Similar Posts

15 Comments

  1. We live in an Anarcho-Tyranny state. Someone could shoot your family pet, in front of you and the authorities likely wouldn’t care. NZ is a horrifying place, compounded by dangerous, growing levels of mental illness.

    “Anarcho-tyranny is a concept, where the state is argued to be more interested in controlling citizens so that they do not oppose the managerial class (tyranny) rather than controlling real criminals (causing anarchy). Laws are argued to be enforced only selectively, depending on what is perceived to be beneficial for the ruling elite.”

  2. I do believe it was a mistake, to target a private event like The America’s cup with public utilities funding. No one was eating out , entertainment fell. The whole thing lost money. It’s not like there wasn’t enough money they just got the distribution kind of ideologically fucked.

  3. I would argue there are inalienable rights which come from our humanity. That people or a state does not recognise those rights does not mean we do not have them.

  4. When will renters be required to bow and curtzy to their landlords…. surely this can’t be far off.

  5. Gangs dealing drugs are a corporation just like Fonterra or TVNZ. It follows that we should be more cruel to gangs like the Blacks or the Mob not give them $2m for fucks sake.

  6. The universal declaration of human rights is built in to our legal system on all levels.

    This is unequivocal, As New Zealand signed the universal declaration of human rights in 1948.

    When one looks at the laws in New Zealand, one can make the connection where The district court rules apply, it will state that the senior court rules apply, which intern states that the evidence act applies, which then leads to and states that the Bill of Rights act applies; on the very first page of the Bill of Rights act it states –

    “ in act (b) to affirm New Zealand’s commitment to the International covenant on civil and political rights”.

    The International covenant on civil and political rights then very clearly states-

    “ recognising that, in accordance with the universal declaration of human rights“

    This means when one brings up the universal declaration of human rights and looks at article 30, it clearly states-

    “ nothing in this declaration may be interpreted as applying for any state, group or person any right to engage in any activity or to perform any act aimed at the destruction of any of the rights and freedoms sit fourth herein.”

    This means that if New Zealand were to attempt to move away and remove such rights that are afforded to us as human beings would be a breach of International law. Such actions would mean that New Zealand would no longer be eligible to be a member of the World Stage, in such things as United Nations, or the Commonwealth.

    The issue that we have as citizens of New Zealand is that we give up too easily on defending our rights, human rights are only rights if we are prepared to defend and argue for them.

Comments are closed.