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  1. Yes , indeed it is an excellent article and good on Bunnings.

    But people even HAVING to live like this is an outrage .

    And every time the National govt tries to justify how well this country’s economy is doing and how strong it is and how well they have managed affairs under their watch – they should be reminded constantly of this appalling reality.

  2. Thank you for writing this article, and for paying such careful attention to the relevant details. It really does not have to be like this, and a so-called cafe society that rides on the back of such things is a vulgar and shameful one. Good on Bunnings for giving people refuge – and bad on this government for driving so many to need it.

    1. Top blog foks,

      Every time I see the temperature drop or rain pelts down I feel distraught thinking of those folks living in cars or tents or even under a bridge or park bench.

      I must be old school but at 72 I never will understand why a NZ elected government has run down all our services and left many without a home, its hard to understand, while they now offer some a carrot falsely before the election, I am astounded.

      Here is Winston’s latest word on this phoney Nactional Government for the rich only.

      Rt Hon Winston Peters

      Leader of New Zealand First

      Member of Parliament for Northland

      Leader’s message

      The prime minister has been crowing about having a supposed operating surplus of $1.14 billion for the last seven months to January despite that surplus being fictional.

      As the government was making the boast Lawrence Yule, Local Government New Zealand chairman, said there was an urgent need for $1.4 billion to build tourism infrastructure.

      New Zealand First has a list of names for his supposed ‘surplus’.

      We would call it a ‘bogus surplus’, a ‘spurious surplus’, a ‘fictional surplus,’ a ‘pull the wool over their eyes’ surplus.

      And predicting surpluses can be pointless. History has shown the government gets things wrong as was the case when Labour Finance Minister David Caygill forecast an $89 million surplus for 1990/91 and it was later found to be a $3.2 billion deficit.

      There’s no substance to Mr English’s ballyhooed surplus.

      You cannot have a legitimate surplus that relies, as the government’s does, on consumerism driven by mass population growth through immigration.

      How can you have a surplus when you make massive cuts elsewhere and everywhere?

      It’s easy to conjure up a bogus surplus if you have frozen the police budget since 2009 and taken a slasher to other sectors.

      National have slashed funding ($1.7 billion) to district health boards; to industry training ($15 billion) and to DoC ($424 million), just to name a few.

      At the same time they have allowed housing to run down to the point there is a chronic shortage of over 40,000 houses.

      Regions are crying out for funding to build roads but are having to wait. All the government can give them are promises.

      Look at Northland with the promises 10 bridges would be built and nothing has happened and what about the promises National have made for defence force spending worth billions of dollars?

      All National does is shuffle the figures around, cut this, cut that and they trumpet about a surplus.

      Bill English is talking of tax cuts but with a general election coming up it’s all just puffed up rhetoric.

      With an election approaching it looks and sounds good but they under-estimate the intelligence of New Zealanders.

      The true state of our society can be seen all around us and that tells a different story to Bill English’s surplus ‘spin.’

      The real situation is one of overcrowding – stress – pressure – largely stagnant incomes, a housing crisis and increasing levels of homelessness and child poverty, all of which are not helped by rampant immigration.

      Rt Hon Winston Peters

      Leader of New Zealand First

      Member of Parliament for Northland

  3. my god john keys brighter future may be bunnings should be running winz it may have more humanity.

  4. “Attitudes towards WINZ were less than civil with good reason. Fears of children uplifted, the cruel treatment of beneficiaries and the disincentivisaiton by the system towards the often only available low paid or part time work were major factors. Punitive policies dished out for those without a fixed abode seeking accommodation supplement and tax credits meant work and income had become less useful to these people than the limited work they could aquire and the total downsizing of their living conditions.

    Basically the consesus was “their help is no help and it costs me more than it pays not just finacially but emotionally and mentally.”

    What a great post, so true all this, sadly the mainstream, as they call them they have NO clue about what really goes on, they also do not damned well care anymore, those in the middle class that own housing, too many of them are more concerned with their value of their home, with affording a second vehicle, with the price of this or the other, that they care about.

    I went past Auckland Uni today, saw thousands of students, most relaxed, and it seems to me, that the CLASS SYSTEM is back with a vengeance. I saw mostly well dressed, casually walking, smart phone holding and relaxed students, mostly white of course, who all seemed to come from better off middle class families.

    I saw a fair few foreign students, and they also seemed to be well attired and casual, so probably enjoying the privilege of coming from better off backgrounds and well paid or earning parents in China, Malaysia or wherever else from.

    I saw almost NO Maori, Pasifika, and no people one may consider poor or struggling, and it appears to me, that the poor are put back to where they are deemed to “belong”, that is on the slave job market, where you get little more than the minimum wage, and cannot afford to study, and consider taking out a student loan to be too high a risk, as a chain around the neck for many years to come.

    We are back to where we once were, the Nats have brought us back there as they cater for their privileged pricks and nobody else. We are back with exclusive clubs and circles and the steady supply of brain conditioned academics to serve the vested interest holding and serving institutions there are.

    So naturally, the ones falling through the net and the cracks, the ones not able to compete with ever more expensive rents and house prices, they are forced to find alternatives, they are the ones sleeping in cars in car parks, in garages, in motels or even under the bridge, unless a sympathetic relative or friend puts them up for the night on the couch.

    This country calls itself “egalitarian”, as a migrant from another place that likes to see itself similarly, I am appalled what NZers put up with, this is not at all egalitarian, it is a society built on injustice on endless competition, on division and endless LIES.

    It is time to take damned action but I see none of this, I cannot believe the apathy or fear of people to not act. It is time to rock the boat, dear friends, to call things by what they are, unfair and crap, thanks, and to storm the offices and homes of the privileged office holders that are there, who exploit and lie to us. Why the hell are you not getting going to deal to the bastards, dear Kiwis???

    1. I don’t accept this Robert. The housing crisis not caused by lack of energy or resources, but by a lack of political will. Humans have been housing ourselves in shelter appropriate to the climate we live in for hundreds of thousands of years. Access to housing is not a product of the industrial revolution driven by fossil fuel use, and I believe that even in a situation of energy descent, we can still provide every person who lives in Aotearoa with suitable shelter as part of our transition to a post-carbon society. To do that, we need leadership to make it a priority, and release the necessary resources.

      1. My great grand father use to say something similar if not short. He use to say he never neded a license to do anything. I replied you needed maori to sign off on it. Then he replied go and get my bourbon (worked every time)

  5. This is certain peoples “God’s Own/Zone” NZ, their “(corporate) paradise”.

    Those homeless people no one cares about to take in to their homes? Its not just the govt and banks and elite, its a great majority of NZers are seemingly selfish comfortable “christian” middle class knobs. Just like no one cares also about some of us who are suffering other bad things like having no clean running water (because of forced fluoridation), etc. I also agree that people are apathetic.

    No doubt certain people will bash homeless as “bums”, “bludgers”, “lazy”.
    Mind you, cars cost alot too….
    People who are lucky to have health, jobs, families/partners, houses etc should be darn grateful (and “grateful” should mean how they treat others who are less fortunate).

    By coincidence i had just recently (re-)written an article on Key’s Housing Crisis. I’ve just posted it in a blog at:
    http://iwillnotbeassimilated.blogspot.co.nz/2017/03/the-nz-housing-crisis-examined.html
    (I didn’t deal with the incomes/wages / employment side which you and also W Peters mentioned, just the housing (crisis) side. I think i will have to add this too now.)

  6. Good post. And good on Bunnings to allow car dwellers a safer place to park for the night without being judgemental.

    I hope the publicity does not change this – because Bunnings are doing a public service.

  7. God, please no more! I can’t take any more of Key’s “Brighter Future!!”

  8. Great post thank you.

    I agree with Country Boy, we need a whole host of people who are homeless and living in vehicles and a whole lot of others to be there to back them up. Then when they are evited from parliament grounds – which they will be – we need to shout out loud ‘the whole world is watching’…. to ensure the media goes far and wide.

    Alternatively we need a host of people who aren’t homeless to do this action on behalf of the homeless. As the homeless rightly so are frightened of getting their kids taken off them and other retributions by the state for nothing that is their own doing.

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