Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

14 Comments

  1. Oh Frank that was so delightful mate,

    Beginning with SS Joyce’s herald’s trumpeting out of there arses, just like the buffoon SS Joyce does every day himself.

    Best article for ages there.

    Talking about SS Joyce claiming that Auckland should be “controlling their costs properly” we found he in 2011 forced Kiwi rail to rob all HB/ Gisborne rail maintenance funding and re-direct that funding to Auckland commuter rail, and that was what caused the Gisborne rail washouts, that now is estimated to cast four million to fix!!!!!

    SS Joyce is a wrecker of infrastructure and should be arrested for destroying “public assets wilfully endangering the communities.”

    he should also be charges with crimes against the people.

    No wonder why Winston ‘the hero of our rail’ hates SS Joyce so much now.
    http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA1302/S00183/kiwirail-admits-lack-of-maintenance-led-to-wash-out.htm

    KiwiRail admits lack of maintenance led to wash-out
    Thursday, 14 February 2013, 1:35 pm
    Press Release: New Zealand Labour Party
    Phil Twyford
    Transport Spokesperson
    14 February 2013
    KiwiRail admits lack of maintenance led to wash-out
    KiwiRail has admitted that its failure to maintain old and damaged culverts was behind the wash out that closed the Gisborne-Napier line, while cuts to its maintenance budget are putting the network at further risk, Labour’s Transport spokesperson Phil Twyford says.
    “Across the country KiwiRail missed its target of replacing 71 old culverts last year, and only replaced 49. This is cause for alarm.
    “The Gisborne-Napier wash-out shows what happens when essential maintenance work is not carried out.
    “KiwiRail cut and deferred $200 million of network maintenance last year. At the very time it needs to be upgrading its network and improving efficiency, the Government’s unrealistic ‘Turn Around Plan’ is putting enormous stress on the organisation and forcing it to cut maintenance.
    “KiwiRail has told Parliament’s transport committee it has 12,197 rail line culverts around the country and has done a risk assessment identifying 53 high priority culverts but ‘…in spite of every effort to mitigate risk, some incidents of wash out may still occur…’
    “National’s plan for rail is not workable. KiwiRail has missed its financial targets for two of the last three years. It is being forced to make cuts that are a false economy.
    “At a time when the Government is wasting billions of dollars on its ‘motorways of madness’, it makes no sense to cripple the national rail line.”
    ENDS

    1. CG, if you liked that, get a load of what I have coming…

      I thought the demise of the Nat guvmint would reduce topics to write about. Oh, how wrong, wrong, wrong, I was. I am going to have so much fun in the following days, months, years to come…

      1. Frnk, I cant wait mate, Got up this AM hheard the slicky smooth vioce of Kim Hill on RNZ and swa your article and this is heaven so kee goinng mate, some national Party folks may actually then hear the real truth as to what SS Joyce has been ruining over the last nine years.

        Over on TS a blogger has a good bit on how SS Joyce has been warned by treasury that the over $100 Billion he has allowed the bebt to ballon out to will come back as a real hole to really bury us all.

        Labour/NZF should be investigating this now and letting the public know just how bad Joyce has loaded us with all this debt for generations now.

        No wonder he is harking on about “fiscal responsiblity” as he has caused usall to swallow his actions now so he needs to be put in the dock for money mis-management.

  2. Frank, have you ever thought about starting your own show on community web based (You Tube) streaming services?

    I like John Oliver and his show, on HBO, but whatever he does, it is also freely available via You Tube.

    Others use You Tube to spread their ideas and videos, it could be very appealing to some social media users, to have a show developed and streamed, that presents this kind of stuff in perhaps a slightly humorous or sarcastic way.

  3. Your heart is in the right place but the stick you are using to beat Joyce with is a neoliberal one. Public debt is low in Nz. We cannot ever default on it even if it were high. When faced with a demand shock like an earthquake or a gfc deficit spending like tax cuts is the right, progressive, Keynesian thing to do. What would you have prefered? A severe recession? The neoliberal stick can equally be used on a labour government when a downturn occurs. Go and do some reading about why balanced budgets tend to be a bad idea. Mmt my friends, it is the way forward.

  4. And for what it’s worth, right now the Nz economy needs more fiscal stimulus and spending on public services. Raising the government debt a bit will have zilch effects on interest rates and the offshore borrowing you talk about is in Nz dollars anyway. How can the government ever run out of those? Investors love our bonds. It’s a lovely risk free return. Don’t constrain the options of our new coalition by banging on about the need to fiscal prudence. Even the imf these days is calling for more fiscal stimulus on a global level.

  5. What goes around comes around.
    Thanks Frank – I feel the same way about our “new’ opposition.

  6. I have been smiling non-stop since that lovely day in October. How gaseous is the inadequate oppositional wind that still can’t recognise they lost, because they were so ______ (fill your own favourite word in here) inept?, incapable?, corrupt?, immoral?, unhinged????? Carry on Frankly!

  7. Hypocrisy has always been part and parcel of the National Party, a fact that seemingly flies far over the heads of their supporters… that said, I hold that people generally SOLELY vote in their own self-interest so maybe it’s sadly pretty much what you’d expect. There was nothing surprising in their near militant “opposition” of Labour – it’s exactly what you’d expect from them. Hopefully Labour holds themselves to higher standards (the bar is VERY low), but we’ll see.

Comments are closed.