Paul Spoonley just about directly addresses it, Jamie Ensor is a little uncomfortable but determined not to blink:
Spoonley said there were also some “particular circumstances” for New Zealand at the time that would have inflamed the threats.
“One of the things that really escalated very rapidly and became a significant characteristic was misogyny. Not only was Ardern the target because she was doing things as [the head of a] government, which upset parts of the community, but the fact she was a woman seemed to add to the vitriol.”
Spoonley said misogyny “has not disappeared” – he argued it’s now directed towards Māori female politicians – but it “lacks a lightning rod with a conservative male PM”.
Fact is, the main reason threats against MPs have drop since the change in government is RW people are unhinged and violent, racist, misogynists:
Although Trump has made it conditional on compliance – so that it cannot be seen as ideological – it will switch the mind-set of all traders & dealers in the capitalist system.
The effect on cost structures will be immediate, the effect on economic planning will be medium-term, the effect on sheeple will be long-term. The most amusing part will be watching commentators & analysts compete to pretend that they will maintain faith in neoliberalism – although the linguistic framing they use will seem so unconvincing to others that their pretence will likely only persist for several weeks.
Although Trump has made it conditional on compliance – so that it cannot be seen as ideological
You're the one taking what he says seriously.
He also says that the US subsidises Canada by trading with it. And if they do not have the trade they cannot survive, so they will have to become part of America.
Apparently he does want to subsidise Canada even more than they do by trade, by making it part of America.
I suspect Canada values its health care system and some other stuff as more important.
Canada is certainly valuing its domestic production. Canadian websites have lit up with people proudly showing their shopping hauls of "Made in Canada" products.
Canada does have its problems – a housing affordability crisis being a major one, but they seem to be pretty happy that they are not Americans.
I remember making the case that those in North America were all Americans, but the Canadian visitors here remained insistent that there was a difference. By remaining polite they placed an exclamation mark on their point of view. And have taken that worldwide. Ably assisted by Americans, both domestic and abroad.
In Fiscal Year 2024, USCBP seized 21,148 pounds of fentanyl at the southwest border, mostly smuggled from Mexico. In contrast, only 43 pounds were intercepted at the northern border. This means that less than 1% of all fentanyl seizures occurred at the U.S.-Canada border.
Furthermore, drug flows are not a one-way street. In 2024, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) seized approximately 10.8 pounds of fentanyl coming into Canada from the United States.
How embarrassing – From being a valued junior partner to US imperialism, reaping some of the benefits of that relationship, to now find yourself possibly being reduced to a subservient neo-colony of the US global hegemon next door.
US imperialism is something baked in from the beginning:
How the U.S. could in fact make Canada an American territory
Published: January 10, 2025 5.36am NZDT
Many pundits dismiss Trump’s bellicose rhetoric as hot-headed bargaining. It’s just tough talk, they say. Some have argued his bluster is simply part of his favoured “art of the deal” negotiating tactics.
….The American origin story of a country born in revolution only applies to a small piece of the country. The rest of the place came to exist through annexation. The U.S. expanded to 50 states and 14 overseas territories through a mix of cession, occupation and purchase…..
…..the belief that the expansion of the U.S. throughout the Americas was both justified and inevitable, is built into the spine of the U.S. Constitution….
[Can the Canadians talk their way out of it?]
Opening lines of communication
It seems hard to fathom that discussions about U.S. annexation efforts against Canada are actually unfolding. Alarming indeed, but it would be a mistake to ignore history, overlook the U.S. Constitution and try to outwit the art of the deal.
Canadian politicians at federal, provincial and even municipal levels need to open lines of communication with Congress, especially in economically strategic states.
Congressional representatives need to view annexing Canada as a ridiculous burden, both politically and financially, rather than as a prize.
“He [The President] shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur…”.
Treaties are the tools the U.S. uses to take “nothing by conquest” after the Senate ratifies those treaties by a two-thirds majority.
So the USA can feasibly make Canada a state if 2 conditions are fulfilled as specified. First, Canada signs a treaty agreeing to the proposal. Second, enough Senators agree its a good idea & ratify it on a bipartisan basis. Your source is Robert Huish, Associate Professor in International Development Studies, Dalhousie University. He hasn't gone so far as to outline how Canada can develop under this scenario, in accord with his domain of expertise.
In fact, I got the distinct impression that he was unwilling to even consider such a future for Canada. Too bad, could have been fun! Rightist Canadian politicians will perhaps be musing the prospect of bribes emanating from T – the Canadian election looms & the right seem likely to win power again. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_2025_Canadian_federal_election
The amiable-looking dude likely to become Canada's PM soon is aspirational:
On February 5, 2022, Poilievre implicitly declared his intention to run in the leadership election, stating "I'm running for Prime Minister". Political commentators and journalists described Poilievre as the frontrunner in the leadership race. Poilievre's campaign was described as being centred on freedom and reducing the cost of living. He stated his desire to make Canada the "freest country in the world". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Poilievre
There is a possibility that there maybe one or two, but it is highly unlikely.
I know for certain we have a number of people who have beaten toddlers to death, and they have yet to be charged. It’s a bit like the pot calling the kettle black
There is a possibility that there maybe one or two, but it is highly unlikely.
If there are IOF personnel here, they are almost certain to have committed, or passively assented, to the horrors that that "soldier" is attesting to.
I know for certain we have a number of people who have beaten toddlers to death, and they have yet to be charged.
We have no one, let alone "a number of people", that has inflicted the horrors that that IOF fellow owns up to in that disgusting video,
It’s a bit like the pot calling the kettle black
??? There is no equivalence between isolated instances child abuse, however terrible they are, and a state which instructs its forces to carry out a genocide.
There is, however, an absolute equivalent between an individual who murders a child – under the circumstances that you're referring to in the IDF video ; and the individuals who are NZ citizens who have systematically tortured and murdered children in their care – and/or covered up for those who did. The long list of shameful child-murder in NZ gives us nothing to be proud about.
There is a world of difference. How many children are deliberately and systematically killed in New Zealand? Can you point to one instance of a New Zealand government minister dehumanising a race of people and sending agents of the state to kill them and their families, and raze their homes and communities?
It's easier to just neglect them to death, in which case just about every National Party minister appointed a Welfare portfolio in the last 40 years, with a dishonourable mention for the fourth Labour Government when Rogernomics got into full swing.
Sorry, I regard the systematic torture, abuse and murder of children by the people who are supposed to be their primary caregivers and protectors as considerably worse.
And the crimes are regularly reported in the papers. As is the failure of their murderers to be brought to justice.
You are drawing an equivalence in that the NZ govt is apparently prosecuting neither class of child killers (even despite its legal obligations to do so in both cases).
I don't believe that NZ has the legal right or responsibility to prosecute IDF soldiers, at all. They are not NZ citizens, nor were any of the killings committed here, nor have they actually been convicted or indicted for any crimes at all (if they had, then we may be liable to return them to face justice – but given the pace of our legal system, then they might be here for decades, cf Dotcom!).
Nor does NZ have the legal right or responsibility to prosecute Sudanese, Russian or Syrian soldiers, for crimes committed in those wars.
We do have the legal right and responsibility to prosecute NZ child murderers. But our current legal system seems to be more concerned with the rights of the criminals, than those of the victims.
NZ has the same obligation to prosecute criminals of foreign armies as other countries have. Thats, for example, one of the obligations of NZ being a member of the ICC.
two on TS in the past day or so. Muttonbird was the other, arguing that NZ should refuse visas to Israeli citizens on the basis of them being in the military, and the inference that border control could just do this as a moral action.
The Palestinian group that wants people to help hunt down Israeli citizens in NZ on the basis of them being in the military would be another example.
The motivation is understandable. Throwing out principles isn’t.
You're the only one getting ahead of things here. Yes, NZ has an obligation to try IDF soldiers who arrive here where there is reasonable evidence they have committed war crimes. That doesn't merely include those directly on the arrest list of the Hague.
For some reason you want to get ahead of that and just not prosecute them.
I think that you're the one getting ahead of yourself. There is no 'reasonable evidence' that any individual Israeli soldier has committed war crimes, when they apply for a NZ visa, and visit this country as a tourist.
It would require an in-depth investigation off-shore to establish individual guilt (or, innocence). Quite frankly, I think our NZ police have better things to do.
Evidence that individual members of the IDF, who have not yet been charged, let alone convicted of any crime, are currently covered under any of the provisions of this act?
The ICC has declared war crimes to have been committed in Palestine and issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant. If individuals enter our jurisdiction that the authorities have reasonable suspicion of having been directly involved in those events, our own laws, independently of the ICC itself, come into play.
This would apply equally to Hamas.
I'm sure that if Netanyahu or Gallant come to NZ – that the provisions you're referring to may well come into play.
However, that is not the case. You're proposing that all IDF soldiers should be treated as war criminals. And how do you define 'reasonable suspicion'? Do you propose that the NZ police carry out an extensive overseas investigation in every case? Or simply adopt your 'tarred by association' definition?
In any case, the number of potential criminals who also choose to visit NZ is tiny. Personally, I'd rather police and legislative effort went into dealing with our home-grown murderers.
Your 'reason for suspicion' appears to be that they are (or have been) IDF personnel. Anything else would require an in-depth investigation – which is way outside the remit of our police force.
It's simply another way to attempt to ban Israelis from visiting NZ. If that is your goal, be up-front – and just propose this.
Well duh. If any military force, paramilitary force, or political party has been extensively documented as having committed a multiple human rights abuses and war crimes, one would generally take a closer look at its individual members, or am I being hopelessly naive?
??? There is no equivalence between isolated instances child abuse, however terrible they are, and a state which instructs its forces to carry out a genocide.
Imho, it's the scale of state-sanctioned killing of Gazan infants that sets IDF actions apart from the few NZ citizens who have killed children. Child abuse, otoh, is much more widespread.
Imho, it's the scale of state-sanctioned killing of Gazan infants that sets IDF actions apart…
It's the scale and the intent. When a child is killed in New Zealand, it is not the result of our government sending people in to that child's community to destroy it.
No, it's the result of the child's own family and/or caregivers deliberately abusing, torturing and murdering them.
Sorry. I don't expect that the State will actively care about each individual. I do expect that their own family, will.
Yes. It's tragic that children have been killed in Gaza. It's tragic that children have been killed in Ukraine. It's tragic that children have been killed in Sudan. These are wars. People die. The 'other side' in this kind of internecine conflict have little interest in the human rights of their opponents.
C'mon Mozza, it is beyond denial the horrific actions of the IDF, the Israeli government and their US government enablers.
I get the point you are trying to make about soldiers and visas.
At the same time, we live in a country that has a heart breakingly high youth suicide rate and we are world leaders in abuse, neglect and murder of our children.
What really shreds my undies is we have senior public officials, sitting MPs and ministers of the crown who actively denied, covered up and used all the state's powers to deny justice to the thousands that had the misfortune to end up in state care. Solicitor General and Attorney General to name two.
From the outside, they appear to have gotten away with it, scot free.
Morrissey, here in NZ, there are most likely far more child abusers wandering around, who have not been brought to justice, than tourists from Israel who have visited NZ over the past few years. Of those Israelis who have visited NZ, there is a possibility that one or two may have in some way been involved in war crimes, but it’s probably highly unlikely. Not far from where my parents live, a toddler was beaten to death, the people who know what happened are still not cooperating with the police, no one has been held to account. This is probably a far more pressing issue, than harassment of tourists who may look like an Israeli
The business talk is that we have been risk averse.
Sure we have allowed people invest in the sure thing the property market for untaxed CG.
Do they have any plans, to change this?
Landlords write the tenancy terms (removing those who ask questions). Landlords do not get checked for compliance with standards. They can claim their interest cost against rent income. The bright-line test is back at 2 years. Any less and they would be investigated for being professional "doing uppers".
So no.
The current narrative.
After spending the past two years talking a lot about getting New Zealand back on track, the Government has realised in doing so, it forgot to mention the track needs to be a growth one.Now it's making up for lost time, rolling out economy-related announcements – no matter how tenuously linked they may be to long-term economic growth.But if the Government is serious about growth, it must, at the very least, lead a conversation about something NZ is not very good at talking about: risk. Culturally, NZ is too risk-averse.
Earthquake standards, building in a flood zone – tell it to insurance companies.
What on earth is going on at the Stats Department?
On Friday they announced that the report on activities at the Manurewa Marae during the Census would be released today. Then, just two and a half hours later they said that that would not happen and that the new date would be announced within the coming weeks. That isn't the date for the release of the report. It is just the date on which they propose to tell us the date.
Are they just trying to put the whole affair of until we are past the demo season at Waitangi?
I find it hard to believe that any political party would protect pedophiles. Name suppression is a matter for the courts, not politicians or political parties.
And did this person take any action? Talk to the police? Explicitly raise the issue in a documented way with party leadership? Or are they personally complicit in the silence. And, if so, what reparation to the victims are they, personally, making?
I’ve heard plenty of rumours around the water cooler, and outside of work, few of them have been true. If you have evidence of any organisation or person protecting a pedophile, or any other criminal, I suggest that you contact the police, posting on social media suggests that you are more interested in spreading rumours than actually doing something
Outside of government departments or city councils. gossip and rumours are about the latest series on Netflix, sports, or whatever one got up on the weekend. Occasionally there maybe something juicy but generally harmless, like Sharon in accounts is dating Brad from sales
Where do you live? The only beltway I am aware of is a ring road around Washington DC (I 495) and I've never seen a watercooler other than in an office in the USA.
Government aligned and appointed, Sir Brian Roche, fails at the first hurdle. My guess is he tried to force the release of the report after a word in the ear from someone in government, but the agencies told him stuff off.
I clicked on the link MB and was confronted with this as the first sentence….
'Sir Brian Roche said the public service engaged in too many meetings, had too many management layers and didn’t focus enough on outcomes.'
I didn't read any further as I cannot beat the relevance of the Mandy Rice Davies quote in the Profumo case
'Well he would say that wouldn't he'
Disclaimer: I worked with Brian Roche a couple of times in the past and he was always a breath of fresh air and competent in his specialist fields, charming and very able to effect compromises etc. I think what has happened is that he has perhaps been promoted beyond his competency, that competence in a specialist field has been mistaken for competence in across management in the PS. They do not universally follow. As a long term PS I have seen it happen often.
I am becoming more in favour of following the guidance set out in Kenny Rogers' The Gambler as a way to manage/get ahead/assess options ….
“This may be the biggest own-goal yet,” Mary Lovely, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told CNN in a phone interview. “This is a huge gamble. It’s a recipe for slowing down the economy and increasing inflation.”
The Wall Street Journal went a step further, publishing a scathing op-ed on Saturday titled: “The Dumbest Trade War in History.” The op-ed argued that Trump’s justification for an “economic assault” on Canada and Mexico “makes no sense” and warned the strategy could end in disaster.
Trump will need to placate the imperial globalists on Wall St, so he must trot out a public intellectual from the ivy league to make sense of his policy. He & his advisors may not be aware of this tactical necessity. They may see his Republican base as main street, biased against Wall St. If so, they will deem the market a sideshow – an error of judgment which could eventually prove senior fellow Mary right in assuming it will become an own-goal. Spooking market reef fish often gets them into escape mode real fast: a fraction of a second, a blink, and they're gone.
The voting down of David Seymour's racist principles bill later this year can be seen as a vote of no confidence in Seymour and ACT. 91% of MPs will be voting against his divisive bill which is an almost unanimous rejection of his dangerous and unpopular ideas.
The only people in that scenario in need of prosecution are Musk and his flunkies who, having no Congressional oversight, have no authority to access those files.
You really believe the US president lacks the authority to investigate govt systems?? If so, you could prove the point by citing relevant laws. If you find any, do let us know. If T & M are indeed operating illegally, the Dems may notice. They could then ask one of those leftist tech bro billionaires to fund a prosecution of the two.
The case would proceed to the Supreme Court eventually, to judgment on the president's executive authority. That could prove you right!
The US President can appoint advisory commissions. Doge is, at best, one of those. It is not a Federal Executive Department, which can only be created by Congress, and therefor has no authority to interfere with genuine Federal Executive Departments because that would be the President unilaterally constraining the authority of Congress, which is unconstitutional. So no, the US President lacks the authority to investigate government systems. That is the purview of Congress.
That's interesting, thanks. It does raise the question of what T's legal advisor is smoking, huh? Not to mention viability of any consequent prosecutions of state agents. I'll watch this space awhile to get a sense of the unreality…
If the GOP has bent the knee to POTUS, then Congress will just rubber stamp the executive orders and SCOTUS will cite the supremacy of POTUS if there is legal challenge.
There is nothing left of "Edmund Burke" in the GOP, the GOP is no longer in defence of the constitution, but the Jan 6 coup against it.
Or it could be just another Musk lie like the one he told about Biden supposedly sending $50 million in condoms to Gaza.
//
While Leavitt did not offer any evidence to support this claim, and was not pressed to by reporters, the idea that the United States government planned to spend $50m to send condoms to Gaza quickly went viral, with an assist from Musk himself.
The Fox pundit Jesse Watters even claimed that the condoms were being used by Hamas militants as balloons to float explosives into Israel.
A review of the available evidence, however, suggests that the claim is almost certainly not true.
According to a comprehensive report issued in September by the US Agency for International Development (USAid), not a penny of the $60.8m in contraceptive and condom shipments funded by the US in the past year went to Gaza. In fact, the accounting shows, there were no condoms sent to any part of the Middle East, and just one small shipment, $45,680 in oral and injectable contraceptives, was sent to the region, all of it distributed to the government of Jordan.
For the financial year 2023, the most recent for which data is available, only about $7m worth of condoms were distributed globally by USAid, and the vast majority of family-planning funds, 89%, were spent on programs in Africa.
As Dan Evon of the non-profit News Literacy Project points out: “It’s also worth noting that this is not a Biden program. Trump, too, spent funds on sending contraceptives around the globe. In 2019, about $40m was spent on contraceptives by the Trump administration”
That one was just egregious. No fact-checking really necessary on a claim the US govt sent tens of millions of condoms to a population of 2 million people who think babies are a blessing from God.
"….the US govt sent tens of millions of condoms to a population of 2 million people…."
According to Hannah Arendt the point of propaganda is not to make you believe lies, the point of propaganda is to flood the information sphere with bullshit, so people don't know what to believe
So I'll confess to being a James Carville fan, and oboy he doesn't hold back on the failed Harris campaign and why the DEmocrats lost so hard. In particular that they should have had a primary and got someone a whole lot better.
And his solutions are pretty simple: stop being polite to the Republicans, go populist and put up popular motions that redefine the Democrats in the public mind, be expansive not defensive, and run the fuckers down.
Having a primary seems a no-brainer given Biden's series of performance failures. Inexplicably stupid of the Dems to have ruled one out!!
That said, I do feel Biden did surprising well overall, even if only as a placeholder, although I'm sympathetic to the loathing some onsite here often express. Morality is such an immensely difficult thing for mainstreamers to grasp.
It was too late to hold a primary of any kind. Biden didn't stand down until 21 July, when the election itself was underway. He only got forced out then because of his dreadful performance in the debate with Donald Trump on 27 June.
Even after that fiasco of a debate it took him another month to quit. He should have announced, in January 2023 say, that he was going to be a single term President and would not run in 2024. That would have given his party a chance to come up with a decent candidate and not get stuck at the end with the hapless Harris.
One should remember that Harris had been such an appalling candidate in 2020 that she had quit the race on December 3 2019.
It was far to late to try and run a whole string of state primaries by the time that Biden quit. After all in 2020 all the primaries were held by very early July and Biden in fact had won the nomination by June 6 when he went over half the delegate count.
Well, you may indeed be simulating their state of mind accurately but I'm the guy who raps a knuckle on their forehead & asks "Anybody home?"
I mean, even if a geriatric comes across lucid most of the time, you still got a geriatric. Falling down at random moments tends to remind viewers of that.
Now if I were a political consultant, I'd give the buggers free advice: People want faith in the future. You don't get it by fronting someone almost dead.
I believe there was also the issue of the campaign chest – which was overwhelmingly promised to the Biden campaign. Some of that money was for the Democratic campaign as a whole – but an awful lot was personal to the Biden/Harris ticket.
The legal opinion was that Harris could use this (since she was on the Biden ticket), but another candidate would have had to begin fundraising from scratch. : Note: the right for Harris to use the money, at all, was vigorously contested by Trump.
I don't think there is any way back for the Democrats if Trump retains the working class vote. And he will if his policies grow jobs and make their lives better.
He will demolish the first pillar of neoliberalism (free trade) if he implements the tarrifs and put a serious dent in globalisation.
Who would have thought that a right wing populist would be the one to dismantle the neolib orthodoxy.
I envisaged the left wing populists Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren as more likely.
We think these concerns reveal a fundamental misunderstanding of America’s electorate. Most conversations about the “working class” rely on disparate definitions of this group — the lack of a four-year college degree, union membership, a blue-collar or manufacturing job. Although each of these criteria represents a reasonable demarcation of the working class, the problem with using them interchangeably is that they refer to distinct groups of voters who face different challenges and even have conflicting interests.
But even if only 10% continue to support the GOP (along with their current supporters) they retain power.
My point is that if Trump continues with tariffs this will be the first serious disruption to neoliberalism and globalism since its introduction. And it comes from the right.
it's a similar dynamic as Brexit. Superficially, it looks like a move away from neoliberalism. But in the US, the move is towards authoritarianism. As much as I want to see an end to neoliberalism, tbis ain't it.
Also worth remembering, the right couldn't get and maintain enough power under neoliberal democracies. NZ is on a similar path, we still have time to stop and turn in a different direction.
They may indeed have different (or even conflicting) interests – but I don't think that any of them sees themselves represented by the Democrats. Which is rather the point.
I don't know if Trump (or whoever is the Republican nominee in the next election) – can hold these working class voters. I'd say the jury is out on whether they feel that they'll be better off under Trump than Biden. But the issue is that they don't see the Dems as a viable alternative.
Do you think that their election of Ken Martin indicates that they're changing strategies?
On the one hand, he's talking about going low, and directly attacking Trump. On the other, he's an absolute member of the party machine. And, on the gripping hand, the big donors wanted a different party leader.
The old RNZAF Super E's Or H Model C-130's are rooted, as all 5 basically nearly at the end of their designed Flying Hour's.
Basically Lockheed & RNZAF can't actually guarantee how long they will flying or literally fall out of the Sky pass their designed flying hrs as the RNZAF have literally flogged them like a dead horse because every NZG since the 90's, Treasury & Taxpayers didn't want to pay for their replacement!
According to Ron Mark through various channels, has said that Robbo was only prepared to buy 3 new J Model's until Ronnie threatened to resign from Government! Even though there is 2-3 papers by the RNZAF & MoD stating the RNZAF actually needs 8-9 C130's too cover all its Specific & Implied mandated NZG Tasks since the retirement of the old Andover Fleet in the 90's!
I actually agree with your suggestion that the RNZAF, MoD along with Fire, CD & DoC buy 3 RORO Fire Bomber modules for the C130 J.
But they would also need to buy an additional 3-5 J Model's IOT extend the Flying Hrs/ Airframe Fatigue life across the C-130 J Fleet to make it viable in order for the Taxpayer to get a long term return on their money as anything less is pissing money up the wall like a Baggie on post deployment leave LoL.
Thanks Jenny. In New Zealand and Australia, too, Jews with a commitment to human rights are speaking out, and no doubt being abused for their activism,,,,
Why Is Israel’s Head Of Infantry Doctrine Addressing A Jewish Community Leadership Gathering?
Why is Israel’s head of infantry doctrine addressing a Union for Progressive Judaism (UPJ) leadership gathering? With genocide charges pending in international court, why is the UPJ’s 2025 fundraising campaign being led by an IDF major general?
The Union for Progressive Judaism (UPJ) is the Australian-based umbrella for New Zealand and Australian synagogues in the Progressive stream of Jewish religion. Over the past 15 months, the UPJ has folded an uncritical militarism into its vision of the Israel which it supports.
Alternative Jewish Voices (AJV), a collective of anti-Zionist New Zealand Jews, is voicing their alarm.
In January 2025, the UPJ advertised a leadership forum for emerging Jewish community leaders. Among the featured speakers was Colonel Yaron Simsolo, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) head of infantry doctrine, pictured in his uniform. After some internal resistance, the event was re-branded in warm yellows as a “Shabbat gathering – a weekend with the UPJ”. Colonel Yaron’s image was removed, although he remains part of the event. The current UPJ newsletter also announces that an IDF major general will spearhead its 2025 fundraising appeal for Israel. …
Marama Davidson back on the job, sporting a fine looking crewcut. It would be nice if the crewcut were a hairdressing choice rather than a medical necessity, but it's great to see she's back and looking well.
I thought Marama looked terrific with that 'do, and the picture of health all round. Fingers crossed that it's not just on the surface. Amen to Weka's comment as well.
Elon Musk’s takeover of federal government infrastructure is ongoing, and at the center of things is a coterie of engineers who are barely out of—and in at least one case, purportedly still in—college. Most have connections to Musk, and at least two have connections to Musk’s longtime associate Peter Thiel, a cofounder and chair of the analytics firm and government contractor Palantir who has long expressed opposition to democracy.
WIRED has identified six young men—all apparently between the ages of 19 and 24, according to public databases, their online presences, and other records—who have little to no government experience and are now playing critical roles in Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) project, tasked by executive order with “modernizing Federal technology and software to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity.” The engineers all hold nebulous job titles within DOGE, and at least one appears to be working as a volunteer.
The engineers are Akash Bobba, Edward Coristine, Luke Farritor, Gautier Cole Killian, Gavin Kliger, and Ethan Shaotran. None have responded to requests for comment from WIRED. Representatives from OPM, GSA, and DOGE did not respond to requests for comment.
With Musk's operatives now controlling key nodes of federal govt power, to know who we're dealing with, here's a substack post from one of them describing how the Deep State prevented Matt Gaetz from becoming AG substack.com/home/post/p-…
The deep state's first move was textbook: open a federal sex trafficking investigation based solely on Greenberg's manufactured evidence and coached testimony. But the DOJ knew what they had would never survive real scrutiny in a courtroom – Greenberg's manipulation of official records had poisoned any chance of prosecution. They needed more, and they needed it fast. Their solution was a classic deep state tactic: cast a wider net, target the family, and go fishing for anything that might stick.
The opening gambit wasn't a rogue operation by opportunists, but rather a carefully crafted deep state ploy leveraging their own buried failures. Bob Kent, a former Air Force intelligence officer who had mysteriously learned of the confidential DOJ investigation, approached Matt's father Don Gaetz—former President of the Florida Senate—with an astounding proposition: $25 million for a last-ditch rescue mission for Bob Levinson (whom the deep state knew was long dead), in exchange for a guaranteed presidential pardon for Matt.
Mussolini, and Hirohito's image. could be just as easily photo shopped onto the image of Musk to give the same warning.
The corporate State was not solely a German thing:
The Corporate State was an economic and political system established by Benito Mussolini in Fascist Italy during the 1920s and 1930s…….
……During the 1930s, Japan established close ties with the fascist governments of Germany and Italy, aligning themselves to prepare for a new global order….
Corporate statism, state corporatism, or simply corporatism, is a political culture and a form of corporatism the proponents of which claim or believe that corporate groups should form the basis of society and the state.
As noted, early March has been about moving house, and I have had little chance to partake in all things internet. But now that everything is more or less sorted, I can finally give a belated report on my visit to the annual Regent Booksale (28th February and 1st March). ...
Information operations Australia has banned cybersecurity software Kaspersky from government use because of risks of espionage, foreign interference and sabotage. The Department of Home Affairs said use of Kaspersky products posed an unacceptable security ...
The StrategistBy Linus Cohen, Astrid Young and Alice Wai
One of the best understood tropes of screen drama is the scene where the beloved family dog is barking incessantly and cannot be calmed. Finally, somebody asks: What is it, girl? Has someone fallen down a well? Is there trouble at the old John Key place?One is reminded of this ...
The ’ndrangheta, the Calabrian mafia, plays a significant role in the global cocaine trade and is deeply entrenched in Australia, influencing the cocaine trade and engaging in a variety of illicit activities. A range of ...
In the US, the Trump regime is busy imposing tariffs on its neighbours and allies, then revoking them, then reimposing them, permanently poisoning relations with Canada and Mexico. Trump has also threatened to impose tariffs on agricultural goods, which will affect Aotearoa's exports. National's response? To grovel for an exemption, ...
Troy Bowker’s Caniwi Capital’s Desmond Gittings, former TradeMe and Warehouse executive Simon West, former anonymous right wing blogger / Labour attacker & now NZ On Air Board member / Waitangi Tribunal member Philip Crump, Canadian billionaire Jim Grenon who used to run vaccine critical, Treaty of Waitangi critical, and trans-rights ...
The free school lunch program was one of Labour's few actual achievements in government. Decent food, made locally, providing local employment. So naturally, National had to get rid of it. Their replacement - run by Compass, a multinational which had already been thrown out of our hospitals for producing inedible ...
New draft government procurement guidelines will remove living wage protections for thousands of low-paid workers in Aotearoa New Zealand, said NZCTU Te Kauae Kaimahi President Richard Wagstaff. “The Minister of Finance Nicola Willis has proposed a new rule saying that the Living Wage no longer needs to be paid in ...
The Trump administration’s effort to divide Russia from China is doomed to fail. This means that the United States is destroying security relationships based on a delusion. To succeed, Russia would need to overcome more ...
Māori workers now hold more high-skilled jobs than low-skilled jobs with 46 percent in high-skilled jobs, 14 percent in skilled jobs, and 40 percent in low-skilled jobs. Resource teachers of literacy and Te Reo Māori are “devastated” by a proposal from the Education Minister to stop funding 174 roles from ...
Knowing what is going on in orbit is getting harder—yet hardly less necessary. But new technologies are emerging to cope with the challenge, including some that have come from Australian civilian research. One example is ...
This is a guest post by Malcolm McCracken. It previously appeared on his blog Better Things Are Possible and is shared by kind permission. New Zealand’s largest infrastructure project, the City Rail Link (CRL), is expected to open in 2026. This will be an exciting step forward for Auckland, delivering better ...
“The reality is I'm just saying to you I'm proud of the work we're doing. We're doing a great job”, said Luxon, pushing back at Auckland Council’s reports of rising homelessness and pleas for help. Photo: Lynn Grieveson / The KākāLong stories shortest:Christopher Luxon denies his Government caused a ...
Should I stay, or should I go now?Should I stay, or should I go now?If I go, there will be troubleAnd if I stay, it will be doubleSo come on and let me knowSongwriters: Topper Headon, Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, Joe Strummer.Christopher,Tomorrow marks seventeen months since the last election. We’re ...
Homelessness in Auckland has risen by 53% in 4 months - that’s 653 peopleliving in cars, on streets and in parks.The city’s emergency housing numbers have fallen by about 650 under National too - now at record lows.Housing First Auckland is on the frontlines: There is “more and more ...
A growing consensus holds that the future of airpower, and of defense technology in general, involves the interplay of crewed and uncrewed vehicles. Such teaming means that more-numerous, less-costly, even expendable uncrewed vehicles can bring ...
Only two more sleeps to the Government’s Jamboree Investor Extravaganza! As a proud New Zealander I’m very much hoping for the best: Off-shore wind farms! Solar power! Sustainable industry powered by the abundant energy we could be producing!I wonder, will they have a deal already lined up, something to announce ...
After decades of gradual decline, Australia’s manufacturing capability is no longer mission-fit to meet national security needs. Any whole-of-nation effort to arrest this trend needs to start by making the industrial operating environment more conducive ...
Back in October 2022, Restore Passenger Rail hung banners across roads in Wellington to protest against the then-Labour government's weak climate change policy. The police responded by charging them not with the usual public order offences, but with "endangering transport", a crime with a maximum sentence of 14 years in ...
Luxon’s popularity continues to fall, and a new survey shows voters rank fixing the health system as the top priority. Photo: Lynn Grieveson / Getty ImagesLong stories shortest in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning: National’s pollster finds Christopher Luxon has fallen behind Chris Hipkins as preferred PM for the first ...
The CTU is calling for an apology from Nicola Willis after her office made a false characterisation of CTU statements, which ultimately saw him blocked from future Treasury briefings. New data shows that Māori make up 83% of those charged under new gang laws. Financial incentives are being offered to ...
Australia’s cyber capabilities have evolved rapidly, but they are still largely reactive, not preventative. Rather than responding to cyber incidents, Australian law enforcement agencies should focus on dismantling underlying criminal networks. On 11 December, Europol ...
This is a re-post from Yale Climate Connections by Jeff Masters Finally, there’s some good news to report from NOAA, the parent organization of the National Hurricane Center, or NHC: During the highly active 2o24 Atlantic hurricane season, the NHC made record-accurate track forecasts at every time interval (12-, ...
The Australian government has prioritised enhancing Australia’s national resilience for many years now, whether against natural disasters, economic coercion or hostile armed forces. However, the public and media response to the presence of Chinese naval ...
It appears that Auckland Transport is finally set to improve Auckland’s busiest non-frequent bus route, the 120. As highlighted in my post a month ago on Auckland’s busiest bus routes, the 120 is the busiest route that doesn’t already run frequently all day/week and carries more passengers than many other ...
Economists have earned their reputation for jargon and tunnel vision, but sometimes, it takes an someone as perceptive as Simplicity economist Shamubeel Eaqub to identify something simple and devastating. As he pointed out recently, the coalition government is trying to attract foreign investment here to generate economic growth, while – ...
Opinion & AnalysisSimeon Brown, left, and Deloitte partner David LovattIn September 2024, Deloitte Partner David Lovatt, was contracted by the National Government to help National ostensibly understand “the drivers behind HNZ’s worsening financial performance”.1 i.e. deficit.The report shows the last version was dated December 2024.It was formally released this week ...
This cobbled-together government was altogether more the beneficiary of Labour getting turfed out than anything it managed to do itself. Even the worthless cheques they were writing didn't buy all that much favour.How’s it all looking now?Shall we take a look at a Horizon poll?The Government’s performance is making only ...
There's horrible news from the US today, with the Trump regime disappearing Mahmoud Khalil, a former Columbia University student, for protesting against genocide in Gaza. Its another significant decline in US human rights, and puts them in the same class as the authoritarian dictatorships they used to sponsor in South ...
Yesterday National announced plans to amend the Public Works Act to "speed up" land acquisition for public works. Which sounds boring and bureaucratic - except its not. Because what "land acquisition" means is people's homes being compulsorily acquired by the state - which is inherently controversial, and fairly high up ...
Contenders: The next question after “Will Luxon really go?” is, of course, “Will that work?” The answer to that question lies not so much in the efficacy of Luxon’s successor as it does in the perceived strength of the Centre-Left alternative.AT LEAST TWO prominent political commentators are alluding publicly to the ...
Ice will melt, water will boilYou and I can shake off this mortal coilIt's bigger than usYou don't have to worry about itIt's circumstantialIt's nothing written in the skyAnd we don't even have to trySongwriters: Neil Finn / Tim Finn.Preparing for the future.Many of you will be familiar with the ...
In my post last Thursday I offered some thoughts on changes that should be initiated by the government in the wake of the Governor’s surprise resignation. (Days on we still have no real explanation as to why he just resigned with no notice, disappearing out the door and (eg) leaving ...
In late February a Chinese navy flotilla including a cruiser, a frigate and a replenishment ship began to circle Australia, conducting a live fire exercise in the Tasman Sea along the way. The Strategist featured ...
China’s deployment of a potent surface action group around Australia over the past two weeks is unprecedented but not unique. Over the past few years, China’s navy has deployed a range of vessels in Australia’s ...
Long stories shortest in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning: Within months and before Parliamentary approval is obtained, the Government plans to strip non-Maori landowners of the right to use the Environment Court to stop compulsory acquisition for fast-track projects and big new motorways.The Government also wants to buy off landowners ...
Hi,When I was 16 (pimples, braces, painfully awkward) — I applied for a job at Video Ezy.It’s difficult to describe how much I wanted this job. Video Ezy was my local video shop in Tauranga, and I’d spend hours of my teenage life stalking through those aisles, looking at the ...
A listing of 32 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, March 2, 2025 thru Sat, March 8, 2025. This week's roundup is again published by category and sorted by number of articles included in each. We are still interested ...
The title of this post comes from Albert Wohlstetter’s 1976 seminal essay Moving Towards Life in a Nuclear Armed Crowd. In that essay he contemplated a world in which several nations had nuclear weapons, and also the strategic logics governing their proliferation, deployment and use (mainly as a deterrent). For ...
Adrian Orr resigned unexpectedly and immediately on Wednesday, giving no explanation for departing three years before the end of his second term. File Photo: Lynn GrievesonLong stories shortest in our political economy this week: David Seymour’s lunch programme came under increasing scrutiny;Adrian Orr resigned unexpectedly after clashing with Nicola Willis ...
You've got to live, lady liveDo the tongue rollGive me joyBut don't kiss me too fastSong: Th’ Dudes.Good morning, all. After another heavy week of less-than-positive news, it’s time for something silly: the old standby of memories and questions.I can’t face writing about any more terrible people this week. I usually ...
Skeptical Science is partnering with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. You can submit claims you think need checking via the tipline. Is Greenland losing land ice? Data from satellites and expeditions confirm Greenland has been losing land ice at an accelerating rate for decades. ...
After the Reserve Bank’s appearance on 20 February at the Finance and Expenditure Committee (the Governor, his macro deputy Karen Silk, and his chief economist Paul Conway) on the previous day’s Monetary Policy Statement, I wrote a post here about it, focused on a number of areas in which Orr, ...
Beijing deployed a naval task group to the waters around Australia for three related reasons. First, to demonstrate the reach and potency of Chinese sea power and to put Australia on notice that it is ...
That's the price that we all payAnd the value of destiny comes to nothingI can't tell you where we're goingI guess there was just no way of knowingSongwriters: Bernard Sumner / Gillian Lesley Gilbert / Peter Hook / Stephen Eric Hague / Stephen Paul David Morris.What an eventful week it’s ...
In what might have been the longest presidential address to Congress in American history—an hour and forty minutes without intermission—President Donald Trump delivered a performance on Tuesday night that was simultaneously grandiose, confrontational, optimistic and ...
Peter Frankopan’s The Earth Transformed: An Untold History is a compelling account of the interaction between humans and the environment. We would be unwise to ignore it. The Silk Roads: A New History of the World by Oxford professor of history Peter Frankopan was initially widely admired. But critics point ...
The United States shocked the world last week with President Donald Trump’s very public rift with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. This was followed by a US pause on military aid and some intelligence sharing with ...
International Women’s Day (IWD) serves as both a celebration of progress and a reminder of the ongoing challenges women face worldwide. Across national security, diplomacy, human rights and digital spaces, women continue to break barriers. ...
Domestic violence is an under-recognised early indicator of terrorism. It is not a reliable solitary indicator, but when observed alongside risk factors, it can prompt authorities to take a closer look at a potential terrorist. ...
1. The Government is bringing back what to Health New Zealand?a. Buckb. Sexyc. The arrangement they dumped nine months ago2. Patient advocate and health campaigner Malcolm Mulholland said Commissioner Levy's time would be remembered as what?a. The Good Placeb. The Bad Placec. Absolute havoc and mayhem3. The government also announced ...
The current National government is one of the worst in Aotearoa's history. And because of this, its also one of the most unpopular. A war on Māori, corrupt fast-track legislation, undermining the fight against climate change, the ferry fiasco, the school lunch disaster... none of these policies are making friends. ...
Australia should enlist partners in the Quad to help address China’s increasingly assertive naval behaviour in the Indo-Pacific. The Quad may be slow in moving into security roles, but one militarily useful function that it ...
Women’s rights and protections are regressing on the international stage, from the Taliban’s erasure of women from public life to US President Donald Trump’s misogynistic rhetoric and decision to suspend USAID. Against this backdrop, Australia’s ...
E tū, representing many of NZME’s journalists, says it is “deeply worried” by a billionaire’s plans to take over its board. They are also concerned that NZ Post call centre jobs are gradually shifting to the Philippines as a cost-cutting measure. APEX have announced that more than 850 lab staff ...
US President Donald Trump, his powerful offsider Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are slashing public spending in an effort to save US taxpayers anywhere between US$500 billion and US$2 trillion. Caught ...
Miles and miles on my ownWarm with shame, I follow onA language to find hard to hearNot to understand, just disappearCould you take my place and stand here?I do not think you'd take this painYou'll be on your knees and struggle under the weightOh, the truth would be a beautiful ...
“I made him the Prime Minister”, said Winston Peters, leaning into his “kingmaker” role. File Photo: Lynn Grieveson / The KākāLong stories shortest in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning: Winston Peters believes he made Christopher Luxon PM and therefore didn’t have to tell him about sacking Phil Goff, which Luxon ...
Yesterday, after kids got “steam burns” from hot school lunches, came the news of a kid in Gisborne who suffered “second degree burns” after opening one of the school lunches and accidentally splashing some on their leg.The student had to be rushed to A&E at the hospital, but it’s horrific ...
The podcast above of the weekly ‘Hoon’ webinar for paying subscribers on Thursday night features co-hosts & talking about the week’s news with regular and special guests, including: and Elaine Monaghan on the week in geopolitics, including Donald Trump’s wrecking of the post-WW II political landscape; and, on ...
Of all the headline-making, world-reshaping actions of the second Trump administration thus far, perhaps the most defining is the United States’ vote against the resolution condemning Moscow’s invasion and supporting Ukraine’s territorial authority. The US has used its security council veto and superpower heft in questionable ways before, but this ...
Open access notables Snow Mass Recharge of the Greenland Ice Sheet Fueled by Intense Atmospheric River, Bailey & Hubbard, Geophysical Research Letters:Atmospheric rivers (ARs) have been linked with extreme rainfall and melt events across the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS), accelerating its mass loss. However, the impact of AR-fueled snowfall has ...
Donald Trump’s description of himself during last week’s excruciating Oval Office meeting as a ‘mediator’ between Russia and Ukraine was revealing even by the standards of the past six weeks. It showed an indifference to ...
In April 1941, Charles Lindbergh, the America First Committee’s most prominent leader, outlined his position that Nazi Germany’s victory was inevitable, that the United States should stay neutral and that Britain was ‘a belligerent nation’ ...
National Business Review has this scoop todayLet’s not belabour it.He wants all NZME directors to be replaced by himself, three new nominees, and one existing NZME Director.Grenon’s link to publications such as Centrist and News Essentials are note worthy.Those publications for all intensive purposes present a very alt-right view of ...
Anyone involved in Australia’s critical minerals industry would be rolling their eyes at the transaction still reported to be under consideration between Ukraine and the United States. US President Donald Trump was initially asking for ...
Collins Unveils Very Special FrigateJudith Collins today announced a bold plan to address the navy’s billion dollar headaches.We’re so short of sailors that we’ve had to tie up half the fleet, and as if that wasn’t enough, our allies have been heavying us to upgrade the boats. Well, that would ...
ANALYSIS / OPINION -Why Central Bankers MatterI remember the day that Lehman Brothers fell. LB was a global financial services behemoth. Fourth largest investment bank in the world. Founded in 1850. The brand smelt of prestige and calibre.But their demise in 2018 - caused by shoddy risk management practices and ...
Australia has no room for complacency as it watches the second Trump Administration upend the US Intelligence Community (USIC). The evident mutual advantages of the US-Australian intelligence partnership and of the Five Eyes alliance more ...
Port workers in Lyttleton are warning that a proposal to cut jobs at the port will lead to more workplace deaths. The Government is doubling the number of nurse practitioners able to train in GP clinics, to 120 every year. They have also announced plans to lower the age for ...
The Labour Party will support Chloe Swarbrick’s member’s bill which would allow sanctions against Israel for its illegal occupation of the Palestinian Territories. ...
The Government’s new procurement rules are a blatant attack on workers and the environment, showing once again that National’s priorities are completely out of touch with everyday Kiwis. ...
With Labour and Te Pāti Māori’s official support, Opposition parties are officially aligned to progress Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick’s Member’s Bill to sanction Israel for its unlawful presence in Palestine. ...
Te Pāti Māori extends our deepest aroha to the 500 plus Whānau Ora workers who have been advised today that the govt will be dismantling their contracts. For twenty years , Whānau Ora has been helping families, delivering life-changing support through a kaupapa Māori approach. It has built trust where ...
Labour welcomes Simeon Brown’s move to reinstate a board at Health New Zealand, bringing the destructive and secretive tenure of commissioner Lester Levy to an end. ...
This morning’s announcement by the Health Minister regarding a major overhaul of the public health sector levels yet another blow to the country’s essential services. ...
New Zealand First has introduced a Member’s Bill that will ensure employment decisions in the public service are based on merit and not on forced woke ‘Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion’ targets. “This Bill would put an end to the woke left-wing social engineering and diversity targets in the public sector. ...
Police have referred 20 offenders to Destiny Church-affiliated programmes Man Up and Legacy as ‘wellness providers’ in the last year, raising concerns that those seeking help are being recruited into a harmful organisation. ...
Te Pāti Māori welcomes the resignation of Richard Prebble from the Waitangi Tribunal. His appointment in October 2024 was a disgrace- another example of this government undermining Te Tiriti o Waitangi by appointing a former ACT leader who has spent his career attacking Māori rights. “Regardless of the reason for ...
Police Minister Mark Mitchell is avoiding accountability by refusing to answer key questions in the House as his Government faces criticism over their dangerous citizen’s arrest policy, firearm reform, and broken promises to recruit more police. ...
The number of building consents issued under this Government continues to spiral, taking a toll on the infrastructure sector, tradies, and future generations of Kiwi homeowners. ...
The Green Party is calling on the Prime Minister to rule out joining the AUKUS military pact in any capacity following the scenes in the White House over the weekend. ...
The Green Party is appalled by the Government’s plan to disestablish Resource Teachers of Māori (RTM) roles, a move that takes another swing at kaupapa Māori education. ...
The Government’s levies announcement is a step in the right direction, but they must be upfront about who will pay its new infrastructure levies and ensure that first-home buyers are protected from hidden costs. ...
The Government’s levies announcement is a step in the right direction, but they must be upfront about who will pay its new infrastructure levies and ensure that first-home buyers are protected from hidden costs. ...
After months of mana whenua protecting their wāhi tapu, the Green Party welcomes the pause of works at Lake Rotokākahi and calls for the Rotorua Lakes Council to work constructively with Tūhourangi and Ngāti Tumatawera on the pathway forward. ...
New Zealand First continues to bring balance, experience, and commonsense to Government. This week we've made progress on many of our promises to New Zealand.Winston representing New ZealandWinston Peters is overseas this week, with stops across the Middle East and North Asia. Winston's stops include Saudi Arabia, the ...
Green Party Co-Leaders Marama Davidson and Chlöe Swarbrick have announced the party’s plans to deliver a Green Budget this year to offer an alternative vision to the Government’s trickle-down economics and austerity politics. ...
At this year's State of the Planet address, Green Party co-leaders Marama Davidson and Chlöe Swarbrick announced the party’s plans to deliver a Green Budget this year to offer an alternative vision to the Government’s trickle-down economics and austerity politics. ...
The Government has spent $3.6 million dollars on a retail crime advisory group, including paying its chair $920 a day, to come up with ideas already dismissed as dangerous by police. ...
The Green Party supports the peaceful occupation at Lake Rotokākahi and are calling for the controversial sewerage project on the lake to be stopped until the Environment Court has made a decision. ...
ActionStation’s Oral Healthcare report, released today, paints a dire picture of unmet need and inequality across the country, highlighting the urgency of free dental care for all New Zealanders. ...
The Golden Age There has been long-standing recognition that New Zealand First has an unrivalled reputation for delivering for our older New Zealanders. This remains true, and is reflected in our coalition agreement. While we know there is much that we can and will do in this space, it is ...
Labour Te Atatū MP Phil Twyford has written to the charities regulator asking that Destiny Church charities be struck off in the wake of last weekend’s violence by Destiny followers in his electorate. ...
As the world marks three years since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Foreign Minister Winston Peters has announced additional sanctions on Russian entities and support for Ukraine’s recovery and reconstruction. “Russia’s illegal invasion has brought three years of devastation to Ukraine’s people, environment, and infrastructure,” Mr Peters says. “These additional sanctions target 52 ...
Associate Finance Minister David Seymour has today announced the Government’s plan to reform the Overseas Investment Act and make it easier for New Zealand businesses to receive new investment, grow and pay higher wages. “New Zealand is one of the hardest countries in the developed world for overseas people to ...
Associate Health Minister Hon Casey Costello is traveling to Australia for meetings with the aged care sector in Melbourne, Canberra, and Sydney next week. “Australia is our closest partner, so as we consider the changes necessary to make our system more effective and sustainable it makes sense to learn from ...
The Government is boosting investment in the QEII National Trust to reinforce the protection of Aotearoa New Zealand's biodiversity on private land, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka says. The Government today announced an additional $4.5 million for conservation body QEII National Trust over three years. QEII Trust works with farmers and ...
The closure of the Ava Bridge walkway will be delayed so Hutt City Council have more time to develop options for a new footbridge, says Transport Minister Chris Bishop and Mayor of Lower Hutt, Campbell Barry. “The Hutt River paths are one of the Hutt’s most beloved features. Hutt locals ...
Good afternoon. Can I acknowledge Ngāti Whātua for their warm welcome, Simpson Grierson for hosting us here today, and of course the Committee for Auckland for putting on today’s event. I suspect some of you are sitting there wondering what a boy from the Hutt would know about Auckland, our ...
The Government will invest funding to remove the level crossings in Takanini and Glen Innes and replace them with grade-separated crossings, to maximise the City Rail Link’s ability to speed up journey times by rail and road and boost Auckland’s productivity, Transport Minister Chris Bishop and Auckland Minister Simeon Brown ...
The Government has made key decisions on a Carbon Capture, Utilisation, and Storage (CCUS) framework to enable businesses to benefit from storing carbon underground, which will support New Zealand’s businesses to continue operating while reducing net carbon emissions, Energy and Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says. “Economic growth is a ...
Minister for Regulation David Seymour says that outdated and burdensome regulations surrounding industrial hemp (iHemp) production are set to be reviewed by the Ministry for Regulation. Industrial hemp is currently classified as a Class C controlled drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act, despite containing minimal THC and posing little ...
The Ministerial Advisory Group on transnational and serious organised crime was appointed by Cabinet on Monday and met for the first time today, Associate Police Minister Casey Costello announced. “The group will provide independent advice to ensure we have a better cross-government response to fighting the increasing threat posed to ...
Peeni Henare apologises for leaving his seat, but not for performing a haka in Parliament.The Privileges Committee pressed Henare on a few key issues: whether the haka was meant to intimidate, whether it was planned, and whether or not he saw the Speaker Gerry Brownlee rise to his feet during ...
Peeni Henare apologises for leaving his seat, but not for performing a haka in Parliament.The Privileges Committee pressed Henare on a few key issues: whether the haka was meant to intimidate, whether it was planned, and whether or not he saw the Speaker Gerry Brownlee rise to his feet during ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Denis Muller, Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Advancing Journalism, The University of Melbourne The publication by the Newcastle Herald of a political advertisement by Clive Palmer’s Trumpet of Patriots party stating “there are only two genders – male and female” has provoked ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Denis Muller, Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Advancing Journalism, The University of Melbourne The publication by the Newcastle Herald of a political advertisement by Clive Palmer’s Trumpet of Patriots party stating “there are only two genders – male and female” has provoked ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra The 2022 election catapulted a new movement into Australian federal politics, with the election of six “teals”. The teals are part of a broader wave of “community independents” who are challenging the major parties, especially ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra The 2022 election catapulted a new movement into Australian federal politics, with the election of six “teals”. The teals are part of a broader wave of “community independents” who are challenging the major parties, especially ...
It’s time that MFAT got back to their core activity – foreign affairs and trade, security in the region (including especially the Cook Islands), free trade deals – rather than ramming down DEI and Wokeism 101 down the throat of every other country. ...
Asia Pacific Report A New Zealand-based Filipino solidarity network has welcomed the arrest of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte by Interpol on charges of crimes against humanity on a warrant by the International Criminal Court (ICC). “We congratulate the human rights activists — both from the Philippines and around the ...
Asia Pacific Report A New Zealand-based Filipino solidarity network has welcomed the arrest of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte by Interpol on charges of crimes against humanity on a warrant by the International Criminal Court (ICC). “We congratulate the human rights activists — both from the Philippines and around the ...
Government spending should deliver public value and economic benefits to New Zealand and prefer New Zealand businesses — big, small and Māori and Pasifika-owned. It is good to see this proposed. ...
In September 2024, New Zealand voted alongside 123 UN member states in support of sanctions against those responsible for illegal settlements and settler violence in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Despite this, the Government has yet to ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lisa Toohey, Professor of Law, UNSW Sydney “Unjustified” and “not the way that friends and allies should be treated”. That’s how Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong have described the latest shot in United States President Trump’s trade war. ...
We look forward to hosting him in a few weeks time to talk about how everyone has the right to housing, and what we can do to work together to ensure that housing and peoples well-being, and the well-being of our children are human rights. ...
Asia Pacific Report The Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) has launched an open letter calling on the Aotearoa New Zealand government to take action on the future of the besieged enclave of Gaza. The network is asking Foreign Minister Winston Peters to speak up for the people of New Zealand ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Peter Whiteford, Professor, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University Over the past two years, there has been some progress in improving the JobSeeker payment. But payment levels remain below the poverty line. That’s according to Australia’s Economic Inclusion Advisory ...
“We want Mr Peters to remind the US administration that the rules apply to Gaza as well” says PSNA Co-chair John Minto. “Mr Peters should be suggesting to the US that it should stand up to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu” ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hunter Bennett, Lecturer in Exercise Science, University of South Australia Michele Ursi/Shutterstock Ice baths have become increasingly popular over the past few years. Fitness enthusiasts and casual exercisers around the world are embracing this trend that was once reserved for elite ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sarah Austin, Senior Lecturer in Theatre, The University of Melbourne Tiffany Garvie/MTC Set in 2042, new play The Robot Dog revolves around Janelle (Kristie Nguy), of Cantonese heritage, and her partner Harry (Ari Maza Long), a First Nations man. Janelle’s ...
Amid the horror stories of school lunches too hot to handle and inedible School Lunch Collective meals, some schools are going it alone. Dannevirke High School in the lower North ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dylan Hicks, Lecturer Active Communities & Social Impact / PhD Sports Biomechanics, Flinders University For decades, sport coaching has been built on the idea that there is one correct way to perform a skill. This has often been referred to as a ...
Winston Peters says the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade advertising a job for a 'tikanga lead' is a case of a bad idea getting "dug in deeper than ticks on a hound". ...
New Zealanders want high environmental standards to be met. Despite the Government’s efforts to derail good environmental outcomes with the shameful Fast-track Approvals Act. ...
Erica Stanford and David Seymour have met to talk about the school lunches programme. The Education Minister and her associate were set for one of their regular meetings last Tuesday ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hayley Stannard, Senior Lecturer in Animal Anatomy and Physiology, Charles Sturt University A kultarr.ptrybyrnes/iNaturalist, CC BY-SA In Australia’s arid and semi-arid zones lives a highly elusive predator. It’s small but fierce and feisty, with big eyes, long hind legs and a ...
With the sudden departure of New Zealand’s Reserve Bank Governor, one has to ask whether there is a pattern here — of a succession of public sector leaders leaving their posts in uncertain circumstances and a series of decisions being made without much regard for due process. It brings to ...
The Indian community in New Zealand is anticipating deepening ties between the two countries as Prime Minister Christopher Luxon takes one of the largest ever delegations to India next week. ...
Currently, contractors who deliver cleaning, security, and catering services for government agencies are required to pay at least the Living Wage ($27.80 at present time) to all their workers. In a media release today, Nicola Willis has announced ...
By Reza Azam of Greenpeace Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior has arrived back in the Marshall Islands yesterday for a six-week mission around the Pacific nation to support independent scientific research into the impact of decades-long nuclear weapons testing by the US government. Forty years ago in May 1985, its namesake, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Raquel Peel, Research Supervisor, University of Technology Sydney, Adjunct Senior Lecturer, University of Southern Queensland and Senior Lecturer, University of Notre Dame Australia Krakenimages.com/Shutterstock Some friendships outlast romantic connections and can prove to be more meaningful. Friends help us get through ...
Welcome to The Spinoff Books Confessional, in which we get to know the reading habits of Aotearoa writers, and guests. This week: Nafanoa Purcell Kersel, author of new collection of poetry Black Sugarcane.The book I wish I’d writtenI’ve had the feeling of wishing I had written something before, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Australia has failed to win an exemption from Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on aluminium and steel, but the government has vowed to fight on for a carve out. The White House spokeswoman, Karoline Leavitt, ...
The Coalition of Cockups, plan for our health system.
Most health insurance covers birth control — but hers cost more than $14,000 – Alternet.org
Easy to see why. Someone will make billions.
The defence rests.
In Luigi Mangione's trial.
The elephant in the room.
Paul Spoonley just about directly addresses it, Jamie Ensor is a little uncomfortable but determined not to blink:
Fact is, the main reason threats against MPs have drop since the change in government is RW people are unhinged and violent, racist, misogynists:
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/number-of-threats-against-politicians-nosedives-in-coalition-governments-first-year-so-whats-changed/YCVR2DLM25EAFHA37AFS4W6INM/
The trade war likely to end neoliberalism starts tomorrow:
Although Trump has made it conditional on compliance – so that it cannot be seen as ideological – it will switch the mind-set of all traders & dealers in the capitalist system.
The effect on cost structures will be immediate, the effect on economic planning will be medium-term, the effect on sheeple will be long-term. The most amusing part will be watching commentators & analysts compete to pretend that they will maintain faith in neoliberalism – although the linguistic framing they use will seem so unconvincing to others that their pretence will likely only persist for several weeks.
You're the one taking what he says seriously.
He also says that the US subsidises Canada by trading with it. And if they do not have the trade they cannot survive, so they will have to become part of America.
Apparently he does want to subsidise Canada even more than they do by trade, by making it part of America.
I suspect Canada values its health care system and some other stuff as more important.
Canada is certainly valuing its domestic production. Canadian websites have lit up with people proudly showing their shopping hauls of "Made in Canada" products.
Canada does have its problems – a housing affordability crisis being a major one, but they seem to be pretty happy that they are not Americans.
I remember making the case that those in North America were all Americans, but the Canadian visitors here remained insistent that there was a difference. By remaining polite they placed an exclamation mark on their point of view. And have taken that worldwide. Ably assisted by Americans, both domestic and abroad.
The US also has a housing affordability crisis: half of renters cannot afford their rents.
43 pounds seized in a year less the 10.8 going the other way. Seems like a big problem.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/andyjsemotiuk/2025/01/31/tariff-on-canada-not-justified-by-us-immigration-and-drug-claims/
In Fiscal Year 2024, USCBP seized 21,148 pounds of fentanyl at the southwest border, mostly smuggled from Mexico. In contrast, only 43 pounds were intercepted at the northern border. This means that less than 1% of all fentanyl seizures occurred at the U.S.-Canada border.
Furthermore, drug flows are not a one-way street. In 2024, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) seized approximately 10.8 pounds of fentanyl coming into Canada from the United States.
Only a fentamyl problem in the US because of the US company that pushed oxytocin.
How embarrassing – From being a valued junior partner to US imperialism, reaping some of the benefits of that relationship, to now find yourself possibly being reduced to a subservient neo-colony of the US global hegemon next door.
US imperialism is something baked in from the beginning:
So the USA can feasibly make Canada a state if 2 conditions are fulfilled as specified. First, Canada signs a treaty agreeing to the proposal. Second, enough Senators agree its a good idea & ratify it on a bipartisan basis. Your source is Robert Huish, Associate Professor in International Development Studies, Dalhousie University. He hasn't gone so far as to outline how Canada can develop under this scenario, in accord with his domain of expertise.
In fact, I got the distinct impression that he was unwilling to even consider such a future for Canada. Too bad, could have been fun! Rightist Canadian politicians will perhaps be musing the prospect of bribes emanating from T – the Canadian election looms & the right seem likely to win power again. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_2025_Canadian_federal_election
The amiable-looking dude likely to become Canada's PM soon is aspirational:
Free of Trump! https://www.ctvnews.ca/vancouver/article/federal-conservative-leader-responds-to-unjustified-us-tariffs-in-vancouver/
His wife is from Venezuela. The election is scheduled for October but could happen earlier if the Liberal govt decides to bring it forward. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Canadian_federal_election
How many of these criminals are hitchhiking around our country right now?
https://x.com/MarRob10114233/status/1886156762476122258
There is a possibility that there maybe one or two, but it is highly unlikely.
I know for certain we have a number of people who have beaten toddlers to death, and they have yet to be charged. It’s a bit like the pot calling the kettle black
There is a possibility that there maybe one or two, but it is highly unlikely.
If there are IOF personnel here, they are almost certain to have committed, or passively assented, to the horrors that that "soldier" is attesting to.
I know for certain we have a number of people who have beaten toddlers to death, and they have yet to be charged.
We have no one, let alone "a number of people", that has inflicted the horrors that that IOF fellow owns up to in that disgusting video,
It’s a bit like the pot calling the kettle black
??? There is no equivalence between isolated instances child abuse, however terrible they are, and a state which instructs its forces to carry out a genocide.
There is, however, an absolute equivalent between an individual who murders a child – under the circumstances that you're referring to in the IDF video ; and the individuals who are NZ citizens who have systematically tortured and murdered children in their care – and/or covered up for those who did. The long list of shameful child-murder in NZ gives us nothing to be proud about.
There is a world of difference. How many children are deliberately and systematically killed in New Zealand? Can you point to one instance of a New Zealand government minister dehumanising a race of people and sending agents of the state to kill them and their families, and raze their homes and communities?
It's easier to just neglect them to death, in which case just about every National Party minister appointed a Welfare portfolio in the last 40 years, with a dishonourable mention for the fourth Labour Government when Rogernomics got into full swing.
Sorry, I regard the systematic torture, abuse and murder of children by the people who are supposed to be their primary caregivers and protectors as considerably worse.
And the crimes are regularly reported in the papers. As is the failure of their murderers to be brought to justice.
But, hey, you do you.
You are drawing an equivalence in that the NZ govt is apparently prosecuting neither class of child killers (even despite its legal obligations to do so in both cases).
I don't believe that NZ has the legal right or responsibility to prosecute IDF soldiers, at all. They are not NZ citizens, nor were any of the killings committed here, nor have they actually been convicted or indicted for any crimes at all (if they had, then we may be liable to return them to face justice – but given the pace of our legal system, then they might be here for decades, cf Dotcom!).
Nor does NZ have the legal right or responsibility to prosecute Sudanese, Russian or Syrian soldiers, for crimes committed in those wars.
We do have the legal right and responsibility to prosecute NZ child murderers. But our current legal system seems to be more concerned with the rights of the criminals, than those of the victims.
NZ has the same obligation to prosecute criminals of foreign armies as other countries have. Thats, for example, one of the obligations of NZ being a member of the ICC.
Point is that members of the IDF are not criminals. They haven't been charged in any court (ICC or otherwise), let alone convicted.
Suggest you stop putting the cart before the horse.
the degree to which lefties are willing to dispense with convention is a problem.
lefties. As in all lefties? Some lefties? How many?
two on TS in the past day or so. Muttonbird was the other, arguing that NZ should refuse visas to Israeli citizens on the basis of them being in the military, and the inference that border control could just do this as a moral action.
The Palestinian group that wants people to help hunt down Israeli citizens in NZ on the basis of them being in the military would be another example.
The motivation is understandable. Throwing out principles isn’t.
You're the only one getting ahead of things here. Yes, NZ has an obligation to try IDF soldiers who arrive here where there is reasonable evidence they have committed war crimes. That doesn't merely include those directly on the arrest list of the Hague.
For some reason you want to get ahead of that and just not prosecute them.
I think that you're the one getting ahead of yourself. There is no 'reasonable evidence' that any individual Israeli soldier has committed war crimes, when they apply for a NZ visa, and visit this country as a tourist.
It would require an in-depth investigation off-shore to establish individual guilt (or, innocence). Quite frankly, I think our NZ police have better things to do.
Wanna bet?
I give you The International Crimes and International Criminal Court Act 2000
Evidence that individual members of the IDF, who have not yet been charged, let alone convicted of any crime, are currently covered under any of the provisions of this act?
I won't hold my breath….
The ICC has declared war crimes to have been committed in Palestine and issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant. If individuals enter our jurisdiction that the authorities have reasonable suspicion of having been directly involved in those events, our own laws, independently of the ICC itself, come into play.
This would apply equally to Hamas.
I'm sure that if Netanyahu or Gallant come to NZ – that the provisions you're referring to may well come into play.
However, that is not the case. You're proposing that all IDF soldiers should be treated as war criminals. And how do you define 'reasonable suspicion'? Do you propose that the NZ police carry out an extensive overseas investigation in every case? Or simply adopt your 'tarred by association' definition?
In any case, the number of potential criminals who also choose to visit NZ is tiny. Personally, I'd rather police and legislative effort went into dealing with our home-grown murderers.
No, I'm proposing that if there is reason for suspicion they should be investigated and then, if appropriate, arrested.
Your 'reason for suspicion' appears to be that they are (or have been) IDF personnel. Anything else would require an in-depth investigation – which is way outside the remit of our police force.
It's simply another way to attempt to ban Israelis from visiting NZ. If that is your goal, be up-front – and just propose this.
Well duh. If any military force, paramilitary force, or political party has been extensively documented as having committed a multiple human rights abuses and war crimes, one would generally take a closer look at its individual members, or am I being hopelessly naive?
Imho, it's the scale of state-sanctioned killing of Gazan infants that sets IDF actions apart from the few NZ citizens who have killed children. Child abuse, otoh, is much more widespread.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Jago#Sexual_abuse_conviction
For me, this report continues to be difficult to forget, or minimise.
Imho, it's the scale of state-sanctioned killing of Gazan infants that sets IDF actions apart…
It's the scale and the intent. When a child is killed in New Zealand, it is not the result of our government sending people in to that child's community to destroy it.
No, it's the result of the child's own family and/or caregivers deliberately abusing, torturing and murdering them.
Sorry. I don't expect that the State will actively care about each individual. I do expect that their own family, will.
Yes. It's tragic that children have been killed in Gaza. It's tragic that children have been killed in Ukraine. It's tragic that children have been killed in Sudan. These are wars. People die. The 'other side' in this kind of internecine conflict have little interest in the human rights of their opponents.
C'mon Mozza, it is beyond denial the horrific actions of the IDF, the Israeli government and their US government enablers.
I get the point you are trying to make about soldiers and visas.
At the same time, we live in a country that has a heart breakingly high youth suicide rate and we are world leaders in abuse, neglect and murder of our children.
What really shreds my undies is we have senior public officials, sitting MPs and ministers of the crown who actively denied, covered up and used all the state's powers to deny justice to the thousands that had the misfortune to end up in state care. Solicitor General and Attorney General to name two.
From the outside, they appear to have gotten away with it, scot free.
For me, that is more outrageous.
But it is ok coz Luxon apologised.
Morrissey, here in NZ, there are most likely far more child abusers wandering around, who have not been brought to justice, than tourists from Israel who have visited NZ over the past few years. Of those Israelis who have visited NZ, there is a possibility that one or two may have in some way been involved in war crimes, but it’s probably highly unlikely. Not far from where my parents live, a toddler was beaten to death, the people who know what happened are still not cooperating with the police, no one has been held to account. This is probably a far more pressing issue, than harassment of tourists who may look like an Israeli
If only we still had The Disinformation Project to debunk the stories that the simple-minded take from Facebook, imagining it's news.
Twisty BD, placing the 4th Labour govt economic reforms as equivalent to wholesale ethnic cleansing footing by Netanyahu's Israel.
As a surgeon in Gaza, I witnessed hell visited on children.
Footing above a typo.
So you think that IOF fellow was lying, do you?
The business talk is that we have been risk averse.
Sure we have allowed people invest in the sure thing the property market for untaxed CG.
Do they have any plans, to change this?
Landlords write the tenancy terms (removing those who ask questions). Landlords do not get checked for compliance with standards. They can claim their interest cost against rent income. The bright-line test is back at 2 years. Any less and they would be investigated for being professional "doing uppers".
So no.
The current narrative.
Earthquake standards, building in a flood zone – tell it to insurance companies.
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/economy/risk-is-a-four-letter-word-in-nz-new-zealand-incs-fear-of-failure
What on earth is going on at the Stats Department?
On Friday they announced that the report on activities at the Manurewa Marae during the Census would be released today. Then, just two and a half hours later they said that that would not happen and that the new date would be announced within the coming weeks. That isn't the date for the release of the report. It is just the date on which they propose to tell us the date.
Are they just trying to put the whole affair of until we are past the demo season at Waitangi?
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/top/540693/manurewa-marae-inquiry-report-delayed-again
They probably found nothing to report so yes, they wouldn't be wanting to release anything pro-Maori this week.
Must have the same lawyer as the pedo protecting act party. !!!
Sarc/
I find it hard to believe that any political party would protect pedophiles. Name suppression is a matter for the courts, not politicians or political parties.
A former young act VP has stated publicly that it was known in 2020 that the party had a pedophile problem.
And did this person take any action? Talk to the police? Explicitly raise the issue in a documented way with party leadership? Or are they personally complicit in the silence. And, if so, what reparation to the victims are they, personally, making?
History and beltway watercooler talk would beg to differ.
I’ve heard plenty of rumours around the water cooler, and outside of work, few of them have been true. If you have evidence of any organisation or person protecting a pedophile, or any other criminal, I suggest that you contact the police, posting on social media suggests that you are more interested in spreading rumours than actually doing something
And how, pray, does one spread rumours when one doesn't mention names, political parties, or even countries?
Outside of government departments or city councils. gossip and rumours are about the latest series on Netflix, sports, or whatever one got up on the weekend. Occasionally there maybe something juicy but generally harmless, like Sharon in accounts is dating Brad from sales
Hence the reference to "beltway" but as I really have no interest in furthering this conversation, I'll leave it there.
"beltway"? "watercooler"?
Where do you live? The only beltway I am aware of is a ring road around Washington DC (I 495) and I've never seen a watercooler other than in an office in the USA.
You need to hang out with policy wonks and journalists more.
New minister is Shane Reti after his demotion from Health ….
Government aligned and appointed, Sir Brian Roche, fails at the first hurdle. My guess is he tried to force the release of the report after a word in the ear from someone in government, but the agencies told him stuff off.
I clicked on the link MB and was confronted with this as the first sentence….
I didn't read any further as I cannot beat the relevance of the Mandy Rice Davies quote in the Profumo case
'Well he would say that wouldn't he'
Disclaimer: I worked with Brian Roche a couple of times in the past and he was always a breath of fresh air and competent in his specialist fields, charming and very able to effect compromises etc. I think what has happened is that he has perhaps been promoted beyond his competency, that competence in a specialist field has been mistaken for competence in across management in the PS. They do not universally follow. As a long term PS I have seen it happen often.
I am becoming more in favour of following the guidance set out in Kenny Rogers' The Gambler as a way to manage/get ahead/assess options ….
The empire strikes back: https://edition.cnn.com/2025/02/02/business/trump-economy-tariff-mexico-canada-china/index.html
Trump will need to placate the imperial globalists on Wall St, so he must trot out a public intellectual from the ivy league to make sense of his policy. He & his advisors may not be aware of this tactical necessity. They may see his Republican base as main street, biased against Wall St. If so, they will deem the market a sideshow – an error of judgment which could eventually prove senior fellow Mary right in assuming it will become an own-goal. Spooking market reef fish often gets them into escape mode real fast: a fraction of a second, a blink, and they're gone.
The voting down of David Seymour's racist principles bill later this year can be seen as a vote of no confidence in Seymour and ACT. 91% of MPs will be voting against his divisive bill which is an almost unanimous rejection of his dangerous and unpopular ideas.
Should he resign, or be pressured to resign?
I thought the Bill would be denied a second reading. Therefore, no vote. His plan is to force it via a referendum.
I believe it either passes or fails when it's returned to parliament for the second reading??? That's the "denied" part.
I don’t think it’s a conscience vote because Luxon then risks losing the confidence of the house and it’s a political issue, not one of conscience.
So, 91% of the country via the house of representatives oppose this cancerous bill and I think Rimmer should have to resign.
He will happily sit on 15-18% polling and his supporters will be delighted.
Yes, Seymour should resign.
I have had gutsful of him and what he is doing. He and his wretched party positively absolutely should go. Before yesterday.
They are actively harming us all in New Zealand.
Took about a day for Musk agents to discover naughty behaviour by deep state agents:
In accord with legal tradition we must therefore wait many years until those culpable are prosecuted. White collar, you know. Privileged.
The only people in that scenario in need of prosecution are Musk and his flunkies who, having no Congressional oversight, have no authority to access those files.
You really believe the US president lacks the authority to investigate govt systems?? If so, you could prove the point by citing relevant laws. If you find any, do let us know. If T & M are indeed operating illegally, the Dems may notice. They could then ask one of those leftist tech bro billionaires to fund a prosecution of the two.
The case would proceed to the Supreme Court eventually, to judgment on the president's executive authority. That could prove you right!
The US President can appoint advisory commissions. Doge is, at best, one of those. It is not a Federal Executive Department, which can only be created by Congress, and therefor has no authority to interfere with genuine Federal Executive Departments because that would be the President unilaterally constraining the authority of Congress, which is unconstitutional. So no, the US President lacks the authority to investigate government systems. That is the purview of Congress.
That's interesting, thanks. It does raise the question of what T's legal advisor is smoking, huh? Not to mention viability of any consequent prosecutions of state agents. I'll watch this space awhile to get a sense of the unreality…
If the GOP has bent the knee to POTUS, then Congress will just rubber stamp the executive orders and SCOTUS will cite the supremacy of POTUS if there is legal challenge.
There is nothing left of "Edmund Burke" in the GOP, the GOP is no longer in defence of the constitution, but the Jan 6 coup against it.
All the more reason for the Dems to pull their thumbs out of their arses.
Or it could be just another Musk lie like the one he told about Biden supposedly sending $50 million in condoms to Gaza.
//
While Leavitt did not offer any evidence to support this claim, and was not pressed to by reporters, the idea that the United States government planned to spend $50m to send condoms to Gaza quickly went viral, with an assist from Musk himself.
The Fox pundit Jesse Watters even claimed that the condoms were being used by Hamas militants as balloons to float explosives into Israel.
A review of the available evidence, however, suggests that the claim is almost certainly not true.
According to a comprehensive report issued in September by the US Agency for International Development (USAid), not a penny of the $60.8m in contraceptive and condom shipments funded by the US in the past year went to Gaza. In fact, the accounting shows, there were no condoms sent to any part of the Middle East, and just one small shipment, $45,680 in oral and injectable contraceptives, was sent to the region, all of it distributed to the government of Jordan.
For the financial year 2023, the most recent for which data is available, only about $7m worth of condoms were distributed globally by USAid, and the vast majority of family-planning funds, 89%, were spent on programs in Africa.
As Dan Evon of the non-profit News Literacy Project points out: “It’s also worth noting that this is not a Biden program. Trump, too, spent funds on sending contraceptives around the globe. In 2019, about $40m was spent on contraceptives by the Trump administration”
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2025/jan/28/donald-trump-executive-orders-transgender-troops-dei-covid-us-politics-live
That one was just egregious. No fact-checking really necessary on a claim the US govt sent tens of millions of condoms to a population of 2 million people who think babies are a blessing from God.
'
"….the US govt sent tens of millions of condoms to a population of 2 million people…."
According to Hannah Arendt the point of propaganda is not to make you believe lies, the point of propaganda is to flood the information sphere with bullshit, so people don't know what to believe
"Condoms" in this case is clearly a euphemism for bullets.
I thought the Bill would be denied a second reading. Therefore, no vote.
Great rank about why working people are getting shafted in the US.
So I'll confess to being a James Carville fan, and oboy he doesn't hold back on the failed Harris campaign and why the DEmocrats lost so hard. In particular that they should have had a primary and got someone a whole lot better.
https://www.salon.com/2025/02/02/seventh-string-qb-carville-calls-harris-a-benchwarmer-trotted-out-for-super-bowl/
And his solutions are pretty simple: stop being polite to the Republicans, go populist and put up popular motions that redefine the Democrats in the public mind, be expansive not defensive, and run the fuckers down.
Having a primary seems a no-brainer given Biden's series of performance failures. Inexplicably stupid of the Dems to have ruled one out!!
That said, I do feel Biden did surprising well overall, even if only as a placeholder, although I'm sympathetic to the loathing some onsite here often express. Morality is such an immensely difficult thing for mainstreamers to grasp.
It was too late to hold a primary of any kind. Biden didn't stand down until 21 July, when the election itself was underway. He only got forced out then because of his dreadful performance in the debate with Donald Trump on 27 June.
Even after that fiasco of a debate it took him another month to quit. He should have announced, in January 2023 say, that he was going to be a single term President and would not run in 2024. That would have given his party a chance to come up with a decent candidate and not get stuck at the end with the hapless Harris.
One should remember that Harris had been such an appalling candidate in 2020 that she had quit the race on December 3 2019.
It was far to late to try and run a whole string of state primaries by the time that Biden quit. After all in 2020 all the primaries were held by very early July and Biden in fact had won the nomination by June 6 when he went over half the delegate count.
Well, you may indeed be simulating their state of mind accurately but I'm the guy who raps a knuckle on their forehead & asks "Anybody home?"
I mean, even if a geriatric comes across lucid most of the time, you still got a geriatric. Falling down at random moments tends to remind viewers of that.
Now if I were a political consultant, I'd give the buggers free advice: People want faith in the future. You don't get it by fronting someone almost dead.
I believe there was also the issue of the campaign chest – which was overwhelmingly promised to the Biden campaign. Some of that money was for the Democratic campaign as a whole – but an awful lot was personal to the Biden/Harris ticket.
The legal opinion was that Harris could use this (since she was on the Biden ticket), but another candidate would have had to begin fundraising from scratch. : Note: the right for Harris to use the money, at all, was vigorously contested by Trump.
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/can-harris-use-bidens-campaign-money
I don't think there is any way back for the Democrats if Trump retains the working class vote. And he will if his policies grow jobs and make their lives better.
He will demolish the first pillar of neoliberalism (free trade) if he implements the tarrifs and put a serious dent in globalisation.
Who would have thought that a right wing populist would be the one to dismantle the neolib orthodoxy.
I envisaged the left wing populists Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren as more likely.
https://thehill.com/opinion/4969356-class-voters-swing-states/
In 2018 31% of people in the US described themselves as working class according to Wikipedia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Working_class_in_the_United_States#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20class%20model,described%20themselves%20as%20working%20class.
But even if only 10% continue to support the GOP (along with their current supporters) they retain power.
My point is that if Trump continues with tariffs this will be the first serious disruption to neoliberalism and globalism since its introduction. And it comes from the right.
Maybe their is an alternative.
it's a similar dynamic as Brexit. Superficially, it looks like a move away from neoliberalism. But in the US, the move is towards authoritarianism. As much as I want to see an end to neoliberalism, tbis ain't it.
Also worth remembering, the right couldn't get and maintain enough power under neoliberal democracies. NZ is on a similar path, we still have time to stop and turn in a different direction.
I remember when John Key made the first decent lift in sole parent benefits for a long time.
Labour couldn't even implement WEAG.
They may indeed have different (or even conflicting) interests – but I don't think that any of them sees themselves represented by the Democrats. Which is rather the point.
I don't know if Trump (or whoever is the Republican nominee in the next election) – can hold these working class voters. I'd say the jury is out on whether they feel that they'll be better off under Trump than Biden. But the issue is that they don't see the Dems as a viable alternative.
Do you think that their election of Ken Martin indicates that they're changing strategies?
On the one hand, he's talking about going low, and directly attacking Trump. On the other, he's an absolute member of the party machine. And, on the gripping hand, the big donors wanted a different party leader.
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/02/01/ken-martin-dnc-democrats-00201955
Just watched three RNZAF Hercules fly over my small South Island town on their final journey before retirement. Big beautiful noisy beasts!
As a youngster fresh out of school and in my first year in the Army, we did a 10 day jungle exercise in F1J1 (as we learned to call it).
Transport was by C130. Ear muffs were handed out and we were told that depending on the height we attain, it may rain in the hold.
Ooh, heard them in my supermarket round 2.15.
This government cannot even afford to convert one into a fire fighting plane.
The old RNZAF Super E's Or H Model C-130's are rooted, as all 5 basically nearly at the end of their designed Flying Hour's.
Basically Lockheed & RNZAF can't actually guarantee how long they will flying or literally fall out of the Sky pass their designed flying hrs as the RNZAF have literally flogged them like a dead horse because every NZG since the 90's, Treasury & Taxpayers didn't want to pay for their replacement!
According to Ron Mark through various channels, has said that Robbo was only prepared to buy 3 new J Model's until Ronnie threatened to resign from Government! Even though there is 2-3 papers by the RNZAF & MoD stating the RNZAF actually needs 8-9 C130's too cover all its Specific & Implied mandated NZG Tasks since the retirement of the old Andover Fleet in the 90's!
I actually agree with your suggestion that the RNZAF, MoD along with Fire, CD & DoC buy 3 RORO Fire Bomber modules for the C130 J.
But they would also need to buy an additional 3-5 J Model's IOT extend the Flying Hrs/ Airframe Fatigue life across the C-130 J Fleet to make it viable in order for the Taxpayer to get a long term return on their money as anything less is pissing money up the wall like a Baggie on post deployment leave LoL.
The modern version of the The White Rose
Thanks Jenny. In New Zealand and Australia, too, Jews with a commitment to human rights are speaking out, and no doubt being abused for their activism,,,,
Marama Davidson back on the job, sporting a fine looking crewcut. It would be nice if the crewcut were a hairdressing choice rather than a medical necessity, but it's great to see she's back and looking well.
https://www.1news.co.nz/2025/02/01/marama-davidson-announces-her-return-to-politics/
here's hoping the Greens get a straight run for a bit.
I thought Marama looked terrific with that 'do, and the picture of health all round. Fingers crossed that it's not just on the surface. Amen to Weka's comment as well.
but her emails…
//
Elon Musk’s takeover of federal government infrastructure is ongoing, and at the center of things is a coterie of engineers who are barely out of—and in at least one case, purportedly still in—college. Most have connections to Musk, and at least two have connections to Musk’s longtime associate Peter Thiel, a cofounder and chair of the analytics firm and government contractor Palantir who has long expressed opposition to democracy.
WIRED has identified six young men—all apparently between the ages of 19 and 24, according to public databases, their online presences, and other records—who have little to no government experience and are now playing critical roles in Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) project, tasked by executive order with “modernizing Federal technology and software to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity.” The engineers all hold nebulous job titles within DOGE, and at least one appears to be working as a volunteer.
The engineers are Akash Bobba, Edward Coristine, Luke Farritor, Gautier Cole Killian, Gavin Kliger, and Ethan Shaotran. None have responded to requests for comment from WIRED. Representatives from OPM, GSA, and DOGE did not respond to requests for comment.
https://www.wired.com/story/elon-musk-government-young-engineers/
Charming character.
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Josh Marshall
@joshtpm.bsky.social
With Musk's operatives now controlling key nodes of federal govt power, to know who we're dealing with, here's a substack post from one of them describing how the Deep State prevented Matt Gaetz from becoming AG substack.com/home/post/p-…
https://bsky.app/profile/joshtpm.bsky.social/post/3lha4u3sawc2j
The Trap: How to Frame a Congressman
The deep state's first move was textbook: open a federal sex trafficking investigation based solely on Greenberg's manufactured evidence and coached testimony. But the DOJ knew what they had would never survive real scrutiny in a courtroom – Greenberg's manipulation of official records had poisoned any chance of prosecution. They needed more, and they needed it fast. Their solution was a classic deep state tactic: cast a wider net, target the family, and go fishing for anything that might stick.
The opening gambit wasn't a rogue operation by opportunists, but rather a carefully crafted deep state ploy leveraging their own buried failures. Bob Kent, a former Air Force intelligence officer who had mysteriously learned of the confidential DOJ investigation, approached Matt's father Don Gaetz—former President of the Florida Senate—with an astounding proposition: $25 million for a last-ditch rescue mission for Bob Levinson (whom the deep state knew was long dead), in exchange for a guaranteed presidential pardon for Matt.
https://weeklybyte.substack.com/p/the-curious-case-of-matt-gaetz-how
Mussolini, and Hirohito's image. could be just as easily photo shopped onto the image of Musk to give the same warning.
The corporate State was not solely a German thing:
Corporate statism, state corporatism, or simply corporatism, is a political culture and a form of corporatism the proponents of which claim or believe that corporate groups should form the basis of society and the state.
Corporate statism – Wikipedia
If politics is concentrated economics, and imperialism is concentrated politics.
What does it mean for us, if the US threatens its Western allies economies through 'America First' US imposed tariffs
Makes me wonder; Will our security and military services continue to give their unquestioning, unflinching support to US imperialism?