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notices and features - Date published:
5:30 pm, June 5th, 2025 - 10 comments
Categories: Daily review -
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Daily review is also your post.
This provides Standardistas the opportunity to review events of the day.
The usual rules of good behaviour apply (see the Policy).
Don’t forget to be kind to each other …
Consider the two stories of the day side by side and who walks home with the greater honour. It ain't the government.
NZ cops do not like charging white men, eh? Particularly those close to the National Party.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/christopher-luxon-speaks-after-deputy-press-secretary-michael-forbes-resigns-after-allegedly-recording-audio-and-taking-photos-of-women/TXIEEKWEV5G2DG7FYIYHPWJYPU/
Remember Jake Bezzant?
Andrew Falloon?
I see a pattern. The National party attracts sex pests, and that is a fact.
How many other men in and around the National Party are a danger to women? Hard to tell right now…
I always thought ACT MPs would make ‘good’ racists, but, ah, we'll see.
These things take time you know.
A bit of a wake-up call for me.
Deputy PM Seymour, defending division by wealth – with every fibre of his being.
Funny as, best news ever, TPM getting sent to naughty chair. Hipkins won't be happy.
Better than the Equal Pay Amendment Bill?

Chris Bishop must be almost as “very non-racist” as Attorney-General and Privileges Committee chairperson Judith ‘Crusher watch my eyebrows‘ Collins.
You might need more than two hands to count the number of times Duncan Grieve either assures us he is not excusing Chris Bishop's behaviour, or confirms that Chris Bishop is wrong, or confirms his opponents are right.
But that doesn't change the fact that he is excusing Chris Bishop’s behaviour, and confirming he's right, and his opponents are wrong.
Among the most concerning parts of Grieve's belief system is that dining table activism is enough, and as far as activism should ever go. It's what allows the well to do to pretend they're making a difference to (insert environment/social problem here) without subscribing to or endorsing actual direct activism on those issues. Grieve happily diminishes the Green Party on this point by directly by quoting, ugh, Luke Malpass.
Another concerning part is Grieve fully subscribes to the idea anything publicly funded must be apolitical including, in this case, the arts. The corollary is that anything privately funded is free to be as political as it wants. His beef, in his defence of Chris Bishop, is that Toitū Te Tiriti is fine as a concept but not as an organised movement, particularly if national treasures might incorporate that movement in their performance or in their criticism of loud, drunk ministers of the crown.
I think Greive is a closet nut job (perhaps he's just a businessman, but it's often the same thing), and in support of that what really struck was his use of Farrar's whataboutism. He indulged himself by innocently asking what if Groundswell or Family First had appeared at the AMAs.
WTF?
https://thespinoff.co.nz/politics/05-06-2025/what-was-chris-bishop-thinking-an-earnest-attempt-to-figure-it-out
Sorry Bishop was 100 % on the money.
[Was he now? Says who? On what arguments?
Your short social media salvos smell like troll turds. This is your warning – Incognito]
Mod note
Fascinating. Heather Duplicity-Allen (of the "Polynesians are leeches" vibe) has won the Paul Holmes (of the "cheeky darky" vibe) broadcaster of the year award:
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/media-insider/media-insider-radio-and-podcast-awards-newstalk-zb-wins-station-of-the-year-heather-du-plessis-allan-named-broadcaster-of-the-year/MDMSV3KWLRHG5JF4MR5RSZH754/