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  1. Bennie Bashing seems a national sport second only to rugby…for Nashnull and various vindictive lunkheads nationwide.

    Capital requires a certain level of unemployed to keep downward pressure on wages and discourage working class organisation. The Reserve Bank and Govt. want higher unemployment, allegedly to help with inflation. However the State on behalf of capital runs a sadistic non welfare system which turns people into “jobseekers” because they want to keep the MSD/WINZ spend down to a minimum.

    The contradictions are rather obvious. Less jobs, but you are harassed for not being able to find a job! Bennies are demonised to divide working class people and fightbacks. Othering has usually been a good tactic to divert the working class from looking at the ruling class.

  2. It isn’t actually counter-productive in his world. It gees up his base and Peters’/Seymour’s as well. I guarantee is responsible for at least some of the uptick in National’s polling. Appealing to New Zealand’s mean streak is never counter-productive as far as votes go.

  3. Easy solution:Pay (much) higher wages, then watch all those vacancies vanish. It’ll attract all those skilled workers they claim to need from abroad as well.

    I thought NAct believed in market forces.

    Apparently not, not when it comes to wages and the labour market.

  4. When his friends find out how much this is going to cost in processing, prosecuting, jailing, rehabilitating, rehousing, shutting out of work and housing owing to convictions, rearresting, re jailing his new social victims over and over, they’ll hit the roof. He could double jobseekers money right now and still come out on top. The moon unit can’t even count. He’s creating gang affiliates and criminals. Imagine just the dental bills! What an eggburger.

  5. On the contrary, I suggest that Christopher Luxon is not weak, but that it suits him to toss out glib platitudes a la John Key, knowing full well that magically transporting beneficiaries into some sort of employment is not going to transform the social community, or help balance the government’s books.
    It’s the same old ‘ divide and rule’ mantra, and it’s vicious. The jobs frequently aren’t there, and even quite well qualified persons who want to work are stranded, or stuck in soul-destroying ruts. There are some who should not be expected to be in paid work, and consigning them to a grim struggle in permanent poverty is also vicious. He and his social welfare minister are either hypocrites, fools, or both.

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