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Post by armchairadmiral on Oct 28, 2022 7:22:26 GMT 12
Does NZ stand by and let these communist dictators complete the destruction of the fabric of our society. Even the big headed egos can read the writing on the wall. All the opposition has to do is .....nothing and they will be the new government....but in a years time. This allows plenty of time for Labour to implement new destruction that will be almost impossible to reverse. Won't get into detail, some has already been detailed on here. Suffice to say that the present trend is that if I can't have it then you're not going to have it either. Maybe the bimbo's pending appointment to the UN could prompt an early election or else it looks like we're stuffed. A weakness in our democracy is letting a really bad government continue with no way out. And they were promoting changing to a 4 year term. Any suggestions for getting rid of them ?
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Post by eri on Oct 28, 2022 7:58:49 GMT 12
just have to grind through the democratic process
if you want to do more, find your local mp and local councillors and make a time to let them know how you feel
the personal touch is more impactful that an email straight to the trash folder
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Post by ComfortZone on Oct 28, 2022 8:44:06 GMT 12
from Cam Slater's editorial this morning, which was in the main talking about his recovery from his stroke
The last thing I will leave you with that is pertinent to these dark, tyrannical times we are all facing, is that sometimes it is best to just let things go. It’s hard and it has taken me several years to get there.
Many of you want to fight this Government and that is commendable but as Sun Tzu says: “however desperate the situation and circumstances, don’t despair. When there is everything to fear, be unafraid. When surrounded by dangers, fear none of them. When without resources, depend on resourcefulness. When surprised, take the enemy by surprise.”
Add to Napoleon Bonaparte’s maxim: “Never interfere with the enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself.” For that is surely what Jacinda Ardern has done by mandating forced medical procedures, introducing draconian internal borders and the modern equivalent to ‘show us your papers’, along with abrogating democracy by ramming through the confiscation of council assets. Let them make these mistakes, because every single action they are currently taking is negatively affecting their re-election prospects.
You can’t stop it anyway, because they have a majority. You don’t have to accept it but realise that you can’t stop it …… yet. Patience is now a virtue. Just let it play out. Keep your powder dry. Just let it go. Their time is at an end. It is a long way to the next election and soon enough people will realise that they are the ones destroying this country.
Just let it go. Do not fear, be strong, we will prevail.
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Post by muzled on Oct 28, 2022 8:51:55 GMT 12
Chris Trotter has a good article this morning. thedailyblog.co.nz/2022/10/28/eliminating-the-racism-virus/As the (Govt) Position Statement makes clear: “Race and racialisation are social and political constructs designed to categorise physical differences between people (that is, skin colour, hair texture, geographical origins, etc) and assign value and meaning to a hierarchically arranged racial grouping. These constructs originated from Europe and influenced the structure of society, racial superiority and hierarchy.” And if you balk at the almost unbelievable historical cheek of this statement. If you want to shout out “Have none of you studied anthropology!” Or point out that for centuries the majority of the world’s slaves were white. Or that there are a number of other “constructs” that “originated in Europe” – like democracy, and the quaint belief that all human-beings (in the words of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) “are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.” Well, then, you can only be a carrier of the racism virus, and you should be hospitalised until you test negative.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 28, 2022 10:37:27 GMT 12
Read Shane Jones article in the herald...
The best summary of the cluster fuck that is labour and Stalin... By Shane Jones 27 Oct, 2022 05:00 AM
The Prime Minister is on ice somewhere in Antarctica - a cold and inhospitable environment not unlike the political winds bearing down on her in Godzone.
As Waka Kotahi struggles to meet the repair bills, potholes grow larger by the week, an epitome for the failings of this Government: An inability to deliver core services.
Community service sentences are wiped out while teenage ram-raids proliferate. Hospital services fail while Te Whatu Ora fiddles with organisational charts. Firms lose trained staff while the head of Te Pūkenga remains disconnected from the limbs. Numeracy and literacy standards plummet while Shakespeare is cancelled.
The Education Minister would do well to remember the prose of the good Bard: “When sorrows come, they come not single spies but in battalions.”
This is a Government with lots of plates spinning. What drives it to spin so many? Is it a case of imposter syndrome, where there is a gap between the internal persona and the personality the public can see? Perhaps it believes more spinning will mask its inadequacies.
Take as another example the fallacy of “Road to Zero” strategy. This is taking on a whole new meaning as provincial confidence in transport policy is verging toward zero. Without durable infrastructure, the economic productivity of our exporters declines.
While the PM craves climate credentials, she seems hellbent on shrinking our primary sector. A substantial reduction of output is paydirt for James Shaw as he jets off to the next climate change event.
Rural communities are told the protein marketplace will pay a premium when we price agricultural emissions. A recent Otago University study however showed that UK shoppers buy on brand, variety and price. More Wellington plate spin.
Inevitably, the chinstrap penguins who beat the political drum of climate doom would have us change our consumption patterns. No matter that global demand for food is slated to increase by 70 per cent over the next three decades.
Reducing the amount of food produced either here or overseas is not an option. New Zealand is in a sweet spot to fill the global plate and there will be no political consensus for shrinking our food exports.
The agricultural emissions policy is like a mystical article of faith. It needs to be replaced by science and technology; the former being optics and the latter as the recipe our exporters need to reduce emissions and boost productivity.
The $52 billion question is what National will do to secure the future of the rural economy. Labour and the Greens have shown us that sheep and beef country will be the sacrificial lamb.
Before the next election, Christopher Luxon will need to distil his position. Trotting out corporate inanities will not wash. Post-Covid, we need to boost our exports. Our current account deficit is already alarming. Shrinking our international income threatens our creditworthiness.
Perhaps Luxon wants less pastoral production and more horticulture. Given the most valuable soils comprise less than 5 per cent of our land, planning will be critical. How will his ministers fund the water infrastructure to incentivise investors? Tax cuts will limit the capacity to undertake practical initiatives.
Climate change woolly thinking isn’t confined to agriculture. The Minister of Transport’s policy agenda is laid bare by Waka Kotahi data showing new EV vehicle registrations - the $8625 Tesla credit cluster - are predominantly in affluent postcodes.
Remuera, Kohimarama and Herne Bay pockets are now bulging with feel-good subsidies. Pockets in Manurewa, Henderson or Swanson have nothing but moths because they can afford only low-priced vehicles.
Funding is needed to address the weaknesses of our energy transmission infrastructure. Decreasing transport emissions needs to be based on clean energy inputs. Such an outcome requires more solar, wind and hydro storage. Such investment however requires a major upgrade of provincial transmission lines. An opportunity was missed in the last Budget as funds were unwisely deployed for native tree planting and other such pursuits. Build the new energy transmission highway and the investment will follow.
Three Waters is as popular as ditch water. Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown has voiced what the public largely feels, too little accountability and dubious fiscal foundations.
According to the Prime Minister, if this reform model does not proceed there will be rate rises. She will not countenance such as outcome. Really? Given the rising cost of Auckland’s current borrowings and the decline in asset values, how will she achieve that?
If the Three Waters model fails in the future, taxpayers will pay to keep the taps running. Not Tainui and Ngāi Tahu. Consequently, the plug should be pulled on iwi involvement.
Auckland light rail is a train wreck with unquantifiable costings. Once Auckland Transport is exorcised of its Periwinkle fairy spirits and common sense prevails, fiscal discipline should return.
Of course, supernatural beings infest other parts of Labour’s agenda. Taniwha once dormant, writhe across the parliamentary landscape as ministers insert the Treaty into more statutes.
They add nothing as is demonstrated in the Oranga Tamariki Act which requires the CEO to commit to the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi. Vulnerable children need protection from warped two-legged taniwha, not cultural cant.
If the outcome of the recent local council elections was an appetiser, the full menu lies ahead in about 12 months. Unless Labour jettisons a host of these spinning plates they’ll fall, dashing its electoral prospects.
The electoral clock is ticking and Labour has overdue decisions to make. Shakespeare actually lays it out for them: “Better three hours too soon than a minute too late.”
Shane Jones is a former Labour MP and NZ First MP and was the
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Post by fish on Oct 28, 2022 10:44:50 GMT 12
This could be a good thread to discuss the demise of Labour. I've been trying to determine how it would play out. Specifically, this talk of Jacinda spitting the dummie and going to the UN. That would seriously throw Labour under the bus. What would lead the leader to do that?
Currently they have 64 MP's (65 less Dr Sharma). About 35 of them will loose their job this time next year. That creates a bit of internal friction and what not. You don't need to be much of a political scientist to know that the race based rules, 3 waters & co-governance are upsetting a lot of people. All of the unpopular policies are coming from Willie Jackson's Arian Nation, sorry, Maori Caucus.
It will be obvious to all of the other Labour MP's, the white, indian, asian etc, that they need to ditch the race based policies to have any chance of re-election. Que a major internal conflict. How that internal conflict plays out would be the pre-curser to a Leader stepping down with some sort of dignity, rather than just throwing the party under the bus for personal gain. Basically she needs a scape goat. Willie Jackson's group is the perfect candidate for that.
Now, extend these thoughts to the basis of MMP. The fundamental problem with this current govt is it has a majority. It has absolute power. That has enabled them to action legislation they don't have a mandate for. The whole point of MMP is to form coalition govts made up of partners that have electoral mandates for their policies. This means one single party can't rum amuck like Labour is.
Fundamentally, it would be far better for the country and democracy if we had a larger number of smaller parties, and got rid of Labour and National all together. I supported Labour (at the time) in their 'normal' policies, not their racist ones. If Labour were to split into a Maori Caucus and the rest, then you'd know what you were voting for. It is basically the same with National. I want good economic management, I don't want religious conservatism. ACT is currently a party small enough to know what you are going to get. The greens are a complete mess, and while they say they are green, they are primarily raging socialists. It would be very good for the political landscape if we had a few more viable small parties. Hopefully Dr Sharma's party (the Karma Party), Democracy NZ, dare I say it NZ First, ACT, possibly TOP. Then you could from a 3 or 4 way coalition, each party brings the policy they got a mandate for, where policies are mutually exclusive, the majority wins (as per democracy), everyone gets what was expected, and we have predictable, stable govt. And we also have unicorn farts.
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Post by eri on Oct 28, 2022 11:08:34 GMT 12
to a large part labour have completed their secret work
they've re-written the rules on just about everything to lock woke-ness onto the bureaucracy
they never had a hope of making it work, but that doesn't matter
that task goes to the new government who is largely locked into these education, health reforms etc
we can only hope a new gov. dismantles the unworkable laws labour have written
which is most of them and they'll be fought every step of the way by a woke bureaucracy who have now built themselves an ethical policy for largely ignoring democracy
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Post by armchairadmiral on Oct 31, 2022 19:57:39 GMT 12
Looks like the bimbo is warming up, ready to leave after all. Sky news reporting she's dismissed the supposition . So did John Key and the timing is almost the same. Brings to mind the old Jim Reeves song. Bimbo bimbo where you going to go e oh....look it up on you tube. Quite relevant from yesteryear
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Post by fish on Oct 31, 2022 20:35:29 GMT 12
Looks like the bimbo is warming up, ready to leave after all. Sky news reporting she's dismissed the supposition . So did John Key and the timing is almost the same. Brings to mind the old Jim Reeves song. Bimbo bimbo where you going to go e oh....look it up on you tube. Quite relevant from yesteryear What is Sky News? Do you have a link?
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Post by fish on Oct 31, 2022 20:39:39 GMT 12
story here 13 hrs old saying she isn't quitting. Her words. Shame. The Prime Minister says she has no plans to quit her job ahead of next year's election after rumours began swirling. Rumours Jacinda Ardern was planning to leave her role before the November 2023 election began circulating earlier in the month. Ardern has been Labour leader for five years but is facing increasing pressure and a decline in popularity. She's also heading into a difficult election as Kiwis face high inflation and a cost of living crisis. And it's driving speculation she's planning to step down instead of potentially losing the election. But speaking with AM on Monday, Ardern told co-host Melissa Chan-Green she has no plans to step down. "I've heard this. This rumour has floated around my entire time five years in Government. I have no plans to change my role as leader, I am not going anywhere. I've said this on the show a number of times," she said. "Rumours circulate and it's just part of the role but this is not the first time I've had this one and it did come up the last election as well. I am the Labour leader and I have no plans on changing that." www.newshub.co.nz/home/politics/2022/10/prime-minister-jacinda-ardern-responds-to-quitting-moving-to-new-plymouth-rumours.html
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Post by Deleted on Nov 1, 2022 7:07:14 GMT 12
If she's wise, she would get out now! Before she is☠️ pushed
Next year, She's heading for a recession, anarchy, racial wars, farmers revolt, education meltdown, healthcare collapse, increased Maori aggression, COL / inflation blowout, suicide records, mortgage sales record increase, failure to fix homeless, crime, ...
There will however be record levels of houses available due to the exodus of kiwis, and the huge increase if houses being listed, but not sold... Thus the price fall!
In the last 3 months trademe residential listings has jumped 9000 listings to be well over 39000.
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Post by fish on Nov 1, 2022 8:46:11 GMT 12
It would appear her job interview at the UN didn't go to plan. They've told her to fuck off, and now we are stuck with her.
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Post by jim on Nov 1, 2022 9:15:07 GMT 12
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Post by GO30 on Nov 1, 2022 20:14:56 GMT 12
Who started the rumour about a departure by JA? Was it who everyone would expect or was it an intentional ruse? A detractor or bad actor? Things like that do open doors and avenues...... 'The use or a rumour as a political weapon'
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