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  1. New Zealand is over exposed to trade with Australia by 50%, then China 20%, then America about 20% with 10% for everywhere else. All that means is our foreign, defence and trade policies are weak and we’ve allowed ourselves to become some ones else’s bitch. We’ve ignored the pacific isles for to long and now we have attitude.

    So yeah, we can either limit exposure with Australia or boost trade so it’s a more even split across the board and quit relying on forign powers discounting our own trade.

  2. Great expose’ Martyn top marks here for your deapth of investigative journo’;

    “…this trade war comes at the end of a super inflated decade of ‘growth’ that saw central banks print billions to prop up stock and bond markets to artificially create the lowest inflation rate for 5000 years.

    That means this Trumpian madness comes at the exact worst moment…
    Well the world needs a correctioon after the years of falsely proping up the broken, flawed, capitalist system rife with speculation.

    Trumps will just edge us toward the cliff of reality that we can mo longer keep publically ‘subsidising corrupt industries with puiblic money and low wage economic slavery.’

    When I begun my working life in the 1950’s we were taught the real value of money and work for wages verses what your work produced then.

    Today we have so many people inventing jobs for themselves that fail to produce any value so we need to return to the old system of work production for value.

    For example when I came out of my electrical apprentiship I went into the army as a conscript around the time of the first NZ Army 101 battery was sent to vietnam and instead I opted to go and contribute to beginng building the Tongarero power sheme which added real value to our future ‘wellbeing & economic security”.

    In those years the average tradesman’s weekly wage was 20 -25 pounds a week or $50 in the private employment market but working for the Ministry of Works as I did our wage was about $40 per week but the experience earned was far maore there than inn the private market so I was valuable to the national economy as being on the job I could repair or build equiptent for the Nation’s electricity system, rather than Ministry contracting in short term tradesman to do the job at a higher cost.

    We need to get back to building our own government engineering companies again as we had then.

    That is just one of the ways to make us all more valuable rather than sitting at home and speculating on making money on the over inflated stock market.

  3. I don’t agree that Trump is the product of neoliberalism. He is one answer to neoliberalism from the proto fascist far right.

    Otherwise he would not reject the ‘globalization’ which was neo-liberals big project to export capital to restore profits at home by investing in offshore production to capture cheap labour and new markets.

    Because neo-liberalism failed to stop the long term problem with capitalism which – despite decades of austerity (squeezing wages to boost profits) and destroying the Soviet Union – has exhausted its productive capacity to return to profitable growth in the developed world.

    Despite being put onto the drip feed of bailouts, neo-liberal capitalism in the advanced capitalist world has used the trillions to prop up its own falling share prices rather than invest in new unprofitable production. Making neoliberalism hostage to a bastardised neo-Keynesian statism.

    Trump was white ‘middle class’ America’s answer to neoliberalism gutting their jobs and lives. This puts him at odds with US capital which makes more money from offshore plants in China etc than their parent plants in the US. A trade war with China is also a trade war with US investment in China (and the EU) which is an economic war against the US itself.

    So Trump has bought a fight with his own ruling class. He knows this, and the return to Amerikan national chauvinism in the middle class is his gamble to hold onto power. That is why all his isolationist policies are designed to promote America as a bastion of white civilization. Chauvinism is the last refuge of the scoundrel.

    Trump is not mad. He is a scoundrel. He is the Bonapartist figure that stands above the bourgeois state as the cult leader of the petty bourgeois and lumpenproletariat. As Congress pathetically tries to block this or that retreat from globalization, and therefore the interests of the dominant finance capital fraction of the US ruling class, Trump will resort increasingly to executive orders to rally his support and keep the reactionary momentum for US going.

    All this points to a new war between the US and China/Russia.

    The question as to what the NZ military needs in such a war is the wrong question. Right now we should be rejecting all military alliances with the US or Russia/China blocs, and preparing ourselves for this threat by building strong anti-fascist bonds with workers in all of these countries whose common interest is not to go to war or become nuclear fodder to a tiny ruling class that will risk global destruction before they surrender their wealth.

    1. This makes total sense. Just like your answer to crypto fascists trying to stir shit up.
      Marxist analysis makes much more sense than liberalism.

  4. Noam Chomsky suggests Trump is just a foil for the back room boys who are completely destroying the US goverment , Pruitt is a good example of the destruction the neo libs are having, look out, the US will get more aggressive
    and out of control.

  5. I disagree that this is about the ‘neo-liberal’ thing. It is much, much more threatening to the planet. The United States represented by the current Administration has become ‘the enemy’, yet NZ is still considering the purchase of billions of dollars of military equipment – under the auspices of our own little pile of right wing specimen – Ron Mark.

    Let go of America before the bastards take us down with them. Fascism is a creeping social disease and just as during the 1930s, the silent majority has missed the point of no return. I may be proven wrong – or not. I’ll go with Madeleine Albright on this.

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/jul/08/madeleine-albright-fascism-is-not-an-ideology-its-a-method-interview-fascism-a-warning

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