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  1. This bears all the hallmarks of what we recognise in other countries as corruption. It is becoming clear that one of the absurdities of our bright little liberal democracy at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean is our unwillingness to call out corruption for what it is. Nicky Hager’s exposure of ‘dirty politics’ was an exposure of corruption, the Oravida fiasco was corruption and there are many, many other examples where it looks like corruption, acts like corruption but, strangely, we don’t want to admit it as corruption. Corruption occurs when the elites who hold the power determine the political structures to retain that power. The popular imagination has it that corrupt officials do this with bribes. But here in NZ it is far more entrenched and manifested in the structures of the elite hierarchies. We see it in the RMA’s refusal to admit climate change as consideration in resource consent hearings. We see it in the unlimited funds that public sector institutions have at their disposal to employ legal processes to bully and dispose of staff. We see it in the workforce when ‘legitimate’ complaint processes offered to staff are actually used but end up in the complaining staff member being sacked. New Zealanders have a rosy picture of their country, reinforced by international reports on corruption. The reality, as many people are beginning to realise, is quite different and aspects of life here are now taking on the character of Zimbabwe or Russia.

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