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  1. I have a lot of questions about the sustainability of the cruise ship industry. As well as your point about the need to reduce emissions, how do these massive ships treat their sewerage, and other waste? Are they accountable to anyone in this regard?

  2. While your thoughts are logical we have a government that only thinks about dollars now & doesn’t care about making the majority being inconvenienced as long as the few can profit.

  3. They’re great! Auckland feels alive when there’s two liners docked not like a morgue. Besides, what about all those jobs in hospitality and suppliers to hospitality that rely on them? We need more to come all year

    1. Yes what about all those hospitality jobs – they tend to be low paid shit jobs of course but in your eyes I guess it’s better than them annoying you buy begging on the streets. In my view it’s better to give them proper constructive jobs in areas that make our lives better.

  4. Cruise Ships-another embarrassing failure for humanity.

    Floating confinement for bored people with disposable cash to stuff themselves with food & booze 24/7.

    1. My wife won a cruise in a quiz once. I don’t know if other people were bored, I wasn’t – but then as long as I’ve got a book I’m not easily bored. But there were people on there who spent six months of the year, I presume their winter months, cruising. Some of them didn’t even bother going ashore because they’d seen it all. They played cards instead. Must confess I felt a little out of place not having paid.

  5. This is a bad start to the new year. I tend to agree with you @ Martyn Bradbury.
    A lot of our iconic sites and infrastructure is suffering from the impacts of mass tourism and Jo or Jill taxpayer is funding this.
    Doc and local council camp sites spring to mind, although reliant on an honesty box situation, in some cases these sites still don’t pay there way. There’s still rubbish to be collected and on some sites septic tanks and water infrastructure maintained.
    Also I wonder if tourism/Destination NZ contribute financially to iconic places that appear in glitzy media campaigns such as Cathedral Cove( although that maybe still shut) hot water beach, Kerosene creek, Church of the good shepherd, Ohinemutu and St Faiths church etc etc.
    Sure it’s great to have travelers back but at what cost. Also……
    Every great second/third world country nearly always has a thriving tourist economy! Think Thailand, Bali.

  6. Sounds like you’re a grizzly bear Den that doesn’t believe in sh…g in the woods. But we want to look at everything before it vanishes, be reasonable. And the kauri trees – most of those had been cut down for masts for ships to sail around the world from ‘developed’ countries looking for special or saleable goodies. Tourists are still looking for that or at things – isn’t it cute, or we have better at home, are their two thoughts. Their few thoughts don’t trouble them at all.

  7. “bloated swine palaces”

    I like it! LOL

    After years of mismanagement by the Council, then Covid lockdowns, Auckland CBD businesses need the foot traffic. So let’s take a deep breath and allow the above porcine individuals donate their dollars to our economic recovery.

  8. I wonder if that is someone taking a break, or a homeless beggar in the second picture, seated on the ground outside an elite Dior store in Auckland? If it’s the latter, then that photo is speaking a thousand very loud words as to what NZ has become!

    1. Maybe Scottie’s are taking advantage of the publicity by setting a street side stall?

  9. I saw my first beggars in the US. In San Francisco there was a whole family living in a shop doorway essentially – presumably they got out of the way when the shop opened. But I thought to myself this would never happen in NZ. No sooner got back here than I saw them all over Lampton quay. This is what forty years of neoliberal government has given us – the gift that keeps on giving.

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