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  1. This is the same brain-warped tribe who trashed William Shakespeare, and during the pandemic, prioritised over 60 puerile disc jockeys entering New Zealand ahead of trained doctors and nurses.

    Rewriting dead authors’ books should be criminalised, and the war on civilised culture is just one reason why some of us are taking steps to preserve significant and valuable books before we ascend to that great celestial library beyond the black holes and beyond the black mould permeating the New Zealand public service, the Education Dept, and sometimes even dripping down hospital walls.

    Criticising Hill’s opinion is beyond pathetic, but the woke wallow in victimhood and their hurt feelings, and as todger Harry and his stupid wife are starting to realise, we’d prefer it if they just buggered off and did something useful.

    1. “This is the same brain-warped tribe who trashed William Shakespeare, and during the pandemic, prioritised over 60 puerile disc jockeys entering New Zealand ahead of trained doctors and nurses.”
      +100
      You have to remember though @ SnowWhite, all this is based on policy from Ministerial “officials”. Officials Ministers have “complete faith in”
      Thankfully I think the new junta is starting to question how wonderful some of that policy and advice has been.
      (Pretty shit, all things considered. There is a record of incompetence and failures in the muddle and senior ranks; of ‘officials’ having to apologise, and supposedly “empathise”; and of those same “officials” treating their worker bees like shit – taking credit for successes while blaming them for failures)
      I wonder if you can pick some of the agencies I’m thinking of in particular. No prizes for guessing

      1. OnceWasTim No prizes, thanks all the same. The politicians blame the officials
        ( let’s cancel that word), the ‘officials’ blame management, and neither could even begin to cope with the flak which the frontline call centre operators receive daily on their behalf. MSD was where they timed these people in the loo and asked why they took so long; ACC was where a lass left her phone and hopped straight onto a plane for Sydney – I think she walked off the job. Education is where the innocence of childhood, and parental authority, are under attack by the transgender propagandists – a big bucks business overseas- and the IRD is where persons of a specific ethnicity can’t be fired.

        Hipkins not photographed hugging DJ’s or hanging out in the All Blacks dressing room, is different optics, that’s all.

        The abolition of the Commissioner for Children suggests to me that they’re still ruthless bastards, and their so-called replacement, breathtakingly dreadful for our most vulnerable little ones. I wouldn’t vote for this.

  2. I agree that this “cancelation” of Hills is ridiculous. But, what is the total amount of people who have actually done this on Twitter? Maybe a 100 or 200? It is a very small subset of NZ who goes to this extreme. There are plenty of kiwis who are somewhere in between and consider themselves woke without cancelling everyone left right and centre. Twitter gives a platform for this minority but they really do not represent the majority.

    1. Dairy Lee. You’re right. The big thing is that people still have voices, and that we keep freedom of speech. Probably only certain sorts of persons twitter and tweet anyway, but it’s when political correctness dominates or asphyxiates public policy, or creeps into legislation- as has happened with the Greens’ gender-bending criminalising concerned parents – that reasonable people need worry.
      The policing and cancelling of literature both in the UK and USA is another dimension altogether, and it is mind boggling.

  3. “When I use a word Humpty Dumpty said, it means just what I choose it to mean”. What the fu.. means woke? It seems to mean what ever someone disagrees with.

    1. The most amusing thing is it’s only the woke who seem to not know exactly what the term means- personally I think it’s the narcissistic lack of self awareness.

  4. Ugghh! I didn’t want to do it but like a good TDB reader I followed the link…. to a Spinoff article!
    I haven’t gone there in years. Everything about that s(h)ite from its sanctimonious navel gazing opinion pieces (I refuse to call it journalism), to its format peppered with silly cartoon characters, eye wateringly bad collages and visual noise of coloured headers like someone dissected a rainbow and gave it to a three year old to make it look pretty, to even its choice of font and type face absolutely repulses me. Don’t start me on the book reviews and poetry
    …now feeling tainted, queezy and dispointed with myself for pulling back the veil and entering the domain of that elitist and passive aggressive bastion of the hyper woke.
    Think I need to have another shower to try and wash it off me.

  5. Penguins decision to change the words is ultimately a commercial decision to be able to continue to sell books to a wide audience. They want a proven cash cow to continue to produce money. It’s capitalism doing this more than woke
    Yes there might be a little moralising in the decision because the elements of meanness in the books become’s clearer as society changes. But they would not make the changes unless it makes money.
    I guess it makes the original books more collectable and more valuable

    1. @Stephen+Minto I think you are giving capitalism too much credit, most of the world, even the english-speaking world is not Woke.

      It’s not uncommon for media and publishing companies to be persuaded/intimidated by vocal ideologically-minded staff members into aligning with supposed ‘contemporary’ sensibilities. Corporate boards are not immune to ideological capture and the desire to virtue signal is strong.
      This often has bad consequences for the bottom line. Hollywood and in particular Disney is a good example of this with billions of losses (partly attributable to ideology), infighting at Studios, the board of directors and even between institutional investors.

      Time will tell if this is a ‘win for capitalism’ but I agree this will make original texts more collectable. However, thought experiment, do you think collectability of old texts is compatible with the ‘improved’ versions increasing or even maintaining english language sales?

  6. This either or dichotomy is disengenuous. It gives Hooton a free pass with an anti woke bait and switch.

  7. Richard Hills has been the chairman of the ‘Climate Emergency’ committee for the last 4 years. Someone tell me what he’s achieved in that time. Does he even have a list of actions by now? What is in the meaning of ’emergency’ that I’m missing?

    I don’t dislike Hills, but he’s useless. He’s typical of the new breed of Labour politician:
    >Did a soft degree.
    >Became a Labour Party member as a student.
    >Ticks a couple of race or gender boxes.
    >Has never even had a proper job, let alone a professional career.
    >Because of his doctrinaire adherence to party doctrine and a few friends in high places, he was given a nice little sinecure in local government. If he stays the course, it’s a stepping-stone to Parliament.

    Can Labour please serve up some candidates that have been somewhere and done something? Heck I might even vote for them!

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