The database failed to automatically restart this morning after 0600 after a fallover and restart. After I realised it wasn't running (ie I finally read my e-mail) it took a while to figure out what was wrong.
Turns out that the default thread_stack size was now too small for the grant tables loading. Can’t see how… but whatever. That prevented the daatabase server from starting.
Not sure how that happened? The existing config for that was set back in about 2010 at 128K which was 2x the default then. Now reset to 512K. The default on mariadb is current ~300K
Which indicates that the size of the data was was now sufficient to tip over the thread stack. Probably why it crashed in the first place.
I'll let a optimizer have a look at the settings later and see what it comes up with. Went down several blind alleys like warning about upgrades to table formats first.
This is telling as to the direction of the USA, infrastructure maintenance and all that.
WASHINGTON, March 1 (Reuters) – The Trump administration has pulled the plug on a team of tech-savvy civil servants that helped to build the Internal Revenue Service’s free tax-filing service and revamp websites across government, a spokesperson for the General Service Administration said on Saturday.
GSA’s Director of Technology Transformation Services Thomas Shedd notified employees of a digital service team known as 18F that their jobs had been terminated as they had been identified as “non-critical."
Roughly 90 18F employees were immediately locked out of their devices.
The GSA said the action had been taken in support of a number of executive orders, including the "Implementing the President’s Department of Government Efficiency Workforce Optimization Initiative," dated February 11.
Billionaire Elon Musk, who leads the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency team, earlier this month responded to a post on X that called 18F a "far-left government-wide computer office" by saying the group has been "deleted."
First launched in 2014 under former President Barack Obama, the 18F team was housed within GSA and helped federal agencies improve their digital services.
Yeah, sounds to me like they are making a already difficult systems more shaker and less accessible.
Compare it to here. As someone who is a self-employed pensioner doing part-time remote contract, and who has some investments. NZ has been doing the exact opposite and it is great.
Most of the taxable infor is already at the hands of the IRD – MSD for super, PIR at investment companies, and bank. I just set tax rates on each.
For the self-employment I use Hnry. Pay most of the expenses directly through their visa card, just attach receipts as images or PDFs, and if they are shared expenses (home office, vehicles) state the percentages that is taxable. Hnry does the GST, does the depreciation of the >$1000 equipment, and acts as the tax agent for the profits – paying tax as I go.
I tell Hnry about the other income so we estimate probable tax rates correctly. I stay on top of expenses and claim everything related to my business. It is a low impact job, apart from working backwards and putting the earier expenses in for the FY in October.
I pay Hnry as my accounting and tax app 1% of income invoiced through them. They do all of the Accounts Payable and taxes.
At the end of the financial year, the IRD puts everything together, tells Hnry, and we figure out the variance. It won't be much because I was careful about the expected tax (of about 18-19% – lot of time without income over the last FY).
This is ALL done with computers and is very low friction. Which is good because if is was too much of a hassle, then I'd probably look at if I want to work as self-employed at all.
I have been using the IRD as my tax agent prior to this because I was doing PAYE, PIR, and bank. I didn't bother filing a return because there wasn't enough money in the return to use my time on it. I was always slightly overtaxed. But less than a few days of my time, and I've usually been less short of time than money for my entire working life. How did I know?
GSA’s Director of Technology Transformation Services Thomas Shedd notified employees of a digital service team known as 18F that their jobs had been terminated as they had been identified as “non-critical."
The MyIR – the IRD website has for many years had the information available for me to check it.
I suspect that Thomas Shedd has financial interests in accountants.
AI hallucinations at the core of government and military infrastructure.
Generative AI is currently reasonably useful, but only in sandboxed modes. The evolutionary AI used for things like PCB designs or molecule designs are actually more useful. Especially if we could backtrack why some of those designs are so damn efficient.
It isn't likely to get much better in the medium term.
A heroic stand in US senate: Corey Booker, New Jersey's first Black Senator, has been dismantling Trump's America in the Senate for more than 24 hours, including questions from the floor.
They were certainly Hitler's false teeth. But "Eva Braun's" teeth were wrong as were some other body parts and damage. It is all good for a bit of speculation!
When Brexit bites you in the bum and it’s the same with the Treaty Principles Bill: when you start something important and claim to follow due process, you ought to see it through as promised and accept the consequences. By breaking your promise and reneging on your commitment, you show the people of NZ that this was a cynical political stunt all along and anti-democratic.
the Greens do have a big problem… As my former colleague here at KP Lew and other have written on social media in the past few days, the Greens problem is one of candidate vetting, not candidate lifestyles.
As I see it, the Greens spend too much time living in an alternative identity bubble, trying to tick as many rainbow and alternative lifestyle boxes as is possible (Doyle claims to be a “pansexual,” … I have heard that they wanted to add polyamory to their electoral platforms
Spreading the love around is what hippies were into, so you won't get me into any problem with polyamory!
The Greens were episodically effective when they were watermelons–red on the inside and green on the outside. They were fairly effective as “teals”–blue on the inside and green on the outside. But other than people like Chloe Swarbrick, who is in fact a smart and effective politician, and perhaps Steve Abel as an environmental purist, the Green Party has become a hodgepodge of identitarian grievance and defence. It is increasingly not relatable to anything other than those in their identity bubbles and while individuals like Swarbrick may be able to carry the party on her election coattails, they appear to be enmeshed in a self-inflicted political death spiral due to the character of their caucus. https://www.kiwipolitico.com/2025/04/the-greens-identity-bubble-problem/
Too subjective, methinks, but many leftists are – so no real problem. Also, the party seems to have stabilised around 10% of electoral support, so their serial tendency to produce controversies is unlikely to seriously concern them!
Laura Walters pierces though Winston Peters’ anti-woke spin & bulldust.
But the positivity with which Peters and the Prime Minister unveiled the ferry plan fails to acknowledge the looming costs of future port infrastructure work, and the near $1 billion in sunk costs and break fees already borne because of the ferry debacle.
Luxon’s pathetic replies (they’re not answers) clearly show that PPPs in his thinking are sources of funding, which is what banks and the likes are for (he should have a word with Banker John).
Indeed, Rob Campbell explained recently:
The issue we have is not the availability of investment money. We could do much more than we do to effectively use such funding available domestically, let alone the ability to borrow. The sort of deals being proposed now will include substantial overseas borrowing as the funds leverage what equity they may commit. And many such deals provide for equity realisation, making this no different to debt from a balance of payments point of view. Neither the equity nor the debt component will be cheaper than the Government funding directly.
In regards the Hansard excerpt, it is frustrating that there don't seem to be anyone who is good in the house in The Greens.
Swarbrick has a good point about how much profit the PM is willing to tolerate us funding.
"How much private profit is he comfortable asking New Zealanders to fork out for his public-private partnerships…."
Unfortunately the question then goes on to make points about the tax system, unproductive speculation and the IMF being de-growth.
"…because he refuses to unlock domestic capital by fixing our tax system, which currently incentivises unproductive speculative investment in housing, recommended by known degrowth institutions like the IMF?"
If the question had stopped at the first 18 words, there was little wriggle room for Luxon and an opportunity to pin him down. Instead Luxon (we can all agree is poor in the house) could waffle and end up attacking Green policy.
I would love for to know how much profit Luxon is willing for me to pay for.
..did a commentary on one a little while back…my heart wasn't really in it…and I found the actual question time interactions somewhat mundane and dreary..
Obviously, you pin it down with a question with a single point.
I kinda agree about QT, soap opera for political tragics. That's why I have a lot of sympathy for TPM MPs in refusing to front to the Privileges Committee.
They are out of practice, as per the populations of many countries-the American people need to get up on their hind legs and fix this rapid move to authoritarianism.
I'm gonna start following the little elections. There's 2 coming up for the vacant gaetz and Walz? Seats in Florida. Carville says the fascinating one will be Gov of Virginia..not till Nov though.
he doesn't care, but others do, including business people and Republicans. He still doesn't have absolute power or enough support. If he moves too soon he will lose, otherwise he would have done it already.
And again, martial law will only work if the military obey him.
There's a short convo here about the courts. Lynn has more faith in that process holding than I do, but you have less. I don't think anyone knows at this point, and I am a fan of keeping our minds open to things working out.
It's been heartening to see people standing up to him, at home and internationally. I also think the moves against Musk matter, he's lost a lot of money in Tesla and with the Wisconsin vote, and the blow to his fragile ego isn't nothing, but also his reputation especially as he's been whining about it in the media.
I don't think it's a done deal, but it does feel precarious and dangerous.
I wan't thinking of civil war between the States, but that's probably a risk as well. I was thinking more of what happens if there are enough people in the military that refuse to take part in a military coup. There will be plenty of military people fucked off about what Trump is doing. If enough do refuse, I think the local, private militias will get involved, they're spoiling for a fight anyway. I would guess Trump's team has a plan for them already. There are shit ton of people in the US with firearms as well.
Climate Bonds Initiative CEO Sean Kidney and SOAS Centre for Sustainable Finance Professor Ulrich Volz today announced they were exploring the setting up of a “5 Degree Investment Fund” that will focus on investments likely to boom as climate change gets severe.
… Volz said “the idea is that the Fund would be used as an opportunity for investors to hedge against the growing failure to take action on climate change. The climate catastrophe will create enormous opportunities for the discerning investor. We plan to be among those.”
However, he also noted that on current trajectories of climate change it may require greater ambition. “We are also considering launching a ‘Runaway Climate Change Fund’ which would invest primarily in ventures to escape into space and colonise other planets.”
All nation states have a right to defend themselves. But do regimes enjoy an equal right to self-defence? Is the security of a particular party-in-power a fundamental right of nations? The Chinese government is asking ...
A modest attempt to analyse Donald Trump’s tariff policies.Alfred Marshall, whose text book was still in use 40 years after he died wrote ‘every short statement about economics is misleading with the possible exception of my present one.’ (The text book is 719 pages.) It’s a timely reminder that any ...
If nothing else, we have learned that the economic and geopolitical turmoil caused by the Trump tariff see-saw raises a fundamental issue of the human condition that extends beyond trade wars and “the markets.” That issue is uncertainty and its centrality to individual and collective life. It extends further into ...
To improve its national security, South Korea must improve its ICT infrastructure. Knowing this, the government has begun to move towards cloud computing. The public and private sectors are now taking a holistic national-security approach ...
28 April 2025 Mournfor theDead FightFor theLiving Every week in New Zealand 18 workers are killed as a consequence of work. Every 15 minutes, a worker suffers ...
The world is trying to make sense of the Trump tariffs. Is there a grand design and strategy, or is it all instinct and improvisation? But much more important is the question of what will ...
OPINION:Yesterday was a triumphant moment in Parliament House.The “divisive”, “disingenous”, “unfair”, “discriminatory” and “dishonest” Treaty Principles Bill, advanced by the right wing ACT Party, failed.Spectacularly.11 MP votes for (ACT).112 MP votes against (All Other Parties).As the wonderful Te Pāti Māori MP, Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke said: We are not divided, but united.Green ...
The Pacific Response Group (PRG), a new disaster coordination organisation, has operated through its first high-risk weather season. But as representatives from each Pacific military leave Brisbane to return to their home countries for the ...
The Treaty Principles Bill has been defeated in Parliament with 112 votes in opposition and 11 in favour, but the debate about Te Tiriti and Māori rights looks set to stay high on the political agenda. Supermarket giant Woolworths has confirmed a new operating model that Workers First say will ...
1. What did Seymour say after his obnoxious bill was buried 112 to 11?a. Watch this spaceb. Mea culpac. I am not a crookd. Youse are all such dumbasses2. Which lasted longest?a. Liz Trussb. Trump’s Tariffsc. The Lettuced. Too soon to say but the smart money’s on the vegetable 3. ...
And this is what I'm gonna doI'm gonna put a call to you'Cause I feel good tonightAnd everything's gonna beRight-right-rightI'm gonna have a good time tonightRock and roll music gonna play all nightCome on, baby, it won't take longOnly take a minute just to sing my songSongwriters: Kirk Pengilly / ...
The Indonesian military has a new role in cybersecurity but, worryingly, no clear doctrine on what to do with it nor safeguards against human rights abuses. Assignment of cyber responsibility to the military is part ...
The StrategistBy Gatra Priyandita and Christian Guntur Lebang
Another Friday, another roundup. Autumn is starting to set in, certainly getting darker earlier but we hope you enjoy some of the stories we found interesting this week. This week in Greater Auckland On Tuesday we ran a guest post from the wonderful Darren Davis about what’s happening ...
Long stories shortest:The White House confirms Donald Trump’s total tariffs now on China are 145%, not 125%. US stocks slump again. Gold hits a record high. PM Christopher Luxon joins a push for a new rules-based trading system based around CPTPP and EU, rather than US-led WTO. Winston Peters ...
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, including Donald Trump’s shock and (partial) backflip; and,Health Coalition Aotearoa Chair ...
USAID cuts and tariffs will harm the United States’ reputation in the Pacific more than they will harm the region itself. The resilient region will adjust to the economic challenges and other partners will fill ...
National's racist and divisive Treaty Principles Bill was just voted down by the House, 112 to 11. Good fucking riddance. The bill was not a good-faith effort at legislating, or at starting a "constitutional conversation". Instead it was a bad faith attempt to stoke division and incite racial hatred - ...
Democracy watch Indonesia’s parliament passed revisions to the country’s military law, which pro-democracy and human rights groups view as a threat to the country’s democracy. One of the revisions seeks to expand the number of ...
The StrategistBy Linus Cohen, Astrid Young and Alice Wai
Australia should follow international examples and develop a civilian cyber reserve as part of a whole-of-society approach to national defence. By setting up such a reserve, the federal government can overcome a shortage of expertise ...
A ballot for three Member's Bills was held today, and the following bills were drawn: Life Jackets for Children and Young Persons Bill (Cameron Brewer) Sale and Supply of Alcohol (Restrictions on Issue of Off-Licences and Low and No Alcohol Products) Amendment Bill (Mike Butterick) Crown ...
Te Whatu Ora is proposing to slash jobs from a department that brings in millions of dollars a year and ensures safety in hospitals, rest homes and other community health providers. The Treaty Principles Bill is back in Parliament this evening and is expected to be voted down by all parties, ...
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has repeatedly asserted the country’s commitment to a non-aligned foreign policy. But can Indonesia still credibly claim neutrality while tacitly engaging with Russia? Holding an unprecedented bilateral naval drills with Moscow ...
The NZCTU have launched a new policy programme and are calling on political parties to adopt bold policies in the lead up to the next election. The Government is scrapping the 30-day rule that automatically signs an employee up to the collective agreement when they sign on to a new ...
Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te must have been on his toes. The island’s trade and defence policy has snapped into a new direction since US President Donald Trump took office in January. The government was almost ...
Auckland’s ongoing rail pain will intensify again from this weekend as Kiwirail shut down the network for two weeks as part of their push to get the network ready for the City Rail Link. KiwiRail will progress upgrade and renewal projects across Auckland’s rail network over the Easter holiday period ...
This is a re-post from The Electrotech Revolution by Daan Walter Last week, UK Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch took the stage to advocate for slowing the rollout of renewables, arguing that they ultimately lead to higher costs: “Huge amounts are being spent on switching round how we distribute electricity ...
That there, that's not meI go where I pleaseI walk through wallsI float down the LiffeyI'm not hereThis isn't happeningI'm not hereI'm not hereSongwriters: Philip James Selway / Jonathan Richard Guy Greenwood / Edward John O'Brien / Thomas Edward Yorke / Colin Charles Greenwood.I had mixed views when the first ...
(A note to subscribers:I’m going to keep these daily curated news updates shorter in future to ensure an earlier and more regular delivery.Expect this format and delivery around 7 am Monday to Friday from now on. My apologies for not delivering yesterday. There was too much news… This ...
As Donald Trump zigs and zags on tariffs and trashes America’s reputation as a safe and stable place to invest, China has a big gun that it could bring to this tariff knife fight. Behind Japan, China has the world’s second largest holdings of American debt. As a huge US ...
Civilian exploration may be the official mission of a Chinese deep-sea research ship that sailed clockwise around Australia over the past week and is now loitering west of the continent. But maybe it’s also attending ...
South Korea’s internal political instability leaves it vulnerable to rising security threats including North Korea’s military alliance with Russia, China’s growing regional influence and the United States’ unpredictability under President Donald Trump. South Korea needs ...
Here are 5 updates that you may be interested in today:Speed kills and costs - so why does National want more of it?James (Jim) Grenon Board Takeover Gets Shaky - As Canadian Calls An Australian Shareholder a “Flake” Billionaire Bust-ups -The World’s Richest Men Are UncomfortableOver 3,500 Australian doctors on ...
Australia is in a race against time. Cyber adversaries are exploiting vulnerabilities faster than we can identify and patch them. Both national security and economic considerations demand policy action. According to IBM’s Data Breach Report, ...
The ever brilliant Kate Nicholls has kindly agreed to allow me to re-publish her substack offering some under-examined backdrop to Trump’s tariff madness. The essay is not meant to be a full scholarly article but instead an insight into the thinking (if that is the correct word) behind the current ...
In the Pacific, the rush among partner countries to be seen as the first to assist after disasters has become heated as part of ongoing geopolitical contest. As partners compete for strategic influence in the ...
The StrategistBy Miranda Booth, Henrietta McNeill and Genevieve Quirk
We’ve seen this morning the latest step up in the Trump-initiated trade war, with the additional 50 per cent tariffs imposed on imports from China. If the tariff madness persists – but in fact even if were wound back in some places (eg some of the particularly absurd tariffs on ...
Weak as I am, no tears for youWeak as I am, no tears for youDeep as I am, I'm no one's foolWeak as I amSongwriters: Deborah Ann Dyer / Richard Keith Lewis / Martin Ivor Kent / Robert Arnold FranceMorena. This morning, I couldn’t settle on a single topic. Too ...
Australian policy makers are vastly underestimating how climate change will disrupt national security and regional stability across the Indo-Pacific. A new ASPI report assesses the ways climate impacts could threaten Indonesia’s economic and security interests ...
So here we are in London again because we’re now at the do-it-while-you-still-can stage of life. More warm wide-armed hugs, more long talks and long walks and drinks in lovely old pubs with our lovely daughter.And meanwhile the world is once more in one of its assume-the-brace-position stages.We turned on ...
Hi,Back in September of 2023, I got pitched an interview:David -Thanks for the quick response to the DM! Means the world. Re-stating some of the DM below for your team’s reference -I run a business called Animal Capital - we are a venture capital fund advised by Noah Beck, Paris ...
I didn’t want to write about this – but, alas, the 2020s have forced my hand. I am going to talk about the Trump Tariffs… and in the process probably irritate nearly everyone. You see, alone on the Internet, I am one of those people who think we need a ...
Maybe people are only just beginning to notice the close alignment of Russia and China. It’s discussed as a sudden new phenomenon in world affairs, but in fact it’s not new at all. The two ...
The High Court has just ruled that the government has been violating one of the oldest Treaty settlements, the Sealord deal: The High Court has found the Crown has breached one of New Zealand's oldest Treaty Settlements by appropriating Māori fishing quota without compensation. It relates to the 1992 ...
Darwin’s proposed Middle Arm Sustainable Development Precinct is set to be the heart of a new integrated infrastructure network in the Northern Territory, larger and better than what currently exists in northern Australia. However, the ...
Local body elections are in October, and so like a lot of people, I received the usual pre-election enrolment confirmation from the Orange Man in the post. And I was horrified to see that it included the following: Why horrified? After all, surely using email, rather ...
Australia needs to deliver its commitment under the Seoul Declaration to create an Australian AI safety, or security, institute. Australia is the only signatory to the declaration that has yet to meet its commitments. Given ...
Ko kōpū ka rere i te paeMe ko Hine RuhiTīaho mai tō arohaMe ko Hine RuhiDa da da ba du da da ba du da da da ba du da da da da da daDa da da ba du da da ba du da da da ba du da da ...
Army, Navy and AirForce personnel in ceremonial dress: an ongoing staffing exodus means we may get more ships, drones and planes but not have enough ‘boots on the ground’ to use them. Photo: Lynn GrievesonLong stories short in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning:PM Christopher Luxon says the Government can ...
If you’re a qualified individual looking to join the Australian Army, prepare for a world of frustration over the next 12 to 18 months. While thorough vetting is essential, the inefficiency of the Australian Defence ...
I’ve inserted a tidbit and rumours section1. Colonoscopy wait times increase, procedures drop under NationalWait times for urgent, non-urgent and surveillance colonoscopies all progressively worsened last year. Health NZ data shows the total number of publicly-funded colonoscopies dropped by more than 7 percent.Health NZ chief medical officer Helen Stokes-Lampard blamed ...
Three billion dollars has been wiped off the value of New Zealand’s share market as the rout of global financial markets caught up with the local market. A Sāmoan national has been sentenced for migrant exploitation and corruption following a five-year investigation that highlights the serious consequences of immigration fraud ...
This is a guest post by Darren Davis. It originally appeared on his excellent blog, Adventures in Transitland, which we encourage you to check out. It is shared by kind permission. Rail Network Investment Plan quietly dropped While much media attention focused on the 31st March 2025 announcement that the replacement Cook ...
Amendments to Indonesia’s military law risk undermining civilian supremacy and the country’s defence capabilities. Passed by the House of Representatives on 20 March, the main changes include raising the retirement age and allowing military officers ...
The StrategistBy Alfin Febrian Basundoro and Jascha Ramba Santoso
So New Zealand is about to spend $12 billion on our defence forces over the next four years – with $9 million of it being new money that is not being spent on pressing needs here at home. Somehow this lavish spend-up on Defence is “affordable,” says PM Christopher Luxon, ...
Donald Trump’s philosophy about the United States’ place in the world is historically selfish and will impoverish his country’s spirit. While he claimed last week to be ‘liberating’ Americans from the exploiters and freeloaders who’ve ...
China’s crackdown on cyber-scam centres on the Thailand-Myanmar border may cause a shift away from Mandarin, towards English-speaking victims. Scammers also used the 28 March earthquake to scam international victims. Australia, with its proven capabilities ...
At the 2005 election campaign, the National Party colluded with a weirdo cult, the Exclusive Brethren, to run a secret hate campaign against the Greens. It was the first really big example of the rich using dark money to interfere in our democracy. And unfortunately, it seems that they're trying ...
Many of you will know that in collaboration with the University of Queensland we created and ran the massive open online course (MOOC) "Denial101x - Making sense of climate science denial" on the edX platform. Within nine years - between April 2015 and February 2024 - we offered 15 runs ...
How will the US assault on trade affect geopolitical relations within Asia? Will nations turn to China and seek protection by trading with each other? The happy snaps a week ago of the trade ministers ...
I mentioned this on Friday - but thought it deserved some emphasis.Auckland Waitematā District Commander Superintendent Naila Hassan has responded to Countering Hate Speech Aotearoa, saying police have cleared Brian Tamaki of all incitement charges relating to the Te Atatu library rainbow event assault.Hassan writes:..There is currently insufficient evidence to ...
With the report of the recent intelligence review by Heather Smith and Richard Maude finally released, critics could look on and wonder: why all the fuss? After all, while the list of recommendations is substantial, ...
Well, I don't know if I'm readyTo be the man I have to beI'll take a breath, I'll take her by my sideWe stand in awe, we've created lifeWith arms wide open under the sunlightWelcome to this place, I'll show you everythingSongwriters: Scott A. Stapp / Mark T. Tremonti.Today is ...
Staff at Kāinga Ora are expecting details of another round of job cuts, with the Green Party claiming more than 500 jobs are set to go. The New Zealand Defence Force has made it easier for people to apply for a job in a bid to get more boots on ...
Australia’s agriculture sector and food system have prospered under a global rules-based system influenced by Western liberal values. But the assumptions, policy approaches and economic frameworks that have traditionally supported Australia’s food security are no ...
Following Trump’s tariff announcement, US stock values fell by the most ever in value terms (US$6.6 trillion). Photo: Getty ImagesLong story shortest in Aotearoa’s political economy this morning:Donald Trump just detonated a neutron bomb under the globalised economy, but this time the Fed isn’t cutting interest rates to rescue ...
A listing of 36 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, March 30, 2025 thru Sat, April 5, 2025. This week's roundup is again published by category and sorted by number of articles included in each. The formatting is a ...
This is a longer read.Summary:Trump’s tariffs are reckless, disastrous and hurt the poorest countries deeply. It will stoke inflation, and may cause another recession. Funds/investments around the world have tanked.Trump’s actions emulate the anti-economic logic of another right wing libertarian politician - Liz Truss. She had her political career cut ...
We are all suckers for hope.He’s just being provocative, people will say, he wouldn’t really go that far. They wouldn’t really go that far.Germany in the 1920s and 30s was one of the world’s most educated, culturally sophisticated, and scientifically advanced societies.It had a strong democratic constitution with extensive civil ...
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 Mars warming? Mars’ climate varies due to completely different reasons than Earth’s, and available data indicates no temperature trends comparable to Earth’s ...
Max Harris and Max Rashbrooke discuss how we turn around the right wing slogans like nanny state, woke identity politics, and the inefficiency of the public sector – and how we build a progressive agenda. From Donald Trump to David Seymour, from Peter Dutton to Christopher Luxon, we are subject to a ...
Max Harris and Max Rashbrooke discuss how we turn around the right wing slogans like nanny state, woke identity politics, and the inefficiency of the public sector – and how we build a progressive agenda. From Donald Trump to David Seymour, from Peter Dutton to Christopher Luxon, we are subject to a ...
The Green Party recognises the extension of visa allowances for our Pacific whānau as a step in the right direction but continues to call for a Pacific Visa Waiver. ...
The Government yesterday released its annual child poverty statistics, and by its own admission, more tamariki across Aotearoa are now living in material hardship. ...
Today, Te Pāti Māori join the motu in celebration as the Treaty Principles Bill is voted down at its second reading. “From the beginning, this Bill was never welcome in this House,” said Te Pāti Māori Co-Leader, Rawiri Waititi. “Our response to the first reading was one of protest: protesting ...
The Green Party is proud to have voted down the Coalition Government’s Treaty Principles Bill, an archaic piece of legislation that sought to attack the nation’s founding agreement. ...
A Member’s Bill in the name of Green Party MP Julie Anne Genter which aims to stop coal mining, the Crown Minerals (Prohibition of Mining) Amendment Bill, has been pulled from Parliament’s ‘biscuit tin’ today. ...
Labour MP Kieran McAnulty’s Members Bill to make the law simpler and fairer for businesses operating on Easter, Anzac and Christmas Days has passed its first reading after a conscience vote in Parliament. ...
Nicola Willis continues to sit on her hands amid a global economic crisis, leaving the Reserve Bank to act for New Zealanders who are worried about their jobs, mortgages, and KiwiSaver. ...
Today, the Oranga Tamariki (Repeal of Section 7AA) Amendment Bill has passed its third and final reading, but there is one more stage before it becomes law. The Governor-General must give their ‘Royal assent’ for any bill to become legally enforceable. This means that, even if a bill gets voted ...
Abortion care at Whakatāne Hospital has been quietly shelved, with patients told they will likely have to travel more than an hour to Tauranga to get the treatment they need. ...
Thousands of New Zealanders’ submissions are missing from the official parliamentary record because the National-dominated Justice Select Committee has rushed work on the Treaty Principles Bill. ...
Today’s announcement of 10 percent tariffs for New Zealand goods entering the United States is disappointing for exporters and consumers alike, with the long-lasting impact on prices and inflation still unknown. ...
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. ...
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 ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra It takes a bit for Labor not to preference the Greens but on Friday it was announced that in the Melbourne seat of Macnamara, where Jewish MP Josh Burns is embattled, the ALP will run ...
By Layla Bailey-McDowell, RNZ Māori news journalist Legal experts and Māori advocates say the fight to protect Te Tiriti is only just beginning — as the controversial Treaty Principles Bill is officially killed in Parliament. The bill — which seeks to redefine the principles of Te Tiriti o Waitangi — ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Wesley Morgan, Research Associate, Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW Sydney Australia’s relationship with its regional neighbours could be in doubt under a Coalition government after two Pacific leaders challenged Opposition Leader Peter Dutton over his weak climate stance. This week, ...
An additional tariff by the US on New Zealand exporters is harmful and the Minister of Trade has written to his American counterparts to tell them that. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sophia Staite, Lecturer in Humanities, University of Tasmania Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures Social media is ablaze with reports of kids going wild at screenings of A Minecraft Movie. Some cinemas are cracking down. There are reports of cinemas calling ...
The Treaty Principles Bill has been brutally defeated in Parliament. We have highlights from key speeches, and explain why its demise is so unusual. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hunter Fujak, Senior Lecturer in Sport Management, Deakin University Few issues in Australian sport generate as much media noise or emotional fan reactions as player movement, especially in our major winter codes the National Rugby League (NRL) and Australian Football League (AFL). ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Isabelle Ng, PhD candidate, College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University A couple of whip coral goby (_Bryaninops yongei_).randi_ang/Shutterstock Swim along the edge of a coral reef and you’ll often see schools of sleek, torpedo-shaped fishes gliding through the currents, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Charles Kemp, Professor, School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne Shutterstock Languages are windows into the worlds of the people who speak them – reflecting what they value and experience daily. So perhaps it’s no surprise different languages highlight different ...
A new poem by Daniel Frears. Pale Straw this season’s colour is pale straw a revelatory colour for an oh so special season it might mess with your head, or mine you can rub my belly like I was a dog. all actions are allowed in this .. phase. if ...
The only published and available best-selling indie book chart in New Zealand is the top 10 sales list recorded every week at Unity Books’ stores in High St, Auckland, and Willis St, Wellington.AUCKLAND1 The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins (Hay House, $32) “A truly helpful treatise on seeing ...
Tara Ward watches the return of The Handmaid’s Tale and discovers the dystopia of the future now feels all too real. If you like your television so bleak that you need to curl into a ball and rock back and forward afterwards, then clear the floor because I have great ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne A national YouGov poll, conducted April 4–10 from a sample of 1,505, gave Labor a 52.5–47.5 lead, a 1.5-point gain for Labor ...
Submissions close today on proposed reforms that would mark the most significant shakeup of fisheries in decades. Here’s what you need to know.On February 12, oceans and fisheries minister Shane Jones held up a wagging finger and a shiny, plastic-comb-bound document as Wellington’s downtown seagulls squawked overhead. Among a ...
This bill sought to fundamentally alter the meaning of Te Tiriti o Waitangi by selectively and incorrectly interpreting the reo Māori text, says E tū National Secretary Rachel Mackintosh. ...
Luxon has an opportunity to emerge as a stabiliser without the diplomatic risk of poking the bear in the White House. Last month, pundits from across the political spectrum were begging Christopher Luxon to add a modicum of clarity to the way he communicates after a disastrous interview with Mike ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brett Mitchell, Professor of Nursing and Health Services Research, University of Newcastle Annie Spratt/Unsplash Hospital-acquired infections are infections patients didn’t have when they were admitted to hospital. The most common include wound infections after surgery, urinary tract infections and pneumonia. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christina Hanna, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Planning, University of Waikato Christina Hanna, CC BY-SA Once floodwaters subside, talk of planned retreat inevitably rises. Within Aotearoa New Zealand, several communities from north to south – including Kumeū, Kawatiri Westport and parts ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Arian Wallach, Future Fellow in Ecology, Queensland University of Technology michael garner/Shutterstock In 1938, zoologist Ellis Le Geyt Troughton mourned that Australia’s “gentle and specialized creatures” were “unable to cope with changed conditions and introduced enemies”. The role of these ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Peetz, Laurie Carmichael Distinguished Research Fellow at the Centre for Future Work, and Professor Emeritus, Griffith Business School, Griffith University doublelee/Shutterstock Can the government actually make a difference to the wages Australians earn? A lot of attention always falls on ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ben Egliston, Senior Lecturer in Digital Cultures, Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow, University of Sydney Last week, Nintendo announced the June 5 release of its long anticipated Switch 2. But the biggest talking point wasn’t the console’s launch titles or features. At ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dan Woodman, TR Ashworth Professor in Sociology, The University of Melbourne Securing the welfare of future generations seems like solid grounds for judging policies and politicians, especially during an election campaign. Political legacies are on the line because the stakes are so ...
Well that was fun /sarc
The database failed to automatically restart this morning after 0600 after a fallover and restart. After I realised it wasn't running (ie I finally read my e-mail) it took a while to figure out what was wrong.
Turns out that the default thread_stack size was now too small for the grant tables loading. Can’t see how… but whatever. That prevented the daatabase server from starting.
Not sure how that happened? The existing config for that was set back in about 2010 at 128K which was 2x the default then. Now reset to 512K. The default on mariadb is current ~300K
Which indicates that the size of the data was was now sufficient to tip over the thread stack. Probably why it crashed in the first place.
I'll let a optimizer have a look at the settings later and see what it comes up with. Went down several blind alleys like warning about upgrades to table formats first.
This is telling as to the direction of the USA, infrastructure maintenance and all that.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/musks-doge-fires-federal-tech-team-that-built-free-tax-filing-site-2025-03-01/
Musk says DOGE is seeking $1T in savings (he will not) and yet this.
https://www.cpapracticeadvisor.com/2025/03/25/irs-cuts-may-cost-500-billion-in-lost-tax-revenue-as-taxpayers-exploit-system/157841/
75% of US scientists who answered Nature poll consider leaving.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00938-y
There are a few grandchildren of academics who left Europe going back.
Yeah, sounds to me like they are making a already difficult systems more shaker and less accessible.
Compare it to here. As someone who is a self-employed pensioner doing part-time remote contract, and who has some investments. NZ has been doing the exact opposite and it is great.
Most of the taxable infor is already at the hands of the IRD – MSD for super, PIR at investment companies, and bank. I just set tax rates on each.
For the self-employment I use Hnry. Pay most of the expenses directly through their visa card, just attach receipts as images or PDFs, and if they are shared expenses (home office, vehicles) state the percentages that is taxable. Hnry does the GST, does the depreciation of the >$1000 equipment, and acts as the tax agent for the profits – paying tax as I go.
I tell Hnry about the other income so we estimate probable tax rates correctly. I stay on top of expenses and claim everything related to my business. It is a low impact job, apart from working backwards and putting the earier expenses in for the FY in October.
I pay Hnry as my accounting and tax app 1% of income invoiced through them. They do all of the Accounts Payable and taxes.
At the end of the financial year, the IRD puts everything together, tells Hnry, and we figure out the variance. It won't be much because I was careful about the expected tax (of about 18-19% – lot of time without income over the last FY).
This is ALL done with computers and is very low friction. Which is good because if is was too much of a hassle, then I'd probably look at if I want to work as self-employed at all.
I have been using the IRD as my tax agent prior to this because I was doing PAYE, PIR, and bank. I didn't bother filing a return because there wasn't enough money in the return to use my time on it. I was always slightly overtaxed. But less than a few days of my time, and I've usually been less short of time than money for my entire working life. How did I know?
The MyIR – the IRD website has for many years had the information available for me to check it.
I suspect that Thomas Shedd has financial interests in accountants.
The agenda/plan is to place AI at the centre of government data.
https://techcrunch.com/2025/02/04/former-tesla-engineer-heading-government-agency-reportedly-outlines-ai-first-strategy/?guccounter=1
This is part of the wider Musk plan to partner government – contracts with Pentagon and NASA.
Yeah, that is what everyone needs.
AI hallucinations at the core of government and military infrastructure.
Generative AI is currently reasonably useful, but only in sandboxed modes. The evolutionary AI used for things like PCB designs or molecule designs are actually more useful. Especially if we could backtrack why some of those designs are so damn efficient.
It isn't likely to get much better in the medium term.
A heroic stand in US senate: Corey Booker, New Jersey's first Black Senator, has been dismantling Trump's America in the Senate for more than 24 hours, including questions from the floor.
Here is his live stream youtube channel. (12.30 still going).
The part I’m listening to him, the attack on Federal funding of science, equating it with The attack on intellectuals in Mao’s Cultural Revolution.
brave man. We need more people stepping up and fast.
I would like to see him get the next democratic nomination…with Bernie as his v.p…
At the pub quiz last night I was asked if I'd heard about the Argentinian President releasing WW2 files.
They then read from a report from the Israel Times. Included was that Adolf Hitler lived into the (or his) 60's and had 2 children.
I had a wee search but could only come up with this:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.timesofisrael.com/argentina-to-declassify-documents-about-nazi-ratline-escape-routes-after-wwii/amp/
Is it an April Fools thing or is there something else to this?
Whereas there's history to the scenario (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratlines_(World_War_II) I personally go with the dental analysis of his teeth found in the bunker…
They were certainly Hitler's false teeth. But "Eva Braun's" teeth were wrong as were some other body parts and damage. It is all good for a bit of speculation!
Tell us more…
When Brexit bites you in the bum and it’s the same with the Treaty Principles Bill: when you start something important and claim to follow due process, you ought to see it through as promised and accept the consequences. By breaking your promise and reneging on your commitment, you show the people of NZ that this was a cynical political stunt all along and anti-democratic.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/556877/prime-minister-doubles-down-on-allowing-exclusion-of-treaty-principles-bill-submissions
Pablo's view of the Greens is worth considering:
Spreading the love around is what hippies were into, so you won't get me into any problem with polyamory!
Too subjective, methinks, but many leftists are – so no real problem. Also, the party seems to have stabilised around 10% of electoral support, so their serial tendency to produce controversies is unlikely to seriously concern them!
Laura Walters pierces though Winston Peters’ anti-woke spin & bulldust.
But the positivity with which Peters and the Prime Minister unveiled the ferry plan fails to acknowledge the looming costs of future port infrastructure work, and the near $1 billion in sunk costs and break fees already borne because of the ferry debacle.
https://newsroom.co.nz/2025/04/01/coalition-consensus-on-peters-ferry-plan/
https://newsroom.co.nz/2025/03/31/a-short-guide-for-govt-politicians-living-in-a-fantasy-world-of-competition/#comment-337296
Rob Campbell writes an essay that could be entitled ‘Profits for Coalition Dummies’.
I’m quite sure that he’s referring to this question during Question Time: https://www.parliament.nz/en/pb/hansard-debates/rhr/document/HansS_20250325_061620000/6-question-no-6-prime-minister
Luxon’s pathetic replies (they’re not answers) clearly show that PPPs in his thinking are sources of funding, which is what banks and the likes are for (he should have a word with Banker John).
Indeed, Rob Campbell explained recently:
https://newsroom.co.nz/2025/03/17/no-free-lunch-in-overseas-investment-not-even-a-late-or-inedible-one/
This National-'led' Coalition are terrible managers of the economy but excel at populism and spin.
In regards the Hansard excerpt, it is frustrating that there don't seem to be anyone who is good in the house in The Greens.
Swarbrick has a good point about how much profit the PM is willing to tolerate us funding.
"How much private profit is he comfortable asking New Zealanders to fork out for his public-private partnerships…."
Unfortunately the question then goes on to make points about the tax system, unproductive speculation and the IMF being de-growth.
"…because he refuses to unlock domestic capital by fixing our tax system, which currently incentivises unproductive speculative investment in housing, recommended by known degrowth institutions like the IMF?"
If the question had stopped at the first 18 words, there was little wriggle room for Luxon and an opportunity to pin him down. Instead Luxon (we can all agree is poor in the house) could waffle and end up attacking Green policy.
I would love for to know how much profit Luxon is willing for me to pay for.
How do you stop a worm wriggling?
I must admit that I see little benefit from QT. It seems an anachronism with occasional entertainment value.
I used to do commentaries on it…
..hadn't watched it for years…
..did a commentary on one a little while back…my heart wasn't really in it…and I found the actual question time interactions somewhat mundane and dreary..
..so I ceased and desisted…
"How do you stop a worm wriggling?"
Obviously, you pin it down with a question with a single point.
I kinda agree about QT, soap opera for political tragics. That's why I have a lot of sympathy for TPM MPs in refusing to front to the Privileges Committee.
Muskrat goes down as Crawford wins Wisconsin Supreme Court position.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/wisconsin-supreme-court-election-results-rcna198353?fbclid=IwY2xjawJZhvRleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHeAbqmKh_tX0jXoj9D9wNqBLHIrF69We9cL8at2rmlK6UmRjsr7rHVnK1g_aem_1OQIKU7R9U1XQ42_FC–IA&_branch_match_id=1435812744780821488&utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=NBC%20News&utm_medium=social&_branch_referrer=H4sIAAAAAAAAAwXB3Q6CIBgA0LfpzkzXStpaw5qT7GdalnXDwPAvJPuwqJuevXOqvu%2F0zLYVz5Uwesi6bihrdbe%2Fx7On9N67Hfii4Lmsb3NiLu6nYWZ9rd6JFGHywm4geUw%2BW4z9UGD%2BbKOK9tmoyR4NWiGze%2FqbkEAwQWeB8o3HehdaGU3SNmk0TCE8qcgpKRMtdfYxidJpglIni8cuDZaWRfDgB6IQALUqKYeH0QLmB1YwqP8Z%2Fnj%2FuQAAAA%3D%3D
That is good news…
..the footage of republican town hall meetings (in staunchly republican areas) has been interesting…
…but of course trump needs that rage to build/explode…to justify him imposing martial law..and suspending elections…
Whose gonna stop him…?
They are out of practice, as per the populations of many countries-the American people need to get up on their hind legs and fix this rapid move to authoritarianism.
Read somewhere that the law will not slow/stop the Trump disaster.
We the people will. Maybe the protests seen so far will explode?
But that will be his excuse to trigger martial law…
It is somewhat depressing to realize it…but I don't see how he can be stopped…
There is no way he is planning to only be there for a couple of more years…
..he is there for the long haul..
I'm gonna start following the little elections. There's 2 coming up for the vacant gaetz and Walz? Seats in Florida. Carville says the fascinating one will be Gov of Virginia..not till Nov though.
this presumes the military will follow his orders.
He has been furiously replacing the military leadership with those professing loyalty to him…
They have to obey him…he is the commander in chief..
…if they don't…I think he can have them courtmartialed/shot…
..this coup is all planned out..
..the/his ducks are all in a row..
..we are about to enter a new age/era…
..the rule of king trump…
people in the military do disobey orders at times, and yes there are consequences. Which military people understand.
I think it's just as likely there will be civil war, in part because of military people refusing to serve a dictator.
That's assuming the legal challenges and elections over the next few years fail. Wisconsin gives us some hope.
Trump cares little about legal challenges…he owns the supreme court…
..and he cares even less about elections/election results..
..he will declare martial law..
..and none of that will matter a jot…
..I hope I am wrong… but I don't think I am..
he doesn't care, but others do, including business people and Republicans. He still doesn't have absolute power or enough support. If he moves too soon he will lose, otherwise he would have done it already.
And again, martial law will only work if the military obey him.
There's a short convo here about the courts. Lynn has more faith in that process holding than I do, but you have less. I don't think anyone knows at this point, and I am a fan of keeping our minds open to things working out.
https://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-21-03-2025/#comment-2029101
It's been heartening to see people standing up to him, at home and internationally. I also think the moves against Musk matter, he's lost a lot of money in Tesla and with the Wisconsin vote, and the blow to his fragile ego isn't nothing, but also his reputation especially as he's been whining about it in the media.
I don't think it's a done deal, but it does feel precarious and dangerous.
As far as timing is concerned..trump would like to have it happen before the mid-terms..
This if he can't shred the constitution in some way…
But I can't see him doing that on its own…he needs the military muscle behind whatever route he chooses..
This is the greatest challenge to the constitution…ever…
We can but hope it stands up to the attack on it by trump ..
..and yes…your scenario of a civil war between the states..cannot be discounted..
We do indeed live in troubled times…even more so than the Cuban missile crisis ..
..the difference this time is that the danger is coming from within…and is arguably more parlous…
I wan't thinking of civil war between the States, but that's probably a risk as well. I was thinking more of what happens if there are enough people in the military that refuse to take part in a military coup. There will be plenty of military people fucked off about what Trump is doing. If enough do refuse, I think the local, private militias will get involved, they're spoiling for a fight anyway. I would guess Trump's team has a plan for them already. There are shit ton of people in the US with firearms as well.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth%27s_energy_budget#Earth's_energy_imbalance_(EEI)
Poking fun at a real problem.