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Your Voice Election 2017 – Takere’s experience of WINZ

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As part of our election coverage of shaming the neoliberal welfare state who treat the poorest and most vulnerable amongst us with contempt, here is  Takere’s experience of WINZ

Glen Mall Service Centre, West Auckland Staff member.

She was too lazy last week to find a family suitable emergency accommodation that was, safe & clean and instead, wasted their time all week & forced them to choose between a Drug & Rehab Hostel, James Liston Hostel or Flea Bag Rat Infested dirty & unclean Lincoln Court Motel!

This person is as you have describe & doesn’t know(??) that she is incompetent, lazy, in denial of her responsibility of her staff & herself to meet the peoples needs when they’re in this situation.

They’ve even done the HNZ Assessment & were assessed A-12. A-15 is top of the list for Urgent Need of Housing in December last year! They have being advising WINZ since then & looking too. Rentals (in West Auckland as everywhere) in the private sector as well as emergency housing providers ect …. over 30 organisations. I could go on but….naming & shaming is a good start!

 

Have you been treated poorly by our neoliberal welfare state and wish to bring attention to your experience anonymously so that they can’t punish you? Check out our 2017 election campaign to do just that.

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Fringe Festival – We May Have to Choose

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We May Have to Choose

Written/Performed by Emma Hall

Directed by Prue Clark

 

Following award-winning seasons at the 2015 Melbourne Fringe and Adelaide Fringe We May Have to Choose makes its New Zealand debut at the Auckland Fringe from 21-25 February before heading to NZ Fringe in Wellington from 2-11 March 2017.

 

We May Have to Choose is a darkly humorous piece of new writing that asks: in a dying world, what is it to speak one’s mind? Emma Hall from Australia has written and will perform in this one-woman poetic study of the personal soapbox. Wildly popular with audiences and critics alike, the show has received eight award nominations and won three awards over its fringe festival seasons in Edinburgh, Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide and Melbourne.

 

In today’s western democracies, free speech is often divisive and morally ambiguous. But when one woman lists 621 of her worldly opinions in one go – opinions about hot water systems, for a start, but also about homelessness, the Loch Ness Monster, Russian diets, Kylie Minogue, and economics – we are offered a riveting and genuinely unique opportunity to reflect on the way we live our lives.

 

We May Have to Choose sees Melbourne-based kiwi director Prue Clark (two-time Green Room nominee for Reasons to Stay Inside and Dropped) shape Emma Hall’s stunning solo performance of this fantastical ride through the subconscious mind. Accompanied by a musical score by indie-electric folk artist SS. Sebastian (Brett Harris), this international fringe favourite is a funny, withering, and moving piece about the fallibility of thought in our quest to solve the riddles of our world.

 

WINNER 2015 Melbourne Festival Discovery Award

WINNER 2015 Melbourne Fringe WA Tour Ready Award

WINNER 2015 Adelaide Fringe Best Theatre – Weekly Award

 

★★★★★ “5/5 – beautifully simple, intensely clever… intimate, funny, honest and unlike anything I’ve seen at the Fringe this year” – Bethan Highgate-Betts, ThreeWeeks 

★★★★ ““Brain-prodding, riveting theatre… genius” Anne Marie-Peard, The Age

 

★★★★ “(Hall) wields her words like a fencing champion, swinging effortlessly from thought to thought, leading the audience until she lands a powerful strike right in the guts… We May Have to Choose … painfully reflects the way we engage with information, opinion and socio-political issues in the contemporary world of globalised, socialised media.” Fiona Spitzkowsky, Theatrepeople

 

We May Have to Choose plays:

Auckland Fringe
Basement Theatre

21 – 25 February, various times
Tickets from http://www.basementtheatre.co.nz/

 

NZ Fringe Festival

BATS Theatre, Wellington

2-4, 7-11 March at 8.30pm

Tickets from https://bats.co.nz/

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Fringe Festival – Moon bridge by Culture Clash – TAPAC at the Fringe

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Moonbridge – A story of love, loss and a little bit of wackiness.

A new exhibition has come to town: “The Museum of Broken Relationships” from Zagreb. Pedro, the town’s museum archivist is heartbroken from the sudden death of his beloved wife. Eclipsed by the moon, we follow Pedro crossing from his loss to a new life, with help from the provocative and wild museum workers. ‘Moonbridge’ entwines fantasy & reality as exhibits become real and stories from the ancient and near past, that thrust Pedro into historical encounters that propel him back to life, love and the moon.
For Tickets:

“Are we lost in translation or inspired by intercultural connections?”

Supported by Creative New Zealand and Foundation North, Culture Clash has been a wonderful yearlong development and mentoring performance programme that has developed skills while challenging participants in a supportive, fun and creative atmosphere. It has provided a platform where different cultures can express their individual perspectives through the performing arts through sharing, gaining knowledge and collaborating in a safe, creative space, guided by established leading performing arts professionals. This year long programme, has culminated in the creation of culturally unique and dynamic show ‘MOONBRIDGE’, presented in the 2017 Auckland Fringe Festival.

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Mental Health Professionals know best (Yeah, right!) – Dave Macpherson Mental Health Blogger

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The Faceless Health bureaucrats will see you now
Plastered on the wall outside the entrance to the Ward at Waikato Hospital’s Henry Bennett Centre (HBC) where our son was a patient is a large sign promoting the need for the service to ‘earn the trust of the family’, in order for the DHB to do their job effectively.

A laudable and sensible aim, you would think; but one that our family quickly realised was at best a box-ticking exercise, and for the senior clinicians our son Nicky saw, something they had no intention of taking any notice of.

The reason this is important comes down to two factors – firstly, as anyone with any lived experience in the area of mental illness easily observes, mental health and treatment for mental illness is an extremely inexact science, and family, whanau and others close to someone affected by mental illness often have as good an idea of what is needed to make their loved one well as do some of the perhaps overworked, and certainly disinterested ‘professionals’ appointed to ‘care’ for the patient. Often the family just want some support and a listening ear to help them with the strategies they already have in place, or to give them some ‘time-out’ from the relentless grind and stress involved in caring for a mentally unwell family member.

Similarly, most care and support of people with mental illness is undertaken by family and whanau members, who better understand the day-to-day effects of mental illness on both the person directly affected, and on those around them, than do ‘professionals’ who might meet the ‘patient’ for 30 minutes, once a week – or less.

For the overwhelming proportion of people affected by mental illness, full family/whanau involvement in their care and treatment plans is an absolute necessity, but is rarely practiced by mental health services around this country, especially inpatient services, and is actively scorned by many service staff, especially the more highly paid ones!

Some examples: this week, a guy I’ve been supporting as he and his daughter struggle to ensure some quality care is provided for his former wife, who is suffering some pretty severe problems, was excluded from a meeting between his wife and the most senior psychiatrist at Waikato DHB. It was the first meeting between the woman and this psychiatrist, and despite the guy having organised the consultation, and provided almost all the support for his wife over the last seven months, and his wife wanting him present, he was excluded.

The guy had also been excluded from an earlier consultation for his wife with a senior occupational therapist, again one that he arranged. So all of his insights into his wife’s issues and care were not available to this ‘know-it-all’ profession. It has taken seven months for the DHB to institute the care plan for his wife that the guy asked for right at the start. Incidentally, the same psychiatrist was involved in, and in overall charge of, our son’s care when he died.

Late last year, a friend of mine was supporting (as a client) a person who had come to him regarding an employment issue, but also had some severe mental health issues. The person with the employment issue had no family in the Waikato, so after consulting family in Whangarei, my friend went to the DHB mental health services with his client to attempt to arrange some care and treatment for him. Although his client was accepted as an in-patient, my fiend had a number of concerns about the (lack of) treatment plan for him, and attempted to advocate on his behalf at the HBC, only to be served a trespass order by management, barring him from visiting his client, even though he was this person’s only personal friend or family member in the area.

Other families have described to my family also being ‘trespassed’ from the HBC when they have got in arguments with staff about the care for their family members or friends.

When our eldest son went into the HBC ward that Nicky had disappeared from to search his belongings for clues as to Nicky’s whereabouts, HBC management called security guards to remove him (the same security guards who mounted no search for Nicky when he disappeared). A week earlier, while Nicky was still alive, one part of the HBC management reluctantly agreed to our family’s insistence that Nicky be only given ‘leave’ to go outside if escorted, while the very next day the American psychiatrist in charge of his ‘care’ unilaterally rescinded that agreement, without consultation or notification to our family, allowing Nicky unescorted leave – which he took, and died as a result of.

The link between these examples is the lack of genuine involvement of families in the care of mental health patients, the ‘we-know-best’ culture of the mental health profession, and how outcomes could have been different if families, whanau and friends had been listened to.

 

Dave Macpherson is the father of Nicky Stevens, who died while in the (compulsory) care of Waikato DHB’s Henry Bennett Centre, and is now an elected board member of the Waikato DHB. The opinions expressed are entirely his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Waikato DHB Board or its management.

 

 

 

 

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Trump, Time and History

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The two and a half weeks since Donald Trump`s inauguration seem longer. Does anybody else have the uneasy feeling that we are six or so months into the first term? If so then welcome to this blog. What follows is an interim depiction of Donald Trump as President through the lens of time and history. My first observation is that a lot has happened. The sheer multitude of Presidential orders, statements and comments on healthcare, abortion, trade agreements, US-Mexico relations, global warming, oil pipelines, immigration and other matters has sparked a media frenzy. Trump and his aides have declared war on the mainstream media and provoked some of the largest protests ever held in the United States. This in turn has generated further media coverage domestically and internationally. By January 27th the BBC website alone had published more than 200 stories and videos about, or relating to President Trump. The fact that much has happened dilates our sense of chronological time. Previous inaugural Presidencies did not begin with the same frantic intensity. Yet, one also feels immersed in an instantaneous present in which real-time events are disconnected from historical memory and the prospective future. These events, and their associated molecular reactions, reverberate throughout the mass media (print,radio,television) and social media (internet sites, facebook, mobile telephony, the twittersphere). Through multiple channels, multiple events and multiple reactions feed off each other continuously. Everybody, it seems, is part of the hyper-mediated spectacle – politicians, journalists, newscasters, commentators ,protestors, celebrities, media audiences, ordinary facebook users and texters.

This is the world of fake news, post truth politics and alternative facts. Amidst the 24/7 barrage of text, sound and imagery there is no time to verify, reflect or deliberate. Donald Trump works to accelerate the spectacle so as to disable critics and sow public confusion. Thus far, every executive order has been accompanied by a flurry of tweets for media and popular consumption. As the spread of protests and legal opposition challenges the executive order other high profile news events are generated out of the White House courtesy of Donald Trump`s twitter account. Yes,it is true that Federal judge James Robart has blocked the President`s 90 day immigration ban against seven designated Muslim-majority countries. But this is already yesterday`s news and, in any case, the President`s twitter post has denigrated Robart as a `so called judge` who has made a `ridiculous` order. In the world of alternative facts absolutely everything is a matter of opinion; let the twittersphere and social media decide. This disruptive style of governance has been deliberately designed by Trump`s ideological soul-mate, chief strategist and National security Agency appointee Stephen Bannon.

These developments unquestionably threaten liberal democratic principles,world peace and our common ecological future. But simply protesting against the Trump Presidency is not sufficient; that just magnifies the spectacle and reinforces Bannon`s strategy. Before taking to the streets (after the next outrage) some historical reflection is required. In my view President Donald Trump is a symptom of five malign tendencies in American society; rampant consumerism, declining media quality, diminishing civil liberties, social polarisation and working class disenfranchisement.

On the first point we need to re-read key writings from German-Jewish philosopher, sociologist and musicologist Theodore Adorno. Like many other European intellectuals he escaped fascist totalitarianism to settle in the United States. Adorno respected the constitutional traditions of his host country but felt uneasy about the spread of consumer culture. In a chapter entitled `The Culture Industry` from ` The Dialectic of Enlightenment` (1943) Adorno and his co-author Max Horkheimer criticised the increasing commodification of cultural expression. Music, film and news had become industrially mass produced and distributed in standardised formats for commercial profit. The growth of advertising, market research and the promotion of suburban consumer lifestyles normalised the continual acquisition of material goods-`I shop therefore I am`. Adorno later argued that commercial television cued audience passivity rather than social reflection upon society, history and prevailing power structures. In these circumstances public opinion was fashion-driven and potentially manipulable by demagogic leaders. Adorno`s analysis was in some respects undermined by the emergence of a new oppositional politics in the 1960s and 1970s. The feminist, civil rights and environmental movements generated mass mobilisations. Protests against the Vietnam war publicly exposed the brutalities of US military imperialism. Yet, in the decades following Adorno`s death in 1969 , oppositional politics dissipated and consumer culture became more entrenched. The establishment of the internet and social media gave advertisers unprecedented access to the private lifeworlds of citizens. Google pioneered the development of individuated commercial surveillance and Facebook allowed advertisers to monitor user generated content. A cyber-mediated culture of narcissism took hold; twitter postings, texting and selfies increasingly displaced literate communication. These tendencies together provided the preconditions for the spread of confirmatory bias (internet echo chambers), vindictiveness (trolling), and authoritarian leadership (with twitter followers). If Adorno`s analysis was overdrawn in the 1960s it is dead on the mark today.

Secondly, the decline in media quality as a precondition for Donald Trump`s political rise has been succinctly outlined in a recent commentary (Victor Pickard `Media Failures in the Age of Trump` polecom.org 2016 pp118-122). Pickard notes that Trump was very lucrative for commercial television. Cable news organisations reportedly made US $2.5 billion during the election season. Leslie Moonves, CEO of CBS candidly stated that Trump was producing considerable revenue for the network ,` The moneys rolling in and this is fun` (p119). When media organisations entirely depend on the sale of audiences to advertisers sensationalist news content prevails over journalistic inquiry. Meanwhile, journalists are less available to scrutinise politicians. Since 2006 the American newspaper industry has lost a third of its staff. Pickard remarks that bankruptcies increase `as readers and advertisers migrate to the web where digital ads generate a fraction of traditional ad revenue`. (p119). On the web millions of Americans rely on Facebook for daily news content. In this regard public concerns about fake news stories ignore the underlying issue. The proliferation of such news is `symptomatic of an unregulated news monopoly, one that is governed solely by profit imperatives` (p119 ).

I now turn to our third malign tendency. Now, I am aware that civil liberties have always been fragile in America. One need only ask Ameri-Indian and African –American activists, union leaders and any other coherent advocate of socialism. Nevertheless, a line was crossed during George Bush`s Presidency. Following the September 2001 9-11 attacks, on October 26th, the Patriot Act rescinded rights long protected by the Constitution and allowed for routine intrusions of the state into the lives of the citizenry. In 2002 Gore Vidal in an interview for the `LA Weekly` stated bleakly that the Federal government was `ready to lift haebus corpus, due process (and) the attorney-client privelege`. The Patriot Act thus enabled the institution of an `arbitrary police state`. President Obama`s failure to properly debate this legislation while in office makes it easier for Trump and Bannon to act despotically against Muslims, Mexicans and other marginalised groups.

Social polarisation ,the fourth malign tendency has a longer history. During the late 1970s, 1980s and 1990s America`s industrial heartlands were hollowed out. Manufacturing corporations moved to Mexico, China and anywhere else where wages were low and unions weak. Millions of US workers were abandoned just as Wall St investment banks became mega wealthy through financial speculation. Unemployed and precariously employed African- Americans were criminalised by racist police forces and incarcerated within a burgeoning prison-industrial complex. The white working class were left to bemoan the evaporation the American dream. For them, the post-war prospect of upward social mobility was effectively destroyed . There were plenty of villains to blame; Washington elites, condescending liberals, immigrants and, eventually, the Democratic Party . This constituency, nostalgic for the past, were always going to be drawn to a leader with a similar outlook. Trump is clearly nostalgic for the days when what was good for General Motor`s seemed good for America. There is some truth in this. Today`s high-tech corporates –Apple, Facebook, Google- employ far less people in proportion to their profits than the industrial corporates of the 1950`s.

Our fifth malign tendency; working class political disenfranchisement, was aided and abetted by the Democratic Party. During Bill Clinton`s Presidency the Glass –Steagall Act was repealed , derivatives speculation deregulated and the North American Free Trade agreement passed. The unemployed working class were forced into workfare regimes while the precariously employed and lower middle classes were cajoled by home- loan sharks into the sub-prime bubble. Under the Obama Presidency, after the financial crash, surviving mega-banks were bailed out at the expense of working class and middle class taxpayers. Bernie Sanders and his supporters sought to redress the situation during the 2016 Democratic primaries but were crushed by the Clinton machine. This systematic disenfranchisementof the poor by Democratic party elites was gleefully exploited by Donald Trump and his strategists.

Together these five malign tendencies in American society formed the preconditions for Donald Trump`s rise to the Presidency. Neither he or his advisors will reverse these tendencies but they are not entirely responsible for them either. Political opposition must look beyond Trump and establishment- liberal critics to publicly oppose the underlying US power structure- Wall St., transnational corporations, the military-industrial apparatus and their associated lobbying networks.

To this end, some intelligent foresight concerning the Trump Presidency will be necessary.

How will it`s future unfold? Read my next blog to find out..

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Malcolm Evans – building walls on Waitangi Day

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Political Caption Competition

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Daily Blog Guerrilla Radio – YG & Nipsey Hussle “FDT (Fuck Donald Trump)”

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TDB Top 5 International Stories: Tuesday 7th February 2017

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5: Lawyers Urge Appeals Court Not to “Unleash Chaos Again” by Reinstating Trump’s Muslim Ban

Courts have temporarily blocked President Trump’s executive order banning people from seven majority-Muslim nations from entering the United States. Early this morning, lawyers for the states of Washington and Minnesota filed a brief with a panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals arguing against restoring Trump’s executive order banning people from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen from entering the United States, saying that to reinstate the ban would “unleash chaos again.” On Sunday, a California appeals court sided with a lower court in Seattle and refused to reinstate the travel ban. The Seattle ruling, issued by U.S. District Court Judge James Robart on Friday, imposed a nationwide temporary restraining order on the ban. Over the weekend, the Department of Homeland Security began allowing visa holders affected by Trump’s order to board U.S.-bound flights. On Sunday, Roslyn Sinha, an Iraqi passport holder with a valid visa to live in the United States, was among those who was able to return.

Democracy Now

4: Israel’s settlement bill ‘big step towards annexation’

Occupied West Bank – The Israeli Knesset has advanced controversial legislation that, if approved, would lead to a host of illegal settlements built on privately owned Palestinian land being legalised retroactively.

The so-called “Regulation Bill”, scheduled for a vote on Monday, would apply to around 4,000 settlement homes in the West Bank for which settlers could prove ignorance that they had built on privately owned land and had received encouragement from the Israeli state to do so.

The bill has been criticised by human rights groups and legal experts who have warned that it would violate property rights. The government’s attorney general has said that the bill was unconstitutional and would contradict Israel’s legal obligations under international law, while Israeli MK Tzipi Livni warned that it would lead Israeli soldiers to the ICC.

“This law will make theft an official Israeli policy by retroactively legalising illegal construction on private lands,” said Anat Ben Nun, director of external relations at Peace Now.

Aljazeera

3: The Stories Behind New Zealand Places You Probably Never Learned in History Class

The Māori chief who inspired Gandhi, and what life was really like when the Treaty of Waitangi was signed.

Vice News

2: Amid the Chaos in Berkeley, a Grinning Face, Covered in Blood

SEVERAL FANS OF the right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos were injured on Wednesday night in Berkeley, in scuffles with dozens of black-clad anti-fascist activists who managed to shut down a talk by Brietbart’s star writer on the University of California campus.

According to Julia Carrie Wong of The Guardian, about 150 anti-fascists — who call themselves Black Bloc or Antifas and justify the use of violence as pre-emptive self-defense — joined a larger group of perhaps a thousand peaceful protesters and quickly confronted fans of the writer who had arrived early for his talk.

Amid the ensuing mayhem, however — as mace was sprayed, punches were thrown, a generator was set on fire, and the talk was called off — one victim of the violence appeared to be enjoying himself, grinning broadly as he approached reporters for BuzzFeed and the Bay Area affiliate of CBS News to display his battered face.

The man, a 30-year-old podcaster who uses the comic book-inspired pseudonym Eddy Brock online, seemed oddly pleased as he introduced himself to Blake Montgomery, who was streaming live video of the protest for BuzzFeed.

The Intercept

 

1: Donald Trump should not be allowed to speak in UK parliament, says Speaker

Donald Trump would not be welcome to address parliament during his state visit, the Commons Speaker, John Bercow, has said in an unprecedented intervention, which drew applause and cheering from MPs.

Rolling coverage of the day’s political developments as they happen, including Theresa May’s meeting with the Israeli PM, and the first chance for MPs to amend the article 50 bill.

Bercow, whose role is non-political, said he could not block a state visit by the US president but would use his role as one of the three “key-holders” of Westminster Hall to prevent the Republican from addressing MPs and peers.

He said he had been particularly persuaded by what he termed Trump’s “migrant ban”, the executive order signed during the president’s first fortnight that prevented any nationals from seven Muslim countries from entering the US, including refugees.

The Guardian 

 

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The Daily Blog Open Mic – Tuesday 7th February 2017

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openmike

 

Announce protest actions, general chit chat or give your opinion on issues we haven’t covered for the day.

Moderation rules are more lenient for this section, but try and play nicely.

 

 

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AS YOU LIKE IT – Summer Shakespeare 2017

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Presented by AUSA Outdoor Summer Shakespeare
Directed by Benjamin Henson

Banished from the constricted court, Rosalind and her cousin/best friend Celia cast off their former lives and embark on a journey of liberation in the glorious Forest of Arden. Dressed as a boy and a simple shepherdess, there they find the charms of the pastoral life – music thrumming in the distance, campfires aglow, celebrations of poetry awash with music, nature, love.
As Rosalind transforms herself, fizzing within a world of possibilities, we see her fall spectacularly in love with Orlando in the only way Shakespeare knows how – with quick minds, sharp tongues and pounding hearts.

Running time: 2 hours + interval

Tuesday 14th February
7:30pm
Beneath the Auckland University Clock Tower, 22 Princes St, Auckland

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BLOGWATCH: ‘The Standard’ goes into Willie Jackson hate mode

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The Standard will go into it’s usual twisting and turning sophistry to claim that The Standard isn’t connected in any way to Labour, but that’s just Lynn pretending to be objective.

Their only good blogger is standing for Labour for Christ’s sake (although I think after this weekend he’ll have problems) and the history of the name The Standard has a long association with Labour, so it’s a Labour affiliated blog despite what old man Lynn growls.

If it blogs self defeats like the Labour Party, if it blogs self mutilations like the Labour party and if it blogs self destruction like the Labour Party, it’s a Labour Party Blog.

Reading their commentary on Poto Williams’ totally counter-productive attack on Willie Jackson which has weakened Andrew Little as Leader, eclipsed Labour’s positive Waitangi media and made Labour look divided is political self mutilation at it’s most sadistic.

They’ve now gone as far as dredging up old criticisms of the established middle class unions Willie made 12 years ago!

How do these people think the rest of the electorate are seeing this unbelievable self-immolation? A house divided against itself cannot stand, and yet here’s The Standard actually feeding it???

It’s like their personal ego is more important than the cause they profess to champion.

They’ve gone as far as promoting a letter to Labour Party Council…

…most of this is bullshit and I’ve answered all these so called criticisms in a previous blog. I would imagine those signing are going to find out what happens to factions that threaten the Leadership of a Political Party.

The insanity of these haters and wreckers who are more than happy to destroy Labour’s unity to push for a divisive attack on a working class Maori who runs two Urban Maori Organisations that provide welfare programmes directly in the poorest urban areas of NZ is beyond belief.

This is as self defeating as the Greens decision to run in Mt Albert, voters will get the perception that the Left is actually more interested in fighting itself than beating the Government.

It’s like these people intend to cleanse Labour of anyone who doesn’t fit their definition of Left rather than win the 2017 General Election and they can’t see how that looks to the wider electorate.

I imagine the riot act is about to be read behind the scenes. Labour doesn’t need this with a by-election starting tomorrow.

 

 

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Conflicting Priorities: Has Poto Williams just cost Labour the 2017 Election?

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POTO WILLIAMS’ very public criticism of Willie Jackson’s return to Labour has done huge damage to her party’s re-election chances. At a stroke, her ill-disciplined and (presumably) unsanctioned outburst has undermined the positive perceptions created by the joint Labour/Green state-of-the-nation event of 29 January. All of those “good vibrations” (to quote TV3’s Patrick Gower) have been drowned out by the high-pitched screeching of identity politics. Too wrapped up in their quest for a gender-balanced caucus to recognise the strategic importance of Andrew Little’s eleventh-hour recruitment of Jackson, Williams and her supporters have cost Labour tens-of-thousands of urban Maori (and Pakeha!) votes.

Little’s own quest: to reconstitute Labour’s “broad church”; is clearly considered secondary to the Labour Women’s Council’s determination to achieve a gender-balanced caucus in 2017 – as mandated by the Party’s recently revised constitution.

The recent recruitment of Greg O’Connor to contest the critically important Ohariu electorate has ruffled more than a few progressive feathers. (The Left deems the former policeman to be a rock-ribbed social conservative.) With the surprise return of Jackson to Labour (on the promise of a favourable position on the Party List) these already fragile feathers have started flying in all directions.

Predictably, it is Jackson’s on-air grilling of “Amy” during the so-called “Roast Busters” scandal of 2013 that is being used to discredit his candidacy. That Jackson, along with his co-host John Tamihere, were merely giving voice to the doubts and reservations of a great many of their listeners (as talkback hosts are wont to do) has never been accepted by their critics. In the binary world of Identity Politics there is only space for rape-culture Devils and victimised Angels. “Devil’s Advocates” need not apply.

That there were many people living in South and West Auckland (and across New Zealand) who considered “Willie & JT” to also be victims of the Roast Busters scandal does not appear to have crossed the minds of their detractors. That these same people may have interpreted the fate of their talkback champions as proof of how little the Left has to offer voters like themselves either did not occur to the avenging angels of Identity Politics, or, if it did, was considered a price worth paying.

For Identity Politicians the psephological consequences of such moral crusading are matters of supreme unimportance. According to one recent analysis: “The correlation between voting National in 2014 and being male was 0.35, which was significant. This was mirrored on the centre-left: the correlation between voting Labour in 2014 and being female was 0.31.” Never mind. That National is well on the way to becoming the blokes’ party matters much less than ensuring a fifty/fifty split between men and women in Labour’s caucus. The question of whether or not guaranteeing gender parity should be accorded a higher priority than winning the election itself is studiously avoided.

As Labour’s leader, Little does not have the luxury of remaining indifferent to the demographic composition of his party’s voter base. In the simplest terms, his mission is to move voters from National’s column to Labour’s. Or, failing that, to lure out of the Non-Vote a large enough body of voters to nudge the election in Labour’s favour. Attracting votes to Labour is, however, unlikely if the party is perceived as subscribing to ideas and values radically at odds with the ideas and values of the voters to whom it is appealing.

Hence Greg O’Connor and Willie Jackson. For the working-class people who are, overwhelmingly, the principal victims of criminal offending, the idea of having the former boss of the Police Association in Parliament is likely to sound pretty good. To urban Maori, having the head of the Manukau Urban Maori Authority, Willie Jackson, representing them in Parliament may be similarly appealing – especially since so many voters already feel they know him from his afternoon talkback show on Radio Live.

Little’s announcement of O’Connor and Jackson was another important step in his carefully calibrated plan to reposition Labour in the minds of the voters. The intention is to change people’s perceptions of the party. From being seen as the political vehicle for highly-educated, politically-correct professionals living in metropolitan New Zealand, Labour’s election strategists are hoping to reclaim its original identity as the party for ordinary working people and their families.

Yes, O’Connor and Jackson may jar the sensibilities of inner-city Wellington and Grey Lynn, but they may also reassure less well-heeled Labour supporters that they represent something more than dull-witted but reliable voting-fodder. By providing such reassurance, Little hopes to avoid the fate of Hillary Clinton’s Democratic Party, which came to be seen by too many working-class Americans as a machine with only one function. To turn out enough people like themselves to elect candidates not even remotely like themselves to Congress and the White House.

Poto Williams’ reckless intervention has done enormous damage to Little’s plan. Memories of the “Man Ban” and of David Cunliffe’s tragic “I’m sorry I’m a man” comment have been revived. Even worse, socially conservative New Zealanders have been reminded of the remorseless pillorying of two working-class Maori men by a swarm of (mostly) Pakeha liberals.

Poto Williams’ unsanctioned attack on Willie Jackson has conveyed to conservative working-class New Zealanders the following, fatal, message. In neon-lit letters ten metres high she has proclaimed: “Labour’s priorities are not your priorities.”

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Why 2017 will be far worse than 2016

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2016 was shocking politically, economically, socially and culturally. We lost an enormous amount of thinkers and artists when we seem to need them the most.

I think 2017 has the potential however to be far worse than 2016 in three crucial areas.

Politics: The speed with which Trump has managed to generate fury and anger that has stretched into protests against him every weekend since his inauguration has changed everything. His ability to hear and manipulate the economic and cultural anger of the working poor is as terrifying as the conspiracy theory that we are watching a slow motion coup.

One of the few to pick Trump’s win, Michael Moore, has argued that we are witnessing one underway right now…

US in middle of coup by Donald Trump, Michael Moore warns

The US is in the middle of a coup and hasn’t realised, according to Michael Moore.

The filmmaker and journalist, who was one of the few famous people to publicly predict that Donald Trump would become President, has warned that the US state is being overthrown by Mr Trump and the people he has appointed to govern alongside him.

Linking to a New York Times piece about the role of senior advisor Steve Bannon, he posted on Twitter: “If you’re still trying to convince yourself that a 21st century coup is not underway, please, please snap out of it”.

…Trump has by-passed the normal political checks and balances which other nations and stakeholders use to anticipate how the President will respond, meaning that with Trump the possibility to misread him is incredibly high.

Trump directly impacts Putin, Israel, China, Europe and the entire Middle East, nothing politically can happen globally without Trump being mollified and praised for having the biggest Presidency ever.

The forces that pushed Brexit and Trump to a win, the angry domestic populations of the West under pressure from increased mass migration due to neoliberal globalisation, are looking for leadership and progressive movements either learn to harness that populism or face electoral impotency.

Progressives spent decades guarding against Orwell’s 1984 while forgetting Huxley’s hyper self gratification dystopia…

there were two landmark dystopian novels written by brilliant British cultural critics – Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell – and we Americans had mistakenly feared and obsessed over the vision portrayed in the latter book (an information-censoring, movement-restricting, individuality-emaciating state) rather than the former (a technology-sedating, consumption-engorging, instant-gratifying bubble).

…consumer culture and hyper individualism has done more to erode solidarity than the collapse of the entire Soviet Union. It’s how affluent cultural elites in California, London and New York didn’t see Trump or Brexit coming.

Those in Western Democracy who have been left behind by the global free market intend to make their fury felt.

 

Economy: The global market has been waiting to burst and correct for some time, especially since nothing was fixed from the 2007/8 Global Financial Recession. Brexit, Trumpism, and the death of global neoliberalism are real contenders to cause the next global economic meltdown, but the problem is that there are so many contenders to be that catalyst.

China has told the planet they will step in if Trump walks away, but China’s own economy looks like it will implode.

Brexit could cause terrible economic pain in Britain at a time when trust in the Government, media and business has collapsed.   

Meanwhile Europe looks like it could disintegrate economically at any moment.

Managing to get through the dark looming clouds of economic collapse in 2017 will take remarkable skill at a time when there is no remarkable skill.

Climate: The third way 2017 becomes worse than 2016 is from climate change. While we have a Prime Minister who barely believes in climate change, America is run by someone who thinks the entire claim is a Chinese hoax.

The World Economic Forum now places extreme weather events caused by climate change as the biggest threat to the global economy

…we are seeing the worst case scenarios from the IPCC play out as the only scenarios now. It is obvious that we have breached environmental feedback loops that will only continue to heat the planet and that we must urgently start investing in cultural, economic and societal adaptation if we are going to survive the worst parts of the future climate we have become welded to.

That reality is missing from the current debate and as the inevitability of extreme weather events  picks up pace in 2017 the ability to pretend it’s not happening can’t continue.

In 2017 there is much ready to explode.

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Trump’s admission of the American Military Industrial Complex War Machine highlights how dangerous Trump is

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The comments by Trump to Arch Conservative Bill O’Reilly regarding the so called innocence of America is a reminder of just how dangerous to the establishment Trump is…

In the clip, Trump repeated his past praise for Putin, saying “it’s better to get along with Russia than not,” which prompted O’Reilly to press him: “But he’s a killer, though. Putin’s a killer”.

“There are a lot of killers,” Trump said. “We’ve got a lot of killers. What do you think? Our country’s so innocent?”

…by admitting the American Military Industrial Complex War Machine has caused needless death he acknowledges the hyper-realist political landscape of constant threat that he is establishing plus he pays tribute to a deeply held belief within the Alt-Right (and agreed with across the political spectrum) that America’s needless wars oversees have sapped America. It is the very poor working class who won the election for Trump who make up the bulk of America’s recruits and they are the ones who do most of the dying and mutilation. Trump recognising that strengthens their core belief in him.

You really must read the terrifying way Trump has harnessed big data to appreciate the skill with which he can now manipulate the American Electorate...

“Pretty much every message that Trump put out was data-driven,” Alexander Nix remembers. On the day of the third presidential debate between Trump and Clinton, Trump’s team tested 175,000 different ad variations for his arguments, in order to find the right versions above all via Facebook. The messages differed for the most part only in microscopic details, in order to target the recipients in the optimal psychological way: different headings, colors, captions, with a photo or video. This fine-tuning reaches all the way down to the smallest groups, Nix explained in an interview with us. “We can address villages or apartment blocks in a targeted way. Even individuals.”

In the Miami district of Little Haiti, for instance, Trump’s campaign provided inhabitants with news about the failure of the Clinton Foundation following the earthquake in Haiti, in order to keep them from voting for Hillary Clinton. This was one of the goals: to keep potential Clinton voters (which include wavering left-wingers, African-Americans, and young women) away from the ballot box, to “suppress” their vote, as one senior campaign official told Bloomberg in the weeks before the election. These “dark posts”—sponsored news-feed-style ads in Facebook timelines that can only be seen by users with specific profiles—included videos aimed at African-Americans in which Hillary Clinton refers to black men as predators, for example.

…by harnessing social media, Trump and his big data manipulators know exactly which phrase to use and which tone to use it in to resonate with the fears and angers within the minimum electorate majority he requires to keep power.

Admitting the United States of America is a murderous war machine reinforces trust for Trump from those paying the price of that murderous war machine while menacingly revealing his casual attitude towards that murderous war machine.

Trump is communicating and resonating with our lowest angers in a way that progressives haven’t even comprehended yet.

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