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  1. Yep Christine, its all a bit Obama to my mind
    The fine oratory made us want to believe, but it never matched up to the reality

  2. Well, on one hand, the leader has to set the vision, that’s the way it always is.

    On the other real substance needs to start coming through even if it is the beginning and I would suggest Labours housing policy is the shining light example here.

    But I would suggest no matter how enthusiastic Labour is, there is so much they can achieve in less than one year, tethered to the reality of being in coalition with other not so like-minded parties, the sizable damage done by 9 years of neglect and the enormity of the problems.

    Meanwhile, miniature molehills are being turned into Mt Everest by “Business” and as of late National, to overshadow the PM at the UN all of which is tying a very compliant media up in knots, megaphoned by the helpers like Hosking etc. And all of which is distracting the government from its direction.

    Somewhere in the present Labour MUST preempt and manage their way in government to achieve their proposed agenda and they must present in a way that shows the courage of their convictions. Its no good being a bunch of wishy washy social workers meaning well because having Jacinda backfooting every stupid little thing and reacting rather than brushing it off is not helping one bit.

  3. Well said, Christine.

    You are absolutely right. Hope does not fix anything; appropriate action is the only thing that might.

    And you are absolutely right when you point out that the many of the ‘problems’ we are facing are direct products of the capitalist system we endure.

    That said, we live in a world in which governments generally do not act in the long-term interests of the people they pretend to represent. Governments in NZ (and a very long list of similar countries) act to protect and promote capitalism. They act in the short-term interests of banks, corporations and opportunists.

    Governments are primarily concerned with NOT rocking the boat. They are primarily concerned with NOT addressing the major factors that are causing long-term harm. The Adern government is little different from any that preceded it and does not have the will to implement fundamental change.

    The Guardian (one of the best of an awfully bad lot in the mainstream media) reports that ‘Children in the UK are being denied their basic human right to breathe clean air and facing a long term “health crisis” because of the toxic fumes they breathe on their way to and from school’:

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/sep/28/uks-children-denied-basic-human-right-to-clean-air-says-unicef

    It’s much the same in NZ.

    With regard to the UN, it is worth noting that Servern Suzuki (daughter of the noted environmentalist David Suzuki), at the age of 12, addressed the UN in 1992, “to tell adults you must change your ways.”

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

    Although her speech was compelling and was delivered brilliantly, it had little effect on the UN and had no impact on world politics. The adults of the time did not change their ways and governments carried on serving the global military-financial-industrial complex.

    26 years after that profound wake-up call practically every aspect of life is more polluted and less sustainable than it was.

    Sadly, we have to look forward to a continuation of the decline we have been experiencing.

  4. “She told stories about growing up inspired by Nelson Mandela, made aware of his plight, and the plight of black South Africans because New Zealanders protested against apartheid, in many ways a culture clash, defining our nation.”…” To oppose apartheid took the courage to stand in the face of state and public opposition and force.”

    It is 100 years since the birth of Mandela. We have just returned from Melbourne were we saw a fantastic Mandela exhibit. The apartheid regime in South Africa. the cruelties imposed on Africans, had many similarities with the Zionist regime today. Except that the Zionist regime is so much crueler. And today’s Western media and political elite prefer to look the other way. Take the 1960 Sharpeville massacre, 69 killed, a massacre that led to huge headlines in the West.
    But the still occurring Friday shooting of unarmed Gazan demonstrators?..including children, medics, journalists?

    It’s very safe to talk about having been inspired by Mandela. But hypocritical to then remain silent about the plight of the Palestinian people.

  5. 100+ agree, end the globalist free trade nightmare, make the bankers face Austerity, stop cosseting China,s bullshit.
    Forget global warming its a con game, get some real science advisers and listen to the populations wishes, or keep up the same old same old and cop the consequences.
    We are witnessing a low key civil war in the states, is that what it will take to get change here?
    labor are deer in the headlights, the natz are foaming at the mouth nut jobs, its looking like we need new leadership to get a forward direction, we need a Trumpian type to upset the apple-cart, crazy like a fox political Machiavellian.
    Whats up Winston

    1. Real scientists are clamoring about global warming politicians are more concerned with re-election.
      It’s not going to be pretty.

  6. Come on, Jacinda in New York and at the UN, that has been a glamourised story perpetuated primarily by the small NZ media. Do a Google or Bing search for ‘Jacinda Ardern’ and global media, you will find most results originate from NZ Inc.

    Yes, she got a mention by one or the other US news and chat show broadcasts, some social media in the US, also here and there in other places, but most was at the end of any news, treated more like a nice little oddity to also report on.

    NZers are navel gazing here, the world is a much larger place, and most people on this planet would not even know where New Zealand is, and who is in charge of running the place.

    And for her speech and actions while in government, much is simply slogan talk, words more so than real action, and what Christine writes here exposes the sad reality.

    This government is put together by three parties in Parliament, none have on their own a majority, it is a MMP government, where even the largest of the parties depends so much on at least one smaller party, it has not so much to say, as the Labour led government has been turned into a ‘coalition government’ now, where the Greens hardly get a mention.

    The plastic bag situation is indeed appalling, at Countdown they keep handing one way plastic bags out as usual, I have seen it at St Lukes Mall and in other shops. It is all a marketing plot, simply greenwashing, nothing more, it is supposed to make the company look good. Instead of automatically handing out plastic bags they should ask people first, whether they need a bag or have their own, they are not even doing that.

    Add the fact that endless products are packaged in plastic, and that even Wellington City Council cannot recycle much, same as many others, it is sent off in large quantities again overseas, dumped and burned, as nobody can economically recycle much of it.

    What can you make from all the various types of plastics, for instance, I have been collecting it and returned it at the supermarkets. But it can only be inferior products made from the wide mixture of plastics ending up in the collection bins.

    Most carry on as usual, drive their cars everywhere, and TVNZ is leading the way now, reporting almost daily about how expensive petrol is now becoming.

    It is a dilemma, you need a majority of people to change the crap system we have, but look at how few vote even Greens, the professional greenwashing party now, do much departed from initial ideals.

    People vote with their pockets, what is left in them, not with the conscience to sacrifice a wasteful lifestyle for something nobody is certain what it should look like.

    The Nats hang around forty plus percent, those are the hard core of naysayers to any serious change in society and the economy, the rest are a bunch of smaller parties voted for, barely enough to govern. Hence we have what we have, neither here nor there, in political terms.

  7. You’re spot on. But every time we start demanding some substance instead of style, they just throw more Faery Dust in our eyes.

    I’m callin’ bullshit on this government.

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