Came up in my word-maker ninegram the other day.
OED's earliest evidence for whatsoever is from around 1320, in the Castle of Love. There are eight meanings listed in OED's entry for the word whatsoever, three of which are labelled obsolete. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/whatsoever_pron?tl=true
Happenstance is also rather cool, eh? With regard to them technoglitches, the RNZ news reporting has featured stuff like "I entered it all, hit the send button, but nothing happened." Debbie N-P then told the govt to pull its socks up, which reminded me of the old socks up to the knee below walk-shorts thing that mainstreamers once exhibited like a uniform.
I felt it was unfair to file the 3-headed dogster politicians into this category but could be departmental heads still feature that antiquated style.
Willy Jackson did a good job on this on RNZ this morning, and the National Duty Minister simply failed to show.
Total gift.
We Facebook hold-outs can't access that link in the OP.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the extension were allowed – it would encourage people to go on concentrating on opposition to the TPB instead of the much more dangerous Regulatory Standards Bill.
The Regulatory Standards Bill is a major threat to evidence-based impartial regulation. If (when) the bill progresses to select committee, I recommend that committee be given at least six months to consider its 'merits'.
Consultation on the Regulatory Standards Bill ends on January 13. No special expertise is required to make a submission on this bill.
The leaky homes debacle, and unsafe levels of nitrate in drinking water, are examples of 'disappointment' – for a few dollars more
https://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-07-01-2025/#comment-2020728
Meta MAGA makeover moment: https://edition.cnn.com/2025/01/07/media/mark-zuckerberg-meta-fact-checking-analysis/index.html
Zappa & the Mothers of Invention did a song about the Brain Police in the '60s, in the vanguard of the rebellion. Bit of a puzzle why the left has been so keen to revive the practice of controlling the thoughts of others, but no doubt someone here will have a go at accounting for political correctness. Or not, as usual. The CNN analyst doesn't like the implications of truthiness…
Whilst I agree that rightists are often delusional in the media, to the point of even asserting alternative facts, it all depends on the old question of balance. Both sides of any story need airing to form an holistic view. Often commentators are highly selective when it comes to citing relevant facts, so others need to counter-balance them.
He said that removing some restrictions on content on topics such as gender and immigration would “make sure that people can share their beliefs and experiences on our platforms” and he said the focus of filters that scan posts for policy violations would be shifted to only tackling illegal and high severity violations with Meta, relying on users to report lower severity violations before it takes action.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/07/meta-facebook-instagram-threads-mark-zuckerberg-remove-fact-checkers-recommend-political-content
In other words, give the transphobes and xenophobes and every other phobe carte blanche to have a field day, and we all know that actual facts will not come into it, and any attempts to provide 'balance' will result in nothing but a massive pile-on.
In reality, I have no idea about how people who weren't at all interested in certain topics find xyz random posts in their threads, which sends the really gullible down the rabbit hole.
My experience with FB is being an administrator of a well moderated health-related group, (a positive side for the site, as it's the only way for people to connect with others over a shared condition) and needing it as the only way to make contact with businesses who won't respond via normal channels, but seem to very quickly via FB. I have a false account.
Zuckerberg and you seem to be confused about fact-checking vs. censorship. In Zuckerberg’s case, it’s politically (and financially) motivated, but what’s your excuse, this time?
https://efcsn.com/news/2025-01-07_efcsn-disappointed-by-end-to-metas-third-party-fact-checking-program-in-the-us-condemns-statements-linking-fact-checking-to-censorship/
Nice straw man there to have a go at ‘the left’, which is one of your favourite targets. Don’t you ever get tired of taking potshots at the same old targets time after time?
Austria's Freedom Party have been invited to form a government.
https://www.dw.com/en/austrias-far-right-freedom-party-asked-to-form-government/a-71228157
That's a pretty big steer for Germany's President if AfD gets to 20% or more in the March German Federal elections.
It is another knell for Ukraine and millions of Ukrainian and Syrian refugees holed up in Austria. Also a pretty good chance that the US and Austria will start mass deportations of undocumented or refugee people at the same time.
Also a very big signal for the Balkan states and Hungary to start mass deportations of their own.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gzn48jwz2o
”US President-elect Donald Trump has ramped up threats to seize control of the Panama Canal and Greenland, calling both critical to US national security.
Asked on Tuesday if he would rule out using military or economic force in order to take over the Danish territory or the Panama Canal, he responded: "I'm not going to commit to that."
Would Denmark invoke Article 5 of the NATO Treaty?? They would be entitled to.
We do live in interesting times.
He also tossed this in:
Whilst the continual mass beaching of whales suggests something is driving that behaviour, I'm as sceptical of causation by windmills as by those UFOs using bases on the bottom of the ocean that we used to hear about.
Narcissist leaders are real good at generating media headlines. Doesn't matter what they say, since it's all just about them really, but tantalising possibilities are liable to catch the fancy of the public regardless. Same principle as the circus in ancient Rome.
"He also tossed this in:" Well, he is a tosser. Well spotted, Dennis.
The Roman analogy is good. The Roman elite used slavery, patronage and war to make millions and then gave some back as bread and circuses to curry favour with the masses.
An American billionaire here in NZ owns several vineyards and a football team. He knows how to work that system…….
Trump is also saying he is going to rename the Gulf of Mexico and call it the Gulf of America. Bring on the men in the white coats.
He doesn't rule out military intervention if Denmark and Panama won't play ball. Someone else did that back in the day only it wasn't Greenland and Panama but most of Europe.
So, would the US military comply or would they conduct their own form of insurrection and refuse to comply?
Unfortunately his maga base will lap it up. The msm will murmur mild warnings, but go along for the clicks.
Following up on my post the other day on software to optimise rental income, via cartel pricing strategies, unprovoked evictions, etc, I read in comments under a Guardian article the other day that rents in the UK have risen 30% in the last three years. The rents along my PN street have jumped from the high $200's to $600 pw in that last 8 years. Oz, the US, all follow a similar trend.
If people must sacrifice the majority of their income on rent, then all other economic woes derive from that. In turn, inflated rent prices create inflated house prices, with banks encouraging larger and larger lending amounts for purchase, as landlords charge more and more.
I can see that affordable housing as a human right, with rent control (and forced reductions), plus breaking rental market cartel-pricing MUST be a cornerstone election issue for lw parties from now on. Expose the 'free' market for what it really is.
Luxon’s rent-decrease promises were empty, of course, because no landlord or property manager will decrease rent when their costs go down.
An interesting Guardian comment pointing out the effect of the UK's "poorly-thought out" online safety law, which is causing the shutdown of small websites.
Implementation "includes registering a “senior person”… who will be held accountable should Ofcom decide your site isn’t safe enough…moderation teams need to be fully staffed with quick response times if bad (loosely defined) content is found on the site…[and] need to take proactive measures to protect children. While all of this may make sense for larger sites, it’s impossible for a small one-person passion project forum.. these requirements are not just burdensome, but existential."
"When you regulate the internet as if it’s all just Facebook, all that will be left is Facebook. Policymakers have repeatedly brushed off warnings about these consequences, insisting that concerns are overblown or merely fear-mongering from big tech companies looking to avoid regulation. But it’s not. And we’re seeing the impact already."
And a lovely article on annual awards given for the most blatant health-care exploitation practices in the US.
Both sides of any story need airing to form an holistic view.
FFS so not true. Mainly the right promote such a notion in order to get their non-sensical bullshit across. Fact checking as opposed to censorship helps mitigate people spouting shit.
You form a holistic view by incorporating broad evidence i.e. the woods instead of just focusing on the trees. Adding into the mix that pile of random dogshit sitting in a paddock adds nothing to looking at the wood and just creates confusion and unnecessary distraction.
False balance is a bias which usually stems from an attempt to avoid bias and gives unsupported or dubious positions an illusion of respectability. It creates a public perception that some issues are scientifically contentious, though in reality they are not, therefore creating doubt about the scientific state of research. This can be exploited by interest groups such as corporations like the fossil fuel industry or the tobacco industry, or ideologically motivated activists such as vaccination opponents or creationists.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_balance#:~:text=False%20balance%2C%20known%20colloquially%20as,viewpoints%20than%20the%20evidence%20supports.
Perhaps my generalisation doesn't apply too well in politics, huh? I agree that the false balance media posturing was a problem for years in climate change advocacy. I was generalising a common sense tradition though: weighing the pros & cons of an issue to inform a decision. People have always done it to optimise the effect of their deciding.
So when confronted with the tendency of the right & left to cite only the evidence that supports their partisan views, a sensible person does what Odysseus did on the way home from Troy: sailed midway between cliff and whirlpool in the Straits of Messina.
Before the election
Now
There was no improvement in the humanitarian situation, it has got worse because more food aid, fuel for generators and vehicles, heating oil and medical supplies was needed for winter.
Limiting aid from what, not enough to a more obvious breach of the ICC determination that blocking aid?
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/01/04/middleeast/israel-gaza-aid-limits-trump-intl/index.html