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9 Comments

  1. Yep, unless the census person breathed down your neck, compliance was limited.

    But what was learnt after the 2018 census flop? Nothing it appears. The relevant ministers didnt care, then went to sleep and never woke up. When the plan was again to put it online, again, not a soul in Wellington saw an issue and definitely not the minister or this government. In their world online is everything!

    The shadowy Willie Jackson and Nanaia aside, there is not a single minister in this government, or member it appears, who have a clue what they’re doing or why they do it. They are dumb. How dumb? Think robot like Grant Robertson putting 30 cents per litre back on fuel mid cost of living crisis while crude oil prices are rising dumb. That’s idiot level dumb! Too many girl scout lawyers and career student politicians turning up to collect a pay cheque, not enough doers!

    The good news for the government according to the 2023 census will be a lot less population for Middlemore Hospital to serve. The bad news is endless!

  2. I admit I was wrong on this issue .I knew the small group of antivaxers would most likely not involve themselves in this government action but most people would just do it because they understood how important it was to the organization of us all.
    It shows a lose of confidence and involvement by everyday NZ people and this seems particularly so in the Maori population which is surprising concidering how much Labour has given them under co governance.

  3. I thought this years census was actually only for non pakeha, all the adds were for other ethnicities, one of them even promised Maori that filling in the census would lead to them fulfilling all their dreams!

    Totally true about the disintegration of society under identity politics and guess who achieved it in just 5 short years.

  4. I’m sorry Bomber but you’re spewing unfacts on this one. Yes, there was an option to fill in the census digitally, but we still got a series of letters in the mail and plenty of passive-aggressive door-knocking before and after. Paper forms were widely available; I used one to fill out my individual form on the night.

    Given how little most people use paper these days, it was reasonable to think that an option to do it digitally would increase participation. Particularly among the younger millenials and zoomers. Indeed, we don’t know how low turnout might have been if it was only done on paper; lest we forget the dismally low turnout in paper-only local body elections.

  5. I worked for census over the past couple of months here in Chch and we tried our hardest to get maximum participation. Knocking on doors, encouraging, cajoling, assisting. Every effort has been made to get folks to do it. I found the poor and ethnic groups mostly happy to participate when engaged and directly assisted. I’m white and middle class (by nz standards) so I was disappointed to experience the highest levels of census avoidance from folks sharing my demographic. Shaka

    1. That does not surprise me .
      it would not surprise if the majority of those not filling it in are middle class Pakeha.

      1. Middle class men and women who are sick of quietly swallowing increasing militant gender ideology in our workplaces, educational institutions and media and have been spurred into defiance by the documented video evidence of violent misogyny on show at Albert Park. My census collector admitted many refusing to fill out the census because of railroaded questions legitimizing gender ideology.

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