Starmer's "Labour" government in the UK refuses to clean up polluted rivers. But the courts have held they have to:
"The [Appeal Court] judges dismissed Reed’s argument that it was administratively unworkable to develop specific measures to clean up individual rivers, lakes and streams as is required by law under the water framework directive – legislation that aims to improve the quality of rivers, lakes and coastal waters."
The High Court had already held:
"The judge in the high court found that the government had unlawfully failed to assess and identify specific measures to achieve the legally mandatory targets for the waterbody."
Daylight saving ends this weekend. I am sick of getting up in the dark, surely if the time has to mucked about with (thank you Peter Dunn) it would be more logical to have it from equinox to equinox.
So the gist seems to be that the Greens are prioritising political representation of sub-cultures. Well and good insofar as nobody else is, but too much of a deviation from the primary purpose of the party. Chloe:
Her conspiracy theory is based on Winston's complaint but there's no explanation given as to who Winston is conspiring with. Do you believe it's in the best interests of the Greens that she explain the conspiracy further?
I agree with your first paragraph and it won't surprise me if they stay stuck in the 10% cul de sac, or even drop their vote. Not because of this, but because of the now many issues they’ve had with MPs in the past few years. Voters don’t like incompetency and the best thing the Greens have going for them atm in voting terms is that Labour aren’t performing that well. I hope they sort this pattern out (not least because I want their energies going to policy and connecting with voters rather than putting out fires), but it looks to me like it’s deep in GP culture.
It's not her conspiracy theory. The conspiracy is from a bunch of far right tweeters. A high profile pseudonymous account had screenshots of the Instagram posts and tried to get MSM to investigate because that account appears to think BD is a paedophile and/or a risk to kids in other ways.
I assume the MSM wouldn't touch it because it's was baseless innuendo.
On Friday (from memory) another high profile account who has much more reach into the mainstream tweeted about it. From memory, she or someone else soon after, tagged Winston Peters in.
A twitter storm ensued, with a lot of people basically saying BD is a paedophile.
Peters then tweeted what he did. The reason the MSM got involved was because the Deputy PM had said something very controversial. By the time they'd done due diligence and started reporting, the mob had been going hard for 3 days.
Peters is tying this to BD's support for gender transition, but it's hard to tell how much Peters is against that vs how much he just hates the left.
That's the conspiracy. It's basically about how the Greens are paedophiles and/or paedophile apologists. I have no doubt that there was organising going in the background.
It's a masterclass in political assassination. Both of BD, because taking down any Green MP is a tactical, and a queer one is a bonus. But also the Greens, who were once again caught on the backfoot having messed up around their candidate vetting (all that needed to happen was for BD to remove those posts before selection and then none of this would have happened).
Thanks for that comprehensive analysis. I accept your view. Seems like she saw it as a conspiracy and referred to it as such due to currency of the framing.
Peters probably thinks BD will flounder if he responds to his call for clarification. I suspect the situation would be best handled by the Greens via the co-leaders standing with him in support if he does want to respond – as long as they agreed prior on all the points to be made in public. That way they can fill in any gaps or clarify any points from their independent appraisal.
BD can emerge from the situation with dignity if he fronts well. A baptism of fire, as they say, but it could give him a reputation for speaking truth to power.
'Complete lack of self-awareness' award to the head of Pride for bringing up "stochastic terrorism.” Members of Pride were major contributors to the most obvious example of "stochastic terrorism” resulting in violence against vulnerable people in this country – at the Let Women Speak event in Auckland on 25 March 2023.
quite. It's such a weird blindspot in people who are otherwise capable of thinking and who have progressive values.
I was also thinking about the years of SM violence, including death and rape memes, against GC women. And the degree to which liberals would have reacted if that was directed at trans people, but basically sanctioned it by turning a blind eye and continuing to use terf as a slur.
Watching the live TrumpFather video stream on RNZ-he is waffling on with lie after lie, it is a pretty low rent affair, no big screen for charts etc. One thing is clear so far-big tax cuts for the 1%.
Tarrifs are a consumption tax on all citizens – a regressive tax. Combine that with slashing Federal programmes and you get the fiscal headroom to lower taxes on the richest even further. That was probably the plan all along.
If, after an initial period of pain, some American manufacturers on-shore processes that they had previously off-shored for reasons of wage arbitrage, that may help some non-rich people eventually. But those manufacturers will on-shore only if American wages are in the cellar and likely to stay there in the long term.
But those manufacturers will on-shore only if American wages are in the cellar and likely to stay there in the long term.
A 25% tariff on imported cars, would mean that there is substantial room for growth in US auto-workers salaries, before the locally-produced product would be out-priced by the imported one.
This is right out of the Trump playbook on revitalizing US industries, and on-shoring previously out-sourced production. It will be highly popular with the blue-collar workforce.
Big business don't want to do this (of course they want the cheapest possible production, so they can maximise their profits) – but Trump doesn't seem to be caring too much about them.
He's also talking about massive tariffs on non-US (constructed, owned and operated) shipping to the US. Which is entirely designed to re-invogorate the moribund US shipbuilding infrastructure. The international shipping cartels (who have been banking super-sized profits ever since Covid) are screaming blue-murder – but it doesn’t seem to be impacting Trump’s decision-making.
We're already seeing international companies who want to sell to the US announcing substantial new investment in US manufacturing – entirely to avoid the tariffs.
Is Trump intending to legislate a federal minimum wage?
because isn't it likely that businesses will pocket increase profit rather than passing it on to workers? And that workers will also face increased priced on goods?
The unionized movement seems to be pretty strong in the manufacturing sector – certainly the auto-workers union seems to be pro-tariffs. And the dockworkers union has been successful with recent strike action, in gaining concessions for their workers. I think there is a big difference employment difference between skilled and unionized workers, and minimum-wage employees in big box companies (Amazon, etc.)
The shift is from manufacturing in China (for example) + 25% tariff; to manufacturing in the US (without the tariff).
Either option is going to cost the business more than the current status quo.
So no extra profits to be pocketed.
Unlike the current shipping situation – where the global carrier lines have been pocketing record profits ever since Covid.
Everyone in the US is going to find cars (for example) are more expensive to buy. The difference is that there will be more jobs for US workers, and more profit being made locally, so more tax.
A 25% tariff on imported cars, would mean that there is substantial room for growth in US auto-workers salaries, before the locally-produced product would be out-priced by the imported one.
To be sure of that we'd need to know the existing differential wage rates between the US workers and workers in China etc, – and whether a 25% tariff is enough to even close that gap, let alone allow for growth in US wages.
I have my doubts, because off-shoring has both a short-term goal of more profit now through wage arbitrage, and a long-term goal of more profit forever by driving down first-world wages permanently.
We're already seeing announcements that international firms are planning to open manufacturing sites in the US – specifically to get around the tariffs.
There are also companies talking of pulling out manufacturing especially in Red states/counties.
I read somewhere that it'll take about three years for the auto-industry to utilise US manufacturing and there is not a lot of point in the investment because Trump could change his mind multiple times before that.
I was responding to Tiger Mountain's comment that one of the things to come out of the Trumpian rant this morning was that the top 1% would get a massive tax cut (in America). If you were to follow the link in my comment you would see that
Just 100 extremely wealthy families invested $2.6bn during the election cycle that put Trump back in the White House
Well ..for those who have long called for an end to globalisation..this must be liberation day ..
I guess they just didn't see it coming from a rightwing nut job like trump..
CBS has reported that the head of united auto workers union sez he likes what he sees so far .. looking forward to the tarrifs creating more jobs for Americans ..and of course protections for the American car industries…
Luxon will be sticking pins into a Trump doll today …he is knee capping global growth for the next couple of years when Luxon hopes to show a growing economy at the next election.
Whilst I agree T's style is authoritarian, it isn't ideological as far as I can see, just a reversion to America First from the early 20th century. Incidentally I posted to Daily Review last night a report that it is also sourced in technocracy.
It may liberate our Labour Party from capture by the right though! They've been advocates of neoliberalism way too long already. Wikipedia's section on NZ (see link below) credits Labour for their ideological conversion in the 1980s without citing any subsequent shift away from that…
Historian Elizabeth Shermer argued that the term gained popularity largely among left-leaning academics in the 1970s to "describe and decry a late twentieth-century effort by policymakers, think-tank experts, and industrialists to condemn social-democratic reforms and unapologetically implement free-market policies" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoliberalism
Not sure what you are reading, but there is plenty analysis out there of the US direction now towards authoritarianism. They're not even trying to hide it.
You can look up the signs of fascism and how fascism comes about.
Read some Sarah Kendzior, she's been writing about this since before the 2016 election.
I'm not seeking to disagree – you could easily be proven right. However my radar for fascism remains finely attuned despite the passage of time.
Like I've written onsite here several times in the past, I was a victim of fascist enforcement as a child and it remains my primary social influence. Sure, I was able to transcend it in adolescence enough to be mostly objective in analysis of it nowadays, but those early experiences were extremely visceral and reinforced on hundreds of days, possibly even thousands. It's a deep imprint.
Nah, his next term is when Trump ascends from kinghood to godhood, presumably with requisite pyramid, possibly hanging round long enough to be the first to have his brain uploaded to the Cloud.
I’ve already ordered my electric T Ford through Amazon with free MAGA hat and one year free use of X Premium.
There was a limited special with all of those things plus a small orange doll with non combable (because of the hairspray) 'floating' dolls hair. It was dressed in a suit with a tie almost to its knees and big shoes with removable shoe lifts (so you could make the doll limp along if more fun was wanted).
actually it does. Because Thatcher is a product of the old boys networking letting in the women that think like them.
When we say let's have women running things for a while, we don't assume all women are like Thatcher, Shipley, Richardson and so on. We assume women cover a wide range of politics, values, and behaviours, and that this will be reflected in governance. No-one is saying women are all egalitarian.
I also believe that women (as a group) are more likely to share power and find solutions that are based in valuing people and the environment. They will tip use towards egalitarianism again, which is one of the reasons why the old boys network controls who is allowed in.
You can look at the countries that did well by their people in the covid pandemic and which had strong female leadership.
Depends on how you define 'did well by their people during Covid' – many of those which had the lowest death rates – did not have women in power.
Also, the countries with arguably some of the most inconsistent and often chaotic responses (UK, US) – were also the ones which developed effective vaccines.
Yes, I read your explanation. However, I don't agree that it reflects the original point the OP made. Which was that "the world needs to be ruled by women"
Possessing an XX set of chromosomes doesn't (IMO) necessarily result in better country or world leadership. Nor does it necessarily shift the governance style.
again, people who say let women rule aren't talking about individuals, they're talking about women as a sex class. Women organise differently, this isn't a surprise.
Also, even if it were individual women in positions of power, once you get parity of female numbers in positions of power across society, things change naturally because again, on average, when looking at women as a class, women tend more towards sharing power and prioritising care of people and the environment.
#notallwomen etc
If you are looking for an explanation of that, it's not found in chromosomes, it's in evolution. Both humans being tribal and kin based, and women having social roles around childbirth, lactation and childrearing that make them more predisposed to caring.
Myself, I go further and say that women are hardwired because of our biology to care about the collective more. Again, not all women (obvs). But the bond between a mother and infant is deeply biological.
(in case anyone things I am being essentialist, I'm not saying that having female biology means women can only do child bearing or that all women have to do childbearing. The whole point is that women's drive for the collective also makes them good at other things).
"…women tend more towards sharing power and prioritising care of people and the environment." will mumblemumble to some apparent propensity that women have a stronger "drive towards the collective…"
Whether biological or environmental, any propensity like that would have shown up in organisational leadership after I don't know the last 20,000 years.
In the introduction to The Sacred Hoop – Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions, Allen outlines seven main themes in Native culture. These include multiple references to what she calls gynocracy (which I interpret not as rule by women, but the centering of women in societal organisation).
Traditional tribal lifestyles are more often gynocratic than not, and they are never patriarchal. These features make understanding tribal cultures essential to all responsible activists who seek life-affirming social change that can result in a real decrease in human and planetary destruction and in a real increase in quality of life for all inhabitants of planet earth.
…
Some distinguishing features of a woman-centered social system include free and easy sexuality and wide latitude in personal style. This latitude means that a diversity of people, including gay males and lesbians, are not denied and are in fact likely to be accorded honor. Also likely to be prominent in such systems are nurturing, pacifist, and passive males (as defined by western minds) and self-defining, assertive, decisive women. In many tribes, the nurturing male constitutes the ideal adult model for boys while the decisive, self-directing female is the ideal model to which girls aspire.
…
In tribal gynocratic systems a multitude of personality and character types can function positively within the social order because the systems are focused on social responsibility rather than on privilege and on the realities of the human constitution rather than on denial-based social fictions to which human beings are compelled to conform by powerful individuals within the society.
Tribal gynocracies prominently feature even distribution of goods among all members of the society on the grounds that First Mother enjoined cooperation and sharing on all her children.
One of the major distinguishing characteristics of gynocratic cultures is the absence of punitiveness as a means of social control.
…
Among gynocratic or gynocentric tribal peoples the welfare of the young is paramount, the complementary nature of all life forms is stressed, and the centrality of powerful women to social well-being is unquestioned.
Again, I feel compelled to point out that this isn’t native/good, white/bad. We’re talking systems here. And please, let’s resist the temptation to dismiss what Paula Gunn Allen is presenting by casting it in (anti) Noble Savage memes just because it challenges our own dominator socialisation.
It’s likely that all peoples have ancestors from egalitarian cultures if we go back far enough.
We similar patterns in Southern Māori, and we see the same destruction of those patterns via colonisation. Lots of other examples from around the world.
“Ask a feminist if that is true. I think it’s a safe assumption given the power imbalances inherent in most cultures from day one.”
There is feminist theory that disputes that patriarchy is the norm for Homo sapiens across all places and all time. There are other bodies of knowledge too eg some indigenous peoples dispute the ‘patriachy has always existed’ myth.
Women have no greater or worse governmental capacity than men, are just as stupid if often for different reasons, and there's no reason to believe they would do a better job running a country.
Just stop with essentialist tripe masquerading as virtue.
I asked Google re scientific evidence and got the AI overview:
scientific evidence suggests that men and women have evolved differently, particularly in reproductive strategies, physical characteristics, and some cognitive and behavioral traits, due to differing selective pressures and adaptations… The brain circuits of males use more testosterone and vasopressin, whereas female's brain circuits use oxytocin and estrogen.
So assuming the trad view of normalcy is correct seems unwise. That said, conforming to socially-endorsed behaviour prescriptions is why this country still suffers under neo-colonialism. I once asked my mother why she voted National when she was clearly not as stupid as my father and she said `women are supposed to support their husbands'. Duh!
The brain circuits of males use more testosterone and vasopressin, whereas female’s brain circuits use oxytocin and estrogen.
Instead of parroting Google AI, why don’t you explain what that actually means? Is your middle name Luke and are you even more stupid than your father?
It's not essentialist to understand the differences between women and men. I'm sure you've heard of oxytocin, so I'm curious why you think women and men are the same.
It's not about being greater or worse, it's about difference. It's not hard to parse that humans who have a child come out of their body and are immersed in life changing physiological changes as well as strong evolutionary pressures, would tend to care in different ways than humans that don't had that.
the problem isn't that women are better than men. It's that our sociopolitical systems have favoured male rule and this has skewed the ways in which both women and men behave and interact with the collective.
You ignored the relatively light-hearted nature of the podcast, but happy to misinterpret and cast aspersions on the one doing the reporting. My sincere apologies for daring to contribute,
right, but they impact on the country that has had the US charge tariffs, which means the economics don't work the same and they may want to rethink what they are doing with exports and imports elsewhere. If that’s not true, then why does the US charging tariffs matter?
It only impacts those (companies) that supply the US market.
Some will move production into the USA, others will move production to areas that have lower (10%) tariffs applied.
Others will do nothing – it might be there is no domestic US production alternative (not enough US workers, or will take years to build a plant and train up locals) and so they just sell at a higher price (old price + tariff) and make the same profit.
Adjustment
Some companies dependent on the US market will retrench – lay off workers.
Their countries will have a recession and import less. There would be downstream impacts on trade with other nations.
On the other hand
The impact on US exporters of retaliatory tariffs.
Layoffs in the USA.
The USA sees its military exports and global tech giants as immune to tariffs on movable goods.
But nations will cut back their use of US military supply and also dependence on US tech (in large part because the US is not seen as reliable/trustworthy).
One council has had a bright idea: "In Gwynedd in Wales, the council has pledged to spend the proceeds raised from its 150% hike in council tax on second homes directly on tackling homelessness." A similar earmarking of rates by councils here could be a possibility, too.
for all the naysayers about the Cass Review, this along makes it worthwhile. Because people with lifelong medical injuries as well as transition regret, have been left without adequate healthcare. Transitions surgeries and hormone prescribing are still highly experimental. And the ideological basis of transition healthcare has meant a lot of denial that detrans people even exist or matter. Which has meant lots of transition surgeries and prescribing, without long term follow up, care or research into adverse effects. That's a medical scandal.
If we are talking about unfortunate experiments (current)..the one going on with those with 'p' issues..bears investigation..
..I am unsure of the twisted logic used…but a 'cure' for those with a liking for go-fast…
..is to give them a lifelong addiction to an opiate…that is more addictive/harder to kick than heroin…
..they are being prescribed methadone…
..which..to my mind ..sets a whole new benchmark for the cure being worse that what it purports to heal…
..and is unbelievably stupid..
(Bear with me here.. it's relevant)…during my opiate/cocaine etc etc years..my favourite was heroin and cocaine mixed together and taken intravenously..it's called a speedball (despite the name speed comes nowhere near it..)
Back to now:..a short time ago I had a conversation with a drug counselor about this .
I pointed out to him that aside from the idea that a lifelong addiction to an opiate is a cure for anything..is barking mad..
..my take is that now..that they will be getting their methadone…and then going to their p-dealer..
I'm sure there are a range just like with doctors generally. But yes, I think doctors become surgeons because they like the technical aspects, over the social ones. And no doubt there is a lot of gratification and peer validation from doing cutting edge surgeries.
"These operations have a high risk of having urethral stenosis, urethral fistula, and postmicturition dribble. The complication rate of FTM surgery is higher than MTF surgery (40% vs. 25%). A suggested body mass index cutoff is 35 kg/m2 for patients desiring RFFF phalloplasty (39)".
He is adding 1.9% to our 15% GST. Why? GST is not a tariff.
And it is irrelevant – Trump's lowest tariff is 10%.
He says ours is 20%, that of the UK and Oz at 10% and we all get a tariff wall at 10% (on top of existing tariffs).
Our response should be some group/organisation tasked with assessing the worlds tariffs on the USA (nation by nation, as at 20 January 2025), the new American tariffs on top of their existing ones – the facts, not Trump speak.
The lie about New Zealand’s rate.
1.we are unlikely to challenge the lie, if we are at the lowest rate 10%
2.they would look bad (hypocrites) applying 10% on a nation with only 2% tariff on their exports.
We should show an appreciation of their circumstance and help them out by applying a reciprocal tariff of 10% on some of their exports.
James Surowiecki: “Just figured out where these fake tariff rates come from. They didn’t actually calculate tariff rates + non-tariff barriers, as they say they did. Instead, for every country, they just took our trade deficit with that country and divided it by the country’s exports to us. So we have a $17.9 billion trade deficit with Indonesia. Its exports to us are $28 billion. $17.9/$28 = 64%, which Trump claims is the tariff rate Indonesia charges us. What extraordinary nonsense this is.”
The thing it that it apparently only counts "Goods" and not "Services" and the USA is far ahead on "Services". Time for a highly trusted nation to start providing "Services".
The USA don't have a sales tax at the federal level but they do have it at the state and county level so, if they are going to count GST/VAT, we should include those in our defintion of the tariffs they impose on us.
The POTUS 47 era will cause the sort of economic and political dislocation within years what was forecast for climate change over decades.
The market uncertainty is based on revaluation of companies impacted and macroeconomic impact on national economies – recessionary (non USA) and stagflation in USA (tariff impact on inflation, demand for workers in production relocated to the USA and decline in consumer spending because of higher price – with regional variation).
And the good news is that the dip shit who leaked an image to Slater adjacent POS Marc Spring of Golriz Ghahraman being questioned outside a supermarket has been identified and sacked.
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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 ...
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 ...
Starmer's "Labour" government in the UK refuses to clean up polluted rivers. But the courts have held they have to:
"The [Appeal Court] judges dismissed Reed’s argument that it was administratively unworkable to develop specific measures to clean up individual rivers, lakes and streams as is required by law under the water framework directive – legislation that aims to improve the quality of rivers, lakes and coastal waters."
The High Court had already held:
"The judge in the high court found that the government had unlawfully failed to assess and identify specific measures to achieve the legally mandatory targets for the waterbody."
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/apr/02/ministers-lose-appeal-against-yorkshire-anglers-river-pollution-ruling
Shame on Labour UK. One hopes a Labour/Green/TPM coalition would be more enlightened.
Putting Thames Water into administration, then turning it into a Crown entity, would be a start.
True
If recently, like me, you've found the squabbling about Russia/Ukraine/US a bit of a mystery, here is a once over lightly history of NATO.
It's origins, intents and a look at its future. Tensions from the French and the US dominance of the organisation.
Rest assured it comes from a liberal point of view, he is no fan of Trump but deals with him fairly even-handedly.
https://halfarsedhistory.net/tag/north-atlantic-treaty-organisation/
BTW, the podcast series is wide ranging with subjects from Xerxes to monuments to Sir Donald Bradman to history of sayings.
Daylight saving ends this weekend. I am sick of getting up in the dark, surely if the time has to mucked about with (thank you Peter Dunn) it would be more logical to have it from equinox to equinox.
Agree.
I hate losing light at the end of the day when I am trying to get things done outside. You can’t win but at least we both get our needs met on a year
Great excuse not to go to work to early if it's dark till after 7 and I'm going to miss my evening golf round
def a rural/city divide on this one I think.
As mad as a hatter without the mercury.
Weirdly enough alot of the meth and coke coming into NZ pass through Canada.
He must have checkers looking over his tweets to make sure he doesn't make an ass of himself. And even the checkers don't understand what is going on.
Very good write up on the social media and Peters attacks on Green MP Benjamin Doyle by David Fisher.
https://removepaywalls.com/https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/anatomy-of-a-scandal-green-mp-benjamin-doyles-case-explained/SI3DQ4LWCBGDXEIJCKIMMMJ5PA/
So the gist seems to be that the Greens are prioritising political representation of sub-cultures. Well and good insofar as nobody else is, but too much of a deviation from the primary purpose of the party. Chloe:
Her conspiracy theory is based on Winston's complaint but there's no explanation given as to who Winston is conspiring with. Do you believe it's in the best interests of the Greens that she explain the conspiracy further?
I agree with your first paragraph and it won't surprise me if they stay stuck in the 10% cul de sac, or even drop their vote. Not because of this, but because of the now many issues they’ve had with MPs in the past few years. Voters don’t like incompetency and the best thing the Greens have going for them atm in voting terms is that Labour aren’t performing that well. I hope they sort this pattern out (not least because I want their energies going to policy and connecting with voters rather than putting out fires), but it looks to me like it’s deep in GP culture.
It's not her conspiracy theory. The conspiracy is from a bunch of far right tweeters. A high profile pseudonymous account had screenshots of the Instagram posts and tried to get MSM to investigate because that account appears to think BD is a paedophile and/or a risk to kids in other ways.
I assume the MSM wouldn't touch it because it's was baseless innuendo.
On Friday (from memory) another high profile account who has much more reach into the mainstream tweeted about it. From memory, she or someone else soon after, tagged Winston Peters in.
A twitter storm ensued, with a lot of people basically saying BD is a paedophile.
Peters then tweeted what he did. The reason the MSM got involved was because the Deputy PM had said something very controversial. By the time they'd done due diligence and started reporting, the mob had been going hard for 3 days.
Peters is tying this to BD's support for gender transition, but it's hard to tell how much Peters is against that vs how much he just hates the left.
That's the conspiracy. It's basically about how the Greens are paedophiles and/or paedophile apologists. I have no doubt that there was organising going in the background.
It's a masterclass in political assassination. Both of BD, because taking down any Green MP is a tactical, and a queer one is a bonus. But also the Greens, who were once again caught on the backfoot having messed up around their candidate vetting (all that needed to happen was for BD to remove those posts before selection and then none of this would have happened).
Just left linking two threads here.
The world needs more women leaders and the (to be kind) 'situation' The Greens are in.
The party most inclined to be inclusivee and the forest fires they have been fighting. Granted Shaw was around Kerekere, Gharaman, Tana, now Doyle.
The behavior of Kerekere and Tana in particular is nothing to be proud of.
Less the chromosomes more the aspiration to be wary of.
Thanks for that comprehensive analysis. I accept your view. Seems like she saw it as a conspiracy and referred to it as such due to currency of the framing.
Peters probably thinks BD will flounder if he responds to his call for clarification. I suspect the situation would be best handled by the Greens via the co-leaders standing with him in support if he does want to respond – as long as they agreed prior on all the points to be made in public. That way they can fill in any gaps or clarify any points from their independent appraisal.
BD can emerge from the situation with dignity if he fronts well. A baptism of fire, as they say, but it could give him a reputation for speaking truth to power.
'Complete lack of self-awareness' award to the head of Pride for bringing up "stochastic terrorism.” Members of Pride were major contributors to the most obvious example of "stochastic terrorism” resulting in violence against vulnerable people in this country – at the Let Women Speak event in Auckland on 25 March 2023.
quite. It's such a weird blindspot in people who are otherwise capable of thinking and who have progressive values.
I was also thinking about the years of SM violence, including death and rape memes, against GC women. And the degree to which liberals would have reacted if that was directed at trans people, but basically sanctioned it by turning a blind eye and continuing to use terf as a slur.
So at least 10%…and if he adds our gst..it's gonna get ugly …
Watching the live TrumpFather video stream on RNZ-he is waffling on with lie after lie, it is a pretty low rent affair, no big screen for charts etc. One thing is clear so far-big tax cuts for the 1%.
Gotta pay the Piper
Tarrifs are a consumption tax on all citizens – a regressive tax. Combine that with slashing Federal programmes and you get the fiscal headroom to lower taxes on the richest even further. That was probably the plan all along.
If, after an initial period of pain, some American manufacturers on-shore processes that they had previously off-shored for reasons of wage arbitrage, that may help some non-rich people eventually. But those manufacturers will on-shore only if American wages are in the cellar and likely to stay there in the long term.
A 25% tariff on imported cars, would mean that there is substantial room for growth in US auto-workers salaries, before the locally-produced product would be out-priced by the imported one.
This is right out of the Trump playbook on revitalizing US industries, and on-shoring previously out-sourced production. It will be highly popular with the blue-collar workforce.
Big business don't want to do this (of course they want the cheapest possible production, so they can maximise their profits) – but Trump doesn't seem to be caring too much about them.
He's also talking about massive tariffs on non-US (constructed, owned and operated) shipping to the US. Which is entirely designed to re-invogorate the moribund US shipbuilding infrastructure. The international shipping cartels (who have been banking super-sized profits ever since Covid) are screaming blue-murder – but it doesn’t seem to be impacting Trump’s decision-making.
We're already seeing international companies who want to sell to the US announcing substantial new investment in US manufacturing – entirely to avoid the tariffs.
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/24/south-korea-hyundai-us-investment.html
Is Trump intending to legislate a federal minimum wage?
because isn't it likely that businesses will pocket increase profit rather than passing it on to workers? And that workers will also face increased priced on goods?
The unionized movement seems to be pretty strong in the manufacturing sector – certainly the auto-workers union seems to be pro-tariffs. And the dockworkers union has been successful with recent strike action, in gaining concessions for their workers. I think there is a big difference employment difference between skilled and unionized workers, and minimum-wage employees in big box companies (Amazon, etc.)
The shift is from manufacturing in China (for example) + 25% tariff; to manufacturing in the US (without the tariff).
Either option is going to cost the business more than the current status quo.
So no extra profits to be pocketed.
Unlike the current shipping situation – where the global carrier lines have been pocketing record profits ever since Covid.
Everyone in the US is going to find cars (for example) are more expensive to buy. The difference is that there will be more jobs for US workers, and more profit being made locally, so more tax.
To be sure of that we'd need to know the existing differential wage rates between the US workers and workers in China etc, – and whether a 25% tariff is enough to even close that gap, let alone allow for growth in US wages.
I have my doubts, because off-shoring has both a short-term goal of more profit now through wage arbitrage, and a long-term goal of more profit forever by driving down first-world wages permanently.
We're already seeing announcements that international firms are planning to open manufacturing sites in the US – specifically to get around the tariffs.
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/24/south-korea-hyundai-us-investment.html
The US unions seem to be highly pro-tariff, as well. And I'm sure they've got a very sharp eye on the benefits to their members.
There are also companies talking of pulling out manufacturing especially in Red states/counties.
I read somewhere that it'll take about three years for the auto-industry to utilise US manufacturing and there is not a lot of point in the investment because Trump could change his mind multiple times before that.
Link to examples?
I was hoping to avoid trawling through r/LeopardsAteMyFace/ because it's very busy and was maybe a week ago but I'll go and look now. :->
I mis-remembered. This isn't due to tariffs but due to Trump pulling Biden's tax breaks for green energy. Trump weasled out on paying – usual story.
https://www.ajc.com/news/business/freyr-cancels-26b-battery-factory-it-promised-to-build-in-georgia/VI3JQTLRGRBJJEL5WAQYOSLXUE/
And the reddit post
https://www.reddit.com/r/LeopardsAteMyFace/comments/1ixqh07/freyr_cancels_26b_battery_factory_it_promised_to/
I was responding to Tiger Mountain's comment that one of the things to come out of the Trumpian rant this morning was that the top 1% would get a massive tax cut (in America). If you were to follow the link in my comment you would see that
Trump is repaying their investment.
Well ..for those who have long called for an end to globalisation..this must be liberation day ..
I guess they just didn't see it coming from a rightwing nut job like trump..
CBS has reported that the head of united auto workers union sez he likes what he sees so far .. looking forward to the tarrifs creating more jobs for Americans ..and of course protections for the American car industries…
Not sure it is the end of globalisation, but that may be a consequence.
It's not a liberation, it's a descent into authoritarianism.
The end of globalisation was meant to be a transition to sustainability and fairness for workers, not this unfolding hellscape.
Of course in America's case it is a 'descent into authoritarianism'..
..I am noting the ironies here…
Trump has done one clever thing…all the monies collected will be paid into a separate entity…
..so he will be able to show the 'good' the tarrifs are…for his populist base…
It's a smart move…
..as they say..'he's as cunning as a rat with a gold toothpick'..
Love that expression…
Luxon will be sticking pins into a Trump doll today …he is knee capping global growth for the next couple of years when Luxon hopes to show a growing economy at the next election.
Or Luxon will be burning incense in front of Trump's statue because he now has a plausible excuse for not achieving anything…
Whilst I agree T's style is authoritarian, it isn't ideological as far as I can see, just a reversion to America First from the early 20th century. Incidentally I posted to Daily Review last night a report that it is also sourced in technocracy.
It may liberate our Labour Party from capture by the right though! They've been advocates of neoliberalism way too long already. Wikipedia's section on NZ (see link below) credits Labour for their ideological conversion in the 1980s without citing any subsequent shift away from that…
Tariffs repudiate that status quo rather forcefully, so this site outlines how pragmatic reversion to nationalist economic policy is "progressive": https://www.americanprogress.org/article/a-trade-strategy-for-the-post-neoliberal-world/
Not sure what you are reading, but there is plenty analysis out there of the US direction now towards authoritarianism. They're not even trying to hide it.
You can look up the signs of fascism and how fascism comes about.
Read some Sarah Kendzior, she's been writing about this since before the 2016 election.
I'm not seeking to disagree – you could easily be proven right. However my radar for fascism remains finely attuned despite the passage of time.
Like I've written onsite here several times in the past, I was a victim of fascist enforcement as a child and it remains my primary social influence. Sure, I was able to transcend it in adolescence enough to be mostly objective in analysis of it nowadays, but those early experiences were extremely visceral and reinforced on hundreds of days, possibly even thousands. It's a deep imprint.
I’ve already ordered my electric T Ford through Amazon with free MAGA hat and one year free use of X Premium.
Surely they will throw in a 'trump was right about everything' hat .?..you'd think..?
The rest of the World has no idea how right Trump is.
Nah, his next term is when Trump ascends from kinghood to godhood, presumably with requisite pyramid, possibly hanging round long enough to be the first to have his brain uploaded to the Cloud.
More likely cryovaced until his resurrection, a modern day mummy
Kingship first.
Yep. King < Emperor < Theocrat.
Hehehe – Make America Grate Again.
There was a limited special with all of those things plus a small orange doll with non combable (because of the hairspray) 'floating' dolls hair. It was dressed in a suit with a tie almost to its knees and big shoes with removable shoe lifts (so you could make the doll limp along if more fun was wanted).
You must have been too slow…….
A Tesla would've been better. Then you can keep repeat ordering auto parts.
It's gaining support from some Dems as well.
https://www.axios.com/2025/03/16/democrats-trump-tariffs-economy
US looks as though it's heading back into a period of isolationism – which is not historically unusual.
A delightful and refreshing RNZ podcast with Guyon Espiner and Sam Neill:
https://www.rnz.co.nz/series – 30 mins.
Sam's reckons:
The two outstanding PMs in NZ – Jacinda Ardern and Helen Clark.
The reason the world is going to hell in a handbasket (my expression) is because it has been ruled forever by toxic males.
The answer: the world needs to be ruled by women.
permanent link
https://www.rnz.co.nz/programmes/30-with-guyon-espiner/story/2018981177/sam-neill
I agree about too many "toxic" sociopathic males at the top.
However Shipley, Bennet, Collins, Richardson were not really any improvement.
Only one was PM for a short period and never elected.
And yet the harm they have done lives on for decades
Like thatcher, richerdson , bennet ,collins , and not forgetting Ben and jerries favorite nicki no boats
I don't think that the example of Margaret Thatcher (longest serving British PM of the 20th century) serves your argument well.
actually it does. Because Thatcher is a product of the old boys networking letting in the women that think like them.
When we say let's have women running things for a while, we don't assume all women are like Thatcher, Shipley, Richardson and so on. We assume women cover a wide range of politics, values, and behaviours, and that this will be reflected in governance. No-one is saying women are all egalitarian.
I also believe that women (as a group) are more likely to share power and find solutions that are based in valuing people and the environment. They will tip use towards egalitarianism again, which is one of the reasons why the old boys network controls who is allowed in.
You can look at the countries that did well by their people in the covid pandemic and which had strong female leadership.
Depends on how you define 'did well by their people during Covid' – many of those which had the lowest death rates – did not have women in power.
Also, the countries with arguably some of the most inconsistent and often chaotic responses (UK, US) – were also the ones which developed effective vaccines.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/06/26/coronavirus-pandemic-global-response-devi-sridhar-review/
https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2023-opinion-lessons-learned-from-covid-pandemic-global-comparison/
And Thatcher is a prime example that just having XX chromosomes doesn't translate into outstanding leadership, or into a change in governance style.
I just addressed that. Did you not read my explanation?
Yes, I read your explanation. However, I don't agree that it reflects the original point the OP made. Which was that "the world needs to be ruled by women"
Possessing an XX set of chromosomes doesn't (IMO) necessarily result in better country or world leadership. Nor does it necessarily shift the governance style.
again, people who say let women rule aren't talking about individuals, they're talking about women as a sex class. Women organise differently, this isn't a surprise.
Also, even if it were individual women in positions of power, once you get parity of female numbers in positions of power across society, things change naturally because again, on average, when looking at women as a class, women tend more towards sharing power and prioritising care of people and the environment.
#notallwomen etc
If you are looking for an explanation of that, it's not found in chromosomes, it's in evolution. Both humans being tribal and kin based, and women having social roles around childbirth, lactation and childrearing that make them more predisposed to caring.
Myself, I go further and say that women are hardwired because of our biology to care about the collective more. Again, not all women (obvs). But the bond between a mother and infant is deeply biological.
(in case anyone things I am being essentialist, I'm not saying that having female biology means women can only do child bearing or that all women have to do childbearing. The whole point is that women's drive for the collective also makes them good at other things).
What bullshit. You'd see a vast history of women far outweighing men in forming collectives of all kinds.
Why?
Oh I don't know some woo about
"…women tend more towards sharing power and prioritising care of people and the environment." will mumblemumble to some apparent propensity that women have a stronger "drive towards the collective…"
Whether biological or environmental, any propensity like that would have shown up in organisational leadership after I don't know the last 20,000 years.
Indeed. And it did.
https://thestandard.org.nz/the-patriarchy-is-not-inevitable/
We similar patterns in Southern Māori, and we see the same destruction of those patterns via colonisation. Lots of other examples from around the world.
and this
https://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-26122014/#comment-944388
Isn't she Thatcher, hated by many for destroying lives and jobs on a scale richardson could only dream of?
Yeah…yeah…good on Sam…!..for having an opinion..
..but his gender based claim for better politicians…
..is basically a load of simplistic tosh ..
Women have no greater or worse governmental capacity than men, are just as stupid if often for different reasons, and there's no reason to believe they would do a better job running a country.
Just stop with essentialist tripe masquerading as virtue.
I asked Google re scientific evidence and got the AI overview:
So assuming the trad view of normalcy is correct seems unwise. That said, conforming to socially-endorsed behaviour prescriptions is why this country still suffers under neo-colonialism. I once asked my mother why she voted National when she was clearly not as stupid as my father and she said `women are supposed to support their husbands'. Duh!
Instead of parroting Google AI, why don’t you explain what that actually means? Is your middle name Luke and are you even more stupid than your father?
It's not essentialist to understand the differences between women and men. I'm sure you've heard of oxytocin, so I'm curious why you think women and men are the same.
It's not about being greater or worse, it's about difference. It's not hard to parse that humans who have a child come out of their body and are immersed in life changing physiological changes as well as strong evolutionary pressures, would tend to care in different ways than humans that don't had that.
the problem isn't that women are better than men. It's that our sociopolitical systems have favoured male rule and this has skewed the ways in which both women and men behave and interact with the collective.
I have seen the claim that men are 3 times more likely than women to be sociopaths
You ignored the relatively light-hearted nature of the podcast, but happy to misinterpret and cast aspersions on the one doing the reporting. My sincere apologies for daring to contribute,
Narcissism is treatable you know.
does the US change on tariff impact on international trade agreements?
They have no impact on how other nations trade with each other.
right, but they impact on the country that has had the US charge tariffs, which means the economics don't work the same and they may want to rethink what they are doing with exports and imports elsewhere. If that’s not true, then why does the US charging tariffs matter?
Phase One
It only impacts those (companies) that supply the US market.
Some will move production into the USA, others will move production to areas that have lower (10%) tariffs applied.
Others will do nothing – it might be there is no domestic US production alternative (not enough US workers, or will take years to build a plant and train up locals) and so they just sell at a higher price (old price + tariff) and make the same profit.
Adjustment
Some companies dependent on the US market will retrench – lay off workers.
Their countries will have a recession and import less. There would be downstream impacts on trade with other nations.
On the other hand
The impact on US exporters of retaliatory tariffs.
Layoffs in the USA.
The USA sees its military exports and global tech giants as immune to tariffs on movable goods.
But nations will cut back their use of US military supply and also dependence on US tech (in large part because the US is not seen as reliable/trustworthy).
On the topic of council rates, increasing numbers of councils in the UK are attaching higher rates to second/holiday homes. Air B&B means that homes in rural areas have disappeared for the locals, as out-of-towners buy a holiday home and fund it via short-term rentals, taking both homes and long-term rentals out of the locality.
One council has had a bright idea: "In Gwynedd in Wales, the council has pledged to spend the proceeds raised from its 150% hike in council tax on second homes directly on tackling homelessness." A similar earmarking of rates by councils here could be a possibility, too.
Wellington Council might apply different rates for AirBnB accommodations:
Finally at least one healthcare system is intending to provide healthcare for detrans people.
from https://x.com/Transgendertrd/status/1907521960818659443
for all the naysayers about the Cass Review, this along makes it worthwhile. Because people with lifelong medical injuries as well as transition regret, have been left without adequate healthcare. Transitions surgeries and hormone prescribing are still highly experimental. And the ideological basis of transition healthcare has meant a lot of denial that detrans people even exist or matter. Which has meant lots of transition surgeries and prescribing, without long term follow up, care or research into adverse effects. That's a medical scandal.
An "unfortunate experiment"?
a very unfortunate experiment, on steroids.
If we are talking about unfortunate experiments (current)..the one going on with those with 'p' issues..bears investigation..
..I am unsure of the twisted logic used…but a 'cure' for those with a liking for go-fast…
..is to give them a lifelong addiction to an opiate…that is more addictive/harder to kick than heroin…
..they are being prescribed methadone…
..which..to my mind ..sets a whole new benchmark for the cure being worse that what it purports to heal…
..and is unbelievably stupid..
(Bear with me here.. it's relevant)…during my opiate/cocaine etc etc years..my favourite was heroin and cocaine mixed together and taken intravenously..it's called a speedball (despite the name speed comes nowhere near it..)
Back to now:..a short time ago I had a conversation with a drug counselor about this .
I pointed out to him that aside from the idea that a lifelong addiction to an opiate is a cure for anything..is barking mad..
..my take is that now..that they will be getting their methadone…and then going to their p-dealer..
Boom..!..instant (albeit low-rent) speedball high…
He told me that this is exactly what is happening now..
(It would be good if the media could start asking some questions about this ..
..yet another 'unfortunate experiment'..
..one happening here/now…
..this madness must be stopped…
Those new weight loss drugs seem to be promising if they help with alcohol good chamce theyll help with others.
Well that's surgeons for you. I have an impression that most are only interested in the actual procedure, not the patient (before, during or after).
I'm sure there are a range just like with doctors generally. But yes, I think doctors become surgeons because they like the technical aspects, over the social ones. And no doubt there is a lot of gratification and peer validation from doing cutting edge surgeries.
Quite a high "complications" rate for genital surgery.
More than you would ever want to know here.
https://jurolsurgery.org/articles/transgender-surgery-a-review-article/doi/jus.galenos.2021.2021.0076
"These operations have a high risk of having urethral stenosis, urethral fistula, and postmicturition dribble. The complication rate of FTM surgery is higher than MTF surgery (40% vs. 25%). A suggested body mass index cutoff is 35 kg/m2 for patients desiring RFFF phalloplasty (39)".
wow, that is quite the read.
"One major disadvantage of intestinal vaginoplasty is excessive discharge, which may be a social problem."
No kidding.
40% vs 25% is a significant difference. I wonder how much of that is anatomical/physiological, and how much is sex bias in medicine.
It is much easier to dig a hole than it is to build a pole!
Our trade minister says this
https://www.tickaroo.com/e/FPwYf45mVhvcJtLM
He is adding 1.9% to our 15% GST. Why? GST is not a tariff.
And it is irrelevant – Trump's lowest tariff is 10%.
He says ours is 20%, that of the UK and Oz at 10% and we all get a tariff wall at 10% (on top of existing tariffs).
Our response should be some group/organisation tasked with assessing the worlds tariffs on the USA (nation by nation, as at 20 January 2025), the new American tariffs on top of their existing ones – the facts, not Trump speak.
The lie about New Zealand’s rate.
1.we are unlikely to challenge the lie, if we are at the lowest rate 10%
2.they would look bad (hypocrites) applying 10% on a nation with only 2% tariff on their exports.
We should show an appreciation of their circumstance and help them out by applying a reciprocal tariff of 10% on some of their exports.
Anyway, apparently it's not about our GST.
James Surowiecki: “Just figured out where these fake tariff rates come from. They didn’t actually calculate tariff rates + non-tariff barriers, as they say they did. Instead, for every country, they just took our trade deficit with that country and divided it by the country’s exports to us. So we have a $17.9 billion trade deficit with Indonesia. Its exports to us are $28 billion. $17.9/$28 = 64%, which Trump claims is the tariff rate Indonesia charges us. What extraordinary nonsense this is.”
https://x.com/JamesSurowiecki/status/1907559189234196942
The thing it that it apparently only counts "Goods" and not "Services" and the USA is far ahead on "Services". Time for a highly trusted nation to start providing "Services".
Trump has been quite clear that he views sales taxes as regressive..
…and as a tariff..
..because they sit between American goods and customers…
Tariffs are also regressive and a way to afford lower taxes on the wealthy.
The states apply the consumption taxes in the USA.
The USA don't have a sales tax at the federal level but they do have it at the state and county level so, if they are going to count GST/VAT, we should include those in our defintion of the tariffs they impose on us.
If this post-Tariff disaster sharemarket stays as volatile as this, the Kiwisaver individual accounts are going to get smashed down.
Prepare to retire later all you people in your 60s late Boomers and 50s early GenXers.
The POTUS 47 era will cause the sort of economic and political dislocation within years what was forecast for climate change over decades.
The market uncertainty is based on revaluation of companies impacted and macroeconomic impact on national economies – recessionary (non USA) and stagflation in USA (tariff impact on inflation, demand for workers in production relocated to the USA and decline in consumer spending because of higher price – with regional variation).
People need to contact their Kiwisaver providers and ask closely which companies and markets they are most exposed to.
Those who moved from growth to conservative funds to avoid the Trumpeconomics impact will be smug.
And those fund managers who moved to gold etc, also.
As an assetless peasant I have no skin in the game but for those who do I would suggest investing in European arms companies – big days ahead
Ad's post on the US tariffs against NZ up now
https://thestandard.org.nz/us-imposes-10-tariff-on-nz-imports/
And the good news is that the dip shit who leaked an image to Slater adjacent POS Marc Spring of Golriz Ghahraman being questioned outside a supermarket has been identified and sacked.
(no link, for obvious reasons)