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  1. The worst year ever for first home buyers is 2022! And I would argue, for renters. Slow round of applause for Labour.

    Key and his National Party ghouls sold off our power assets. That’s bad enough but Jacinda and her Labour Party zombies are selling off our land. That is worse, far worse!
    And they never campaigned on it.

    Key and National ensured Fletcher’s had a monopoly on gib board. Labour have known for quite some time this was a problem but did nothing. Answer. Do nothing. When it becomes public, so public you can’t build houses, what do they do? Sweep it under the “taskforce” rug.

    Supermarket duopoly robbing the public. What do Labour do? Send it off for some elongated review to stall any changes and once that doesn’t work any longer, release the review, look concerned and understanding. Implement the fluffy limp suggestions from their review, job done, like nothing ever happened.

    React, only ever react when it’s smacks them in the face, then do a 5 star announcement then leave everything just the way it is.

    Election 2023. You’ve got Jacinda’s Labour who ain’t got Jack or it’s ugly sibling National. And their freak show poodles, the Greens and ACT. For all intents and purposes, this myopic collection is one and the same.

    They all do bad, just with different ways of getting to the same point.

  2. +100
    Except:
    “We either attack the economic settings of this madness now and fight to retain our egalitarianism or we are doomed to live in the shadow of its greed”
    should read:
    “We either attack the economic settings of this madness now and fight to GET BACK our egalitarianism or we are doomed to live in the shadow of its greed”.

  3. I see a post I haven’t read about the bad effects if National wins the next election. I agree it will be harsh but I don’t care. My focus is making Labour and Greens worth voting for.

    It is bad to have become rigid in this now with the threatened crises now blowing on our necks. The neoliberal consensus of very bad versus worse has gone on for too long and has now, for me, reached critical mass.

    I intend to get really drunk and vote national in the next election, and further, will do what I can to get them in power in the run-up, knowing full well they will be worse. Because this no choice just can’t continue. If all I can do is punish Labour and the Greens as much as I can, I will do that.

    We have to stop this any way we can. Desperate action is required IMHO.

  4. A Left Yin and Right Yang of petty spite and broad malice locked in a death spiral on a melting planet.

    Well at least we got Matariki…

  5. They media are describing Megan Woods as a “can do minister”. Dear oh dear, if that’s a can do minister, I’d hate to see their can’t do’s!

    1. cosy little arrangements between insurance companies and ‘preferred supplier’ panel beaters basically. (to cut a long story short)

  6. “Dog eat Dog” has obviously been disastrous for working class people in the 38 years since Roger and Bassett and Caygill and the rest of their scabby mates ran the TINA blitzkrieg 1984–90 that saw thousands sacked and discarded, and the natzos continued it with the union busting 1991 ECA, Bennie bashing war on the poor, market rents for state houses etc. etc.

    We know the problem–a NZ neo liberal state based on monetarist legislation and methods, with heavy penetration of public infrastructure by private capital–all enforced by fifth columnists in the senior public service AND all the main political parties, and compliant consumer citizens. There are pockets of great wealth in the provinces and a sector of very dark kiwis indeed as COVID illustrated–but the odds are in the favour of the successor generations to the sheep shaggers.

    So what is to be done? Boomers are a lost cause in the majority (I fit in that age group but still involved in political action, as are a staunch minority) so it is up to newer gens in reality. In the time frame available all that can be done for 2023 is turn Greens and Māori as left as possible to influence Labour as best as possible. After that, community organising & direct action, occupy empty residential and commercial property, Climate Strikes, and run a major campaign to retire the NZ Neo Liberal State once and for all.

    Unite all who can be united including migrant workers. It will take a new movement.

    1. For TM A song to sing as we are getting the uniting spirit going.
      http://www.azlyricdb.com/lyrics/Steeleye-Span-Padstow-327137
      Steeleye Span – Padstow Lyrics
      Unite and unite and let us all unite
      For summer is a-comin’ today
      And whither we are going, we all will unite
      In the merry morning of May

      The young men of Padstow, they might if they would
      For summer is a-comin’ today
      They might have built a ship and gilded it with gold
      In the merry morning of May
      The young women of Padstow, they might if they would
      For summer is a-comin’ today
      They might have built a garland with the white rose and the red
      In the merry morning of May…

      With the merry ring and with the joyful spring
      For summer is a-comin’ today
      How happy are the little birds and the merrier we shall sing
      In the merry morning of May

      Oh where are the young men that now do advance
      For summer is a-comin’ today
      Some they are in England and some they are in France
      In the merry morning of May

      1. It is a great life if you don’t weaken Warbler…

        Random comment for a cultured commenter…bought a birdsong clock for my partners birthday from Viking Seven Seas on Kapiti Coast, different birds on the hour, Morepork, Kiwi, Tui, etc. light activated, and Grey Warbler is at 6 o’clock position!

        1. Glad to be in your company TM. What an interesting clock I want one. Thanks for the seller info. Brrrr = commenter coming in at 6 o[clock!

  7. I disagree. What I read was interesting but I feel as if though there were more than a few generalisations. For example, there has been direct government involvement on at least two occasions in the last 35 years to keep electricity affordable for all New Zealanders as well as separate government backed initiatives to assist the vulnerable in paying their electric bills. There are similar scenarios in New Zealand for petrol, housing, and food.

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