A very nasty story of Assange's deterioration Francesca. The cause of his crash mentally and physically may never know only conjectured. A blow to democracy.
A very interesting phenomenon. There is now a huge industry of independent "truth tellers/independent journalists" who endlessly recycle social media posts and write "exposes" recycling same while at the same time touting for donations to support their noble struggle often with large "click farms" of associated url's and social media accounts. The one truth about these operators is that their business plan depends on Assanges continued incarceration. They contribute nothing and their wall of white noise and misdirection impedes Assange in his struggle
I didn't realise that xanthe but I shouldn't be surprised. Everybody can present themselves as a journalist these days it seems. It is bad enough with people in the Fairfax papers with big Bylines giving Opinions and not even a sentence of background information on them. So nothing to advise you as to why they should lay their opinions on you and what line of career, education, culture or experience has built their perceptions and facts they have chosen to accept.
Thanks francesca – I feel guilty letting his welfare drop out of sight. So have to remember to keep thinking of him. At present I seems to be like a rabbit in the headlights watching Boorish and his Rubber Band play their discordant music in the UK. Need a good dose of Spitting Images I think to illustrate the Farrago of it all.
Yes good call – a childrens author just has a view like anyone else and shouldn't have a platform imo especially when the opinion is yucky,
A popular children's author has been asked not to speak at a retreat for Catholic school principals in Central Otago, after defending a disgraced bishop's sexual relationship with a young woman.
Joy Cowley hit the headlines last week, after writing a column in defence of former Catholic Bishop of Palmerston North, Charles Drennan, who resigned earlier this month after admitting a sexual relationship with a young woman.
…Last week, in an RNZ interview, she went further, saying the sexual relationship between an older bishop and a young woman – even if aged in her late teens – was not an abuse of power.
The relationship would also help ''make him a much better bishop'', she told RNZ.
''He would know how to work with women, wouldn't he? As a man, he wouldn't be just hopping on one foot.''
A report on National Radio last week outlined the significant shift which allowed marriage for Catholic priests under some conditions, in priest strapped South America. I don't remember where I heard that sorry.
There are some eastern rite orthodox churches which accept the Supremacy of the Pope ( so are 'catholic') that allow priests to marry.
In addition some existing married Church of England priests who broke away from the CofE to join the Catholic church are allowed to act as Catholic priests, but if their wife dies they cant re- marry and if the werent married already they cant marry.
Just been, for my sins, listening to Soimun on RNZ – and the lack of logic he displays is quite exceptional.
In his monotone monologue he accused Andrew Little of only wanting to make NZers half safe by not extending the supervision period and not lowering the age to 14 years.
But does this mean National won't support the bill? And if that's the case, will NZ be not at all safe?
I hope Andrew calls his bluff on this and makes National support the bill, or risk being accused to endangering all NZers. Surely, "the reality is" half safe is better than no safe?
The time line on Mars makes the few seconds of human life on earth makes us pretty insignificant. Wonder if some sort of living organisms existed on Mars back then?
The first couple Prince albums are stunning, I love later Prince but the early albums are so different and interesting, I Feel For You is on his 2nd album but the acoustic version is awesome! Thanks for sharing.
The former US homeland security secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, repeatedly defended her decision to separate thousands of children from their parents at the southern border, in her first public interview since she resigned in April.
At Fortune magazine’s Most Powerful Woman summit in Washington DC on Tuesday, the PBS NewsHour correspondent Amna Nawaz asked Nielsen four times if she regretted signing off on the family separation policy, before Nielsen responded: “I don’t regret enforcing the law.
Back in Feb 2017, KiwiSaver architect Sir Michael Cullen joined the board of variable annuity company Retirement Income Group. Former retirement commissioner Diana Crossan is also on the board.
Now, interim Retirement Commissioner Peter Cordzt is taking public submissions on an annuity scheme (called KiwiSpend) before he decides which recommendations will make it into his review of retirement incomes.
The final report will be presented to Government in December.
It will be interesting to see what comes of this.
Submissions are open until October 31.
[Again, you did not provide a link so that readers could follow-up (e.g. to make a submission) and gain more insight into the context/background. To label it “interesting” is pretty vanilla (beige?) too IMO and you might as well have asked “should we be concerned?” Please provide a link – Incognito]
The Government is asking New Zealanders for their views on proposals to stop freshwater health getting worse and to restore waterways to a healthy state in a generation. We have prepared a discussion document setting out the proposals, which is available on our website. We recommend you refer to the discussion document when completing your submission.
We have engaged with a wide range of stakeholders to develop the proposals and are keen to hear your views on them.
We have grouped the questions from the discussion document by theme, but if you want to answer a specific question, please note the question number from the discussion document in your submission. You do not need to answer all of the questions. Notes boxes are provided under each question for your comments. Supporting documents may also be attached at the end of the form.
Just because Russell Norman told the truth doesn't mean either he – and those of us who agree with him – have no sympathy for those directly affected like the inner city dwellers who have had 24 hrs of toxic smoke to contend with.
There was much hoopla and some political concessions made at the time – maybe the government of the day aimed to make political capital out of it. ‘Bum deal’? Scam? A bit of both? Will taxpayers ever get will get the full story?
Don't know the real extent of public or private costs, although some major private companies got burned, 'going forward'. There was a remarkable dearth of good news stories about the project in 2016/17 – funny that.
"In 2015, Skycity announced Fletcher Construction would be building the new international convention centre in Auckland. Nobody then suspected it would lead to over $400m of losses to Fletcher Building."
after all they want plausible deniability when the firefighters/first responders come to ACC with health issues caused by the job. Toxic fires are quite common, and the guys putting them out are more often then not unpaid volunteers.
so yeah, how dare he talk about the toxic fumes, he should thank the fire fighters for their service instead! It is simply not polite from him to point out all the toxic smoke, debris and waste water. 🙂
Interesting to see that the owners of Tiwai Point Aluminium have requested talks with the government.
As a result Meridian dropped 7.75% in a morning's market trade, and others like Mercury also fell down a chunk as well.
I sure feel for the people of Southland who are having to go through this again.
But it is surely one of the greatest gifts that Minister Wood could have dropped on her, if she wanted to require Meridian to divert that power supply from Tiwai Point to the national grid.
That would be a considerable shift in our energy carbon emissions, and hopefully put a really hard floor under our energy price with that much constant supply on tap.
I sure feel for the people of Southland who are having to go through this again.
Until Tiwai Point is shut down, they will forever be pawns in Rio Tinto's game of extorting the cushiest deal they can out of the government of the day. This government needs to develop a hostage rescue plan, and come up with alternatives for those workers.
If it isn't already in Rio Tinto's interest to move out of Southland, it will be very soon. The estimates I've seen for what Rio Tinto pays for electricity in NZ are around 6 cents/kWhr (vs around 25 cents/kWhr average for residential consumers). Plus the alumina has to be shipped here, then the refined aluminium shipped elsewhere. But new solar power projects are being built to supply electricity at under US 3 cents/kWhr, and the Weipa bauxite mine is quite handy to one of the best solar resources in the world.
Concentrating solar power schemes which can keep supplying into the night aren't quite that low yet, but they're not that far off. Here's a scheme from 2017 in Australia contracting to supply for 78 dingodollars/MWhr.
The idea that capital equipment must be kept running 24/7 is a managerialist axiom, but it's not necessarily the lowest cost way to produce a product.
In the case of aluminium smelting after there's a reasonable waste disposal fee placed on carbon emissions, it may turn out most cost effective to just smelt during the day using extremely cheap PV electricity and just do the minimum to keep them hot and ready to go overnight. Or it may be cheaper to pay a bit more on the electricity side for concentrating solar with a shitload of storage. Or something else. Whatever the outcome may be, that should be Rio Tinto's problem, not ours.
But what's going to be really stupid for New Zealand is to continue paying a premium for fossil generated electricity for the rest of the country while continuing to give Rio Tinto extremely cheap clean hydro electricity.
"Capital equipment must be kept running 24/7 is a managerialist axiom, but it's not necessarily the lowest cost way to produce a product.
Its a smelter, the Al pot lines will solidify. Plenty of production processes are continuous for technical reasons and off peak power is cheaper for the very big customers.
Theres 2 reasons the Smelter power is cheap .
1) Only a short distance from Manapouri to Bluff , so Transpower lines charges are low
2) They are a heavy bulk power under contract, not a flick the switch user like a home or small to medium business. They can drop power for short periods to help with small spikes in demand or sudden system failures.
Portugal has always subsidized its Solar power. The latest one isnt publicly subsidized ( a first) but the price is fixed and confidential. Public outcry over the existing subsidies. of course Portugal can get Power from Spain as well. Good luck with NZ having an interconnector with another Grid – although the North And South islands are run like that with the Cook St cable connecting Benmore and Haywards in Upper Hutt
Solar power has many issues, the biggest is the sun doesnt shine when the morning and evening peaks occur. The second is the power production isnt synchronous at 50Hz, so some sort of rotating generator is needed to stabilise the frequency. In NZ we have hydro power stations around the country to do that , otherwise its thermal , either coal or gas.
Yes a smelting pot needs to be kept hot so it doesn't solidify, but that doesn't mean it needs to be running at full production. It just needs to be kept hot. Keeping it hot requires a lot less power if you aren't dumping cold alumina in the top and tapping molten aluminium out the bottom.
There's a third reason Rio Tinto gets it cheap, they successfully apply pressure on the government using Southland employment as hostages for leverage.
If that continuous 600ish MW continuous draw from Tiwai Point went away, I'm sure the grid and generators would work out how to manage the extra available power. Y'know, it could supply base load for the rest of the country that is currently coming from sources that can quite happily operate in a variable mode. Meridian might even find they get more for it by selling most of it at higher variable rates rather than just a continuous low rate.
Aluminium smelting pots don't run on 50Hz AC, they're only roughly 2V DC. It is possible to convert AC to DC and back again – the Cook Strait cables are DC.
You sure that Portugal price is subsidised? It's a couple of years on from the unsubsidised US 1.79 cents/kWhr in Saudi in 2017, and PV prices have fallen significantly from 2017 to now.
So much wrong with what you are saying. You clearly have half a clue about a lot of things.
The pot lines are DC but the power generated at Manapouri which is fed to the Grid is AC at 50hz. Its a single grid , that the smelter changes the power for its purposes doesnt matter for the grid.
Cheapest power production is from large load thermal stations, mainly coal and gas, then come hydro. They can provide power on demand day or night. Then comes wind which is intermittant and last comes solar.
Carbon taxes deliberately push up the cost of creating thermal power, but its still the cheapest because of scale and it can be used as a base load
There would be many positives if the corporate blackmail ceased…..unless you live in Invercargill where Tiwai smelter employs around 10 % of the workforce.
Another political difficulty this government could do without at this time
"I sure feel for the people of Southland who are having to go through this again."
maybe it's time that NZ started considering what sustainability is, and applying that to economics. Not the co-opted meaning of the word, but the regenerative, nature-based meaning, where something is able to be sustained over long periods of time without causing damage or stealing rersources from other communities. This is going to be an ongoing issue with climate transition, may as well get used to it now. When dairy and tourism contract, how will Southland and NZ make a living?
"That would be a considerable shift in our energy carbon emissions, and hopefully put a really hard floor under our energy price with that much constant supply on tap."
Likewise, might be a good time to learn about the limits of nature and make good use of the freed up resource for transition and essential goods and services rather than wasting it.
Agreed. The time of climate change is upon us, and one day, petrol station staff are gonna be out of jobs, like most miners will be and combustion engine mechanics. Sometime the bullet has to be bitten, and what's needed is not outrage, but a plan to move employees into sustainable jobs outside the norm.
As a petty political aside, Surely Invercargil is a true blue region, so no loss to the government should a hard decision needs to be made?
Invercargill has had Labour and National MPs. They consistently vote in Shadbolt for Mayor, fwiw.
But yeah, just transition can be coupled with designing sustainable systems and that needs to include security around making a living, and local economies. The old rhetoric of jobs vs environment needs to be changed to seeing jobs as a benefit of the environment.
It's exactly as I wrote – If the hard decision is to be taken, then in a tory area, the hit to the government will be minimal, so less of a barrier to making the call. That doesn't mean those people are disposable or collateral damage, to me or the government, which is why twice I've posted about replacement sustainable jobs, but these type of job cuts will be more common in the future as we combat cutting emissions to save the planet.
I don't see that as a big issue in the big scheme of things.
I am worried for the people inhaling the smoke in Auckland. I wonder where all the drainage goes – into the normal system? Into a special system? Pollution? I spose the toxic firefighting foam is no longer used which is good. Anyway I hope everyone and the environment stays safe.
I expect the water hosed on the fire ends up in the harbour – a place where in a month's time or so I expect to be catching dinner occasionally. Interesting that something that makes Auckland a brilliant place (catching fish within sight of downtown) could theoretically be jeopardised by something that makes it a sh*thole (Skycity and all its doings).
Which leads to a larger question – why is a trashy private fiefdom like Skycity allowed any influence over our cityscape, or our lives in general?
But Massey University lecturer Ralph Bathurst disagreed.
"The thing that is surprising about the David Hisco case is that it is unsurprising. We as citizens should be outraged by CEOs, and board members receiving astronomical salaries and benefits under the pretence that they are talented. The primary talent that these senior so-called business 'leaders' have in common is that they can fool us into believing that they are talented," he said.-Stuff.
Your sarcasm is unnecessary.I quoted the part I wanted to and attributed it to Stuff.
[Little things like adding links to quoted text take a few seconds and do lift the quality of discourse. If everybody do their bid we will all benefit – this is not sarcasm but a fact. In addition, it is about appropriate attribution of the originator of the quoted text or info – Incognito]
Do each of the following comments here on Open Mike today also fall into the same category as those of The Chairman and Blazer and require links to be provided to the statements made:
Tony V @ 3 re what Simon Bridges said on RNZ this morning
Ad @10 re the owners of Tiwai Point Aluminium requesting talks with the government
The Al1en @ 13 claiming that Jono and Ben have fled Mediaworks for TVNZ
Newsense @ 15 re political party support for light rail.
Not speaking for Incognito but the mod note said if you quote, provide a link. You'll note in my post I didn't quote, just made an observation. Though I'm happy to provide a link, if required, it'll have to be when I get home from work and can stop using this shitty tablet.
Theo Spierings springs to mind. Obscene salary package (and bonus) NOT based on performance. I would have no problem if he was earning say, $3 million a year and the company was performing.
Those seriously unfunny or unoriginal pillocks Jono and Ben have fled the sinking ship that is mediaworks and got a gig at tvnz. Whilst not being the absolute worst examples of what passes for kiwi man's humour, though it's close, it still won't make them any less Rattus rattus.
Much hope for Mark Richardson than he deserves, then, if that’s the level they’re prepared to stoop to at the national broadcaster.
Ill admit to switching channels when any of them are on TV, I dislike the act so much, but of course it's each to their own and all that.
I have recently been re watching The thick of it, about a spin doctor for the last labour gov, starring the better jock doctor who, so my taste in comedy is probably a bit different to b&j's world view.
Seymour told Newsroom that he worried the auction would politicise the charity, which he supports as a local MP, and asked Allen to change the recipient of the funds to ACT.
Yup, you read that "right": Seymour was so concerned for the reputation of the charity that he bravely suggested that his organisation should bear the brunt of the donation. Such a fine humanitarian lol
Surely the minister for wasting time and burning political capital is on thin ice?
Before the election there was two party consensus on light rail, and Labour was promising 2 lines, plus high speed rail Auckland to Tauranga in 9 years.
Now we are down to the Nats and NZ First not supporting light rail and there has been sod all progress of any kind.
If this was encouraged because a PPP looks better…grr
When you say 2 party consensus do you mean Labour and Greens? Cos the National Party hasn’t ever supported light rail. Just like they didn’t support the Northern Busway when Clark announced that or the CRL until Key gave in on that or the Waterview tunnel or had the commonsense to build the northwestern busway infrastructure while they were widening that motorway.
Racial terrorism is actually normal in American history but I believe we talk about in the wrong way. These are not isolated incidents , nor are they rare.
This is the story of how a national campaign by whites terrorists overthrew the US government
A few weeks ago, Donald Trump tweeted that there would be a coup if he was ousted from the presidency and media outlets portrayed him as crazy. It it is NOT crazy to think that a race war is possible.
The Council has a huge job ahead of it sorting out the demise of the old mining water rights, water quality issues that are going to hit like a sledge hammer when the dairy waste reaches ground water and streams in Central, public transport needs throughout the region and public dis-engagement with a council that seemed only interested in building a Dunedin centric empire.
Jesse Mulligan (afternoons on Natrad) had former Herald columnist Rachel Stewart as a guest today. Stewart shared her favourite music, books and movie….and for at least a short while created an oasis of quality listening in this usually bland timeslot.
Sorry, can't do the link thing from my phone….but this is well worth a listen.
Social Development minister Carmel Sepuloni says the issue of disabled unemployment has been overlooked for too long.
“It’s our responsibility to ensure that we are breaking down the barriers and providing opportunities to work,” she says.
Issues range from mental health issues, to sight or hearing impairments, intellectual disabilities and autism.
It’s also not a stagnant group – people are going off and on the benefit, many taking up employment for a short time. Sepuloni says 74 percent of them do want to work.
“We want them to thrive, and they want to thrive,” she says. (How can people believe this sort of bumf.)
It's a mirage. How many people who are employed are getting a decent wage so that they can do sufficient hours during the hours of daylight to fulfil their roles and lives as advanced human beings? People are sick, they are stressed, and the jobs that are available largely depend on basic neds , providing health, or catering for tourists who need to be from overseas, or are old age pensioners. Too many young and; middle aged people are making do on a knife-edge, very uncomfortably. Thriving? Even our bacteria can't thrive and people need faecal inputs; there is a fog of stats around employment.
What we need is work along demography strata age=group lines – and show about five different measures per 100,000 like full-time in normal working periods of a 5 day weeks b 6day weeks c revolving flexible weeks where the hours are tacked in here and there and no guaranteeed 2 day break.
Etc – Possibly not drawn up by the OECD because they make up the stats so countries can lie to their populations.
The public service used to pick up many of those with disabilities as employees. The profit imperative of business means the private sector will never create sufficient employment for this group.
Same with young school leavers.
She should put her money where her mouth is and fund the public service to do this on top of their existing funding – ring fenced so the funding doesn't get siphoned off elsewhere.
Busy telling private sector employers to do this when she needs to look closer to home.
In my view the public service should look like the local communities they serve.
Agreed. I was amazed to listen to the very fluent Sepuloni go on and on in such a well-modulated voice, like she has been programmed. These tertiary institutions really fill you up with rhetoric and on just a tiny reservoir of energy, the information can go for hours. Turned her off after a short while.
There may be good reason for a disabled person to go and do a wage job, or not. They might want one and get a real burst of determination to achieve something that takes them to the peak of their own Mt Aoraki (analogy). I heard nothing said about setting up opportunity groups to do volunteer work, and class that as alternative employment so it is listed in separate statistics from the usual employment figures.
The relish that they announce how good it is for everyone to be working, ie in a paid job, is an example of saturation programming. It has been picked up from somebody's paper/s as reliable and honourable as the material on anti-vaxxers. I am all for people contributing to society, and I mean all, evem just coaching one person in reading, teaching music, making scones, permaculture, learning extra skills even the best way to use garden tools (as done in big hardware shops) etc.
Have joint classes for mothers with young children, encourage the availability of jobs during school hours. One thing that I think I did hear this morning was that mothers were encouraged to share a job, so the other could cover with child care, or when there is sickness. If I heard right that was an innovative step for a start.
Per Peck, some of the more bizarre practices of the EY [Ernest & Young] Power-Presence-Purpose training (as it was called) included:
– Women were encouraged to "signal fitness and wellness" by getting manicures and wearing flattering clothing – yet were told not to "flaunt their body."
– Attendees had to rate how "masculine" or "feminine" they were before the training. Masculine adjectives included "ambitious" and "has leadership abilities"; feminine adjectives included "shy" and "childlike."
– Women were told to sit cross-legged and not to make face-to-face contact with men at work.
– The presenter claimed women had smaller brains than men, a former EY executive director who wished to remain anonymous told HuffPost. She added that the presentation said women absorbed information "like pancakes," making it hard for them to focus.
The presentation also had a breakdown describing differences between men's and women's speaking styles, saying women ramble and "miss the point" when they communicate and "think men hog air time."
Well it’s this time of the year I start look for books to read or reference books for my 1/700 model ships that I build during the summer period (the Northern Australian Wet Season) while listening to the summer of cricket on ABC radio except for the Boxing Day Test as I will be there in person with the old man over from NZ.
Anyway I find this new book on poor old Neville Chamberlain while looking for a book on the WW2 Illustrious Class Carriers line drawings and camouflage markings. This book looks like it could be a good read, for example he has a butterfly named after him, enjoyed bird watching and was a bit of a greenie/ naturalist among other things. Model ship building does leads me down to some interesting paths like the why, who, where, when and how these ships came to be built.
Plus a couple of books from the New Zealand Rail Society on the rebuilding the SIMT Line after the Kaikoura earthquake and one on the Hillside workshops, where I drank a few ales with some of the old boys in the pubs around Hillside workshops and it was also close to KAH Barracks during the 90’s.
Nice one Ex Kiwi I have noted those for future reading. As an ex-engineer at one stage involved in the Aircraft Industry, well, that is when Britain had an aircraft industry before it was destroyed by inept politicians and management. I can highly recommend the following books "Empire of the Clouds" by James Hamilton-Paterson about the demise of the British Aircraft industry, EXACTLY by Simon Winchesterly, how precision engineering made the modern world. Great stories from automating the pulley block making for Nelson's navy to why that RR Engine blew apart on that Qantas flight. and lastly, a book I am reading now which gives great insight into the development of the U2 and stealth aircraft by Lockheeds highly secretive department called Skunk Works, written by the CEO Ben R Rich and Leo Jonos. Great insights into brilliant engineers and in the book Empire of the Clouds cretinous fuckwit politicians who should have been put down at birth
Britain was spending 10% of its government budget on Defence in the middle 50s, plus paying for development of the civil aviation industry, which largely ended with the most expensive of all – Concorde
Thats what the cuts made by successive governments from Conservatives in late 50s to labour in mid 60s and later was all about reducing
“Thats what the cuts made by successive governments from Conservatives in late 50s to labour in mid 60s and later was all about reducing “
We all know that, but they didn't save or reduce on this little exercise did they, fact it cost the UK dearly in more ways than one. This is just one example of many, I could mention like Sandys and his fetish for missiles and how much that cost the taxpayer and the UK aircraft industry. Also, like Cleese, I won't mention the war or the Miles 52 project, a complete irreparable incompetent criminal stuff up by politicians who did not have a clue how to open a bottle of milk let alone minister an aircraft industry.
From the book Empire of the Clouds
“Thus ended TSR.2 and with it all hopes that Briton could remain in the major league of aircraft manufacturing countries. 195 million in development costs were written off. The immediate effect on BAC and particularly on English Electric's Warton workforce was devasting, with large numbers of redundancies and general demoralisation that hit the RAF and spread throughout the industry. For TSR,2 was not the only project prat (my words) Healey had cancelled that fateful day. With it went Fairey's project Rotodyne feeder helicopter for ferrying passengers from airports to city centres(21 Million written off); Hawkers P.1154 projected supersonic version of what was to be the Harrier verticle take-off fighter (my words again something the Yanks have just managed to achieve in the last decade at enormous costs) another 21 million; and the Hawkers Siddeley/Armstrong Whitworth 681 military freighter much the same cost (my words again, would have made the Hercules look pathetic) There was widespread disbelief at both the policy and the crassness with which it was implemented, but this quickly turned to real anger when the full irony was revealed: that the 150 F-111's ordered for the RAF because they would have been so much cheaper than 150 TSR.2's turned out – when the equivalent F-111s were delivered to the Australian Airforce – to be even MORE expensive because their recurrent bugs and teething problems ( my opinion, another heap of American shit something Australia found out). “ Eventually the UK order for the F-111's was cancelled in 1968 at a cost of 46.4 million.”
Great "reducing" there aye mate, it certainly “reduced” the British Aircraft Industry
The TSR.2 is one of my favourite planes of the 50-60's along the Avro Canada's CF-105. The TSR.2 shit fight is something I still to this day can't get my head around as it was basically an EE design Aircraft, but the lead builder was Vickers out of Weybridge which had no SME on building Supersonic Military aircraft, but EE had all the knowledge etc from the Lighting, long a enough runway etc and other research design at Warton was made the a secondary partner. Vickers only post war military AC was Valiant Bomber and had been more focus on Civil AC.
Then we have Avro Canada's and the stuff that was coming out of the Company was leading edge stuff like its Avro Jetliner which then follow CF100 and lastly the doomed CF-105. Just reading Randall Whitcomb books on Avro Canada is just mind blowing
As you said the Miles 52 project was an opportunely lost and having read Winkle Brown's book, does lead me to think they would've beat the Yanks by far margin and, again the Vickers with Barnes Wills got into the ear of the then Labour Government to say its rockets while alot safer and cheaper, a maned flight.
The Fairey's Rotodyne was another excellent design, but again it was way a head of its time and a lot less complex than the US Osprey that flies over my house during the dry season when the Yanks are in town.
The Joint British/ Australian Rocket programme is another subject, i still can't really get my head a round either, when one considers that the UK/ Aus were the third nation to put up a satellite and then pull the plug on it as some muppet called Roy Jenkins why do we need satellites and what's there use? All the work of the Black Arrow, Black Prince, Black Knight and Blue Streak along with Saro and co kicked into the scrap yard.
The Civil Aircraft was no better either the V1000/ VC7 would've been the first widebody aircraft in world and would've been built in the 50's and then later the VC10 which if had been built to its original design spec's without BOAC sticking in fingers in pie would've been another world beating widebody. Then we have the sorry episode of DH's lovely Trident Tri Jet and again if it had been built to it original design without BEA sticking its fingers in the pie, it would beating the Boeing 727 hands down.
The way Handley Page was treated during the 60's by then Labour Government is be on contempt and quite frankly fucking disgusting. It had a couple of good aircraft coming online, Victor Bomber upgrades would've been world class and it research dept at the time looking into carbon fibre/ composite materials back in the late 50's/ 60's before they became the rage in 90's.
Boulton & Paul was mucking around with Radar Absorbent Material until it was caned in the 60's and today its research files are still class as for UK Eyes only. Just think if the B&P RAM was applied to the Vulcan which already had a very small radar cross section or the Blackburn Buccaneer (One blight spot among the chaos of the 60's and should've sold more if wasn't for the BS from the RAF)?
The list is endless IRT to the UK Labour Government of the 60's, but don't get me started on the post war Churchill/ Eden Government.
Then lastly the High Speed Train is a What if or could've been? which was in the in end scaled right back. And the same could be said of the Nimrod MR4 and there is some interesting chat over at the http://www.secretprojects.uk.com on the balls up by Big And Expensed and co.
The answer is simple the UK couldnt afford all this stuff and the over sized military forces that went with it. Even by this stage the US was winding back some of its development projects as too expensive. Was all the best decisions made to keep the best projects ? No but hindsight is a great thing they didnt have back then.
Rather than reading fanboys stories of how great these planes were – they were generally shocking management and old and inefficent production plants and very long development times. Even some missile projects were cancelled.
Tony Buttler has done some good recent reserach on the original papers covering aircraft and engines from that era ( 1957) showing how many competing and likely outdated by the time they were ready.
Check out other defence cuts in Army and navy forces and programs at the time
eg
'There was to be a reduction in the number of regular infantry battalions from 64 to 49 "
'The British Army was to be reduced in size and reorganised to reflect the ending of National Service and the change to a voluntary army, and to "keep the Army abreast of changing circumstances, policies, weapons and techniques of war". 51 major units and a large number of smaller ones were to be disbanded or amalgamated,"
I fully agree with what you are saying, but my issue is that TSR2 should've continue even just purely as research Aircraft, instead of backing Concorde when the TSR2 got canned and even back then there were doubts about Concorde even being a success. Especially what was on the drawing broads at Hatfield (DH125 and the DH148) and coming of Woodford (Arvo) two wide body Airliners which become the A300 &310, the FTA (Future Transport Airlifter) also known by the Woodford crew as FAT's which became the bases for the A400 and the replacement of the Avro 748 (the Mount Cook AC and the RNZAF Andover) or ATP. Where the then Labour Government should've supported as a backstop to Concorde and the TSR2.
But if you ask anybody around Preston today about the TSR2? the punters would say we were stab in the back Labour as they said they would never cancel TSR2 as the now infamous Labour Party leaflet issued in the Preston South constituency before the 64 General Election say's:
Harold Wilson Tells TSR2 workers "Your Jobs are Guaranteed Under Labour" etc etc.
Ref: Pg 268 TSR2 Britain's Lost Bomber by Damien Burke
There is a book on my wishlist on Frogpond on the Brit Army from 45- 1971, but it will cost a bomb to get around the $150 mark.
And people wonder why the Working class/ Working poor in the Mildlands are going to give the UK Labour the two fingers in this election. I think the Blairites within the UK labour Party are going to be in for a rude shock this time round. The Australian Working Class give the Shorten and the Oz labour the two fingers, and the NZ Labour Party better watch themselves as well next year.
Thanks for that Kiwi I agree with you 300% I could have written more and thank you for adding what I wanted to say
I have friends in NZ who worked on the TSR.2 The way they speak about this aircraft which they had great pride in I get the impression it was the last straw where they were concerned when it was scrapped. There is one airframe left and that is at Duxford Agree with you I feel English Electric should have built it as you said it was a EE design, but once again cretinous fuckwit politicians got in the way.
You mentioned Avro of Canada another great design the Avro Arrow, that upset the Yanks scrapped within a couple of weeks and the then Canadian government had their arm twisted to buy a missile from the Yanks which once again was a heap of crap that did not work.
A great quote from Sir Sydney Camm designer of the Hurricane and Hunter(I think)
“All modern aircraft have four dimensions: Span, Length, Height and Politics. TSR2 simply got the first three right.” -……………………….. Sir Sydney Camm.
TSR2 Britain's lost cold war strike aircraft by Tim Mclelland,
X Planes TSR2 Britain's lost cold war strike jet by Andrew Brookes who an Bomber Command/ Strike Command V Bomber Pilot
Also this book called the Lost Eagle on the TSR2 is very good as well.
I have two Diecast 1/72 models of both the TSR2 and the CF-105 and this book Avro Arrow put out by The Boston Mills Press http://www.bostonmillpress.com
Then I also have Tony Butlers books called the British Secret Projects and two are on Rockets Hypersonic and Ramjets and Dan Sharp's Vol 5 of this is the UK Space Program Projects.
Chris Gibson also has a Series where he breaks down all the various Operational Requirements (OR's) into
Vulcan's Hammer (Bomber)
Battle Flight (Fighters and Air Defence)
Nimrod's Genesis (Maritime Patrol and Weapons)
On Atlas shoulders (RAF Transport)
Listening In (RAF Spookies/ Snoopy's aka Electronic Intelligence) and the new out is
Typhoon to Typhoon (Close Air Support)
Sir Sid Cam’s last jet fighter is also very interesting the Hawker P1121 which wouldn’t look out of place on a modern flightline in today’s airforce either. It’s remains are held at Canwell Aviation Centre for Aeronautical Research I believe
No one is immune from the Greedy chasing putea $$$$$$$$$$$$$ cause all the problems of Te Papatuanuku. We must change the way we live or we are all going to be suffering.
My rich town was poisoned by a corporation. Even the 1% isn't safe from pollution
Environmental and political leaders in the US have decided the environment is worth compromising for private profit
My son took his first breath in a place I never imagined would be potentially harmful for his health: Hinsdale, Illinois.
Hinsdale is listed in the top 1% of the wealthiest towns in Illinois. It’s filled with multimillion-dollar mansions, Zook architectural masterpieces and upscale shops. But Hinsdale, despite its privileged position in Chicago’s western suburbs, has one unfortunate thing against it: like any other American town, it’s part of a country whose environmental and political leaders have decided that the environment is worth compromising for private profit.
Somehow, many of the privileged among us, including myself, didn’t think the unfortunate choices of our political leaders could have the power to kill us. They might hurt the poor in Flint, Michigan, the migrant workers in Bakersfield, California, or those who don’t have the means to leave Louisiana’s Cancer Alley. But most of us living in Hinsdale and its neighboring well-to-do towns never considered that our villages could be a Flint or Cancer Alley.
What is happening in America's Cancertown is tragic, immoral and evil | Rev William Barber
Read more
We were naive. Last year we learned that Sterigenics, a global medical sterilization company with a plant in Willowbrook, Illinois, quietly spewed insane amounts of ethylene oxide (EtO), a powerful carcinogen, into our air for 35 years.
This was wishful thinking. Nothing was done. So enraged residents formed Stop Sterigenics, a group that is now is over 10,000 members strong. We staged protests, packed town hall meetings, signed witness slips and called for Illinois politicians to shut down the company for the sake of public health
In February, the Illinois environmental protection agency issued a seal order temporarily banning Sterigenics from using EtO, but last month, the agency granted the company a permit to continue to use the chemical. The message to all of us was clear: the rights of Sterigenics to make a profit mattered more to the IEPA than the rights of thousands of people living in its vicinity not to be subjected to cancer-causing air. This really shouldn’t have been surprising to anyone reading the news, where every day there seems to be another disaster related to an environmental policy decision, but, until it happens to you, it is.
Just as we were preparing to breathe toxic air again, the unthinkable happened: despite being given the green light to continue using EtO (albeit with certain emissions restrictions in place), Sterigenics announced it was leaving Willowbrook. They blamed their lease and the “unpredictable” regulatory landscape rather than the community activism that has fought them relentlessly for 14 months. But the question to the rest of the nation is: where are they going? They emit EtO in eight other locations nationwide, and the Environmental Protection Agency’s National Air Toxics Assessment has linked EtO to high cancer rates in Smyrna, Georgia, where Sterigenics also has a plant
But the tough community activism of Stop Sterigenics proves that even in a world where the EPA protects corporations instead of people, people still do have power. Let’s use it to join the attorneys general of Illinois, California, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin, who, on 10 October, wrote a letter asking the EPA to update its current emissions standards to protect the nation from the EtO the EPA knows is killing us
ETO Eco Maori, another acronym to add to our list of confusing identification of harmful substances and practices. Glad they are leaving one part of Illinois, but where else are they going to go with their ill-ness producing methods?
I agree no one would have thought that the intelligence tangata of Te Papatuanuku would strike for our futures Climate 10 years ago or even 3 years ago. Kia Kaha to all the Tangata who are doing the correct thing for our future.
There are no excuses left': why climate science deniers are running out of rope
Guardian environment correspondent Fiona Harvey recalls being heckled at the House of Commons and explains how attitudes to climate have shifted in 10 years
The shouted words rang out across the packed parliamentary corridor: “Fiona Harvey is the worst journalist there is. She’s the worst journalist of them all, because she should know better.”
They were the words of Lord Lawson, former UK chancellor of the exchequer, turned climate denier and now Brexiter, addressing a crowd of more than 100 people trying to cram into a House of Commons hearing on climate change. As listeners craned their necks to hear better, whispering and nudging, he elaborated at length on my insistence on reporting the work of the 97% of the world’s climate scientists whose work shows human responsibility for global heating, and failure to give equal weight to the tiny number of dissenters
As the science of climate chaos has become vastly clearer in the past two decades, and the warnings more stark, the rearguard action fought by climate denialists has grown fiercer and their attacks more vicious. Fact-based arguments will never serve their purpose; trolling is the last refuge of the discredited. We can expect much more of the same.
When I began writing full-time on the environment in 2004, climate change had hit a political impasse. George W Bush was in the White House, the US preoccupied with the war on terror and – as Bush admitted – “addicted to oil”. The 1997 Kyoto protocol was on ice, without the backing of enough countries to bring it into force, and international negotiations on greenhouse gases were stagnating as a result.
Suddenly, like a glacier destabilising, small cracks turned into crevasses and whole edifices came avalanching down. First Russia played the unlikely hero: by ratifying Kyoto in late 2004 (cynically, in return for a favour at the World Trade Organization) the Duma rescued the treaty from the scrapheap of history. That was enough to galvanise the UN negotiations, loosening entrenched positions and giving the talks a point once more.
Its good that people are being caught a charged for pouching Kai Moana .
Mike Smith that's the way we need to leave the carbon in Te Papatuanuku.
Congratulations Hinerangi Goodman on your winning a seat on the Whakatane Council Awsome to see more Wahine and tangata whenua standing for Local government positions.
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Māori are yet to see anything from this Government except cuts, reversals and taking our people backwards, Māori Development spokesperson Willie Jackson said. ...
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New Zealand is demonstrating its commitment to reducing global greenhouse emissions, and supporting clean energy transition in South East Asia, through a contribution of NZ$41 million (US$25 million) in climate finance to the Asian Development Bank (ADB)-led Energy Transition Mechanism (ETM). Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Climate Change Minister Simon Watts announced ...
The Government is today releasing a list of organisations who received letters about the Fast-track applications process, says RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop. “Recently Ministers and agencies have received a series of OIA requests for a list of organisations to whom I wrote with information on applying to have a ...
Attorney-General Judith Collins today announced the appointment of Wellington Barrister David Jonathan Boldt as a Judge of the High Court, and the Honourable Justice Matthew Palmer as a Judge of the Court of Appeal. Justice Boldt graduated with an LLB from Victoria University of Wellington in 1990, and also holds ...
Education Minister Erica Stanford will lead the New Zealand delegation at the 2024 International Summit on the Teaching Profession (ISTP) held in Singapore. The delegation includes representatives from the Post Primary Teachers’ Association (PPTA) Te Wehengarua and the New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI) Te Riu Roa. The summit is co-hosted ...
A stopbank upgrade project in Tairawhiti partly funded by the Government has increased flood resilience for around 7000ha of residential and horticultural land so far, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says. Mr Jones today attended a dawn service in Gisborne to mark the end of the first stage of the ...
Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters will represent the Government at Anzac Day commemorations on the Gallipoli Peninsula next week and engage with senior representatives of the Turkish government in Istanbul. “The Gallipoli campaign is a defining event in our history. It will be a privilege to share the occasion ...
Science, Innovation and Technology and Defence Minister Judith Collins will next week attend the OECD Science and Technology Ministerial conference in Paris and Anzac Day commemorations in Belgium. “Science, innovation and technology have a major role to play in rebuilding our economy and achieving better health, environmental and social outcomes ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon held a bilateral meeting today with the President of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos Jr. The Prime Minister was accompanied by MP Paulo Garcia, the first Filipino to be elected to a legislature outside the Philippines. During today’s meeting, Prime Minister Luxon and President Marcos Jr discussed opportunities to ...
The Government has announced that $20 million in funding will be made available to Westport to fund much needed flood protection around the town. This measure will significantly improve the resilience of the community, says Local Government Minister Simeon Brown. “The Westport community has already been allocated almost $3 million ...
The Government is proud to support the first ever Repco Supercars Championship event in Taupō as up to 70,000 motorsport fans attend the Taupō International Motorsport Park this weekend, says Economic Development Minister Melissa Lee. “Anticipation for the ITM Taupō Super400 is huge, with tickets and accommodation selling out weeks ...
Local Government Minister Simeon Brown has announced an increase to the Rates Rebate Scheme, putting money back into the pockets of low-income homeowners. “The coalition Government is committed to bringing down the cost of living for New Zealanders. That includes targeted support for those Kiwis who are doing things tough, such ...
The Coalition Government is investing in a project to boost survival rates of New Zealand mussels and grow the industry, Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones has announced. “This project seeks to increase the resilience of our mussels and significantly boost the sector’s productivity,” Mr Jones says. “The project - ...
Benefit figures released today underscore the importance of the Government’s plan to rebuild the economy and have 50,000 fewer people on Jobseeker Support, Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston says. “Benefit numbers are still significantly higher than when National was last in government, when there was about 70,000 fewer ...
The Government’s commitment to doubling New Zealand’s renewable energy capacity is backed by new data showing that clean energy has helped the country reach its lowest annual gross emissions since 1999, Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says. New Zealand’s latest Greenhouse Gas Inventory (1990-2022) published today, shows gross emissions fell ...
The Government is bringing the earthquake-prone building review forward, with work to start immediately, and extending the deadline for remediations by four years, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says. “Our Government is focused on rebuilding the economy. A key part of our plan is to cut red tape that ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and his Thai counterpart, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, have today agreed that New Zealand and the Kingdom of Thailand will upgrade the bilateral relationship to a Strategic Partnership by 2026. “New Zealand and Thailand have a lot to offer each other. We have a strong mutual desire to build ...
RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop and Transport Minister Simeon Brown have today announced the Coalition Government’s intention to extend port coastal permits for a further 20 years, providing port operators with certainty to continue their operations. “The introduction of the Resource Management Act in 1991 required ports to obtain coastal ...
Today’s announcement that inflation is down to 4 per cent is encouraging news for Kiwis, but there is more work to be done - underlining the importance of the Government’s plan to get the economy back on track, acting Finance Minister Chris Bishop says. “Inflation is now at 4 per ...
Refreshed health guidance released today will help parents and schools make informed decisions about whether their child needs to be in school, addressing one of the key issues affecting school attendance, says Associate Education Minister David Seymour. In recent years, consistently across all school terms, short-term illness or medical reasons ...
Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones is streamlining high-level oceans management while maintaining a focus on supporting the sector’s role in the export-led recovery of the economy. “I am working to realise the untapped potential of our fishing and aquaculture sector. To achieve that we need to be smarter with ...
Associate Agriculture Minister Mark Patterson is speaking at the International Wool Textile Organisation Congress in Adelaide, promoting New Zealand wool, and outlining the coalition Government’s support for the revitalisation the sector. "New Zealand’s wool exports reached $400 million in the year to 30 June 2023, and the coalition Government ...
The Government is making legislative changes to make it easier for new early learning services to be established, and for existing services to operate, Associate Education Minister David Seymour says. The changes involve repealing the network approval provisions that apply when someone wants to establish a new early learning service, ...
Changes to the Resource Management Act will align consenting for coal mining to other forms of mining to reduce barriers that are holding back economic development, Resources Minister Shane Jones says. “The inconsistent treatment of coal mining compared with other extractive activities is burdensome red tape that fails to acknowledge ...
Trade, Agriculture and Forestry Minister Todd McClay has concluded productive discussions with ministerial counterparts in Beijing today, in support of the New Zealand-China trade and economic relationship. “My meeting with Commerce Minister Wang Wentao reaffirmed the complementary nature of the bilateral trade relationship, with our Free Trade Agreement at its ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon today paid tribute to Singapore’s outgoing Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. Meeting in Singapore today immediately before Prime Minister Lee announced he was stepping down, Prime Minister Luxon warmly acknowledged his counterpart’s almost twenty years as leader, and the enduring legacy he has left for Singapore and South East ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon held a bilateral meeting today with Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. While in Singapore as part of his visit to South East Asia this week, Prime Minister Luxon also met with Singapore President Tharman Shanmugaratnam and will meet with Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong. During today’s meeting, Prime Minister Luxon ...
Foreign Minister Winston Peters has made further appointments to the Board of Antarctica New Zealand as part of a continued effort to ensure the Scott Base Redevelopment project is delivered in a cost-effective and efficient manner. The Minister has appointed Neville Harris as a new member of the Board. Mr ...
Finance Minister Nicola Willis will travel to the United States on Tuesday to attend a meeting of the Five Finance Ministers group, with counterparts from Australia, the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. “I am looking forward to meeting with our Five Finance partners on how we can work ...
The coalition Government has today announced purrfect and pawsitive changes to the Residential Tenancies Act to give tenants with pets greater choice when looking for a rental property, says Housing Minister Chris Bishop. “Pets are important members of many Kiwi families. It’s estimated that around 64 per cent of New ...
State Highway 1 (SH1) through Wellington City is heavily congested at peak times and while planning continues on the duplicate Mt Victoria Tunnel and Basin Reserve project, the Government has also asked NZ Transport Agency (NZTA) to consider and provide advice on a Long Tunnel option, Transport Minister Simeon Brown ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Foreign Minister Winston Peters have condemned Iran’s shocking and illegal strikes against Israel. “These attacks are a major challenge to peace and stability in a region already under enormous pressure," Mr Luxon says. "We are deeply concerned that miscalculation on any side could ...
Hundreds of people in little over a week have turned out in Northland to hear Regional Development Minister Shane Jones speak about plans for boosting the regional economy through infrastructure. About 200 people from the infrastructure and associated sectors attended an event headlined by Mr Jones in Whangarei today. Last ...
Health Minister Dr Shane Reti has today thanked outgoing Health New Zealand – Te Whatu Ora Chair Dame Karen Poutasi for her service on the Board. “Dame Karen tendered her resignation as Chair and as a member of the Board today,” says Dr Reti. “I have asked her to ...
The NZ Transport Agency (NZTA) has signalled their proposed delivery approach for the Government’s 15 Roads of National Significance (RoNS), with the release of the State Highway Investment Proposal (SHIP) today, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says. “Boosting economic growth and productivity is a key part of the Government’s plan to ...
New Zealand is renewing its connections with a world facing urgent challenges by pursuing an active, energetic foreign policy, Foreign Minister Winston Peters says. “Our country faces the most unstable global environment in decades,” Mr Peters says at the conclusion of two weeks of engagements in Egypt, Europe and the United States. “We cannot afford to sit back in splendid ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has announced the Australian Governor-General, His Excellency General The Honourable David Hurley and his wife Her Excellency Mrs Linda Hurley, will make a State visit to New Zealand from Tuesday 16 April to Thursday 18 April. The visit reciprocates the State visit of former Governor-General Dame Patsy Reddy ...
Associate Health Minister David Seymour has announced that Medsafe has approved 11 cold and flu medicines containing pseudoephedrine. Pharmaceutical suppliers have indicated they may be able to supply the first products in June. “This is much earlier than the original expectation of medicines being available by 2025. The Government recognised ...
New Zealand and the United States have recommitted to their strategic partnership in Washington DC today, pledging to work ever more closely together in support of shared values and interests, Foreign Minister Winston Peters says. “The strategic environment that New Zealand and the United States face is considerably more ...
April 11, 2024 Joint Declaration by United States Secretary of State the Honorable Antony J. Blinken and New Zealand Minister of Foreign Affairs the Right Honourable Winston Peters We met today in Washington, D.C. to recommit to the historic partnership between our two countries and the principles that underpin it—rule ...
Headline: The moment of friction. – 36th Parallel Assessments In strategic studies “friction” is a term that it is used to describe the moment when military action encounters adversary resistance. “Friction” is one of four (along with an unofficial fifth) “F’s” in military strategy, which includes force (kinetic mass), ...
The Fast-track Bill, if passed, would allow three Ministers, unchallenged and unchecked, to approve the immediate extraction and exhaustion of one-off resources. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Stephen Duckett, Honorary Enterprise Professor, School of Population and Global Health, and Department of General Practice and Primary Care, The University of Melbourne iamharin/Shutterstock For many people, the term “bulk billed” refers to a GP visit they don’t have to pay ...
Emmas Hislop, Sidnam and Wehipeihana discuss what’s in a name. Emma Sidnam: Hello Emmas! Thank you so much for agreeing to do this with me. My first question for you is related to what’s been on my mind for a while. It’s very important. You see we’ve recently had some ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Sievers, Research Fellow, Global Wetlands Project, Australia Rivers Institute, Griffith University Chris Brown Humans love the coast. But we love it to death, so much so we’ve destroyed valuable coastal habitat – in the case of some types of habitat, ...
Josh Thomson on the 80s milk ad jingle he can’t stop singing, the beauty of The Simpsons, why Jersey Shore is as good as Shakespeare and more. For someone who spends a lot of time on our screens, popping up in everything from 7 Days to Taskmaster, Educators to Good ...
In apparent defiance of the Biden administration, the Netanyahu government has now initiated missile strikes against Iran. Last Saturday night (Sunday morning in New Zealand) Iran launched more than 300 drones, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles against Israeli military targets. With the assistance of US, UK and possibly French forces, ...
Māori representation brings a perspective that encompasses not only the interests of Māori communities but also a broader, holistic approach to environmental stewardship and community well-being, principles deeply embedded in Te Ao Māori (the Māori ...
This week in Auckland, a group of young people took over the microphone at a ministerial press conference, to explain why they oppose the Fast-Track Approvals Bill. One young woman said, ‘We’re here because we love Aotearoa New Zealand. We want to raise our children in an environment that’s thriving, ...
The summer was wonderful. Evie was wonderful, too; finally a teenager, finally worthy of long, hot days. She shaved her legs for the first time and bought cut-off shorts from the op-shop that made them look long. She got a Warehouse singlet so tight on her new shape that her ...
When Thomas James was on his solo camp as part of Outward Bound, the keen outdoorsman didn’t find it too challenging, as others often do. In what might just be the perfect illustration of his character, he saw it as a great opportunity to solve a few problems. “I thought, ...
From the unstable and drippy to the hi-tech and pretty, here’s our ranking of all the tunnels you can drive through in this country. The first tunnel seems to have been built in 2200BC in Babylonia, kicking off a global phenomenon for digging holes in order to get places more ...
Lucinda Bennett on the art of being greedy but resourceful. This is an excerpt from our weekly food newsletter, The Boil Up. When I picture the market, it is always this time of year. Crisp air, dripping nose, counting coins with cold fingers. Sunlight pale, filtered through specks of dew still ...
Zoë Colling’s favourite piece in the ‘That’s So Last Century’ collection is a lubrication chart for a sewing machine from the ’60s. It’s about the size of a postcard, and carefully maintained. “I like it that this piece of ephemera highlights that manual and technical side of the skill involved ...
Kia Ora Gaza A passionate haka reverberated through Auckland International Airport as a medical team of three New Zealand doctors received an emotional farewell from a big crowd of supporters before flying to Turkey to join the international Freedom Flotilla to Gaza. The doctors, who left Auckland yesterday, hope to ...
With submissions closing today, Macassey-Pickard says groups around the country have been supporting a huge range of people to make their submissions. ...
Our response to the new legislation is informed by targeted conversations with practitioners working in the system and through an implementation lens. ...
The new ‘Fast-track Approvals Bill’ would give just three Ministers the power to approve or deny development projects. They would avoid the usual checks and balances that are in place to protect rivers, land, the ocean, and communities. ...
COMMENTARY:By Eugene Doyle Helen Clark, how I miss you. The former New Zealand Prime Minister — the safest pair of hands this country has had in living memory — gave a masterclass on the importance of maintaining an independent foreign policy when she spoke at an AUKUS symposium held ...
The government's released the list of organisations provided with information on how to apply - just hours before public submissions on the bill close. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Milton Speer, Visiting Fellow, School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, University of Technology Sydney Before climate change really got going, eastern Australia’s flash floods tended to concentrate on our coastal regions, east of the Great Dividing Range. But that’s changing. Now ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elizabeth Finkel, Vice-Chancellor’s Fellow, La Trobe University Sia Duff / South Australian Museum In February, the South Australian Museum “re-imagined” itself. In the face of rising costs and inadequate government funds, CEO David Gaimster, who took the reins last June, declared ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alan Pearce, Professor, School of Allied Heath, Human Services & Sport, La Trobe University, La Trobe University This week, Collingwood AFL player Nathan Murphy announced his retirement, brought on by his concussion history and ongoing issues. The 24-year-old’s seemingly sudden retirement, ...
The Mental Health Foundation provides support and resources for those facing the loss of their job, so it’s wrong in the very week the Government adds another 1000 jobs to its tally of cuts, that this is happening. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English and Writing, University of Sydney Daniel Boud/Sydney Theatre Company Decay, terror, revulsion. These are three of the central themes of Thomas Bernhard’s rarely performed play The President. The Austrian is one of the greatest ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ye In (Jane) Hwang, Postdoctoral Research Associate at School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney Shutterstock You’d be hard pressed to find any aspect of daily life that doesn’t require some form of digital literacy. We need only to look back ten ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says threats by ministers Shane Jones and David Seymour to reform or close down the Waitangi Tribunal were “ill-considered”, as legal experts say the ministers may have breached Cabinet Manual conventions. “I think those comments are ill-considered and we expect all ministers to actually exercise good ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rob Newton, Professor of Exercise Medicine, Edith Cowan University Pexels/RDNE stock project You’re not in your 20s or 30s anymore and you know regular health checks are important. So you go to your GP. During the appointment they measure your waist. ...
A new poem by Evangeline Riddiford Graham. Mitochondrial Problem I. It was long drive to Kansas for the man and his dog but you have to understand he said She doesn’t fly. Which calls to mind not carsick shitting barking or whining but a dog who chooses not to as ...
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 Hemingway’s Goblet by Dermot Ross (Mary Egan Publishing, $38)Hot off the press, this debut ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Laura Wajnryb McDonald, PhD candidate in Criminology, University of Sydney Less than 24 hours after Ashlee Good was murdered in Bondi Junction, her family released a statement requesting the media take down photographs they had reproduced of Ashlee and her family without ...
Chief executive Shaun Robinson said it has not had any government funding cut, but government-funded contracts have not kept pace with rising costs. ...
The Ministry of Health has delayed the release of its evidence brief on the safety, reversibility and mental health and wellbeing outcomes for puberty blockers. While we wait, Julia de Bres speaks to those with firsthand experience. Best practice gender-affirming healthcare is based on trans people’s self-determination and agency. The ...
Barcelona’s city streets have gone from traffic-clogged to pedestrian-friendly. How? Superblocks. Ellen Rykers explains. This is an excerpt from our weekly environmental newsletter Future Proof. Sign up here. Last week I read a great interview with renowned urbanist Janette Sadik-Khan by The Spinoff’s Wellington editor Joel MacManus: “You can reimagine streets, ...
Student groups ‘Climate Action VUW’, Schools Strike 4 Climate and VUWSA will be on the street in Wellington today, the last day for submissions on the Fast-track Approvals Bill, with a message that the fight against the Government’s ‘War on ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sofia Ammassari, Research Fellow, Griffith University Since 2014, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s popularity has grown exponentially – and so has the formidable organisational machine of his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). These two factors will be key to delivering the BJP a ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brendon Hyndman, Associate Professor of Education (Adjunct) & Senior Manager (BCE), Charles Sturt University During COVID almost all Australian students and their families experienced online learning. But while schools have long since gone back to in-person teaching, online learning has not gone ...
Yes, they’re better for the environment. No, that’s not a good enough reason for me to use them. Once every 26 days or so, my period arrives, and if struck by an act of God, I am caught red-crotched without products. How, after 17 years of this, do I still ...
“It will cause significant harm to our environment and communities. It is completely at odds with New Zealanders’ relationship with nature and our need for a low-carbon, sustainable economic future." ...
The Chair of the National Maori Authority, Matthew Tukaki, has warned a Parliamentary Select Committee that fast-tracking legislation is a perilous practice that undermines the core tenets of democracy, transparency, and accountability. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tim Tenbensel, Associate Professor, Health Policy, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau Getty Images Since coming into power, the coalition government has adopted a simple but shrewd see-how-fast-we-can-move political strategy. However, in the health sector this need for speed entails ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anastasia Hronis, Clinical Psychologist, University of Technology Sydney Darya Sannikova/Pexels Whether you’re watching TV, attending a footy game, or eating a meal at your local pub, gambling is hard to escape. Although the rise of gambling is not unique to Australia, ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mark Wong, Forrest Fellow, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia Have you ever wondered if there are more insects out at night than during the day? We set out to answer this question by combing through the scientific ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Carol T Kulik, Research Professor, University of South Australia IR Stone/Shutterstock In Australia, it’s not the done thing to know – let alone ask – what our colleagues are paid. Yet, it’s easy to see how pay transparency can make pay ...
The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) is sounding a warning to migrants, that running foul of the law may see them leaving the country prematurely. ...
The government’s plan to get 50,000 people off jobseeker support by 2030 has had a rocky start, writes Catherine McGregor in this excerpt from The Bulletin, The Spinoff’s morning news round-up. To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here. Beneficiary numbers are up – and so are ...
Raglan Roast is a staple of Wellington coffee culture. But with five branches across the capital, which one is the best? I am a die-hard Raglan Roast fan. It’s consistently the most affordable cafe in Wellington, and one of the only places you can get a coffee after 3pm. So, ...
Residents of University of Auckland halls are being urged to withhold their accommodation fees from May 1, in a bid to force the university to take student concerns over rent hikes seriously.The University of Auckland is facing a strike from students over the cost of on-campus accommodation. The Students ...
New Zealand and the Philippines have signed a new maritime security agreement and stated their concerns over activity in the South China Sea, as Chinese vessels continue to flout international law. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Philippines President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos committed to signing a Mutual Logistics Supporting Arrangement by ...
The thousands of government “back-office” job cuts are causing widespread pain in the capital city. In today’s episode of The Detail, we speak to three journalists and a think tank researcher, looking at the larger picture around the cuts and what effect it will have on Wellington, a city that’s ...
Opinion: The famed American architect and urban designer Daniel Burnham once said, “Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men’s blood!” Burnham wouldn’t have been referring to the transport plans in Aotearoa New Zealand over the past five years; projects so big they hadn’t the credibility to ...
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Opinion: With maths understanding at 42 percent for Year 8 students, there’s no doubt something has to be done. But how? The post Financial literacy should be on all of us appeared first on Newsroom. ...
Greywarshark
You were interested in current news of Assange.
News isn't great, for him, human rights, or journalism in general, but at least some Australian politicians are starting to stir
Assange in court
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/
and 10 Aussie MPs raising their objections ….too little too late,… the guy is gone
https://consortiumnews.com/2019/10/21/judge-denies-assange-extension-on-extradition-hearing/
A very nasty story of Assange's deterioration Francesca. The cause of his crash mentally and physically may never know only conjectured. A blow to democracy.
A very interesting phenomenon. There is now a huge industry of independent "truth tellers/independent journalists" who endlessly recycle social media posts and write "exposes" recycling same while at the same time touting for donations to support their noble struggle often with large "click farms" of associated url's and social media accounts. The one truth about these operators is that their business plan depends on Assanges continued incarceration. They contribute nothing and their wall of white noise and misdirection impedes Assange in his struggle
I didn't realise that xanthe but I shouldn't be surprised. Everybody can present themselves as a journalist these days it seems. It is bad enough with people in the Fairfax papers with big Bylines giving Opinions and not even a sentence of background information on them. So nothing to advise you as to why they should lay their opinions on you and what line of career, education, culture or experience has built their perceptions and facts they have chosen to accept.
Thanks francesca – I feel guilty letting his welfare drop out of sight. So have to remember to keep thinking of him. At present I seems to be like a rabbit in the headlights watching Boorish and his Rubber Band play their discordant music in the UK. Need a good dose of Spitting Images I think to illustrate the Farrago of it all.
Yes good call – a childrens author just has a view like anyone else and shouldn't have a platform imo especially when the opinion is yucky,
At least some people have their heads screwed on.
A report on National Radio last week outlined the significant shift which allowed marriage for Catholic priests under some conditions, in priest strapped South America. I don't remember where I heard that sorry.
There are some eastern rite orthodox churches which accept the Supremacy of the Pope ( so are 'catholic') that allow priests to marry.
In addition some existing married Church of England priests who broke away from the CofE to join the Catholic church are allowed to act as Catholic priests, but if their wife dies they cant re- marry and if the werent married already they cant marry.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/morningreport/audio/2018716496/pope-francis-mulls-letting-married-men-become-priests
Joy Cowley advances thoughts on considering what is moral and ethical in a warm relationship rather than dogma.
She is an admirable woman.
she certainly can write books for children – the rest? yeah nah.
Just been, for my sins, listening to Soimun on RNZ – and the lack of logic he displays is quite exceptional.
In his monotone monologue he accused Andrew Little of only wanting to make NZers half safe by not extending the supervision period and not lowering the age to 14 years.
But does this mean National won't support the bill? And if that's the case, will NZ be not at all safe?
I hope Andrew calls his bluff on this and makes National support the bill, or risk being accused to endangering all NZers. Surely, "the reality is" half safe is better than no safe?
…. and how much damage could one NZ Army trained misfit cause by returning from a jaunt with IS in Syria? Enough to suggest anyone is at risk?
IS is defeated, did you not hear the news? So maybe you need to find a different thing to be scared of.
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/10/21/politics/syria-cabinet-meeting-donald-trump/index.html
NASA’s Curiosity Rover finds an ancient oasis on Mars
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/10/191007112956.htm
The time line on Mars makes the few seconds of human life on earth makes us pretty insignificant. Wonder if some sort of living organisms existed on Mars back then?
You might wish to have a look at
https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/home/
and now for something nice
accousting version of 'i feel for you' from Prince (as a twenty year old) Chaka Khan made it a hit in the early 80s.
time flies.
https://www.npr.org/2019/10/18/771266727/hear-princes-acoustic-i-feel-for-you-demo-fresh-from-the-vault?utm_term=nprnews&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=npr
The first couple Prince albums are stunning, I love later Prince but the early albums are so different and interesting, I Feel For You is on his 2nd album but the acoustic version is awesome! Thanks for sharing.
swamp's too nice for this toxic creature
Interesting.
Back in Feb 2017, KiwiSaver architect Sir Michael Cullen joined the board of variable annuity company Retirement Income Group. Former retirement commissioner Diana Crossan is also on the board.
Now, interim Retirement Commissioner Peter Cordzt is taking public submissions on an annuity scheme (called KiwiSpend) before he decides which recommendations will make it into his review of retirement incomes.
The final report will be presented to Government in December.
It will be interesting to see what comes of this.
Submissions are open until October 31.
[Again, you did not provide a link so that readers could follow-up (e.g. to make a submission) and gain more insight into the context/background. To label it “interesting” is pretty vanilla (beige?) too IMO and you might as well have asked “should we be concerned?” Please provide a link – Incognito]
https://www.cffc.org.nz/reviews-and-reports/2019-review-of-retirement-income-policies/make-a-submission/
See my Moderation note @ 12:18 PM.
That was written up by me, hence there was no link.
Nevertheless, here you go.
https://www.cffc.org.nz/reviews-and-reports/2019-review-of-retirement-income-policies/
Save our waterways – make a submission
…have to agree Russel Norman's tweet puts him to the class of being an A-Grade dork…
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/politics/news/article.cfm?c_id=280&objectid=12278896
I quite liked that tweet. It was exactly what I was thinking…
Not something i would admit to Scott.
Noddy Norman's tweet make him look like nasty bitter scumbag,
Only if you’ve succumbed to the manufactured outrage from the usual suspects. Otherwise it’s just the usual to-and-fro in the Twittersphere.
It was exactly what I was thinking…
Me too ScottGN.
Just because Russell Norman told the truth doesn't mean either he – and those of us who agree with him – have no sympathy for those directly affected like the inner city dwellers who have had 24 hrs of toxic smoke to contend with.
You rwnjs are an incredibly stupid lot sometimes.
How quickly, and conveniently 'they' forget.
There was much hoopla and some political concessions made at the time – maybe the government of the day aimed to make political capital out of it. ‘Bum deal’? Scam? A bit of both? Will taxpayers ever get will get the full story?
Don't know the real extent of public or private costs, although some major private companies got burned, 'going forward'. There was a remarkable dearth of good news stories about the project in 2016/17 – funny that.
A case of 'Big Smoke' and mirrors? Better that than 'all up in smoke', which has (alas) now eventuated.
"SkyCity to remove aluminium cladding from International Convention Centre"
https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/110551367/sky-city-expects-395-million-from-fletchers-in-compensation-for-building-delays
It's a case of a global gaming organisation up against the kids running Fletchers currently who swallowed nationals dead rat convention centre.
It's one of a few projects the kids thought they knew better about that’s gnawing away
selective outrage.
after all they want plausible deniability when the firefighters/first responders come to ACC with health issues caused by the job. Toxic fires are quite common, and the guys putting them out are more often then not unpaid volunteers.
so yeah, how dare he talk about the toxic fumes, he should thank the fire fighters for their service instead! It is simply not polite from him to point out all the toxic smoke, debris and waste water. 🙂
Interesting to see that the owners of Tiwai Point Aluminium have requested talks with the government.
As a result Meridian dropped 7.75% in a morning's market trade, and others like Mercury also fell down a chunk as well.
I sure feel for the people of Southland who are having to go through this again.
But it is surely one of the greatest gifts that Minister Wood could have dropped on her, if she wanted to require Meridian to divert that power supply from Tiwai Point to the national grid.
That would be a considerable shift in our energy carbon emissions, and hopefully put a really hard floor under our energy price with that much constant supply on tap.
I sure feel for the people of Southland who are having to go through this again.
Until Tiwai Point is shut down, they will forever be pawns in Rio Tinto's game of extorting the cushiest deal they can out of the government of the day. This government needs to develop a hostage rescue plan, and come up with alternatives for those workers.
If it isn't already in Rio Tinto's interest to move out of Southland, it will be very soon. The estimates I've seen for what Rio Tinto pays for electricity in NZ are around 6 cents/kWhr (vs around 25 cents/kWhr average for residential consumers). Plus the alumina has to be shipped here, then the refined aluminium shipped elsewhere. But new solar power projects are being built to supply electricity at under US 3 cents/kWhr, and the Weipa bauxite mine is quite handy to one of the best solar resources in the world.
"But new solar power projects are being built to supply electricity at under US 3 cents/kWhr"
No solar power plant does that…. and the other problem for a smelter which runs day and night is what ?
The UK solar power stations have a government guarantee of minimum price ( called a Contract for Difference CFD) well above what yo mention
Solar during the day, hydro at night.
Portugal just contracted for 14.76 euro per MWhr, or 1.476 euro cents per kWhr
https://www.energyglobal.com/solar/12082019/portugal-awards-worlds-lowest-cost-solar-pv-contract/
Concentrating solar power schemes which can keep supplying into the night aren't quite that low yet, but they're not that far off. Here's a scheme from 2017 in Australia contracting to supply for 78 dingodollars/MWhr.
https://www.solarpaces.org/solarreserve-breaks-csp-price-record-6-cent-contract/
Or the new scheme at Ouarzazate in Morocco is around the same price.
https://www.solarpaces.org/morocco-breaks-new-record-with-800-mw-midelt-1-csp-pv-at-7-cents/
The idea that capital equipment must be kept running 24/7 is a managerialist axiom, but it's not necessarily the lowest cost way to produce a product.
In the case of aluminium smelting after there's a reasonable waste disposal fee placed on carbon emissions, it may turn out most cost effective to just smelt during the day using extremely cheap PV electricity and just do the minimum to keep them hot and ready to go overnight. Or it may be cheaper to pay a bit more on the electricity side for concentrating solar with a shitload of storage. Or something else. Whatever the outcome may be, that should be Rio Tinto's problem, not ours.
But what's going to be really stupid for New Zealand is to continue paying a premium for fossil generated electricity for the rest of the country while continuing to give Rio Tinto extremely cheap clean hydro electricity.
"Capital equipment must be kept running 24/7 is a managerialist axiom, but it's not necessarily the lowest cost way to produce a product.
Its a smelter, the Al pot lines will solidify. Plenty of production processes are continuous for technical reasons and off peak power is cheaper for the very big customers.
Theres 2 reasons the Smelter power is cheap .
1) Only a short distance from Manapouri to Bluff , so Transpower lines charges are low
2) They are a heavy bulk power under contract, not a flick the switch user like a home or small to medium business. They can drop power for short periods to help with small spikes in demand or sudden system failures.
Portugal has always subsidized its Solar power. The latest one isnt publicly subsidized ( a first) but the price is fixed and confidential. Public outcry over the existing subsidies. of course Portugal can get Power from Spain as well. Good luck with NZ having an interconnector with another Grid – although the North And South islands are run like that with the Cook St cable connecting Benmore and Haywards in Upper Hutt
Solar power has many issues, the biggest is the sun doesnt shine when the morning and evening peaks occur. The second is the power production isnt synchronous at 50Hz, so some sort of rotating generator is needed to stabilise the frequency. In NZ we have hydro power stations around the country to do that , otherwise its thermal , either coal or gas.
Yes a smelting pot needs to be kept hot so it doesn't solidify, but that doesn't mean it needs to be running at full production. It just needs to be kept hot. Keeping it hot requires a lot less power if you aren't dumping cold alumina in the top and tapping molten aluminium out the bottom.
There's a third reason Rio Tinto gets it cheap, they successfully apply pressure on the government using Southland employment as hostages for leverage.
If that continuous 600ish MW continuous draw from Tiwai Point went away, I'm sure the grid and generators would work out how to manage the extra available power. Y'know, it could supply base load for the rest of the country that is currently coming from sources that can quite happily operate in a variable mode. Meridian might even find they get more for it by selling most of it at higher variable rates rather than just a continuous low rate.
Aluminium smelting pots don't run on 50Hz AC, they're only roughly 2V DC. It is possible to convert AC to DC and back again – the Cook Strait cables are DC.
You sure that Portugal price is subsidised? It's a couple of years on from the unsubsidised US 1.79 cents/kWhr in Saudi in 2017, and PV prices have fallen significantly from 2017 to now.
https://cleantechnica.com/2017/10/07/the-birth-of-a-new-era-in-solar-pv-record-low-cost-on-saudi-solar-project-bid/
So much wrong with what you are saying. You clearly have half a clue about a lot of things.
The pot lines are DC but the power generated at Manapouri which is fed to the Grid is AC at 50hz. Its a single grid , that the smelter changes the power for its purposes doesnt matter for the grid.
Cheapest power production is from large load thermal stations, mainly coal and gas, then come hydro. They can provide power on demand day or night. Then comes wind which is intermittant and last comes solar.
Carbon taxes deliberately push up the cost of creating thermal power, but its still the cheapest because of scale and it can be used as a base load
There would be many positives if the corporate blackmail ceased…..unless you live in Invercargill where Tiwai smelter employs around 10 % of the workforce.
Another political difficulty this government could do without at this time
"I sure feel for the people of Southland who are having to go through this again."
maybe it's time that NZ started considering what sustainability is, and applying that to economics. Not the co-opted meaning of the word, but the regenerative, nature-based meaning, where something is able to be sustained over long periods of time without causing damage or stealing rersources from other communities. This is going to be an ongoing issue with climate transition, may as well get used to it now. When dairy and tourism contract, how will Southland and NZ make a living?
"That would be a considerable shift in our energy carbon emissions, and hopefully put a really hard floor under our energy price with that much constant supply on tap."
Likewise, might be a good time to learn about the limits of nature and make good use of the freed up resource for transition and essential goods and services rather than wasting it.
Agreed. The time of climate change is upon us, and one day, petrol station staff are gonna be out of jobs, like most miners will be and combustion engine mechanics. Sometime the bullet has to be bitten, and what's needed is not outrage, but a plan to move employees into sustainable jobs outside the norm.
As a petty political aside, Surely Invercargil is a true blue region, so no loss to the government should a hard decision needs to be made?
"As a petty political aside, Surely Invercargil is a true blue region, so no loss to the government should a hard decision needs to be made?"
You may wish to consider we have MMP now and there remain considerable party votes on offer regardless of the colour of the electorate MP
https://www.electionresults.govt.nz/electionresults_2017/electorate-details-19.html
Invercargill has had Labour and National MPs. They consistently vote in Shadbolt for Mayor, fwiw.
But yeah, just transition can be coupled with designing sustainable systems and that needs to include security around making a living, and local economies. The old rhetoric of jobs vs environment needs to be changed to seeing jobs as a benefit of the environment.
so they don't deserve jobs and care? they don't deserve true representation from their elected government?
this is snark?
People will lose jobs because of dealing to global warming. It's a fact.
this is not what your statement was about.
i asked you about this – the rest of your comment i had no issue with,
Care to elaborate on 'true blue region, so no loss"? is loss now measured by party affiliation – or what would 'blue region' mean?
It's exactly as I wrote – If the hard decision is to be taken, then in a tory area, the hit to the government will be minimal, so less of a barrier to making the call. That doesn't mean those people are disposable or collateral damage, to me or the government, which is why twice I've posted about replacement sustainable jobs, but these type of job cuts will be more common in the future as we combat cutting emissions to save the planet.
I don't see that as a big issue in the big scheme of things.
ok then.
thanks for clarifying that for me.
I am worried for the people inhaling the smoke in Auckland. I wonder where all the drainage goes – into the normal system? Into a special system? Pollution? I spose the toxic firefighting foam is no longer used which is good. Anyway I hope everyone and the environment stays safe.
I expect the water hosed on the fire ends up in the harbour – a place where in a month's time or so I expect to be catching dinner occasionally. Interesting that something that makes Auckland a brilliant place (catching fish within sight of downtown) could theoretically be jeopardised by something that makes it a sh*thole (Skycity and all its doings).
Which leads to a larger question – why is a trashy private fiefdom like Skycity allowed any influence over our cityscape, or our lives in general?
ain't this the truth…
'
But Massey University lecturer Ralph Bathurst disagreed.
"The thing that is surprising about the David Hisco case is that it is unsurprising. We as citizens should be outraged by CEOs, and board members receiving astronomical salaries and benefits under the pretence that they are talented. The primary talent that these senior so-called business 'leaders' have in common is that they can fool us into believing that they are talented," he said.-Stuff.
Please add the link when you quote something. Here's one for free: https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/116782789/hisco-wants-privacy-but-what-could-he-do-next
Your sarcasm is unnecessary.I quoted the part I wanted to and attributed it to Stuff.
[Little things like adding links to quoted text take a few seconds and do lift the quality of discourse. If everybody do their bid we will all benefit – this is not sarcasm but a fact. In addition, it is about appropriate attribution of the originator of the quoted text or info – Incognito]
See my Moderation note @ 2:11 PM.
'university lecture Ralph Bathurst'…'Here's one for free'…is definitely sarcasm.
Stop being a prick.And your opinion is just that=not fact at all.
[Please refrain from making personal insults and please provide links in future, thanks – Incognito]
See my Moderation note @ 2:43 PM.
Do each of the following comments here on Open Mike today also fall into the same category as those of The Chairman and Blazer and require links to be provided to the statements made:
Not speaking for Incognito but the mod note said if you quote, provide a link. You'll note in my post I didn't quote, just made an observation. Though I'm happy to provide a link, if required, it'll have to be when I get home from work and can stop using this shitty tablet.
I always understood it was only about direct quotes.
Will personally read with a grain of salt if it's anyone (including me) just characterising a source, so I do not mind.
Nothing is B&W and set in stone but my personal take is:
HTH
Theo Spierings springs to mind. Obscene salary package (and bonus) NOT based on performance. I would have no problem if he was earning say, $3 million a year and the company was performing.
Oddly enough, it seems there is indeed a relationship between CEO pay and company performance: they're inversely correlated.
https://cooleypubco.com/2016/07/25/new-study-shows-inverse-correlation-between-ceo-pay-and-performance-over-the-long-term/
Those seriously unfunny or unoriginal pillocks Jono and Ben have fled the sinking ship that is mediaworks and got a gig at tvnz. Whilst not being the absolute worst examples of what passes for kiwi man's humour, though it's close, it still won't make them any less Rattus rattus.
Much hope for Mark Richardson than he deserves, then, if that’s the level they’re prepared to stoop to at the national broadcaster.
What's wrong with J&B? They're not my cup of tea, but they're not tory chatbots like hosking or richardson AFAIK
Not my cup of tea at all, either, but if opinions are like arseholes, I can ignore my dag just like I can wipe yours. Lol
lol fair enough. I much prefer folk like them on the telly rather than hosking, who is just a propagandist of the lowest kind.
Now that's something we can all agree on lol
I guess its a matter of opinion, I don't mind them but I just do not find their off sider Guy Williams funny at all.
Ill admit to switching channels when any of them are on TV, I dislike the act so much, but of course it's each to their own and all that.
I have recently been re watching The thick of it, about a spin doctor for the last labour gov, starring the better jock doctor who, so my taste in comedy is probably a bit different to b&j's world view.
Here we go with jobs for the Boyz n girlz. Tvnz needs a clear out from the top down.
Unfunny and unoriginal….how about something new and interesting.
I love the concern tories have for charity.
So ACT's David Seymour signed a MAGA hat to be auctioned, originally for a donation to the kidsline charity. The MAGA hat was made by a right wing nutter.
Yup, you read that "right": Seymour was so concerned for the reputation of the charity that he bravely suggested that his organisation should bear the brunt of the donation. Such a fine humanitarian lol
I assume the hat was a 'Make Ardern Go Away' hat….
Surely the minister for wasting time and burning political capital is on thin ice?
Before the election there was two party consensus on light rail, and Labour was promising 2 lines, plus high speed rail Auckland to Tauranga in 9 years.
Now we are down to the Nats and NZ First not supporting light rail and there has been sod all progress of any kind.
If this was encouraged because a PPP looks better…grr
When you say 2 party consensus do you mean Labour and Greens? Cos the National Party hasn’t ever supported light rail. Just like they didn’t support the Northern Busway when Clark announced that or the CRL until Key gave in on that or the Waterview tunnel or had the commonsense to build the northwestern busway infrastructure while they were widening that motorway.
tl;dr 'Murica's been as racist AF forever.
https://twitter.com/michaelharriot/status/1186468302400507904
Racial terrorism is actually normal in American history but I believe we talk about in the wrong way. These are not isolated incidents , nor are they rare.
This is the story of how a national campaign by whites terrorists overthrew the US government
A few weeks ago, Donald Trump tweeted that there would be a coup if he was ousted from the presidency and media outlets portrayed him as crazy. It it is NOT crazy to think that a race war is possible.
It has happened FOUR TIMES in history.
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1186468302400507904.html
I couldn't believe that actually happened, WTF? & great Twitter thread.
In Europe they were called pogroms…meaning "to destroy, to wreak havoc"
A good day for the Otago region with Marion Hobbs elected as chairman of Otago Regional Council, with Michael Laws as deputy.
https://www.odt.co.nz/news/dunedin/labour-minister-orc-chairwoman
The Council has a huge job ahead of it sorting out the demise of the old mining water rights, water quality issues that are going to hit like a sledge hammer when the dairy waste reaches ground water and streams in Central, public transport needs throughout the region and public dis-engagement with a council that seemed only interested in building a Dunedin centric empire.
Get to work people.
Jesse Mulligan (afternoons on Natrad) had former Herald columnist Rachel Stewart as a guest today. Stewart shared her favourite music, books and movie….and for at least a short while created an oasis of quality listening in this usually bland timeslot.
Sorry, can't do the link thing from my phone….but this is well worth a listen.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/afternoons/audio/2018718998/rachel-stewart-on-being-in-the-public-eye
Ta.
Canada’s first Climate Change Election?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/trudeau-sheer-election-carbon-tax-1.5330829
https://www.rnz.co.nz/programmes/the-detail/story/2018717779/nz-s-low-unemployment-rate-is-hiding-huge-inequity
Social Development minister Carmel Sepuloni says the issue of disabled unemployment has been overlooked for too long.
“It’s our responsibility to ensure that we are breaking down the barriers and providing opportunities to work,” she says.
Issues range from mental health issues, to sight or hearing impairments, intellectual disabilities and autism.
It’s also not a stagnant group – people are going off and on the benefit, many taking up employment for a short time. Sepuloni says 74 percent of them do want to work.
“We want them to thrive, and they want to thrive,” she says. (How can people believe this sort of bumf.)
It's a mirage. How many people who are employed are getting a decent wage so that they can do sufficient hours during the hours of daylight to fulfil their roles and lives as advanced human beings? People are sick, they are stressed, and the jobs that are available largely depend on basic neds , providing health, or catering for tourists who need to be from overseas, or are old age pensioners. Too many young and; middle aged people are making do on a knife-edge, very uncomfortably. Thriving? Even our bacteria can't thrive and people need faecal inputs; there is a fog of stats around employment.
What we need is work along demography strata age=group lines – and show about five different measures per 100,000 like full-time in normal working periods of a 5 day weeks b 6day weeks c revolving flexible weeks where the hours are tacked in here and there and no guaranteeed 2 day break.
Etc – Possibly not drawn up by the OECD because they make up the stats so countries can lie to their populations.
The public service used to pick up many of those with disabilities as employees. The profit imperative of business means the private sector will never create sufficient employment for this group.
Same with young school leavers.
She should put her money where her mouth is and fund the public service to do this on top of their existing funding – ring fenced so the funding doesn't get siphoned off elsewhere.
Busy telling private sector employers to do this when she needs to look closer to home.
In my view the public service should look like the local communities they serve.
Agreed. I was amazed to listen to the very fluent Sepuloni go on and on in such a well-modulated voice, like she has been programmed. These tertiary institutions really fill you up with rhetoric and on just a tiny reservoir of energy, the information can go for hours. Turned her off after a short while.
There may be good reason for a disabled person to go and do a wage job, or not. They might want one and get a real burst of determination to achieve something that takes them to the peak of their own Mt Aoraki (analogy). I heard nothing said about setting up opportunity groups to do volunteer work, and class that as alternative employment so it is listed in separate statistics from the usual employment figures.
The relish that they announce how good it is for everyone to be working, ie in a paid job, is an example of saturation programming. It has been picked up from somebody's paper/s as reliable and honourable as the material on anti-vaxxers. I am all for people contributing to society, and I mean all, evem just coaching one person in reading, teaching music, making scones, permaculture, learning extra skills even the best way to use garden tools (as done in big hardware shops) etc.
Have joint classes for mothers with young children, encourage the availability of jobs during school hours. One thing that I think I did hear this morning was that mothers were encouraged to share a job, so the other could cover with child care, or when there is sickness. If I heard right that was an innovative step for a start.
Accounting and Law are similar fields to my mind. At least it is an overseas example, and yes it did happen recently
https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/world/116814057/ey-seminar-claims-women-have-smaller-brains-than-men-less-ambition
This seems much more concrete than most of the other leadership philosophy and advise I have observed.
Probably a rark up it's so 1980s
June last year….and the usual corporate BS that passes as training
Well it’s this time of the year I start look for books to read or reference books for my 1/700 model ships that I build during the summer period (the Northern Australian Wet Season) while listening to the summer of cricket on ABC radio except for the Boxing Day Test as I will be there in person with the old man over from NZ.
Anyway I find this new book on poor old Neville Chamberlain while looking for a book on the WW2 Illustrious Class Carriers line drawings and camouflage markings. This book looks like it could be a good read, for example he has a butterfly named after him, enjoyed bird watching and was a bit of a greenie/ naturalist among other things. Model ship building does leads me down to some interesting paths like the why, who, where, when and how these ships came to be built.
https://www.pen-and-sword.co.uk/Neville-Chamberlains-Legacy-Hardback/p/16537
Plus a couple of books from the New Zealand Rail Society on the rebuilding the SIMT Line after the Kaikoura earthquake and one on the Hillside workshops, where I drank a few ales with some of the old boys in the pubs around Hillside workshops and it was also close to KAH Barracks during the 90’s.
Nice one Ex Kiwi I have noted those for future reading. As an ex-engineer at one stage involved in the Aircraft Industry, well, that is when Britain had an aircraft industry before it was destroyed by inept politicians and management. I can highly recommend the following books "Empire of the Clouds" by James Hamilton-Paterson about the demise of the British Aircraft industry, EXACTLY by Simon Winchesterly, how precision engineering made the modern world. Great stories from automating the pulley block making for Nelson's navy to why that RR Engine blew apart on that Qantas flight. and lastly, a book I am reading now which gives great insight into the development of the U2 and stealth aircraft by Lockheeds highly secretive department called Skunk Works, written by the CEO Ben R Rich and Leo Jonos. Great insights into brilliant engineers and in the book Empire of the Clouds cretinous fuckwit politicians who should have been put down at birth
Britain was spending 10% of its government budget on Defence in the middle 50s, plus paying for development of the civil aviation industry, which largely ended with the most expensive of all – Concorde
Thats what the cuts made by successive governments from Conservatives in late 50s to labour in mid 60s and later was all about reducing
“Thats what the cuts made by successive governments from Conservatives in late 50s to labour in mid 60s and later was all about reducing “
We all know that, but they didn't save or reduce on this little exercise did they, fact it cost the UK dearly in more ways than one. This is just one example of many, I could mention like Sandys and his fetish for missiles and how much that cost the taxpayer and the UK aircraft industry. Also, like Cleese, I won't mention the war or the Miles 52 project, a complete irreparable incompetent criminal stuff up by politicians who did not have a clue how to open a bottle of milk let alone minister an aircraft industry.
From the book Empire of the Clouds
“Thus ended TSR.2 and with it all hopes that Briton could remain in the major league of aircraft manufacturing countries. 195 million in development costs were written off. The immediate effect on BAC and particularly on English Electric's Warton workforce was devasting, with large numbers of redundancies and general demoralisation that hit the RAF and spread throughout the industry. For TSR,2 was not the only project prat (my words) Healey had cancelled that fateful day. With it went Fairey's project Rotodyne feeder helicopter for ferrying passengers from airports to city centres(21 Million written off); Hawkers P.1154 projected supersonic version of what was to be the Harrier verticle take-off fighter (my words again something the Yanks have just managed to achieve in the last decade at enormous costs) another 21 million; and the Hawkers Siddeley/Armstrong Whitworth 681 military freighter much the same cost (my words again, would have made the Hercules look pathetic) There was widespread disbelief at both the policy and the crassness with which it was implemented, but this quickly turned to real anger when the full irony was revealed: that the 150 F-111's ordered for the RAF because they would have been so much cheaper than 150 TSR.2's turned out – when the equivalent F-111s were delivered to the Australian Airforce – to be even MORE expensive because their recurrent bugs and teething problems ( my opinion, another heap of American shit something Australia found out). “ Eventually the UK order for the F-111's was cancelled in 1968 at a cost of 46.4 million.”
Great "reducing" there aye mate, it certainly “reduced” the British Aircraft Industry
The TSR.2 is one of my favourite planes of the 50-60's along the Avro Canada's CF-105. The TSR.2 shit fight is something I still to this day can't get my head around as it was basically an EE design Aircraft, but the lead builder was Vickers out of Weybridge which had no SME on building Supersonic Military aircraft, but EE had all the knowledge etc from the Lighting, long a enough runway etc and other research design at Warton was made the a secondary partner. Vickers only post war military AC was Valiant Bomber and had been more focus on Civil AC.
Then we have Avro Canada's and the stuff that was coming out of the Company was leading edge stuff like its Avro Jetliner which then follow CF100 and lastly the doomed CF-105. Just reading Randall Whitcomb books on Avro Canada is just mind blowing
As you said the Miles 52 project was an opportunely lost and having read Winkle Brown's book, does lead me to think they would've beat the Yanks by far margin and, again the Vickers with Barnes Wills got into the ear of the then Labour Government to say its rockets while alot safer and cheaper, a maned flight.
The Fairey's Rotodyne was another excellent design, but again it was way a head of its time and a lot less complex than the US Osprey that flies over my house during the dry season when the Yanks are in town.
The Joint British/ Australian Rocket programme is another subject, i still can't really get my head a round either, when one considers that the UK/ Aus were the third nation to put up a satellite and then pull the plug on it as some muppet called Roy Jenkins why do we need satellites and what's there use? All the work of the Black Arrow, Black Prince, Black Knight and Blue Streak along with Saro and co kicked into the scrap yard.
The Civil Aircraft was no better either the V1000/ VC7 would've been the first widebody aircraft in world and would've been built in the 50's and then later the VC10 which if had been built to its original design spec's without BOAC sticking in fingers in pie would've been another world beating widebody. Then we have the sorry episode of DH's lovely Trident Tri Jet and again if it had been built to it original design without BEA sticking its fingers in the pie, it would beating the Boeing 727 hands down.
The way Handley Page was treated during the 60's by then Labour Government is be on contempt and quite frankly fucking disgusting. It had a couple of good aircraft coming online, Victor Bomber upgrades would've been world class and it research dept at the time looking into carbon fibre/ composite materials back in the late 50's/ 60's before they became the rage in 90's.
Boulton & Paul was mucking around with Radar Absorbent Material until it was caned in the 60's and today its research files are still class as for UK Eyes only. Just think if the B&P RAM was applied to the Vulcan which already had a very small radar cross section or the Blackburn Buccaneer (One blight spot among the chaos of the 60's and should've sold more if wasn't for the BS from the RAF)?
The list is endless IRT to the UK Labour Government of the 60's, but don't get me started on the post war Churchill/ Eden Government.
Then lastly the High Speed Train is a What if or could've been? which was in the in end scaled right back. And the same could be said of the Nimrod MR4 and there is some interesting chat over at the http://www.secretprojects.uk.com on the balls up by Big And Expensed and co.
The answer is simple the UK couldnt afford all this stuff and the over sized military forces that went with it. Even by this stage the US was winding back some of its development projects as too expensive. Was all the best decisions made to keep the best projects ? No but hindsight is a great thing they didnt have back then.
Rather than reading fanboys stories of how great these planes were – they were generally shocking management and old and inefficent production plants and very long development times. Even some missile projects were cancelled.
Tony Buttler has done some good recent reserach on the original papers covering aircraft and engines from that era ( 1957) showing how many competing and likely outdated by the time they were ready.
Check out other defence cuts in Army and navy forces and programs at the time
eg
'There was to be a reduction in the number of regular infantry battalions from 64 to 49 "
'The British Army was to be reduced in size and reorganised to reflect the ending of National Service and the change to a voluntary army, and to "keep the Army abreast of changing circumstances, policies, weapons and techniques of war". 51 major units and a large number of smaller ones were to be disbanded or amalgamated,"
I fully agree with what you are saying, but my issue is that TSR2 should've continue even just purely as research Aircraft, instead of backing Concorde when the TSR2 got canned and even back then there were doubts about Concorde even being a success. Especially what was on the drawing broads at Hatfield (DH125 and the DH148) and coming of Woodford (Arvo) two wide body Airliners which become the A300 &310, the FTA (Future Transport Airlifter) also known by the Woodford crew as FAT's which became the bases for the A400 and the replacement of the Avro 748 (the Mount Cook AC and the RNZAF Andover) or ATP. Where the then Labour Government should've supported as a backstop to Concorde and the TSR2.
But if you ask anybody around Preston today about the TSR2? the punters would say we were stab in the back Labour as they said they would never cancel TSR2 as the now infamous Labour Party leaflet issued in the Preston South constituency before the 64 General Election say's:
Harold Wilson Tells TSR2 workers "Your Jobs are Guaranteed Under Labour" etc etc.
Ref: Pg 268 TSR2 Britain's Lost Bomber by Damien Burke
There is a book on my wishlist on Frogpond on the Brit Army from 45- 1971, but it will cost a bomb to get around the $150 mark.
And people wonder why the Working class/ Working poor in the Mildlands are going to give the UK Labour the two fingers in this election. I think the Blairites within the UK labour Party are going to be in for a rude shock this time round. The Australian Working Class give the Shorten and the Oz labour the two fingers, and the NZ Labour Party better watch themselves as well next year.
Thanks for that Kiwi I agree with you 300% I could have written more and thank you for adding what I wanted to say
I have friends in NZ who worked on the TSR.2 The way they speak about this aircraft which they had great pride in I get the impression it was the last straw where they were concerned when it was scrapped. There is one airframe left and that is at Duxford Agree with you I feel English Electric should have built it as you said it was a EE design, but once again cretinous fuckwit politicians got in the way.
You mentioned Avro of Canada another great design the Avro Arrow, that upset the Yanks scrapped within a couple of weeks and the then Canadian government had their arm twisted to buy a missile from the Yanks which once again was a heap of crap that did not work.
A great quote from Sir Sydney Camm designer of the Hurricane and Hunter(I think)
“All modern aircraft have four dimensions: Span, Length, Height and Politics. TSR2 simply got the first three right.” -……………………….. Sir Sydney Camm.
This book might be your up alley and does look to be quite interesting
http://www.crecy.co.uk/britain-s-aircraft-industry-since-1909
The three TSR2 Books I have are
TSR2 Britain's lost bomber by Damien Burke,
TSR2 Britain's lost cold war strike aircraft by Tim Mclelland,
X Planes TSR2 Britain's lost cold war strike jet by Andrew Brookes who an Bomber Command/ Strike Command V Bomber Pilot
Also this book called the Lost Eagle on the TSR2 is very good as well.
I have two Diecast 1/72 models of both the TSR2 and the CF-105 and this book Avro Arrow put out by The Boston Mills Press http://www.bostonmillpress.com
Then I also have Tony Butlers books called the British Secret Projects and two are on Rockets Hypersonic and Ramjets and Dan Sharp's Vol 5 of this is the UK Space Program Projects.
Chris Gibson also has a Series where he breaks down all the various Operational Requirements (OR's) into
Vulcan's Hammer (Bomber)
Battle Flight (Fighters and Air Defence)
Nimrod's Genesis (Maritime Patrol and Weapons)
On Atlas shoulders (RAF Transport)
Listening In (RAF Spookies/ Snoopy's aka Electronic Intelligence) and the new out is
Typhoon to Typhoon (Close Air Support)
Sir Sid Cam’s last jet fighter is also very interesting the Hawker P1121 which wouldn’t look out of place on a modern flightline in today’s airforce either. It’s remains are held at Canwell Aviation Centre for Aeronautical Research I believe
Kia Ora 1 News.
Natural prouds are not extremely hard to extinguish when on ahi.
I know who I won't tau toko.
I did not know much
about India culture.
I don't think that statement should have been made.
Its good that some reparation has been given to Parihaka Tangata Whenua of Tarakihi.
I would like my day in Whare whakawa.
Ka kite Ano.
No one is immune from the Greedy chasing putea $$$$$$$$$$$$$ cause all the problems of Te Papatuanuku. We must change the way we live or we are all going to be suffering.
My rich town was poisoned by a corporation. Even the 1% isn't safe from pollution
Environmental and political leaders in the US have decided the environment is worth compromising for private profit
My son took his first breath in a place I never imagined would be potentially harmful for his health: Hinsdale, Illinois.
Hinsdale is listed in the top 1% of the wealthiest towns in Illinois. It’s filled with multimillion-dollar mansions, Zook architectural masterpieces and upscale shops. But Hinsdale, despite its privileged position in Chicago’s western suburbs, has one unfortunate thing against it: like any other American town, it’s part of a country whose environmental and political leaders have decided that the environment is worth compromising for private profit.
Somehow, many of the privileged among us, including myself, didn’t think the unfortunate choices of our political leaders could have the power to kill us. They might hurt the poor in Flint, Michigan, the migrant workers in Bakersfield, California, or those who don’t have the means to leave Louisiana’s Cancer Alley. But most of us living in Hinsdale and its neighboring well-to-do towns never considered that our villages could be a Flint or Cancer Alley.
What is happening in America's Cancertown is tragic, immoral and evil | Rev William Barber
Read more
We were naive. Last year we learned that Sterigenics, a global medical sterilization company with a plant in Willowbrook, Illinois, quietly spewed insane amounts of ethylene oxide (EtO), a powerful carcinogen, into our air for 35 years.
This was wishful thinking. Nothing was done. So enraged residents formed Stop Sterigenics, a group that is now is over 10,000 members strong. We staged protests, packed town hall meetings, signed witness slips and called for Illinois politicians to shut down the company for the sake of public health
In February, the Illinois environmental protection agency issued a seal order temporarily banning Sterigenics from using EtO, but last month, the agency granted the company a permit to continue to use the chemical. The message to all of us was clear: the rights of Sterigenics to make a profit mattered more to the IEPA than the rights of thousands of people living in its vicinity not to be subjected to cancer-causing air. This really shouldn’t have been surprising to anyone reading the news, where every day there seems to be another disaster related to an environmental policy decision, but, until it happens to you, it is.
Just as we were preparing to breathe toxic air again, the unthinkable happened: despite being given the green light to continue using EtO (albeit with certain emissions restrictions in place), Sterigenics announced it was leaving Willowbrook. They blamed their lease and the “unpredictable” regulatory landscape rather than the community activism that has fought them relentlessly for 14 months. But the question to the rest of the nation is: where are they going? They emit EtO in eight other locations nationwide, and the Environmental Protection Agency’s National Air Toxics Assessment has linked EtO to high cancer rates in Smyrna, Georgia, where Sterigenics also has a plant
But the tough community activism of Stop Sterigenics proves that even in a world where the EPA protects corporations instead of people, people still do have power. Let’s use it to join the attorneys general of Illinois, California, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin, who, on 10 October, wrote a letter asking the EPA to update its current emissions standards to protect the nation from the EtO the EPA knows is killing us
Ka kite Ano link below.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/oct/23/hinsdale-illinois-pollution-sterigenics-epa
ETO Eco Maori, another acronym to add to our list of confusing identification of harmful substances and practices. Glad they are leaving one part of Illinois, but where else are they going to go with their ill-ness producing methods?
Some Eco Maori Music For The Minute.
https://youtu.be/gOsM-DYAEhY
Some Eco Maori Music For The Minute.
https://youtu.be/SKprXO-f2pM
Kia Ora Breakfast.
I think it's good that our government has given farmers 5 years to come up with a plan and show they are lowering their carbon footprint
. That's good the Australians respecting Te Tangata of Australias views and banning people from climbing their Taonga moanga Uluru
Te insurance industry in Aotearoa will kick Te little companies to touch. Greed and Prophets.
Ka kite Ano
I agree no one would have thought that the intelligence tangata of Te Papatuanuku would strike for our futures Climate 10 years ago or even 3 years ago. Kia Kaha to all the Tangata who are doing the correct thing for our future.
There are no excuses left': why climate science deniers are running out of rope
Guardian environment correspondent Fiona Harvey recalls being heckled at the House of Commons and explains how attitudes to climate have shifted in 10 years
The shouted words rang out across the packed parliamentary corridor: “Fiona Harvey is the worst journalist there is. She’s the worst journalist of them all, because she should know better.”
They were the words of Lord Lawson, former UK chancellor of the exchequer, turned climate denier and now Brexiter, addressing a crowd of more than 100 people trying to cram into a House of Commons hearing on climate change. As listeners craned their necks to hear better, whispering and nudging, he elaborated at length on my insistence on reporting the work of the 97% of the world’s climate scientists whose work shows human responsibility for global heating, and failure to give equal weight to the tiny number of dissenters
As the science of climate chaos has become vastly clearer in the past two decades, and the warnings more stark, the rearguard action fought by climate denialists has grown fiercer and their attacks more vicious. Fact-based arguments will never serve their purpose; trolling is the last refuge of the discredited. We can expect much more of the same.
When I began writing full-time on the environment in 2004, climate change had hit a political impasse. George W Bush was in the White House, the US preoccupied with the war on terror and – as Bush admitted – “addicted to oil”. The 1997 Kyoto protocol was on ice, without the backing of enough countries to bring it into force, and international negotiations on greenhouse gases were stagnating as a result.
Suddenly, like a glacier destabilising, small cracks turned into crevasses and whole edifices came avalanching down. First Russia played the unlikely hero: by ratifying Kyoto in late 2004 (cynically, in return for a favour at the World Trade Organization) the Duma rescued the treaty from the scrapheap of history. That was enough to galvanise the UN negotiations, loosening entrenched positions and giving the talks a point once more.
Tony Blair did his bit by making climate change the main theme for the UK’s 2005 presidency of the G8, which forced world leaders to confront the issue. The EU’s emissions trading scheme came into being early that year, marking the first time companies were held responsible financially for their carbon output.
Ka kite Ano link below.
Eco Maori link for the above.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/oct/17/climate-science-deniers-environment-warning
Some Eco Maori Music For The Minute.
https://youtu.be/tgIqecROs5M
Kia Ora 1 News.
What a mess.
That's is cool a new drinking water quality monitor.
Tawhirimate is Mana at Uluru.
The 5 new Islands that the Russian have mapped looks like the wild life have made a whare there.
Ringer for Mark
SainBury
Ka kite Ano.
Kia Ora Te Ao Maori News.
Its good that people are being caught a charged for pouching Kai Moana .
Mike Smith that's the way we need to leave the carbon in Te Papatuanuku.
Congratulations Hinerangi Goodman on your winning a seat on the Whakatane Council Awsome to see more Wahine and tangata whenua standing for Local government positions.
Ka kite Ano