This weeks Waatea news column – Key uses Brash’s racist dog whistle to twist power sharing into separatism

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This weeks Waatea news column – Key uses Brash’s racist dog whistle to twist power sharing into separatism

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  1. Just watched the opening speeches of Parliament,
    John Key full of bombast shouting and lies, waving his fists in the air.
    Andrew Little has gone up in my estimation,he was brilliant,showed the government for what they are false ,nasty and shows what separatism means to them, the low and middle income earners pathetic wages that makes it hard to buy a house or make ends meet, but the wealthy who are Keys contributors right at the top on high incomes.
    Andrew Little went through Keys rubbish with truth calling Key and his lot Lords of the Universe in their own estimation, but showed Key as a spitting spiteful jerk.The speaker pulled Andrew Little up for mention how an mp was made in charge of law and order after news of said MPs problems, speaker said this before the courts and a suppression order on the house , there was a suppression on mps of the case by John Key , long before the imposed one in the house.
    Andrew Little got round it to make his point,that the problem was hidden, even thought the pm knew about possible charges,and the position awarded regardless.
    Andrew Little showed Key and his band of not so merry men that he and the public are on to Nationals do nothing policies except special connsessions for sky city and how much its going to cost the taxpayer after promising the convention centre would be free.
    Andrew Little shows great promise of being an excellent leader.

  2. The “recent sovereignty ruling” is being made out to be more than it really is. Whether they want it or not the Maori are not sovereign and will remain under the crown and its laws, any notion of power sharing in the form of racial quotas (such as the 50% Maori Upper House) is a joke and completely antithetical to the idea of a democracy. Not to say we should ignore the generational poverty that is present in Maori or the many claims still in the courts.

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