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  1. Corporations are in short walking corpses disguised by a thick skin who will put off their own final demise by pushing we the people before them. Life is grim so let us own that and do something to protect ourselves and keep some positive thoughts at the back of our minds. Help someone every day, you can’t do everything for all the needy around you, but buy a pie for the person on the pavement, drop a gold coin to a busker, give a spare old rug to an outdoor sleeper.

    Way to go I think only way, is try to be helpful and kind but practical too – just a little bit rather than nothing and don’t expect too much back they can only get by. But yourself stiffen up and be as strong as poss, we will need that. But have a laugh or chuckle regularly but not at other people, we all are ridiculous sometimes. The malicious, uncaring, keep an eye on them they can hurt.
    How to handle life and death ? Like Beetlejuices Netherworld waiting room?:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0PkmeXxN68 (then Taco and the..Ritz if you like, good and weird)
    But more seriously – here is how Beetlejuice handled real estate corps and brought them up short. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMCqP4-BZmo

    1. ps I know some good real estate people but too many you get a mosquito problem. Or finally get swamped by those awful midges that apparently can drive people distracted.

  2. Kiwis are too focused on Maori and homeless bashing to see the reality of what is going on .I saw a piece this morning about the increase in the use of meth nz wide .But no one really cares as they assume that only unemployed homeless people use meth .Most media paint that assumption too as they are too lazy to get out and mix with users and find the reality .The wealthy users are able to be more anonymous when using .
    We have a major problem with 37 kgs of meth being consumed every week and use is double last years consumption .That will likely rise again next year to 50kgs per week which points to more than unemployed and homeless being the only users in NZ .

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