If you missed this, well worth a listen. Interviewing Tabitha Paul about her police comments that have the other politicians clutching their pearls in dismay.
Listening to this, I hear an intelligent young woman who can clearly articulate her case. Unlike, say, our PM, deputy PM, etc etc.
He said the research showed that rich people thought that benefit levels were enough, but poorer people thought they were not.
(Gee, no kidding.)
"What that tells you is there is a perception we're doing enough. But those who are living in those conditions are telling us it's very hard to escape the poverty trap… have we got our welfare safety net right? Have we got the ability to climb out of poverty right? The wider social cohesion part is hard to answer."
He said the fact that the JobSeeker basic benefit is $361 a week for single people over 25 without children, compared to $538 a week for people on NZ Super might surprise some people.
(Especially those who end up having to receive it.)
"If you're old you deserve more money than if you're young and poor? We have a very inequitable welfare system… I don't think people realise how little money is given. That's the stereotype thing.
Followed by the pertinent question:
"Are there ways we can connect with each other and have conversations across diverse groups of people?
"Social cohesion can best be understood as the glue that holds our communities and society at large together,"
"The opposite of social cohesion is polarisation. Without social cohesion, societies become increasingly unstable – from politics to business, to civil society, to day-to-day life in our communities. This is a pattern increasingly seen around the world, and New Zealand is not immune."
I think polarisation is now ingrained, and the window has passed for us to connect across the divide. With regards to the position of beneficiaries in this country, a decades- long divide and rule campaign against us by successive governments and especially the media has been extremely successful.
The other thing that most people in NZ who've never been through it don't get is just how many barriers there are to earning money in addition to the benefits. The reason the dole is set so low is because there is an expectation that the person will also work part time. But the abatement rate on wages is high.
As an example, someone on JS with no partner and not kids (because this is the simplest calculation to do), gets $405.59 gross/$353.46 net per week. The abatement rate currently above $160 (gross). At a living wage that's just under 6 hours/week. At minimum wage that's just under 7 hours/week.
Once you earn over $160/wk, every dollar after that is taxed at 70%.
so someone doing 7 hours a week on minimum wage will get around $570 per week gross. They may get accommodation supplement on top of that, depending on their situation and where they live. They might also be eligible for TAS, the hardship benefit, but TAS is taxed at 100% from the first dollar you earn.
If they get 15 hours of work per week, they would get $701. That's the dole plus an hourly rate of $8.70. Once you factor in things like transport to work, it just becomes unviable.
If that $701 was for a 40 hour week, the hourly rate would be $17. No-one in NZ is expected to live on that, because the budget just can't work.
The only way to get out of poverty then is to get a full time job or do cash work.
I've used gross figures, but the actual amounts might be different because I'm not sure how WINZ and IRD handle the various calculations (eg are wages taxed at the secondary rate?).
The biggest thing that could be done to change poverty for people who can work would be to remove the abatement rates. This is too difficult politically because people who have low waged jobs and no benefit would probably see it as unfair, and there are definitely fairness issues here but imagine if we told workers that some of their wages would be taxed an additional 70%. The simplest way to resolve that is to pay all low income workers a universal benefit.
The cynic in me is sure those abatement rules are a deliberate ploy to a) keep people in the benefit trap, and b) cut down the benefit bill.
Many moons ago when I could still work part/time my wage was $13.25 hr (this was higher than minimum wage at the time). I worked 20hrs a week, and after all the abatements and secondary tax, I came away with a whole extra $80, so $4/hr. While it was pathetic, I did actually like paying taxes that just went straight back to me via my Invalids benefit, and also ACC levies, which in subsequent years I've claimed back on.
The only positive was, when I was unable to subsequently work anymore, I had the benefit fall back, and didn't need to go through all the reapplication nightmare. I don't know if that's the case anymore with SLP, or how it is for jobseekers.
I can't say I'm looking forward to the annual April fools day joke that is the annual 'increase', and seeing just how much gets deducted from supplements because I've had the audacity to get an increase in income (another form of abatement even for non-workers.)
In theory, the abatement trap is to force people off benefits by making it uneconomical to stay on a benefit once the part-time work is above a certain level.
I don't agree with that approach, but it's deliberate, not an unintended consequence.
The impact is greater on those who receive support at a level above the main benefit.
For those single on the main benefit without AS, older homeowner or person at home with their parent – they can earn up to $160 a week on top of the JSB without any impact.
The current level ($160) is a doubling on a level frozen for well over 10 years.
The cookers are cooking Amerika. Mis and DisInformation…rules.
Top vaccine official forced out of US FDA
The head of the US Food and Drug Administration department responsible for assuring the safety and effectiveness of vaccines has resigned, according to a resignation letter obtained by CNN.
Dr Peter Marks, director of the FDA's Centre for Biologics Evaluation and Research, was given the choice to resign or be fired. Marks' resignation takes effect 5 April.
"It has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the Secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies," Marks wrote in his letter, referring to US Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr.
WTAF ? "gold standard" ? "radical Transparency" ? RFK jnr cooker in chief : taking Amerika back to a very dark age…
In an email, an HHS official told CNN, "If Peter Marks does not want to get behind restoring science to its golden standard and promoting radical transparency, then he has no place at FDA under the strong leadership of Secretary Kennedy."
Medical Experts are alarmed..
Marks' forced resignation and other recent moves by HHS drew a wave of warnings from health experts.
"This is what happens when you hire a 20 year virulent anti-vaccine activist who continues to deny the science that vaccines don't cause autism, and put him in a position of influence," Dr Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Centre at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and a vaccine adviser to the FDA, told CNN, referring to Kennedy.
Organisations opposing Trump's Kennedy pick for US top health job urge senators to reject him
consumer group Public Citizen and healthcare coverage advocacy group Protect Our Care co-wrote a letter sent on Friday to all 100 US senators, urging them to announce their opposition to Kennedy. They recruited 85 other non-governmental groups to join the letter, including the Union of Concerned Scientists, the NAACP and the National Organisation for Women.
"If Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. takes command of the Department of Health and Human Services, we will face lies and disinformation at an unprecedented scale that are capable of unwinding a century of progress on fighting disease and promoting public health," the letter said, which has been seen by Reuters.
so what's the plan? You obviously want to ostracise the group of people you call cookers. So you think they're deplorables? What do you think is going to happen with the next pandemic?
If we keep ostracising people, we will keep losing. Best case scenario atm is we get a change of government next year, with Hipkins as leader. He's already positioning himself as leading a centrist government. Maybe Labour last more than one term, but by the end of this decade, the polycrisis will have deepened and there will be more people struggling who are even less likely to be persuaded by a sanctimonious left who keep telling them Labour will make things better.
Reading Kay's comment above where she believes that it's too late to resolve the social divides in NZ, is that what you think too? If not, why is ostracising people seen as a useful position or strategy?
"It has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the Secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies," Marks wrote in his letter, referring to US Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr.
The cookers are cooking Amerika. Mis and DisInformation…rules.
Sadly, the persuasive power of evidence is weak compared to the power of belief.
Suppose an individual believes something with his whole heart; suppose further that he has taken irrevocable actions because of it. Finally suppose he is presented with evidence, unequivocal and undeniable evidence that his belief is wrong. What will happen? The individual will frequently emerge not only unshaken but even more convinced of the truth of his beliefs than ever before. Indeed he may even show a new fervor for converting other people to his view. – Brooke Gladstone
Federal Government’s Growing Banned Words List Is Chilling Act of Censorship [21 March 2025]
A growing list of words and materials are being scrubbed from government websites and documents in an attempt by the Trump administration to remove all references not only to diversity, equity and inclusion, but also to climate change, vaccines, and a host of other topics.
Robert F Kennedy Jr and his ilk now also have the power to censor existing evidence (think Trump 2.0 and climate change), and undermine the capacity of expert researchers to generate new evidence – don’t take future research for granted.
Aye DMK. RFK Jr and ilk are indeed dangerous people. Now unimaginably more so, with the vast power gifted him by his fellow nutbar, Pres trump. I dont have a thumbs-up emogi on my PC, but have a virtual one !
The only possible silver lining (which I still see) are those beacons who will still speak out.
"This is what happens when you hire a 20 year virulent anti-vaccine activist who continues to deny the science that vaccines don't cause autism, and put him in a position of influence," Dr Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Centre at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and a vaccine adviser to the FDA, told CNN, referring to Kennedy.
"So what you're about to see is studies done, presumably under the imprimatur of the CDC, showing that vaccines cause autism. That's what you're about to see, because he will put in place people who will shoehorn data to make it look that way, which will create more fear, will create likely more people who will choose not to be vaccinated, and you'll just see more and more in the way of these outbreaks."
Dr Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health and Covid-19 response coordinator during the Biden administration, said on X that Marks is a brilliant scientist who "helped usher in scientific rigor and transparency into the FDA."
Pushing him out makes "the FDA dramatically weaker, less effective," Jha wrote. "This is not how we make America healthy."
All I could say to Mr Secretary Kennedy is what was once allegedly said to another prominent Catholic, many years ago: "e pur si muove". (Very loosely translatable as "ultimately the science can't be denied".)
While it's about the validity of the science, it is also important to understand the emotions at the heart of misinformation. I have found the BBC podcast 'Things fell apart" by Jon Ronson a great place to understand the emotional context and factual nuance in the development of conspiracy theories. Ronson teases out the roots of many that have swept across the US and percolated into NZ since the pandemic. Left and right ideologies are both represented in his two series.
The first gives the story of Judy Mikovits, the medical researcher at the heart to the Plandemic disinformation video. The second is the background to the evolution of the "15 minute cities" theory: they'll lock you down in your suburbs and you'll be barred from stepping out.
Re-listened to a number of them last night while jigsawing, and in the best way you come out well-informed while being drawn into the personal stories of those involved.
Obtrectator, I was not familiar with that particular phrase… again you have broadened my word/phrase knowledge. Re reading it renewed my respect for Galileo and others who tried (even facing torture and worse : ( , to bring Rationality to the world.
[To me,] being woke is not about ideology. It’s about responsibility. It’s about understanding the past so we can do better in the future. It’s about listening, learning, and acting with purpose. […]
[…]
Mike Casey, through his own cherry orchard in Central Otago, has shown what’s possible. He replaced all fossil-fuel machinery with electric alternatives – and is now saving up to $60,000 a year on energy costs. Multiply that across every sector, and you begin to see the true economic power of going electric.
Electrification is not just an environmental solution—it’s a national savings plan. One estimate from Rewiring Aotearoa’s Investing in Tomorrow report puts that saving at $11 billion a year by 2040 if we electrify all our homes and cars. We keep more money in the country, create future-focused jobs, and reduce our dependence on imported energy we don’t control. $11 billion a year is a lot of hospitals, and we also reduce our carbon footprint. By 2040 the savings would accumulate to $95 billion.
Those would be great numbers to deliver to the Paris Accord don’t you think?
So, e hoa, here’s my question: Why don’t you champion this?
Winston: "Because I'm a conservative. That futuristic thinking is for liberals. If they can make it work, I'll go along with it but my natural way of engaging the future is to live in the present with a perpetual focus on the rear-view mirror. Fortunately my chauffeur looks ahead for me, so it all works really well."
[I’ve edited your copy-pasta to adhere to the original narrative and show where you left out large shreds of text.
Your semi-satirical swipe at Winston Peters is just that and doesn’t address anything of the Ian Taylor’s very good opinion piece in a meaningful and constructive way – Incognito]
Molotov-Ribbtrop 2.0 with Ukraine as the new Poland.
/
Donald Trump is holding a gun to the head of Volodymyr Zelensky, demanding huge reparations payments and laying claim to half of Ukraine’s oil, gas, and hydrocarbon resources as well as almost all its metals and much of its infrastructure.
The latest version of his “minerals deal”, obtained by The Telegraph, is unprecedented in the history of modern diplomacy and state relations.
“It is an expropriation document,” said Alan Riley, an expert on energy law at the Atlantic Council. “There are no guarantees, no defence clauses, the US puts up nothing.
“The Americans can walk away, the Ukrainians can’t. I’ve never seen anything like it before.”
It dovetails with parallel talks between the US and Russia for a comprehensive energy partnership, including plans to restore West Siberian gas flows to Europe in large volumes, with US companies and Trump-aligned financiers gaining a major stake in the business.
[…]
The US will control infrastructure linked to natural resources “including, but not limited to, roads, rail, pipelines and other transportation assets; ports, terminals and other logistics facilities and refineries, processing facilities, natural gas liquefaction and/or regasification facilities and similar assets”.
Three of the five board members on the new fund will be chosen by the US. It will have “A” shares and golden shares. America will receive all the royalties until Ukraine has paid off at least $100bn of war debt to the US, with 4pc interest added – less than the $350bn floated earlier by Mr Trump but still half of Ukraine’s GDP, and unpayable.
Ukraine has only “B’ shares and will receive 50pc of the royalties only once its arrears are paid off.
The fund is registered in Delaware but under New York jurisdiction. The US has the first right of refusal on all projects. It has authority to examine the books and accounts of any Ukrainian ministry or agency whenever it wants during working hours.
“For the first time in the 25 years of the Edelman Trust Barometer being published, New Zealand’s overall trust index has fallen into outright distrust territory – dropping to 47%, below the global average of 56%. Perhaps most telling, a full 67% of New Zealanders report moderate to high levels of grievance toward institutions, believing that government, business and “the wealthy” actively disadvantage ordinary people. Such findings point to a country “divided by mistrust,” where scepticism has deepened into a pervasive sense that the system is rigged in favour of an elite few.”
“That fight is now underway in New Zealand, in town halls, on talkback radio, across social media, and in everyday conversations. It’s messy and fraught, but it signals an engaged citizenry. In raising their voices, New Zealanders are asserting ownership of their democracy. This rising political awareness and demand for change may be just what the country needs to renew its social contract – to ensure New Zealand remains not a playground for the wealthy few, but a society where everyone has a stake and a say. The path forward is clear: heed the calls for reform, address the grievances, and in doing so, begin to restore the trust that is so vital for a healthy, functioning democracy.”
“A sense of grievance is taking hold in New Zealand, with 67% of New Zealanders expressing a moderate or higher sense of grievance, a figure that surpasses the global average of 61%. This is defined by a belief that government and business harm them and serve narrow interests, and ultimately the wealthy benefit while the regular people struggle.”
And goes on to stress,
“This year, the Trust Barometer showed New Zealanders are feeling overlooked by those in power and disillusioned as a result,” Adelle Keely, Acumen Chief Executive says. “While business is still our most trusted institution, its trajectory is not going in the right direction. This year’s results should be a major wake-up call to all leaders. The New Zealand public expect more from our institutions. Grievance is accompanied by three core psychosocial components, a lack of hope for the next generation, a lack of trust in business leaders, and worry that key institutional leaders are purposely lying to us.”
[…]
My reading focussed less on business, and more on the broader captures of society, sense-making, trust, social cohesion, and media, and information ecologies.
Key points
The full slide deck of the AETB report is only available for free after registering on the website, and worth the effort. It’s data heavy, but the infographics make for interesting, if not downright disturbing reading.
Overall trust is stagnant, and neutral: New Zealand’s overall Trust Index score remains at 51, placing it in the “neutral” category. This is unchanged from 2024, which can be read as a representative indicator on the quality of government, and governance since the 2023 general election. The country lags behind the global average (56) and many other surveyed nations.
The erosion of trust: While still the most trusted institution (54%), trust in Business saw a significant YoY drop (-6 points). More importantly, trust also declined for Government (45%, -3 points) and NGOs (53%, -4 points). Mainstream media (MSM) remains the least trusted (35%, -1 point). New Zealand trust levels for all institutions are below the global averages.
The rich(er) trust less: The trust gap between high-income (58%) and low-income (44%) New Zealanders has narrowed. This is primarily driven by a sharp decline in trust among high-income earners, particularly towards Business (-13 points) and Government (-9 points), rather than a rise in low-income trust (which actually rose slightly for Business).
Deep pessimism about the future: There is a significant lack of optimism for the next generation in New Zealand. Only 19% believe the next generation will be better off, far below the global average (36%) and typical of developed nations.
A growing distrust of traditional meaning-makers: Worry that leaders (Government, Business, Journalists) are purposely misleading the public has reached record levels in new Zealand. This fear is highest concerning journalists and reporters (67%). This decline is inextricably entwined with the seemingly inexorable deterioration in New Zealand’s media, and information ecologies, studied below.
A “Crisis of Grievance” is pronounced: A significant majority (67%) of New Zealanders report a moderate or high sense of grievance against business, government, and the rich – notably higher than the global average (61%). This grievance is fuelled by economic anxieties (job security fears related to trade, competition, offshoring, recession), perceptions of inequality (68% believe the wealthy don’t pay fair taxes), and widespread worries about discrimination.
Grievance imposes a significant “Trust Penalty”: Higher levels of grievance strongly correlate with lower trust across all institutions. Those with high grievance actively distrust Business (35%), Government (25%), NGOs (45%), and Media (25%). Interestingly, grievance also fuels suspicion towards AI, and erodes trust in business leaders (CEOs).
Grievance fuels zero-sum thinking, and demands for corrective measures: Individuals with higher grievance are much more likely (2x) to adopt a “zero-sum” mindset (“what helps others comes at my cost”). They are also significantly more likely to believe business is not doing enough to address societal issues like affordability, climate change, retraining, misinformation, and discrimination.
He hits a note of optimism. "There are signs that politicians are beginning to get the message." Someone gave him an extremely powerful microscope?
His analysis also displays a lack of focus on the way political parties fail to represent the voters on an authentic basis. Perhaps one could argue that they default to representing partisans instead of the common good because democracy was designed to be oppositional instead of forming common ground.
Funny how he goes back to a rerun of Corbyn/Sanders instead of learning why they failed. Grievances producing reformers only works as causal influence when folks become motivated by common interests. You'd think he'd have intellect sufficient to grasp this – but he seems to get the global trend of subsiding trust in the establishment.
Corporation capital and provision of services within nation states – a case study.
Sky knows NZR has an internal problem with the management of the professional game and working with the provincial unions (who manage the amateur club game), so makes a low ball offer for Super Rugby that excludes coverage of the NPC and FPC games. As one "professional" body to another.
It is also considering selling out to DAZN (who have bought FOXTEL in Oz), who are the other known bidder for Super Rugby coverage.
It is likely the locally owned Sky would perceive loss of the Super Rugby coverage as providing a reason for selling to the foreign DAZN (to reduce reaction from their customers).
On 12 August 2020, Sky announced it had sold Outside Broadcasting to NEP New Zealand, part of American production company NEP Group. As part of the transaction, NEP will be Sky's outsourced technical production partner in New Zealand until at least 2030. The sale was cleared by the Commerce Commission on 5 February 2021.
It would appear Sky has this issue to consider. It does not seem to have a long term capacity to provide outdoor sports coverage. The five year contract is only to 2030.
Options might include working with government and TVNZ to restore domestic outdoor sports coverage capability for the provincial game – with a view of providing domestic capability for Super rugby (maybe with an Oz based partner, such as STAN) beyond 2030.
Another factor is TVNZ is no longer providing free to air broadcast from 2027. On line service only, or otherwise via cable/satellite provider.
There is currently legislation before a Select Committee on stalking.
One thing this nation does not have is case law on this. Because we may be the only first world democratic nation state without such legislation.
Thus the identification of stalking and gaslighting behaviour as criminal or sociopathic behaviour has yet to occur in case law. Only tenuously in the defence made by counsel representing those who have abused women. Or in the practice of police who profile a person as the type who might be guilty, because their evidential case is so weak.
The absence of stalking legislation is one reason why we are land safe for predators and those who protect them.
This is not just about individual behaviour, but also group behaviour against individuals.
The Housing Minister says he doesn't believe tightened eligibility rules for emergency housing have led to more homelessness, despite reports the move has led to a rise in rough sleeping.
He is totally correct, all the policy was designed to achieve was to reduce the waiting list for emergency housing.
National always designs policies of this sort, such as reducing waiting lists in health care without providing more treatment to those in need. That is also not a policy designed to make things worse, only to make National look better without doing anything.
It doesn’t matter what he believes or doesn’t, it’s a distraction; what matters is what he wants us to believe or not. Pierce through the smokescreen of seven veils and see what he’s really done.
On March 18, the official White House account on X posted two photographs of Virginia Basora-Gonzalez, a woman who was arrested earlier this month by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The post described her as a “previously deported alien felon convicted of fentanyl trafficking,” and celebrated her capture as a win for the administration. In one photograph, Basora-Gonzalez is shown handcuffed and weeping in a public parking lot.
The White House account posted about Basora-Gonzalez again yesterday—this time, rendering her capture in the animated style of the beloved Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki, who co-founded the animation company Studio Ghibli. Presumably, whoever runs the account had used ChatGPT, which has been going viral this week for an update to its advanced “4o” model that enables it to transform photographs in the style of popular art, among other things. The White House did not respond directly to a request for comment, instead referring me to a post by Deputy Communications Director Kaelan Dorr that says, in part, “The arrests will continue. The memes will continue.”
[…]
Beyond the fact that this kind of shitposting is so obviously beneath the office, the posts are genuinely sinister. By adding a photo of an ICE arrest to a light-hearted viral trend, for instance, the White House account manages to perfectly capture the sociopathic, fascistic tone of ironic detachment and glee of the internet’s darkest corners and most malignant trolls. The official X account of the White House isn’t just full of low-rent 4chan musings, it’s an alarming signal of an administration that’s fluent in internet extremism and seemingly dedicated to pursuing its casual cruelty as a chief political export.
On a positive note, there's progress being made in the general direction of using carbon dioxide as fuel. Nature invented plants for that purpose, but industrial level high tech systems could stabilise atmospheric carbon dioxide.
There may be other options but these give us an idea of scientific progress happening nowadays. Someone oughta tell Elon to stop being Trump's bloodhound trying to nose out Deep State agents, and put his money behind one of these development projects. Even if he finds them, they will likely tell him they receive their orders anonymously and folks will then assume the control system is extraterrestrial. Yeah I know plenty already do but we don't need to multiply them…
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One of the first aims of the United States’ new Department of Government Efficiency was shutting down USAID. By 6 February, the agency was functionally dissolved, its seal missing from its Washington headquarters. Amid the ...
If our strategic position was already challenging, it just got worse. Reliability of the US as an ally is in question, amid such actions by the Trump administration as calling for annexation of Canada, threating ...
Small businesses will be exempt from complying with some of the requirements of health and safety legislation under new reforms proposed by the Government. The living wage will be increased to $28.95 per hour from September, a $1.15 increase from the current $27.80. A poll has shown large opposition to ...
Summary A group of senior doctors in Nelson have spoken up, specifically stating that hospitals have never been as bad as in the last year.Patients are waiting up to 50 hours and 1 death is directly attributable to the situation: "I've never seen that number of patients waiting to be ...
Although semiconductor chips are ubiquitous nowadays, their production is concentrated in just a few countries, and this has left the US economy and military highly vulnerable at a time of rising geopolitical tensions. While the ...
Health and Safety changes driven by ACT party ideology, not evidence said NZCTU Te Kauae Kaimahi President Richard Wagstaff. Changes to health and safety legislation proposed by the Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety Brooke van Velden today comply with ACT party ideology, ignores the evidence, and will compound New ...
In short in our political economy this morning:Fletcher Building is closing its pre-fabricated house-building factory in Auckland due to a lack of demand, particularly from the Government.Health NZ is sending a crisis management team to Nelson Hospital after a 1News investigation exposed doctors’ fears that nearly 500 patients are overdue ...
Exactly 10 years ago, the then minister for defence, Kevin Andrews, released the First Principles Review: Creating One Defence (FPR). With increasing talk about the rising possibility of major power-conflict, calls for Defence funding to ...
In events eerily similar to what happened in the USA last week, Greater Auckland was recently accidentally added to a group chat between government ministers on the topic of transport.We have no idea how it happened, but luckily we managed to transcribe most of what transpired. We share it ...
Hi,When I look back at my history with Dylan Reeve, it’s pretty unusual. We first met in the pool at Kim Dotcom’s mansion, as helicopters buzzed overhead and secret service agents flung themselves off the side of his house, abseiling to the ground with guns drawn.Kim Dotcom was a German ...
Come around for teaDance me round and round the kitchenBy the light of my T.VOn the night of the electionAncient stars will fall into the seaAnd the ocean floor sings her sympathySongwriter: Bic Runga.The Prime Minister stared into the camera, hot and flustered despite the predawn chill. He looked sadly ...
Has Winston Peters got a ferries deal for you! (Buyer caution advised.) Unfortunately, the vision that Peters has been busily peddling for the past 24 hours – of several shipyards bidding down the price of us getting smaller, narrower, rail-enabled ferries – looks more like a science fiction fantasy. One ...
Completed reads for March: The Heart of the Antarctic [1907-1909], by Ernest Shackleton South [1914-1917], by Ernest Shackleton Aurora Australis (collection), edited by Ernest Shackleton The Book of Urizen (poem), by William Blake The Book of Ahania (poem), by William Blake The Book of Los (poem), by William Blake ...
First - A ReminderBenjamin Doyle Doesn’t Deserve ThisI’ve been following posts regarding Green MP Benjamin Doyle over the last few days, but didn’t want to amplify the abject nonsense.This morning, Winston Peters, New Zealand’s Deputy Prime Minister, answered the alt-right’s prayers - guaranteeing amplification of the topic, by going on ...
US President Donald Trump has shown a callous disregard for the checks and balances that have long protected American democracy. As the self-described ‘king’ makes a momentous power grab, much of the world watches anxiously, ...
They can be the very same words. And yet their meaning can vary very much.You can say I'll kill him about your colleague who accidentally deleted your presentation the day before a big meeting.You can say I'll kill him to — or, for that matter, about — Tony Soprano.They’re the ...
Back in 2020, the then-Labour government signed contracted for the construction and purchase of two new rail-enabled Cook Strait ferries, to be operational from 2026. But when National took power in 2023, they cancelled them in a desperate effort to make the books look good for a year. And now ...
The fragmentation of cyber regulation in the Indo-Pacific is not just inconvenient; it is a strategic vulnerability. In recent years, governments across the Indo-Pacific, including Australia, have moved to reform their regulatory frameworks for cyber ...
Welcome to the March 2025 Economic Bulletin. The feature article examines what public private partnerships (PPPs) are. PPPs have been a hot topic recently, with the coalition government signalling it wants to use them to deliver infrastructure. However, experience with PPPs, both here and overseas, indicates we should be wary. ...
Willis announces more plans of plans for supermarketsYesterday’s much touted supermarket competition announcement by Nicola Willis amounted to her telling us she was issuing a 6 week RFI1 that will solicit advice from supermarket players.In short, it was an announcement of a plan - but better than her Kiwirail Interislander ...
This was the post I was planning to write this morning to mark Orr’s final day. That said, if the underlying events – deliberate attempts to mislead Parliament – were Orr’s doing, the post is more about the apparent uselessness of Parliament (specifically the Finance and Expenditure Committee) in holding ...
Taiwanese chipmaking giant TSMC’s plan to build a plant in the United States looks like a move made at the behest of local officials to solidify US support for Taiwan. However, it may eventually lessen ...
This is a Guest Post by Transport Planner Bevan Woodward from the charitable trust Movement, which has lodged an application for a judicial review of the Governments Setting of Speed Limits Rule 2024 Auckland is at grave risk of having its safer speed limits on approx. 1,500 local streets ...
We're just talkin' 'bout the futureForget about the pastIt'll always be with usIt's never gonna die, never gonna dieSongwriters: Brian Johnson / Angus Young / Malcolm YoungMorena, all you lovely people, it’s good to be back, and I have news from the heartland. Now brace yourself for this: depending on ...
Today is the last day in office for the Governor of the Reserve Bank, Adrian Orr. Of course, he hasn’t been in the office since 5 March when, on the eve of his major international conference, his resignation was announced and he stormed off with no (effective) notice and no ...
Treasury and Cabinet have finally agreed to a Crown guarantee for a non-Government lending agency for Community Housing Providers (CHPs), which could unlock billions worth of loans and investments by pension funds and banks to build thousands of more affordable social homes. Photo: Lynn GrievesonMōrena. Long stories shortest:Chris Bishop ...
Australia has plenty of room to spend more on defence. History shows that 2.9 percent of GDP is no great burden in ordinary times, so pushing spending to 3.0 percent in dangerous times is very ...
In short this morning in our political economy:Winston Peters will announce later today whether two new ferries are rail ‘compatible’, requiring time-consuming container shuffling, or the more efficient and expensive rail ‘enabled,’ where wagons can roll straight on and off.Nicola Willisthreatened yesterday to break up the supermarket duopoly with ...
A listing of 31 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, March 23, 2025 thru Sat, March 29, 2025. This week's roundup is again published by category and sorted by number of articles included in each. The formatting is a ...
For prospective writers out there, Inspired Quill, the publisher of my novel(s) is putting together a short story anthology (pieces up to 10,000 words). The open submission window is 29th March to 29th April. https://www.inspired-quill.com/anthology-submissions/ The theme?This anthology will bring together diverse voices exploring themes of hope, resistance, and human ...
Prime minister Kevin Rudd released the 2009 defence white paper in May of that year. It is today remembered mostly for what it said about the strategic implications of China’s rise; its plan to double ...
In short this morning in our political economy:Voters want the Government to retain the living wage for cleaners, a poll shows.The Government’s move to provide a Crown guarantee to banks and the private sector for social housing is described a watershed moment and welcomed by Community Housing Providers.Nicola Willis is ...
The recent attacks in the Congo by Rwandan backed militias has led to worldwide condemnation of the Rwandan regime of Paul Kagame. Following up on the recent Fabian Zoom with Mikela Wrong and Maria Amoudian, Dr Rudaswinga will give a complete picture of Kagame’s regime and discuss the potential ...
New Zealand’s economic development has always been a partnership between the public and private sectors.Public-Private-Partnerships (PPPs) have become fashionable again, partly because of the government’s ambitions to accelerate infrastructural development. There is, of course, an ideological element too, while some of the opposition to them is also ideological.PPPs come in ...
How Australia funds development and defence was front of mind before Tuesday’s federal budget. US President Donald Trump’s demands for a dramatic lift in allied military spending and brutal cuts to US foreign assistance meant ...
Questions 1. Where and what is this protest?a. Hamilton, angry crowd yelling What kind of food do you call this Seymour?b.Dunedin, angry crowd yelling Still waiting, Simeon, still waitingc. Wellington, angry crowd yelling You’re trashing everything you idiotsd. Istanbul, angry crowd yelling Give us our democracy back, give it ...
Two blueprints that could redefine the Northern Territory’s economic future were launched last week. The first was a government-led economic strategy and the other an industry-driven economic roadmap. Both highlight that supporting the Northern Territory ...
In December 2021, then-Climate Change Minister James Shaw finally ended Tiwai Point's excessive pollution subsidies, cutting their "Electricity Allocation Factor" (basically compensation for the cost of carbon in their electricity price) to zero on the basis that their sweetheart deal meant they weren't paying it. In the process, he effectively ...
Green MP Tamatha Paul has received quite the beat down in the last two days.Her original comments were part of a panel discussion where she said:“Wellington people do not want to see police officers everywhere, and, for a lot of people, it makes them feel less safe. It’s that constant ...
US President Donald Trump has raised the spectre of economic and geopolitical turmoil in Asia. While individual countries have few options for pushing back against Trump’s transactional diplomacy, protectionist trade policies and erratic decision-making, a ...
Jobs are on the line for back-office staff at the Department of Corrections, as well as at Archives New Zealand and the National Library. A “malicious actor” has accessed and downloaded private information about staff in districts in the lower North Island. Cabinet has agreed to its next steps regarding ...
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 on the week in geopolitics and climate; on the fifth anniversary of the arrival of Covid and the ...
Hi,As giant, mind-bending things continue to happen around us, today’s Webworm is a very small story from Hayden Donnell — which I have also read out for you if you want to give your sleepy eyes a rest.But first:As expected, the discussion from Worms going on under “A Fist, an ...
The threat of a Chinese military invasion of Taiwan dominates global discussion about the Taiwan Strait. Far less attention is paid to what is already happening—Beijing is slowly squeezing Taiwan into submission without firing a ...
The National Government’s choices have contributed to a slow-down in the building sector, as thousands of people have lost their jobs in construction. ...
Willie Apiata’s decision to hand over his Victoria Cross to the Minister for Veterans is a powerful and selfless act, made on behalf of all those who have served our country. ...
The Privileges Committee has denied fundamental rights to Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, Rawiri Waititi and Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, breaching their own standing orders, breaching principles of natural justice, and highlighting systemic prejudice and discrimination within our parliamentary processes. The three MPs were summoned to the privileges committee following their performance of a haka ...
April 1 used to be a day when workers could count on a pay rise with stronger support for those doing it tough, but that’s not the case under this Government. ...
Winston Peters is shopping for smaller ferries after Nicola Willis torpedoed the original deal, which would have delivered new rail enabled ferries next year. ...
The Government should work with other countries to press the Myanmar military regime to stop its bombing campaign especially while the country recovers from the devastating earthquake. ...
The Green Party is calling for the Government to scrap proposed changes to Early Childhood Care, after attending a petition calling for the Government to ‘Put tamariki at the heart of decisions about ECE’. ...
New Zealand First has introduced a Member’s Bill today that will remove the power of MPs conscience votes and ensure mandatory national referendums are held before any conscience issues are passed into law. “We are giving democracy and power back to the people”, says New Zealand First Leader Winston Peters. ...
Welcome to members of the diplomatic corp, fellow members of parliament, the fourth estate, foreign affairs experts, trade tragics, ladies and gentlemen. ...
In recent weeks, disturbing instances of state-sanctioned violence against Māori have shed light on the systemic racism permeating our institutions. An 11-year-old autistic Māori child was forcibly medicated at the Henry Bennett Centre, a 15-year-old had his jaw broken by police in Napier, kaumātua Dean Wickliffe went on a hunger ...
Confidence in the job market has continued to drop to its lowest level in five years as more New Zealanders feel uncertain about finding work, keeping their jobs, and getting decent pay, according to the latest Westpac-McDermott Miller Employment Confidence Index. ...
The Greens are calling on the Government to follow through on their vague promises of environmental protection in their Resource Management Act (RMA) reform. ...
“Make New Zealand First Again” Ladies and gentlemen, First of all, thank you for being here today. We know your lives are busy and you are working harder and longer than you ever have, and there are many calls on your time, so thank you for the chance to speak ...
Hundreds more Palestinians have died in recent days as Israel’s assault on Gaza continues and humanitarian aid, including food and medicine, is blocked. ...
National is looking to cut hundreds of jobs at New Zealand’s Defence Force, while at the same time it talks up plans to increase focus and spending in Defence. ...
It’s been revealed that the Government is secretly trying to bring back a ‘one-size fits all’ standardised test – a decision that has shocked school principals. ...
The Green Party is calling for the compassionate release of Dean Wickliffe, a 77-year-old kaumātua on hunger strike at the Spring Hill Corrections Facility, after visiting him at the prison. ...
The Green Party is calling on Government MPs to support Chlöe Swarbrick’s Member’s Bill to sanction Israel for its unlawful presence and illegal actions in Palestine, following another day of appalling violence against civilians in Gaza. ...
The Green Party stands in support of volunteer firefighters petitioning the Government to step up and change legislation to provide volunteers the same ACC coverage and benefits as their paid counterparts. ...
At 2.30am local time, Israel launched a treacherous attack on Gaza killing more than 300 defenceless civilians while they slept. Many of them were children. This followed a more than 2 week-long blockade by Israel on the entry of all goods and aid into Gaza. Israel deliberately targeted densely populated ...
Living Strong, Aging Well There is much discussion around the health of our older New Zealanders and how we can age well. In reality, the delivery of health services accounts for only a relatively small percentage of health outcomes as we age. Significantly, dry warm housing, nutrition, exercise, social connection, ...
Shane Jones’ display on Q&A showed how out of touch he and this Government are with our communities and how in sync they are with companies with little concern for people and planet. ...
The Government’s new planning legislation to replace the Resource Management Act will make it easier to get things done while protecting the environment, say Minister Responsible for RMA Reform Chris Bishop and Under-Secretary Simon Court. “The RMA is broken and everyone knows it. It makes it too hard to build ...
Trade and Investment Minister Todd McClay has today launched a public consultation on New Zealand and India’s negotiations of a formal comprehensive Free Trade Agreement. “Negotiations are getting underway, and the Public’s views will better inform us in the early parts of this important negotiation,” Mr McClay says. We are ...
More than 900 thousand superannuitants and almost five thousand veterans are among the New Zealanders set to receive a significant financial boost from next week, an uplift Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston says will help support them through cost-of-living challenges. “I am pleased to confirm that from 1 ...
Progressing a holistic strategy to unlock the potential of New Zealand’s geothermal resources, possibly in applications beyond energy generation, is at the centre of discussions with mana whenua at a hui in Rotorua today, Resources and Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says. The Coalition Government is in the early stages ...
New annual data has exposed the staggering cost of delays previously hidden in the building consent system, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says. “I directed Building Consent Authorities to begin providing quarterly data last year to improve transparency, following repeated complaints from tradespeople waiting far longer than the statutory ...
Increases in water charges for Auckland consumers this year will be halved under the Watercare Charter which has now been passed into law, Local Government Minister Simon Watts and Auckland Minister Simeon Brown say. The charter is part of the financial arrangement for Watercare developed last year by Auckland Council ...
There is wide public support for the Government’s work to strengthen New Zealand’s biosecurity protections, says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard. “The Ministry for Primary Industries recently completed public consultation on proposed amendments to the Biosecurity Act and the submissions show that people understand the importance of having a strong biosecurity ...
A new independent review function will enable individuals and organisations to seek an expert independent review of specified civil aviation regulatory decisions made by, or on behalf of, the Director of Civil Aviation, Acting Transport Minister James Meager has announced today. “Today we are making it easier and more affordable ...
The Government will invest in an enhanced overnight urgent care service for the Napier community as part of our focus on ensuring access to timely, quality healthcare, Health Minister Simeon Brown has today confirmed. “I am delighted that a solution has been found to ensure Napier residents will continue to ...
Health Minister Simeon Brown and Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey attended a sod turning today to officially mark the start of construction on a new mental health facility at Hillmorton Campus. “This represents a significant step in modernising mental health services in Canterbury,” Mr Brown says. “Improving health infrastructure is ...
Finance Minister Nicola Willis has welcomed confirmation the economy has turned the corner. Stats NZ reported today that gross domestic product grew 0.7 per cent in the three months to December following falls in the June and September quarters. “We know many families and businesses are still suffering the after-effects ...
The sealing of a 12-kilometre stretch of State Highway 43 (SH43) through the Tangarakau Gorge – one of the last remaining sections of unsealed state highway in the country – has been completed this week as part of a wider programme of work aimed at improving the safety and resilience ...
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Winston Peters says relations between New Zealand and the United States are on a strong footing, as he concludes a week-long visit to New York and Washington DC today. “We came to the United States to ask the new Administration what it wants from ...
Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee has welcomed changes to international anti-money laundering standards which closely align with the Government’s reforms. “The Financial Action Taskforce (FATF) last month adopted revised standards for tackling money laundering and the financing of terrorism to allow for simplified regulatory measures for businesses, organisations and sectors ...
Associate Health Minister David Seymour says he welcomes Medsafe’s decision to approve an electronic controlled drug register for use in New Zealand pharmacies, allowing pharmacies to replace their physical paper-based register. “The register, developed by Kiwi brand Toniq Limited, is the first of its kind to be approved in New ...
The Coalition Government’s drive for regional economic growth through the $1.2 billion Regional Infrastructure Fund is on track with more than $550 million in funding so far committed to key infrastructure projects, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says. “To date, the Regional Infrastructure Fund (RIF) has received more than 250 ...
[Comments following the bilateral meeting with United States Secretary of State, Marco Rubio; United States State Department, Washington D.C.] * We’re very pleased with our meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio this afternoon. * We came here to listen to the new Administration and to be clear about what ...
The intersection of State Highway 2 (SH2) and Wainui Road in the Eastern Bay of Plenty will be made safer and more efficient for vehicles and freight with the construction of a new and long-awaited roundabout, says Transport Minister Chris Bishop. “The current intersection of SH2 and Wainui Road is ...
The Ocean Race will return to the City of Sails in 2027 following the Government’s decision to invest up to $4 million from the Major Events Fund into the international event, Auckland Minister Simeon Brown says. “New Zealand is a proud sailing nation, and Auckland is well-known internationally as the ...
Improving access to mental health and addiction support took a significant step forward today with Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey announcing that the University of Canterbury have been the first to be selected to develop the Government’s new associate psychologist training programme. “I am thrilled that the University of Canterbury ...
Health Minister Simeon Brown has today officially opened the new East Building expansion at Manukau Health Park. “This is a significant milestone and the first stage of the Grow Manukau programme, which will double the footprint of the Manukau Health Park to around 30,000m2 once complete,” Mr Brown says. “Home ...
The Government will boost anti-crime measures across central Auckland with $1.3 million of funding as a result of the Proceeds of Crime Fund, Auckland Minister Simeon Brown and Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee say. “In recent years there has been increased antisocial and criminal behaviour in our CBD. The Government ...
The Government is moving to strengthen rules for feeding food waste to pigs to protect New Zealand from exotic animal diseases like foot and mouth disease (FMD), says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard. ‘Feeding untreated meat waste, often known as "swill", to pigs could introduce serious animal diseases like FMD and ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi held productive talks in New Delhi today. Fresh off announcing that New Zealand and India would commence negotiations towards a Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement, the two Prime Ministers released a joint statement detailing plans for further cooperation between the two countries across ...
Agriculture and Trade Minister Todd McClay signed a new Memorandum of Cooperation (MOC) today during the Prime Minister’s Indian Trade Mission, reinforcing New Zealand’s commitment to enhancing collaboration with India in the forestry sector. “Our relationship with India is a key priority for New Zealand, and this agreement reflects our ...
Agriculture and Trade Minister Todd McClay signed a new Memorandum of Cooperation (MOC) today during the Prime Minister’s Indian Trade Mission, reinforcing New Zealand’s commitment to enhancing collaboration with India in the horticulture sector. “Our relationship with India is a key priority for New Zealand, and this agreement reflects our ...
Attorney-General Judith Collins today announced the appointment of two new Family Court Judges. The new Judges will take up their roles in April and May and fill Family Court vacancies at the Auckland and Manukau courts. Annette Gray Ms Gray completed her law degree at Victoria University before joining Phillips ...
Health Minister Simeon Brown has today officially opened Wellington Regional Hospital’s first High Dependency Unit (HDU). “This unit will boost critical care services in the lower North Island, providing extra capacity and relieving pressure on the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and emergency department. “Wellington Regional Hospital has previously relied ...
Namaskar, Sat Sri Akal, kia ora and good afternoon everyone. What an honour it is to stand on this stage - to inaugurate this august Dialogue - with none other than the Honourable Narendra Modi. My good friend, thank you for so generously welcoming me to India and for our ...
Healthcare dominated the debate in an unusually sober and serious question time. “Hey David!” a group of high school students in the public gallery called out as Act leader David Seymour entered the debating chamber. Standing in the middle of the floor, before any other MPs had arrived, he happily ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Matthew Heaslip, Senior Lecturer in Naval History, University of Portsmouth How the Shuqiao barges may be used to ferry troops ashore. X (formerly Twitter) China’s intentions when it comes to Taiwan have been at the centre of intense discussion for years. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kiera Vaclavik, Professor of Children’s Literature & Childhood Culture, Queen Mary University of London This spring, Babe is returning to cinemas to mark the 30th anniversary of its release in 1995. The much-loved family film tells the deceptively simple but emotionally powerful ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sophie King-Hill, Associate Professor at the Health Services Management Centre, University of Birmingham Netflix television series Adolescence follows a 13-year-old boy accused of the murder of his female classmate. It touches upon incel online hate groups, toxic influencers and the misogynistic online ...
I don’t want my neuroses about someone being ‘good enough’ to keep me from finding love. But choosing to be with someone who isn’t quite right seems like a death sentence.Want Hera’s help? Email your problem to helpme@thespinoff.co.nzDear Hera,I’m a straight single woman in my late 20s ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Claudia Reyes, Postdoctoral Fellow, Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Australian National University Pavel Gabzdyl / Shutterstock The “music” of starquakes – enormous vibrations caused by bursting bubbles of gas that ripple throughout the bodies of many stars – can reveal ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Clune, Honorary Associate, Government and International Relations, University of Sydney The five-week election campaign is now in full swing throughout the nation. Amid the flurry of photo opportunities and press conferences, candidates campaign in specific areas for a reason: to shore ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Samuel Whittle, ANZMUSC Practitioner Fellow, Monash University Marinesea/Shutterstock More than 500 million people around the world live with osteoarthritis. The knee is affected more often than any other joint, with symptoms (such as pain, stiffness and reduced movement) affecting work, sleep, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Cornelia Sattler, Research Fellow in Ecology, Macquarie University Samantha Terrell/Shutterstock If you go walking in the wild, you might expect that what you’re seeing is natural. All around you are trees, shrubs and grasses growing in their natural habitat. But there’s ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Madeleine Fraser, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, Australian Catholic University One of the first things parents want to ask their children after school is “how was your day?” We simply want to know how they are going and what happened at school. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Daniel Johnston, Director of Learning and Teaching at Excelsia University College and Research Affiliate, University of Sydney As Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young waved a decapitated salmon dripping with blood in parliament last week, you could feel the election coming. Hanson-Young ...
The head of the Mental Health Foundation says he is not confident there will not be a repeat of a mistake that saw an 11-year-old girl wrongly identified as an adult mental health patient. ...
Staff at Kāinga Ora face restructuring, with a Green MP claiming another 500 jobs are set to go and staff are worried front line housing services will suffer. ...
The government is scheduled to announce reforms to fast-track new drugs based on prior overseas approvals, writes Catherine McGregor in today’s extract from The Bulletin. To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here.Quicker drug approvals on their way The government is expected to unveil reforms today that ...
Comment: The Consumer Data Right is now part of New Zealand law. The CDR is intended to give customers (including consumers and business customers) greater control over the data that certain service providers hold about them.The introduction of the CDR was confirmed by the enactment of the Customer and Product ...
The President’s guest list in the Rose Garden includes steel workers, autoworkers, oil and gas workers, steam fitters, truck drivers, and hardworking Americans from a variety of trades, the White House saysDonald Trump wants to punish countries for national drug-buying schemes like Pharmac, by imposing tariffs on pharmaceuticals imported ...
A legal bid to stop Rotorua Lakes Council’s controversial sewerage pipeline near Lake Rotokākahi has failed, with the Environment Court saying the project is in the public’s interest. But opponents call it a desecration and are not giving up.The Environment Court has dismissed a legal bid to stop Rotorua ...
From ‘general rudeness and condescension’ to leaving a sexual harassment victim stranded and another wheelchair user concussed, a litany of complaints has led to Wellington’s public transport provider promising to revamp its staff training.Metlink has pledged to revamp its staff accessibility awareness training following numerous complaints from disabled passengers, ...
The success of public transport emissions cuts in Auckland will no longer be measured, deemed too difficult to calculate and replaced by a simple number for electric buses in the fleet.Auckland Transport is deleting emissions reduction from its list of operational performance measures. At the same time, it’s also pledging ...
The New Zealand Wars from 1841 to 1884 were not a series of conflicts solely between Crown and Māori. They were far more complex than that, involving complex alignments or alliances amongst Māori which often varied over time. The new lavishly illustrated book Atlas of the New Zealand Wars: Volume ...
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Improving the health of waterways and ecosystems is a useful purpose for declarations being sought in the High Court, an environmental group says.South Island iwi Ngāi Tahu has taken the Attorney-General to court, seeking a series of declarations with the aim of overhauling the freshwater management regime, in partnership with ...
New Zealand, are you ready for your liberation? “The only thing being liberated is my sanity from my mind at the moment,” Sense Partners economist John Ballingall tells Newsroom ahead of United States President Donald Trump’s much-anticipated announcement on the tariffs he will levy against various countries – a moment Trump ...
Super Rugby Pacific has been called boring and predictable by its many critics but even Australian commentators are gushing about the competition this year.Halfway through the 16-week competition, rugby fans have been watching history in the making with the Queensland Reds topping the table for the first time in more ...
Comment: I arrived in New Zealand in 2022, fresh from the trauma and heartbreak of caring for patients through the American Covid nightmare. The wounds on my soul and conscience were still raw, but, more than healing, I came in search of hope.The pandemic had, with great efficiency, stripped away ...
Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith is standing by Chief Human Rights Commissioner Stephen Rainbow, despite calls for him to be sacked for remarks characterised as Islamophobic by some groups. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Chris F. Wright, Professor of Work and Labour Market Policy, University of Sydney Labor has called for an “economically sustainable real wage increase” for almost 3 million workers who depend on the award system for their wages. In a submission to the ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Aaron Humphrey, Lecturer, Media and Digital Humanities, University of Adelaide Leading man of 1990s Hollywood, Val Kilmer, has died at 65 from pneumonia. Battling cancer since 2014, he has not been a frequent presence on our film screens for most of this ...
If you missed this, well worth a listen. Interviewing Tabitha Paul about her police comments that have the other politicians clutching their pearls in dismay.
Listening to this, I hear an intelligent young woman who can clearly articulate her case. Unlike, say, our PM, deputy PM, etc etc.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/focusonpolitics/audio/2018980899/politics-and-the-police
Benefit rates, housing and social cohesion.
He said the research showed that rich people thought that benefit levels were enough, but poorer people thought they were not.
(Gee, no kidding.)
"What that tells you is there is a perception we're doing enough. But those who are living in those conditions are telling us it's very hard to escape the poverty trap… have we got our welfare safety net right? Have we got the ability to climb out of poverty right? The wider social cohesion part is hard to answer."
He said the fact that the JobSeeker basic benefit is $361 a week for single people over 25 without children, compared to $538 a week for people on NZ Super might surprise some people.
(Especially those who end up having to receive it.)
"If you're old you deserve more money than if you're young and poor? We have a very inequitable welfare system… I don't think people realise how little money is given. That's the stereotype thing.
Followed by the pertinent question:
"Are there ways we can connect with each other and have conversations across diverse groups of people?
"Social cohesion can best be understood as the glue that holds our communities and society at large together,"
"The opposite of social cohesion is polarisation. Without social cohesion, societies become increasingly unstable – from politics to business, to civil society, to day-to-day life in our communities. This is a pattern increasingly seen around the world, and New Zealand is not immune."
I think polarisation is now ingrained, and the window has passed for us to connect across the divide. With regards to the position of beneficiaries in this country, a decades- long divide and rule campaign against us by successive governments and especially the media has been extremely successful.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/556587/do-you-know-what-people-on-benefits-actually-get
Unfortunately, just 2 days earlier, RNZ published this article, while mostly useful reading, began with these lines, thus perpetuating the myth.
James, a single parent to a 13-year-old son, says he's living quite happily on the benefit – but is worried about getting stuck.
The Whangārei man, whom RNZ has agreed not to identify, has been on sole parent support and Jobseeker Support for seven or eight years.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/business/556428/benefit-struggle-i-ve-fallen-into-the-trap-of-being-100-percent-reliant-on-it
Mods, apologies, I'm still no good at formatting longer posts. I hope this isn't too much of a mess
looks fine
Italics and regular text are a good way to do it.
The other thing that most people in NZ who've never been through it don't get is just how many barriers there are to earning money in addition to the benefits. The reason the dole is set so low is because there is an expectation that the person will also work part time. But the abatement rate on wages is high.
As an example, someone on JS with no partner and not kids (because this is the simplest calculation to do), gets $405.59 gross/$353.46 net per week. The abatement rate currently above $160 (gross). At a living wage that's just under 6 hours/week. At minimum wage that's just under 7 hours/week.
Once you earn over $160/wk, every dollar after that is taxed at 70%.
so someone doing 7 hours a week on minimum wage will get around $570 per week gross. They may get accommodation supplement on top of that, depending on their situation and where they live. They might also be eligible for TAS, the hardship benefit, but TAS is taxed at 100% from the first dollar you earn.
If they get 15 hours of work per week, they would get $701. That's the dole plus an hourly rate of $8.70. Once you factor in things like transport to work, it just becomes unviable.
If that $701 was for a 40 hour week, the hourly rate would be $17. No-one in NZ is expected to live on that, because the budget just can't work.
The only way to get out of poverty then is to get a full time job or do cash work.
I've used gross figures, but the actual amounts might be different because I'm not sure how WINZ and IRD handle the various calculations (eg are wages taxed at the secondary rate?).
The biggest thing that could be done to change poverty for people who can work would be to remove the abatement rates. This is too difficult politically because people who have low waged jobs and no benefit would probably see it as unfair, and there are definitely fairness issues here but imagine if we told workers that some of their wages would be taxed an additional 70%. The simplest way to resolve that is to pay all low income workers a universal benefit.
The cynic in me is sure those abatement rules are a deliberate ploy to a) keep people in the benefit trap, and b) cut down the benefit bill.
Many moons ago when I could still work part/time my wage was $13.25 hr (this was higher than minimum wage at the time). I worked 20hrs a week, and after all the abatements and secondary tax, I came away with a whole extra $80, so $4/hr. While it was pathetic, I did actually like paying taxes that just went straight back to me via my Invalids benefit, and also ACC levies, which in subsequent years I've claimed back on.
The only positive was, when I was unable to subsequently work anymore, I had the benefit fall back, and didn't need to go through all the reapplication nightmare. I don't know if that's the case anymore with SLP, or how it is for jobseekers.
I can't say I'm looking forward to the annual April fools day joke that is the annual 'increase', and seeing just how much gets deducted from supplements because I've had the audacity to get an increase in income (another form of abatement even for non-workers.)
In theory, the abatement trap is to force people off benefits by making it uneconomical to stay on a benefit once the part-time work is above a certain level.
I don't agree with that approach, but it's deliberate, not an unintended consequence.
The impact is greater on those who receive support at a level above the main benefit.
For those single on the main benefit without AS, older homeowner or person at home with their parent – they can earn up to $160 a week on top of the JSB without any impact.
The current level ($160) is a doubling on a level frozen for well over 10 years.
The cookers are cooking Amerika. Mis and DisInformation…rules.
WTAF ? "gold standard" ? "radical Transparency" ? RFK jnr cooker in chief : taking Amerika back to a very dark age…
Medical Experts are alarmed..
RFK jnr…a very clear danger to Public Health.
And…Samoa. The RFK jnr toxic and deadly misinformation effect. Comment by someone well respected both medically, and otherwise.
so what's the plan? You obviously want to ostracise the group of people you call cookers. So you think they're deplorables? What do you think is going to happen with the next pandemic?
If we keep ostracising people, we will keep losing. Best case scenario atm is we get a change of government next year, with Hipkins as leader. He's already positioning himself as leading a centrist government. Maybe Labour last more than one term, but by the end of this decade, the polycrisis will have deepened and there will be more people struggling who are even less likely to be persuaded by a sanctimonious left who keep telling them Labour will make things better.
Reading Kay's comment above where she believes that it's too late to resolve the social divides in NZ, is that what you think too? If not, why is ostracising people seen as a useful position or strategy?
Robert F Kennedy Jr and his ilk now also have the power to censor existing evidence (think Trump 2.0 and climate change), and undermine the capacity of expert researchers to generate new evidence – don’t take future research for granted.
Aye DMK. RFK Jr and ilk are indeed dangerous people. Now unimaginably more so, with the vast power gifted him by his fellow nutbar, Pres trump. I dont have a thumbs-up emogi on my PC, but have a virtual one !
The only possible silver lining (which I still see) are those beacons who will still speak out.
All I could say to Mr Secretary Kennedy is what was once allegedly said to another prominent Catholic, many years ago: "e pur si muove". (Very loosely translatable as "ultimately the science can't be denied".)
While it's about the validity of the science, it is also important to understand the emotions at the heart of misinformation. I have found the BBC podcast 'Things fell apart" by Jon Ronson a great place to understand the emotional context and factual nuance in the development of conspiracy theories. Ronson teases out the roots of many that have swept across the US and percolated into NZ since the pandemic. Left and right ideologies are both represented in his two series.
These two podcasts, They're coming for you, Honey and You'll own nothing and you'll be happy are excellent entry points. The podcasts are very listenable, and very human. The format has Ronson interviewing a range of people at the heart of each issue.
The first gives the story of Judy Mikovits, the medical researcher at the heart to the Plandemic disinformation video. The second is the background to the evolution of the "15 minute cities" theory: they'll lock you down in your suburbs and you'll be barred from stepping out.
Re-listened to a number of them last night while jigsawing, and in the best way you come out well-informed while being drawn into the personal stories of those involved.
If you want a left-wing balancing one, try A Hierachy of Trauma, about cancel culture spilling out of college campuses.
Obtrectator, I was not familiar with that particular phrase… again you have broadened my word/phrase knowledge. Re reading it renewed my respect for Galileo and others who tried (even facing torture and worse : ( , to bring Rationality to the world.
Cheers.
Sir Ian Taylor (founder and managing director of Animation Research) seems to have released an open letter to the grouch who's straining at his leash: https://www.stuff.co.nz/politics/360632590/deputy-prime-ministers-war-woke-and-what-champion
Winston: "Because I'm a conservative. That futuristic thinking is for liberals. If they can make it work, I'll go along with it but my natural way of engaging the future is to live in the present with a perpetual focus on the rear-view mirror. Fortunately my chauffeur looks ahead for me, so it all works really well."
[I’ve edited your copy-pasta to adhere to the original narrative and show where you left out large shreds of text.
Your semi-satirical swipe at Winston Peters is just that and doesn’t address anything of the Ian Taylor’s very good opinion piece in a meaningful and constructive way – Incognito]
Mod note
Austerity, as we know, is a political choice, and makes absolutely no sense!
Richard Murphy explains – 8 mins long.
Molotov-Ribbtrop 2.0 with Ukraine as the new Poland.
/
Donald Trump is holding a gun to the head of Volodymyr Zelensky, demanding huge reparations payments and laying claim to half of Ukraine’s oil, gas, and hydrocarbon resources as well as almost all its metals and much of its infrastructure.
The latest version of his “minerals deal”, obtained by The Telegraph, is unprecedented in the history of modern diplomacy and state relations.
“It is an expropriation document,” said Alan Riley, an expert on energy law at the Atlantic Council. “There are no guarantees, no defence clauses, the US puts up nothing.
“The Americans can walk away, the Ukrainians can’t. I’ve never seen anything like it before.”
The text leaves little doubt that Mr Trump’s chief objective is to incorporate Ukraine as a province of America’s oil, gas and resource industries.
It dovetails with parallel talks between the US and Russia for a comprehensive energy partnership, including plans to restore West Siberian gas flows to Europe in large volumes, with US companies and Trump-aligned financiers gaining a major stake in the business.
[…]
The US will control infrastructure linked to natural resources “including, but not limited to, roads, rail, pipelines and other transportation assets; ports, terminals and other logistics facilities and refineries, processing facilities, natural gas liquefaction and/or regasification facilities and similar assets”.
Three of the five board members on the new fund will be chosen by the US. It will have “A” shares and golden shares. America will receive all the royalties until Ukraine has paid off at least $100bn of war debt to the US, with 4pc interest added – less than the $350bn floated earlier by Mr Trump but still half of Ukraine’s GDP, and unpayable.
Ukraine has only “B’ shares and will receive 50pc of the royalties only once its arrears are paid off.
The fund is registered in Delaware but under New York jurisdiction. The US has the first right of refusal on all projects. It has authority to examine the books and accounts of any Ukrainian ministry or agency whenever it wants during working hours.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/03/27/revealed-trump-plan-force-ukraine-restore-putin-gas-empire/
Dr Bryce Edwards doesn’t always get it right, (IMO.) But this is on the button.
https://democracyproject.substack.com/p/integrity-briefing-nzs-trust-crisis?r=aax0&utm_medium=ios&triedRedirect=true
“For the first time in the 25 years of the Edelman Trust Barometer being published, New Zealand’s overall trust index has fallen into outright distrust territory – dropping to 47%, below the global average of 56%. Perhaps most telling, a full 67% of New Zealanders report moderate to high levels of grievance toward institutions, believing that government, business and “the wealthy” actively disadvantage ordinary people. Such findings point to a country “divided by mistrust,” where scepticism has deepened into a pervasive sense that the system is rigged in favour of an elite few.”
“That fight is now underway in New Zealand, in town halls, on talkback radio, across social media, and in everyday conversations. It’s messy and fraught, but it signals an engaged citizenry. In raising their voices, New Zealanders are asserting ownership of their democracy. This rising political awareness and demand for change may be just what the country needs to renew its social contract – to ensure New Zealand remains not a playground for the wealthy few, but a society where everyone has a stake and a say. The path forward is clear: heed the calls for reform, address the grievances, and in doing so, begin to restore the trust that is so vital for a healthy, functioning democracy.”
Dr Sanjana Hattotuwa:
.
The 2025 Acumen Edelman Trust Barometer (AETB) makes for very grim reading. As the AETB starts off by noting,
And goes on to stress,
[…]
My reading focussed less on business, and more on the broader captures of society, sense-making, trust, social cohesion, and media, and information ecologies.
Key points
The full slide deck of the AETB report is only available for free after registering on the website, and worth the effort. It’s data heavy, but the infographics make for interesting, if not downright disturbing reading.
https://sanjanah.wordpress.com/2025/03/28/trust-in-freefall-what-2025-acumen-edelman-barometer-reveals-about-new-zealands-future/
He hits a note of optimism. "There are signs that politicians are beginning to get the message." Someone gave him an extremely powerful microscope?
His analysis also displays a lack of focus on the way political parties fail to represent the voters on an authentic basis. Perhaps one could argue that they default to representing partisans instead of the common good because democracy was designed to be oppositional instead of forming common ground.
Funny how he goes back to a rerun of Corbyn/Sanders instead of learning why they failed. Grievances producing reformers only works as causal influence when folks become motivated by common interests. You'd think he'd have intellect sufficient to grasp this – but he seems to get the global trend of subsiding trust in the establishment.
They're unconcerned about appearing trustworthy or giving a toss.
It'll be double down on the BS, media poodles in tow outgunning the opposition resources by multiples.
That new sth akl hospital after the absolute kicking they've given the health system one of many cynical plays to come no doubt.
That is a very good piece from Edwards..a coherent explanation of where we are..
…and where we need to go..
..and soon…
And it must be a wake-up call for labour..
..and a blueprint for what they have to do..
(I recommend going to the link..and reading the whole piece..)
Is that it?
An RFI! Wow, prices are going to tumble. /sarc
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/556597/nicola-willis-considers-structural-separation-of-retail-grocery-market
Rewhiting 'Murica's history.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2025/03/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-restores-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/
Meanwhile….
/
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/556560/act-mp-launches-member-s-bill-to-stop-universities-offering-services-based-on-race
https://bsky.app/profile/acgeddis.bsky.social/post/3llindzagmk2d
Corporation capital and provision of services within nation states – a case study.
Sky knows NZR has an internal problem with the management of the professional game and working with the provincial unions (who manage the amateur club game), so makes a low ball offer for Super Rugby that excludes coverage of the NPC and FPC games. As one "professional" body to another.
It is also considering selling out to DAZN (who have bought FOXTEL in Oz), who are the other known bidder for Super Rugby coverage.
It is likely the locally owned Sky would perceive loss of the Super Rugby coverage as providing a reason for selling to the foreign DAZN (to reduce reaction from their customers).
It would appear Sky has this issue to consider. It does not seem to have a long term capacity to provide outdoor sports coverage. The five year contract is only to 2030.
Options might include working with government and TVNZ to restore domestic outdoor sports coverage capability for the provincial game – with a view of providing domestic capability for Super rugby (maybe with an Oz based partner, such as STAN) beyond 2030.
Another factor is TVNZ is no longer providing free to air broadcast from 2027. On line service only, or otherwise via cable/satellite provider.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_(New_Zealand)
There is currently legislation before a Select Committee on stalking.
One thing this nation does not have is case law on this. Because we may be the only first world democratic nation state without such legislation.
Thus the identification of stalking and gaslighting behaviour as criminal or sociopathic behaviour has yet to occur in case law. Only tenuously in the defence made by counsel representing those who have abused women. Or in the practice of police who profile a person as the type who might be guilty, because their evidential case is so weak.
The absence of stalking legislation is one reason why we are land safe for predators and those who protect them.
This is not just about individual behaviour, but also group behaviour against individuals.
He is totally correct, all the policy was designed to achieve was to reduce the waiting list for emergency housing.
National always designs policies of this sort, such as reducing waiting lists in health care without providing more treatment to those in need. That is also not a policy designed to make things worse, only to make National look better without doing anything.
https://www.1news.co.nz/2025/03/30/bishop-denies-emergency-housing-policy-leading-to-homelessness/
It doesn’t matter what he believes or doesn’t, it’s a distraction; what matters is what he wants us to believe or not. Pierce through the smokescreen of seven veils and see what he’s really done.
Chan kiddies with nukes.
/
https://x.com/HouseForeignGOP/status/1906008542382879094
The Gleeful Cruelty of the White House X Account
Welcome to the 4chan administration.
On March 18, the official White House account on X posted two photographs of Virginia Basora-Gonzalez, a woman who was arrested earlier this month by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The post described her as a “previously deported alien felon convicted of fentanyl trafficking,” and celebrated her capture as a win for the administration. In one photograph, Basora-Gonzalez is shown handcuffed and weeping in a public parking lot.
The White House account posted about Basora-Gonzalez again yesterday—this time, rendering her capture in the animated style of the beloved Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki, who co-founded the animation company Studio Ghibli. Presumably, whoever runs the account had used ChatGPT, which has been going viral this week for an update to its advanced “4o” model that enables it to transform photographs in the style of popular art, among other things. The White House did not respond directly to a request for comment, instead referring me to a post by Deputy Communications Director Kaelan Dorr that says, in part, “The arrests will continue. The memes will continue.”
[…]
Beyond the fact that this kind of shitposting is so obviously beneath the office, the posts are genuinely sinister. By adding a photo of an ICE arrest to a light-hearted viral trend, for instance, the White House account manages to perfectly capture the sociopathic, fascistic tone of ironic detachment and glee of the internet’s darkest corners and most malignant trolls. The official X account of the White House isn’t just full of low-rent 4chan musings, it’s an alarming signal of an administration that’s fluent in internet extremism and seemingly dedicated to pursuing its casual cruelty as a chief political export.
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2025/03/gleeful-cruelty-white-house-x-account/682234/?
https://archive.li/99aUW
On a positive note, there's progress being made in the general direction of using carbon dioxide as fuel. Nature invented plants for that purpose, but industrial level high tech systems could stabilise atmospheric carbon dioxide.
There may be other options but these give us an idea of scientific progress happening nowadays. Someone oughta tell Elon to stop being Trump's bloodhound trying to nose out Deep State agents, and put his money behind one of these development projects. Even if he finds them, they will likely tell him they receive their orders anonymously and folks will then assume the control system is extraterrestrial. Yeah I know plenty already do but we don't need to multiply them…
Those are ambulances at the bottom of the cliff as remedials for global warming. Cut emissions first.
Up the Wahs