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    1. He is correct that the country became “an inward-looking, narrow-minded and petty economic backwater.”

      What he refuses to admit is that neo-liberalism — and its trade policy, referred to by Henry Kissinger as ‘globalism’ — is entirely to blame for that (and the monopoly firms wish to keep it that way). He is no doubt embarrassed that the world’s great industrial superpower is full of vast state-owned factories, banks, skyscrapers and bullet-train railways.

  1. Yes I agree, it’s completely weird how many of the rich are so sorry for themselves.
    Why is NZ so soft on them?
    Why?
    Why did Chippy back away from a wealth tax, and why don’t we have a windfall tax on corporations when they make outrageous profits.

  2. Capital Flight is a tired projection/metaphor that is paraded by opportunists and fifth columnist any time capital is even slightly challenged. Let ’em go then I say!

    Some have commented that it is not just a proportion of the 1%ers that are worried about fairer taxes, but also the huge NZ petit bourgeoisie hooked on property and tax free capital gains that will squeal.

    Nasssty lefties–fair taxes–it burns us!…

  3. Windfall tax on large corporations should be on the cards .Increase in personnal tax is likely to drive entrepreneurs away .The way our tax is spent should be looked at . At the moment any increase in tax take would just lead to more wasteful spending.

  4. What is inward looking about our country? It’s basically defenceless from a trade point of view. There’s no regulation of substance and foreign money can buy what it likes. My goodness we are so worldly all his mates at ACT have NRA talking points as proposed policy.

    Did anyone notice how in the case of the missing real estate agent, her friend was openly talking about getting 600k sent in from China for a property purchase? Weren’t we supposed to be restricting this?

  5. Bomber and Damian are both making appropriate observations, trouble is in both cases, only 50% of their observations are correct. Life generally and in NZ because of – how much reading time do you have?? – is a lot more nuanced. People need to stop talking politics and start thinking practicalities – until we do this the country is stalled as it has been since around 2008? when GDP last grew.

    As a country we are sinking economically and its time to abandon all the rhetoric and unravel all the labyrithine levers and systems of power that have led us here. Its all about what do NZers want (and need) and how do we manage the next 50 years.

  6. Rather than increasing tax, how about decreasing useless Govt spending. New Zealand used to be able to live within its means! What happened? Ask yourself are we better off now than we were 10 years ago? 20 years ago? What has changed?

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