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So we have a racist, sexist, crypto-fascist President vs the Military Industrial Complex – who do you cheer for?

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I blame Game of Thrones.

Suddenly Western pop media narratives could expand from beyond the outsider hero and a cast of 3 others (mentor, love interest and nemesis) to all sorts of different groups with different values competing for different interests.

That’s why Trump confuses so many.

He is hated and distrusted by the Military Industrial Complex because he has zero appetite of interest in geo-political warfare. As a business man he wants a trade war with China and a truce with Russia.

His preference is to build roads and bridges rather than waste cash on another foreign adventure. The vast majority of white poor folk who voted Trump are the also the same ones who keep getting pushed into fighting these wars.

Those communities are tired and want their sons and daughters home with all their limbs and minds intact.

However, just because the Military Industrial Complex and its war machine lust hates Trump, that’s no reason for any decent human being to respect or support Trump.

He is a sexist, racist, crypto-fascist who seems to revel in his ignorance. His basic lack of grace dignity and respect is nothing to celebrate in any leader.

The biggest mistake the Left and Progressives have made however is in assuming that because Trump is a sexist, racist, crypto-fascist that means all those who voted for him were sexist, racist, crypto-fascists. There’s no question that some of Trump’s voters are sexist, racist, crypto-fascists, but certainly not the majority and screaming ‘racist, sexist, Nazi’ at those Trump voters misses their economic pain and their realities of free market neoliberal globalisation.

The Left’s need to blame Russia and brand all Trump voters as sexist, racist, crypto-fascists allows the Left to conveniently ignore their own role in alienating those poor white voters. Like many legacy left wing Political Parties in modern democracies, Hillary offered those hurt by the free market  nothing by more neoliberal globalisation.

The lesson here for Progressives is that they actually need to examine the economic platform from which they are preaching because those who are labouring and paying the highest price for keeping that economic platform standing are the ones who are benefiting the least from it.

 

 

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Sexual Culture – Alt-Right cuckoldry, hyper-hetrosexual Putin fetishisation and toxic Trump masculinity

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Some reckons on the deep and dark toxic masculinity sexual culture that drives Trumpism.

I think the bewildering hatred and contempt of women is one of the most striking manifestations of Trump populism. Social media has opened a new dialogue front in gender rights and minority rights that have caught many privileged males off guard.

The fury the majority of women and minorities righteously feel towards patriarchal capitalist culture is unfiltered and streamed live 24-7 now, and its increasing influence in the debate has angered, alienated and on some rare occasions, enlightened many men.

The real problem of a patriarchal capitalist culture however is that toxic masculinity drenches most men in it. Without the emotional skills and secure character that privilege robs many men of, most males are ill equipped for the strident new voices on social media and lack the ability to find security in their own identification of the masculine.

This leads to a festering and toxic resentment of women caused by their own self loathing.

The ‘privilege’ many men are accused of doesn’t feel like much of a ‘privilege’ for the men themselves. An inability to be emotionally secure, the pressures of being a provider, the pressure from other men to not be the weakest member of the group, the horrific suicide, depression and illness rates of men, our crime rates, our violence, our uneducated ignorance – these are not beneficial privileges in any real sense of the word.

A man might earn more per hour than a woman, but if he can’t cry without getting drunk that’s not much of an entitlement.

I’ve never understood the mocking some on social media make of the fragility of men’s masculinity. That fragility speaks of a deeper pain that can’t be resolved using the current gender defined roles of being male.

Mocking men for being fragile seems counter-productive in the extreme.

Understanding the bizarre strands that bond the Alt-Right with this damaged sexual culture are difficult to appreciate if you haven’t seen the mutation of Breitbart media over Obama’s past two terms.

I think the weird hyper-hetrosexual Putin fetishisation that has seduced so many of the Alt-Right is part of this wider backlash towards women fed by this sudden confrontation of privilege via social media.

The Right in America, in an attempt to undermine Obama, always built Putin up as some sort of Ninja Chess player who constantly outplayed Obama. Putin worship in America bonded with the Right as a way to belittle Obama’s foreign policy. Mix those trends in with toxic masculinity insecurity and Putin’s macho man brutality towards the Gay, Lesbian, Bi, Trans and Gender Fluid communities and this aggressive hyper-heterosexuality has spread like cyber chlamydia throughout right wing social media.

Take the ultimate Alt-Right insult ‘cuck’. Cuckoldry is the sexualisation of everything toxic masculinity hates. The idea of a male allowing his female partner to enjoy her self sexually with any other sexual partner she choses while playing with those taboo gender constructs of power is blasphemy to the Alt-Right. For the vast oceans of men morbidly fractured and damaged by toxic masculinity, the mere idea of giving power away to their partner in such a way is a sin to all and everything they understand.

We have a culture and humanity in desperate need of healing. The prison of toxic masculinity that locks so many men from a true and deeper connection with the world around them can’t be unwound by more animosity, it actually requires kindness, compassion and a sense of empathy.

Those attributes are in short supply right now when everyone else’s pain feels far larger than the perceived privilege of being male.

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Allowing the CIA to re-write Lange’s legacy, what do you think the NSA 5 Eyes can do now and what was really revealed at the 2014 Moment of Truth?

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What was most disturbing about the release of last weeks CIA spy file on New Zealand, was that we suddenly allowed the Military Industrial Complex of America to re-write one of our Nation’s most important symbolic stands, our treasured anti-nuclear stance.

According to the CIA, Lange painted himself into a corner and accidentally turned NZ nuclear free. Why the christ we are allowing the fucking CIA to dictate their version of history to us is only a reminder of how captured many of our mainstream media journalists are to the American narrative.

I’m sure the CIA wanted to believe that Lange had tripped up, that makes the whole anti-nuclear stance far easier for their egos to accept, what it ignores was that Lange was passionately ethical in his position against nuclear war, remember this…

…I can smell the uranium on the CIA letterhead.

What the CIA choose to believe to make our anti-nuclear stance easier for their Maters of the Universe egos to accept is the CIA’s business, we shouldn’t buy into their self-delusion. Lange could have as easily decided to use the loophole he did to get the deal across the line, he could have been bluffing or he could have purposely painted himself into that corner. There are a dozen reasons why and how Lange dealt with the situation, the fact a tiny South Pacific Nation stood up to the US is what matters, how Lange did it is far less important.

But the CIA need to believe it was all a mistake and our corporate media are happy to propagate that narrative.

Surprise, surprise.

Consider now what the NSA has access to via the 5 Eyes mass surveillance powers that John Key rammed through Parliament under urgency.

We know now that the power of the 5 Eyes makes the spying outlined by the CIA last week seem sweet and cute in comparison.

Amnesty International paints an Orwellian picture of what mass surveillance is doing to the UK…

UK counter-terror laws most Orwellian in Europe, says Amnesty

The UK is leading a Europe-wide “race to the bottom” with Orwellian counter-terrorism measures that seriously threaten human rights, according to a comparative survey of security laws by Amnesty International.

A 70-page report, entitled Dangerously disproportionate: The ever-expanding national security state in Europe, alleges that Britain has introduced powers in the name of national security that are “among the most draconian in the EU”.

…NZ Parliament right now are debating the NZ Intelligence and Security Bill which allows for the SIS and GCSB to conduct their own investigations, allows them to break laws and empower others to break laws with legal immunity and extends punishment for anyone leaking to the media illegal Government spying to 5 years.

We know post-Snowden that the NSA hoovers up and can hack any and all electronic communications that the GCSB trawls for them and now with a dangerous crypto-fascist like Trump in the White House, that seems ripe for abuse.

The protest at the GCSB/NSA Spy Nest in Waihopai this summer is a reminder that the 5 Eyes Mass Surveillance State is quietly building its empire while voters are distracted with clickbait mainstream media.

So are we as a country going to wake up to this threat to our democracy? Or will we allow the CIA to re-write our history for us?

To answer that, I reflect upon the 2014 Moment of Truth and what it actually revealed.

I remember one thing most vividly from that night. The naked hatred in the barking face of former Metro Editor Simon Wilson and TV3 news reporter Patrick Gower as they screamed hysterically at Glenn Greenwald and Kim Dotcom because he had decided not to show his evidence that Key knew about Kim before Key had said he did (he’s going to present that in Court).

The mainstream media decried the event as a damp squib and wrote the entire thing off as an over hyped promise that didn’t deliver.

That’s when I realised what the Moment of Truth had actually revealed.

The Moment of Truth had Assange, Greenwald and Edward Snowden prove without a shadow of a doubt that John Key had lied through his teeth about mass surveillance. It showed the NSA and CIA have staff here, it showed they planned to spike the sea cable and steal data directly from that feed and it showed that our GCSB went and met with the NSA to assure them the law Key had just pushed through allowed for mass surveillance despite Key telling the NZ public that it didn’t.

But what did NZ focus on? Kim not proving Key knew he existed before he claimed to have known.

What was revealed was something of the nature of the anti-intellectual average Kiwi, who rather than look at the bigger picture presented, managed to find a tiny corner they could disagree with.

You can lead a New Zealander to slaughter, but you can’t make them think.

What was really revealed at the Moment of Truth was how easily led we are in our critical thinking. Will NZers have the self of esteem to reject this smear by the CIA on our nuclear free stance?

The Moment of Truth reaction suggests we do not.

We need a counter media more than ever before.

 

 

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Trump quotes Bane from Batman at Inauguration Speech

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Spot the Difference: One is a sociopathic Supervillain who uses nuclear weapons as bargaining chips and the other is Bane from Batman

 

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Political Caption Competition

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Daily Blog Guerrilla Radio – Green Day – American Idiot

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TDB Top 5 International Stories: Saturday 21st January 2017

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5: Trump’s New White House Website Doesn’t Mention Civil Rights

Or climate change, or poverty, or healthcare, or LGBTQ people.

Along with taking over the official @POTUS Twitter handle, Donald Trump got the keys to the White House website. Unsurprisingly, he’s made some changes—erasing Barack Obama’s digital legacy and replacing it with, well, not much.

For instance, references to climate change have been deleted, and in place of Obama’s in-depth “Issues” section, which included pages on civil rights, poverty, and violence prevention, among other topics, Trump’s administration has put up some vague outlines for six different issues he’d like to tackle as president, including energy and law enforcement.

The new White House promises to target what it describes as a “dangerous anti-police atmosphere in America,” pledges in two different places to “rebuild” America’s allegedly depleted military, and vows to slash regulations (including those intended to fight climate change) and reduce taxes—all Trump campaign promises. But curiously, there’s nothing at all about healthcare reform, which is the first major political fight of the administration.

Vice News

4: Donald Trump Preaches Angry Nationalism, While Practicing Goldman Sachs Capitalism

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S INAUGURAL address was fiery and nationalistic, a considerable departure from the traditional Republican Party embrace of the free market and an activist foreign policy. Trump talked of an “America First” policy and vowed that “January 20th 2017, will be remembered as the day the people became the rulers of this nation again.”

But Trump’s words on the steps of the Capitol bore little resemblance to the reality of the administration he is building.

It’s hard to argue with Trump’s assessment that “the establishment protected itself, but not the citizens of our country. Their victories have not been your victories; their triumphs have not been your triumphs.”

But that establishment will be in full force in the Trump administration. The megabank Goldman Sachs, famously close to Trump’s opponents in the Democratic Party, has six alumni posed for key posts in his administration, including his treasury secretary nominee Steve Mnuchin.

Trump spoke of “mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities; rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation,” but Mnuchin built a fortune off of helming banks that misled borrowers and foreclosed on their homes.

The Intercept

3: Native Americans expect nothing good from Trump…

America’s journalists are truly and deeply sorry for their behaviour during the election. They are sorry they failed to see the simmering animosity and racism that helped Donald J Trump take the White House. They are apologetic for staying within their own social circles and ignoring disparate points of view. They have asked forgiveness for misleading the public into thinking that Mr Trump could never hold office and pledged that when he takes office on Friday, they will hold him accountable, come hell or high water.

Please … This behaviour isn’t new.

For months, protests outside the Standing Rock Sioux Indian Reservation transfixed the public, exposing US audiences to the elaborate political, environmental and cultural issues American Indians face. However, much of the reporting was superficial and journalists often failed to see the social or historical environments that created the incident at Standing Rock.

The battle ended in December when the US Army Corp of Engineers stopped construction, and since then little follow-up to the story has been made.

Aljazeera

 

2: Michael Moore & Naomi Klein on Resisting Donald Trump as Protests Erupt Ahead of Inauguration

Democracy Now! broadcast our daily show live from WHUT on the campus of the historically black university, Howard University in Washington, D.C., less than four hours before Donald Trump became the nation’s 45th president. Trump lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton by almost 3 million votes, but he managed to win the Electoral College. He takes office as the least popular incoming president in at least a generation. We get an update from protests in Washington, D.C., and hear the speech Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore gave Thursday night, when nearly 25,000 people gathered in New York City to protest outside Trump International Hotel and Tower near Central Park. We are also joined live by Naomi Klein, journalist and best-selling author, whose most recent book is “This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate,” and Lee Fang, reporter with The Intercept who covers the intersection of money and politics.

Democracy Now

1: Chinese growth slips to slowest pace for 26 years

China’s economy slowed further last year to expand at its weakest pace for quarter of a century, with warnings that it risks losing further momentum in 2017 as Donald Trump’s presidency creates new challenges for the trading superpower.

The world’s second-largest economy grew 6.7% last year, according to China’s statistics office, meeting Beijing’s target range of 6.5-7% but the slowest growth since 1990.

Figures for the final quarter of 2016 alone pointed to a small pick-up in pace at the close of the year. They showed GDP growth quickened to 6.8% for October-December, the first quarterly acceleration for two years and ahead of economists’ forecasts for growth to hold at 6.7%.

The Guardian

 

 

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The Daily Blog Open Mic – Saturday 21st January 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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Costs of education to parents increased by Government freeze on education spending – NZEI

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Children will be the biggest losers if a Government freeze on education spending this year increases the costs of education to parents, NZEI Te Riu Roa warned today.

New figures released today show parents face $38,000 for the cost of state school education for a child born in 2017, an increase of 15 percent since 2007.

In last year’s Budget, the Government froze 2017 school operational funding and continued a seven year freeze of early childhood education funding.

NZEI Te Riu Roa President Lynda Stuart said failing to fund education properly was costly to parents, but the biggest losers were children.

“Schools know that parents are strapped for cash, and a survey of principals late last year shows that many schools will instead be forced to cut teacher aide hours because their communities simply can’t afford to pay more. That means the children who most need extra support miss out, and teacher aides face more insecurity.”

“New Zealand primary school students are currently funded below the OECD average. The Government’s decision to freeze school funding this year exacerbates the under-funding issue. It’s time the Government prioritised children’s education over promises of tax cuts.”

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New oil exploration for NZ as 2016 officially declared hottest on record – Greenpeace

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As 2016 is officially declared the hottest year ever recorded, the world’s largest seismic ship is searching for deep sea oil off New Zealand’s East Coast.

This morning, two key global climate agencies, The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and NASA, confirmed that 2016 was the hottest year on record, and according to scientific research, the world hasn’t been this warm for 115,000 years.

Greenpeace climate campaigner, Kate Simcock, says against this backdrop it’s a “climate crime” that New Zealand is currently hosting the world’s largest seismic ship to search for more oil.

“We are in a climate emergency and our Government has invited this ship to blast for oil at extreme depths in an area of New Zealand that’s rich in rare and unique marine life,” she says

“This is the oil scientists say we can’t afford to burn if we are to have any chance at avoiding a climate catastrophe that will affect every single person and living thing on this planet.

“The burning of fossil fuels has already irreparably changed our future. The more the Earth warms, the more we’re experiencing violent weather events like the torrential weather bomb that’s just hit New Zealand.

“This isn’t an issue for future generations to deal with. It’s no longer just about our children or our children’s children. This is happening right now – it’s about us.”

The seismic ship, the Amazon Warrior, will be searching for oil on behalf of oil giants Statoil and Chevron for the coming months.

Last week, Greenpeace and local iwi used two small inflatable boats to intercept it, 50 nautical miles off the coast of Wairarapa.

From on board one of the inflatables, Simcock rang the captain of the Amazon Warrior and delivered a message signed by over 60,000 New Zealanders, telling the ship to cease its operations immediately.

Polynesian voyaging waka captain and East Coast resident, Reuben Raihania Tipoki (Ngāti Kahungunu) also spoke on behalf of 80 indigenous communities from the East Coast who are demanding the ship leave their customary waters immediately.

Simcock says the journey was “just the beginning” of the looming uprising around New Zealand against the Amazon Warrior, the oil industry, and the Government’s oil agenda.

People across the country have already started making plans to attend The People’s Climate Rally, which will take place at the Government’s annual oil conference on March 22 and 23 in New Plymouth.

Organising groups include Climate Justice Taranaki, Frack Free, Oil Free Wellington, Greenpeace and 350 Aotearoa.

Simcock says it’s more important than ever to get active about climate change.

“We have Trump about to take office in the US – one of the world’s biggest carbon emitters – who thinks that climate change is a hoax made up by China. And here at home we now have Bill English, who has downplayed the importance of climate change and said that our response to it should be ‘moderate’,” she says.

“We can’t wait for our leaders to act because they’re not doing it fast enough. It’s up to the people now.”

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Waihopai Spybase Protest Saturday January 28th – CAFCA

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People from all around New Zealand (and Australia) will be converging on the super-secret Waihopai satellite interception spybase, in Marlborough, on Saturday January 28th.

We will be at the Waihopai spy base main gate at Waihopai Valley Road from 9.30 – 10.30 a.m. There will be speakers; information will be provided on the function of the base; and there will be a peaceful protest, calling for its closure.

The main focus of the day will be workshops in Blenheim both in the morning and afternoon. Featured speakers:

Former Green MP Keith Locke, jointly with Warren Thomson of the Anti-Bases Campaign (on Five Eyes/GCSB/Waihopai) – 11 a.m. – 12.30 p.m.

Nicky Hager (on researching skills) – 1.15 – 2.45 p.m.

Kyle Matthews, a Dunedin academic (on the history of non-violent direct action as a tactic, including during the nearly 30 years of the Waihopai campaign), along with Liz Remmerswaal Hughes (a Kiwi who was at the October 2016 protest activities at the very nasty US warfighting and spy base at Pine Gap in Australia). Adrian Leason, one of the three Waihopai Domebusters who deflated one of the spy base’s domes in 2008, will also speak at this workshop. 3 – 4.15 p.m.

The day of workshops will conclude with the first Blenheim screening of Errol Wright and Abi King-Jones’ excellent 2016 documentary “The 5thEye”. 5 p.m.

The venue for the workshops and film screening is the Nativity Centre, 76 Alfred St, central Blenheim.

The Anti-Bases Campaign is inviting the people of Blenheim to join us at the base protest, and to come to the workshops and film screening. To that end we are having an information leaflet (attached) delivered to every house in Blenheim (all 9,154 of them) this weekend.

2016 saw the Goverment change the law to remove previous restrictions on domestiv spying by the NZ Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB, which operates Waihopai). Not only does the GCSB systematically spy on New Zealanders – but it also routinely spies on any number of other countries, on behalf of the US National Security Agency (NSA). And the NSA spies on everyone. It is essential that more pressure is put on the Government to end the anti-democratic and destructive activities of this NZ spy agency. For nearly 30 years Waihopai has been NZ’s most significant contribution to Washington’s global effort to manipulate world business and diplomacy.

Waihopai does not operate in the national interest of New Zealand. In all but name it is a foreign spy base on NZ soil, paid for with hundreds of millions of our tax dollars; it spies on Kiwis and foreigners; it is NZ’s key contribution to America’s global spying & war machine. Waihopai must be closed.

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Aotearoa’s experience in overcoming racist and other divisions in the workers’ movement (Part 2 of 3)

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(Part 2 of series – See Part 1 here)

There is a rich history of working people in Aotearoa uniting and overcoming the divisions imposed on us.

In particular, during periods of working class upsurge, we see working people shake off the shackles of prejudice and ignorance and join hands in struggle.

In my own life, I have been witness to a number of instructive examples. I began my working life in 1970 as a meat worker in the Auckland works. I have worked in warehouses, car assembly, in a glue factory, a soap factory, and as an English language teacher.  I was an active unionist and participated in numerous strikes. These included actions to attempt to improve conditions at work or actions that had a broader target such as opposition to wage controls by the government or to protest the arrest of a fellow unionist on the picket line.

During these decades, some unions also took action against the government’s international policies such as the sending of New Zealand troops to the Vietnam War, the support given to apartheid South Africa or the welcoming of US nuclear warships to New Zealand.  

During the 1970s and 80s, there was an almost continuous rise in the class struggle – at least in terms of the number of people participating in strike action. At first, the unions were largely unfit to the tasks being demanded of them. The leaderships were overwhelmingly old, white men who had been tamed by earlier defeats in the 1950s and had lost faith in working people and their capacity to struggle.

Strengthening the ability of the unions to fight involved a process of both democratisation of the unions and involving broader and broader layers of workers in action. One elementary form of the democratisation process was to deepen the involvement of women, Maori, Pacifica and other migrant workers. Later there was a recognition of the oppression applying to LGBT workers. That also meant acknowledging the weaknesses that existed in structural terms but also a basic acknowledgement of the needs of these workers as women, Maori, and Pacifica workers. The working class was no longer – if it ever had been – a bunch of white men.

Typical of these transformations was that of the Hotel Workers Union in Auckland. A young militant Maori worker by the name of Matt McCarten led a rank and file revolt in the early 1980s that ousted the old leaders, organised militant strikes and other struggles including Hotel occupations that massively increased the membership at the same time.

As a consequence, the unions were drawn into the struggles against sex and race discrimination, in support of Maori struggles for land and language rights, protests against police violence, as well as rejecting the racist scapegoating of Pacifica workers during periods like the those when “dawn raids” were commonplace.

Unions also had to adapt to the push by women in traditionally “male” industries like the meat works to open up the more skilled and better-paid jobs to women. I was a worker at the Westfield meat works when women workers took cases to the Human Rights Commission and won the right to work as butchers. Workers at Westfield generally were not opposed to these efforts – more a case of being a bit bewildered and bemused. But as soon as women stepped-up and proved the could do the work they were usually strongly defended by their fellow workmates.

Unions supported the Maori Land March in 1975 and imposed a “Green Ban” on the sale and development of Maori land at Bastion Point in 1976. A “Working Women’s Charter” – a powerful and radical programme for women’s rights – was debated and voted on at mass meetings of workers across the country in the late 1970s before being adopted by the Federation of Labour in 1980. It included demands for equal pay, 24-hour child care, abortion rights, an end to discrimination on the basis of gender or sexual orientation.

I remember one union meeting in particular. There were 1500 members of the Northern Drivers Union filling the Auckland Town Hall. They were overwhelmingly male. I was there to support a female comrade presenting the motion to support the charter who inauspiciously was subjected to catcalls and whistles as she walked towards the stage. My friend made a strong argument that endorsing the charter would help not just women workers but all working people and their families.  After a serious debate, the charter was endorsed overwhelmingly by the workers present. This was true in meeting after meeting across the country during the years 1977-80. And it was true for so-called “male” unions as much as for those with strongly mixed membership.

Many of the Maori working class leaders emerging from struggles in those years were naturally part of more narrowly defined “union” struggles as well as leading organisations dedicated to promoting Maori rights. For example, the leaders of the Gear Meat Workers Union in Wellington were also leaders of Maori land rights groups in Wellington. It was natural then that the Gear Meat works went on strike to protest the eviction of protestors from the occupation at Bastion Point in May 1978.

In fact, the merging of union and social protests during this decade saw the ruling class retreat and adopt a new strategy to try to capture and co-opt Maori rather than end up in an endless cycle of confrontations.

Up to this point, the National Party was an openly racist party. Election adds in 1975 for example had racist caricatures of Pacific Islanders beating up people.

White South Africans were referred to as being “our kith and kin” by then Prime Minister Robert Muldoon.

Through the mid-1970s Maori and Pacifica were rounded up on the streets and asked for their passports to try and identify Pacific island “overstayers”.

When police were criticised for these random checks a National government minister justified the police action by arguing that if a Friesian cow with black and white markings was in a herd of light brown Jersey cows then it was natural for the police to check the Friesian.

1982 saw Samoans stripped of citizenship rights granted by the Courts to those born in Samoa during the period of New Zealand’s colonial rule. This was done in a late night session of parliament with both the Labour and National parties working together.

The Labour Party was the traditional party for Maori workers to vote for. Maori remembered the fact that it was the 1935-49 Labour Government that had given them the same access to welfare as other citizens. Labour was also credited with creating full employment and providing state housing.

There was almost a total absence of a Maori professional or middle class except for a small number of relatively affluent farmers. When I went to Auckland University in the early-1970s fewer than 100 Maori attended.

The election of the Labour Government in 1984 allowed for a change in course from direct racism towards opening up spaces for some Maori to advance. This was especially true for professionals in health, education and other public services. For most Maori, this government was actually a disaster as tens of thousands of jobs were being slashed in the Railways, the Ministry of Works and other state enterprises where many Maori worked as they were corporatised in preparation for eventual privatisation.

The 1984-90  Labour government had an extreme free-market economic policy dubbed “neoliberal” which was normally associated with reactionary right-wing and racist governments like those in the UK under Margaret Thatcher and the US under Ronald Reagan from the same period.

In New Zealand however, the government was able to use concessions that would appeal to the liberal left on issues around sex and race discrimination, together with some foreign policy actions like expelling the South African Ambassador and banning nuclear ships, to blunt the opposition to the economic reforms. At least in terms of many middle-class leaders (including trade union ones) who could be bought off with perks and appointments that was partially successful.

The Waitangi Tribunal was also allowed to investigate claims from before 1975 – the year it was established. This opened the way to a series of compensation recommendations that involved the transfer of some money and land to tribal entities. Both Labour and National have deliberately done this in a manner to promote a professional middle class of corporate-minded tribal leaders who can be used to negotiate and mediate problems away without the mass confrontations of the past.

The National government from 1990 to 1999 oversaw the deepest and longest recession in New Zealand history since the 1930s. Overall official unemployment figures topped 10 percent. For Maori and Pacifica families, however, it was the equivalent of the Great Depression with official unemployment rates hitting 25%.

Using the weapon of high unemployment, the bosses were able to push their agenda forward even more strongly. Real wages were driven down. Protective measures like overtime rates after eight hours or penal rates on weekends were eliminated. Health and Safety laws were degraded. Deregulation was the order of the day. The trade union movement collapsed across the private sector. The neoliberal counter-revolution begun by the 1984-90 Labour government was continued and completed.

A large part of the responsibility for the collapse in union strength during that period was that much of the central union leadership simply refused to fight.

The union bureaucracy’s retreat began with a dirty deal done with the previous Labour government to accept a ban on strikes during the contract period in return for a state-led forced merger of the smaller unions into bigger ones. This was accompanied by the merger of the more militant and democratic Federation of Labour made up mostly of private-sector unions with the more bureaucratic state sector union body to create the Council of Trade Unions in 1987. All local autonomy and power was eliminated in the process. The CTU leaders, of course, got promised lots of gravy-train “consultation” on government policy and appointments to various boards.

The only fight launched by the CTU leadership following its formation was a fight to the death against proposals for a general strike when the National Party government elected in 1990 introduced the Employment Contracts Act. A number of central leaders of the CTU had been members of the Socialist Unity Party trained in a bureaucratic variety of pro-Moscow Stalinism so the collapse of the Stalinist states in Eastern Europe and Russia at that time simply added justifications to their rightward leap to openly praising the so-called virtues of free market capitalism.

As a consequence of the huge working class defeats during these years action by working people collapsed to near zero and has largely remained there ever since. As a consequence large numbers of working people have simply had very few opportunities to fight together. This undermines the confidence and consciousness of the working class.

What came to be dubbed “Identity Politics” – that is a political approach that prioritised one’s identity over one’s class – became dominant in middle-class liberal-left circles. Class was dismissed as no longer relevant or important.  This included a number of Labour Party MP’s and functionaries.

This was an inevitable consequence of the retreat of the working class.

In an odd reversal of cause and effect, some left-wing commentators like Chris Trotter seem to blame the working class retreat on the rise of identity politics rather than the other way around.

A disappointing aspect of the retreat was the fact that union officials seemed to be focused on protecting their own positions and high salaries through bureaucratic mergers over organising the unorganised. Many unions seemed to turn the groups inside the unions which had been formed to empower workers from oppressed groups into inwardly focussed talking shops rather than organising centres.

Many of the new middle-class Maori leaders incorporated into the state, corporate and iwi bodies also seemed to simply ape the excessive salaries, bad taste and extravagance of their Pakeha “colleagues’.

It was a principal of the socialist movement that workers representatives, whether they are in parliament, on local bodies or employed by unions should only receive the pay of an average skilled worker. Maybe it is time to revive that rule and look at applying it to other voluntary and co-operative organisations as well as elected tribal bodies.

While many union officials and middle-class Maori were focussed on protecting themselves from the consequences of the social crisis during the 1990s, the big majority of working people – including and especially Maori  – emerged in a far worse state than they entered.

The 1990-1999 National government, however, continued the process of settling Waitangi Tribunal claims. The “liberal” face of New Zealand capitalism continued as before. The Tory prime Minister Jenny Shipley attended the 1999 Gay Pride parade.

National also largely gave up on overt racism as an electoral tool except for the 2005 campaign run by the then leader Don Brash. Brash’s campaign did increase the National Party’s share of the vote from the historic lows of 2002 under the then leader Bill English but not enough to secure a majority.

It probably shocked many that racist sentiments were as deep and widespread as they were. The problem for National is that under a proportional system of election, and given the demographic changes being produced by migration to new Zealand with 25 percent of the country’s population not born here, it is difficult maintaining a majority with such overtly racist policies. Brash was forced to resign after a book exposing his methods was published. This included the fact that the use of racist dog-whistles like “Iwi or Kiwi” was entirely cynical and manipulative.

Following John Key’s election as leader in November 2006, he moved to the centre again on these issues and was able to form coalition governments with the Maori Party from 2008 until today.

The Maori Party now explicitly represents a pro-capitalist upper-class layer in Maori society that is happy to compete for contracts from the state. For the government, this has the added advantage of furthering the privatisation agenda into the realm of education, welfare and housing by claiming the state has failed Maori in these areas – which, of course, is true. But the solutions being implemented will inevitably end up in a dead end for the big majority of Maori again.

The Mana Movement’s establishment in 2011 represented a progressive split from this orientation. The founding leader Hone Harawira, who had in the past been closely identified with more narrow nationalist arguments around asserting Maori rights became an articulate advocate of a class-based approach to fighting poverty and inequality. He openly acknowledged that the majority of poor people in this country were white – without, of course, ignoring the fact that the unequal impact of those social diseases on Maori in Aotearoa today means that a significantly larger proportion of Maori are poor than their Pakeha compatriots.   

I believe it was correct for socialists and working class militants to embrace this political development. It provided a basis for a fighting alliance of Maori who wanted to struggle “by any means necessary” for the liberation of their people and working class activists who are white who wanted a class struggle oriented labour movement. That initial effort appears to have also run into a roadblock with no clear way forward. Again it is mainly objective obstacles that exist as a consequence of the very low level of broader working class struggle. We can only hope that the lessons that are there to be learnt can be absorbed and acted on in the future as new struggles emerge among Maori and the broader working class.

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All Changed, Changed Utterly: Thoughts on the Eve of Donald Trump’s Inauguration.

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NOTE TO READERS: This post draws extensively from the historical circumstances that led to the appointment of Adolf Hitler as German Chancellor on 30 January 1933. Inevitably, these references will provoke someone to invoke “Godwin’s Law” – i.e. the Internet convention that the first person to equate contemporary events with the horrors of Nazi Germany in a political debate, loses the debate. I have long considered those who cry “Godwin” to be not only foolish but dangerous. Anyone who attempts to prevent people learning from one of the most terrible periods of human history is, objectively speaking, a fascist. Genuine progressives do not obey “Godwin’s Law”.

HAD YOU BEEN LIVING in Germany on 27 January 1933 the chances are good that you would have considered Adolf Hitler a busted flush. Two months earlier, in the last nationwide elections, his Nazi Party had suffered a small but highly significant loss of support. The newspapers were filled with confident predictions that the National Socialists had peaked. The trade unions even dared to entertain a small measure of optimism about the future. It was known that the present Chancellor, General Kurt von Schleicher, was drawing up a comprehensive plan to put Germany back to work. Things were looking up.

The following day, however, General Schleicher was forced to tender his resignation. Unending backstairs intrigue had finally succeeded in persuading the German President, Paul von Hindenburg, to get rid of the inveterate military schemer once and for all and replace him with Adolf Hitler. The right-wing aristocrats, soldiers, politicians and businessmen advising Hindenburg were firmly convinced that Hitler could be “controlled”. The Nazi Party and its charismatic leader would be the pawns of German reaction – not its master.

Negotiations between Hitler and the President’s advisers continued for a further 24 hours. The following day, 30 January 1933, Hindenburg announced that he was appointing Adolf Hitler Chancellor of Germany.

Nothing would ever be the same again.

Today, Donald Trump will be sworn in as the 45th President of the United States. The route by which he has arrived at the White House is very different from that which led Hitler to the Chancellery, but when executive power is finally vested in Trump’s person, the American Republic, like the hapless Weimar Republic before it, will be changed utterly.

Trump will be able to change America in ways no other president has ever dared contemplate because his election represents not a vote of collective confidence in the American system, but an act of collective repudiation. Not by all Americans. Not even by a majority of Americans. But by enough of those Americans who believe themselves to be “real” Americans. These Americans, like the “true” Germans of 1933, have become convinced that they can no longer rely upon the American political system to protect their interests – and so, that system must be changed, changed utterly.

The forms of American democracy will remain – at least for a while – but its substance will be steadily whittled away. With all three branches of the US government: the Executive, the Legislature, and (very soon) the Judiciary under Republican Party control, the “checks and balances” in which America’s founding fathers placed so much faith will be rendered inoperative. Exactly what is meant by “We the People of the United States” will become the subject of drastic revision.

The progressive expansion of what it means to be a citizen of the United States: the historical journey that began in the depths of the American Civil War with the Emancipation Proclamation, and which ended with President Barack Obama bathing the White House in all the colours of the rainbow, will be halted. Worse – it will be thrown into reverse.

In Nazi Germany the process began with The Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honour and The Reich Citizenship Law – both passed at a special session of the Reichstag convened during the 1935 Nazi Party Rally in the city of Nuremburg. It was through these so-called “Nuremburg Laws” that German Jews found themselves definitively excluded from what it meant to be German.

That is how it begins: with exclusions; deportations; preventive detentions; the construction of walls.

But it is not how it ends.

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Q Theatre and Auckland Fringe Festival 2017 – ONCE THERE WAS A WOMAN

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Q Theatre and Auckland Fringe Festival 2017

ONCE THERE WAS A WOMAN

Old age ain’t no place for sissies.” Bette Davis

‘Once There Was A Woman’ is a gutsy story about grief, memory and caring for the elderly and dying. A much loved Mother and Grandmother is treated badly in care, family take over and look after her until she dies. Memories of family life are evoked and there are colourful stories from the 70’s to present day: caftans, race relations, glimpses of childhood. To their horror the family discover that even the bravest people can be silenced by bullying in their vulnerable, elderly years. Full of feeling, humour, and imagination, this new solo work from Co Theatre Physical Once There Was a Woman premiers at Q Theatre Loft from February 28th to March 3rd 2017.

 

A Co Theatre Physical Production created and performed by Beth Kayes with dramaturge Murray Edmond (Indian Ink Theatre), directorial consultant Margaret-Mary Hollins (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, 1000 Hills, OH BABY), music from Claire Cowan (Blackbird Ensemble) and violinist composer Hope Csutoros.

In the search for her lost Mother memories are traded for access to destinations, imagination is the fuel and a true telling is the final exit point from grief. Once There Was a Woman uses story-telling and physical theatre to reveal how extraordinary the ordinary is-it is a tale of kindness and letting go.

A theatre veteran, Beth trained at Auckland’s Theatre Corporate drama school in the 80’s, learnt circus and physical theatre on her O.E in London, returned to Auckland and worked with anarchic theatre company Theatre AT Large (The Butcher’s Wife and Henry 8). In the 90’s she made her name touring nationally and internationally with acclaimed Australian aerial and physical theatre company Legs on the Wall (All of Me, Homelands). In 1995 she founded Co Theatre Physical whose productions A House Across Oceans and Oh Baby followed their premiere in Auckland with successful touring seasons to festivals nationwide. “This is a brilliant piece of original New Zealand theatre… topical, identifiable, truthful, sad and satirical. Don’t miss it.”– Nelson Mail, Nelson Festival ’05

ONCE THERE WAS A WOMAN plays:

Tuesday 28th February-Friday 3rd March 2017, Q Theatre Loft, 8.15pm

Tickets from: www.qtheatre.co.nz and www.iTicket.co.nz

$14- Groups of 10 or students

$20- Use promo code BRING MUM or Senior Citizens

$24-Full Price

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Commentary of Trump’s Inauguration Concert

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5pm ET – This inauguration has all the charm and culture of your average Klan rally – it’s a sad joke after a crippling 18months of hate

5.05pm ET –Trump has arrived at the inauguration – now we are just waiting on War, Famine and Plague to arrive

5.30pm ET – 3 Doors Down are now playing inauguration – will we see Sister Hazel, Blues Traveler & Gin Blossoms on this late 90s College Radio rock out?

5.31pm ET –  I swear I will lose my shit if Fox News talk over ‘Kryptonite’ by 3 Doors Down

5.33pm ET – 3 Doors Down have more than 2 songs? I’m learning something new every minute of this inauguration

5.36pm ET – the way these 4 guys playing piano at inauguration is actually how Trump intends to run the WhiteHouse- 4 people doing the job of 1

5.40pm ET – There are more celebrities in my phone’s contact list than at this inauguration

5.50pm ET – I think there was less military worship at the Nuremberg Rallies than at this Trump Inauguration

6pm ET – There’s a ‘folk’ singer singing about how much he loves the US Military at Trump Inauguration – you can’t write this kind of satire

6.10pm ET – Trump is speaking incoherently to the audience. Announces ‘something special is happening’. Doesn’t explain what that something is, starts ranting about change. Now ranting about special. Claims he is going to ‘Make America Great Again’. Audience cheers madly for this incoherent ranting.

6.15pm ET – Massive fireworks display that overshadows all the ‘talent’ so far and then spookily has ‘Glory, Glory, Hallelujah’ song at full man throat by the military throat singers.  Comes across like a scene form the Handmaids Tale.

Let the horror of Trump begin.

They rally around the family (with a pocket full of shells) – Bulls on Parade by Rage Aginst the Machine sums this inauguration up best.

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