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  1. Ghandi famously said “first they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win”. What I find most fascinating as present about the TOP phenomenon is the way some commentators seem so threatened by it that they have already moved from ignoring TOP to laughing at it, and in some cases fighting it. The partisans of the “left” are determined to cast Morgan as a rich neo-liberal and TOP as the new ACT. The partisans of the “right” are determined to cast Morgan as this election’s DotCom, and TOP as the new Internet-Mana.

    The people involved with TOP are likely uninterested in media strategy advice frorm obscure blog commentators, but I’ll offer some anyway. Talk about policy. Policy, policy, policy. Refuse to be drawn into attack politics, gossip, and speculation. Get into robust and respectful policy debates with the other parties. That way, whether you get over the 5% threshold or not, you will have made an important contribution to our political process, the public will be much more familiar with your policy proposals, and they’re much more likely to be adopted in some form by a post-neoliberal government.

  2. Re: “Policy #6 – Climate Change is the most threatening of all global risks.”
    Noam Chomsky writes of 2 most threatening global risks.
    Nuclear war and climate change.

    Should NZ quietly remain part of the American military hegemony or should NZ play a different role in world affairs? Isn’t it time to say NO to nuclear weapons, NO to drone attacks, NO to militarism, NO to war..?
    There are peace movements in the US who would thank us.

    1. New Zealand should not remain part of the American military hegemony. The path forward would be to stake out clearly neutral territory, one step at a time across every facet of our conduct as a nation. The Swiss model comes to mind. Achieving palpable neutrality will, in the first instance, require an equally focused effort towards ‘deliberative democracy’ as TOP is proposing. In the meantime individuals may find solace in a gradual but conscious move away from all things American. See: https://thedailyblog.co.nz/2016/11/24/guest-blog-john-stroh-learning-from-history-and-what-it-really-means-to-avoid-america/

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