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  1. Yes the Rangitira, I can well remember the sleeping cabin (puking all night) in 1969 after a day at Wellington zoo. But you’re not wrong, Lyttleton was sunny and magical if not just for the fact, we were getting off the damn boat!

    Illusory perhaps but a much more golden time for most NZers, Maori and Pakeha alike – state houses were plentiful, work was plentiful and there was food on the table. Peak social democracy.

  2. The young woman is Zealandia unaware that Roger Douglas is approaching through the gate.

  3. Strange how a particular memory, based on an image, can anchor us in not just the past but our own fully rounded sense of the past. I also grew up in Christchurch in the 70s and visited the McDougall Art Gallery many times. Your sense of Christchurch then is much like mine. I agree that it was almost Victorian in its culture with the school you attended being seen, in particular, as the most important social determinant.

    I don’t see this as negative particularly, just the flavour of the times, and even found myself experiencing a degree of nostalgia for that flavour when visiting Invercargill.

  4. So true Chris Trotter. ‘Who are we? Where did we come from? Where are we going?’
    Our Lady has many names but the time of day is rather late.
    Nevertheless we are surrounded with clues and symbols. Sometimes rather astounding like those in the video linked, set in a politically drenched old city where a beautiful, miraculous woman of the Han interprets a great Russian composer.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oD5pqlDPCHc

  5. If we don’t stop blasting each other over things written or done in the deep past, when the new devils take over they will put all of us through a brain wash and there won’t be any problem with these troubling thoughts. But bad things are not only in the past.

    Can we try and rise above the harsh side of our natures that is buried but too often arises like vomit. In Brave New World they found a way to deal with strong emotions which were regarded as destabilisng.

    1. ‘Brave New World???’ What is it exactly that you are trying to say?
      I can’t think of anything more helpful than a full understanding of the past.
      The commonly used expression, “Those who ignore history are bound (or doomed) to repeat it” is actually a mis-quotation of the original text written by George Santayana (1863-1952), who, in his Reason in Common Sense, The Life of Reason, Vol.1, wrote “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
      Santayana’s quotation, in turn, was a slight modification of an Edmund Burke (1729-1797) statement, “Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it.” Burke was a British Statesman and Philosopher who is generally viewed as the philosophical founder of modern political conservatism.

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