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The Daily Blog Open Mic Wednesday 25th November 2015

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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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24hour surveillance without any legal rights is what a Police State does

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So these 40 people who are under 24 hour physical and electronic surveillance – what legal rights do these people have? Are the Government sure of the information that justifies this surveillance? We know from NZs own legal history with Ahmed Zaoui and domestic miscarriages of justice that our police and intelligence agencies can be abusive with their vast powers. Combine this with new mass surveillance abilities and we have all the ingredients for corruption.

The intelligence agencies in NZ have been spending money on opinion manipulation and have seeded stories in baby boomer media like The Listener to calm middle NZ about their new 5 Eye capabilities.

So we have a PM who is prepared to tell NZers there is a threat amongst us at a time when he needs to scare the local population to justify more powers. How many exactly? 40 or 49? How fast has this number jumped? When did the surveillance start? Have these cases been reviewed? What is happening with the surveillance footage? Do we destroy the original without copying it?

We can’t just hand over more and more unchecked power to a Government who have no problem using the state spy agency to falsely smear the Leader of the Opposition months before an election.

24 hour surveillance of people with a fig leaf judicial framework is what Police States do.

 

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The awful thing that connects Jonah Lomu’s funeral with Terrorism

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There is an awful thing that connects Jonah Lomu’s funeral with Terrorism, it is Prime Minister John Key.

Just as Key is inappropriately using Jonah Lomu to pimp his flag change vanity project…

Andrew Little labels John Key ‘tasteless’ for saying Jonah Lomu tribute shows need for new flag
Labour leader Andrew Little has accused the Prime Minister of being “tasteless” after he suggested the Irish Examiner’s tribute to Jonah Lomu shows the country needs a new flag.

Appearing on Paul Henry, Key used the front page as a prop in his argument for a fern on the new flag.

…he is daring to use the recent massacre in Paris to justify his mass surveillance powers in New Zealand…

‘Threatening individuals’ under 24-hour surveillance – John Key
One or two New Zealanders on a terror watchlist are considered so threatening that they are being monitored every minute of the day, Prime Minister John Key says.

But the main concern to the Government are the potential terrorists who are not on the radar of New Zealand’s spy agencies, Mr Key told Radio New Zealand this morning.

All of the 40 people on the watchlist were linked to, or “on the periphery” of the Islamic State (ISIS), and were likely to be regularly reading the extremist group’s propaganda.

Mr Key said one or two of the people were “quite threatening individuals” and they were under 24-hour surveillance.

They were being watched both physically and electronically under new powers which were given to spy agencies a year ago.

…the sickest part of Key’s smug defence of mass surveillance is that these spying powers don’t work!

Paris is being used to justify agendas that had nothing to do with the attack
The aftermath of the Paris terrorist attacks has now devolved into a dark and dishonest debate about how we should respond: let’s ban encryption, even though there’s no evidence the terrorists used it to carry out their crime, and let’s ban Syrian refugees, even though the attackers were neither.

It’s hard to overstate how disgusting it has been to watch, as proven-false rumors continue to be the basis for the entire political response, and technology ignorance and full-on xenophobia now dominate the discussion.

First, there’s the loud “we need to ban encryption” push that immediately spawned hundreds of articles and opinions strongly pushed by current and former intelligence officials the day or two after the attacks, despite the government quietly admitting there was no evidence that the attackers used encryption to communicate. It was a masterful PR coup: current and former intelligence officials got to sit through a series of fawning interviews on television where they were allowed to pin any of their failures on Edward Snowden and encryption – the bedrock of privacy and security for hundreds of millions of innocent people – with virtually no pushback, or any critical questions about their own conduct.

The entire encryption subject became a shiny scapegoat while the truth slowly trickled in: as of Tuesday, it was clear that American and/or French intelligence agencies had seven of the eight identified attackers on their radar prior to the attacks. The attackers used Facebook to communicate. The one phone found on the scene showed the terrorists had coordinated over unencrypted SMS text messages – just about the easiest form of communication to wiretap that exists today. (The supposed ringleader even did an interview in Isis’s English magazine in February bragging that he was already in Europe ready to attack.)

As an unnamed government official quoted by the Washington Post’s Brian Fung said, if surveillance laws are expanded the media will be partly to blame: “It seems like the media was just led around by the nose by law enforcement. [They are] taking advantage of a crisis where encryption hasn’t proven to have a role. It’s leading us in a less safe direction at a time when the world needs systems that are more secure.”

…so these terrorists were acting in the open with the knowledge of the surveillance services. Why does that mean we need to give Governments even more powers to spy on us when they can’t even use the information open to the public?

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And let’s not pretend that this is happening in some sort of vacuum. Climate change deepened the drought in Syria and Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia exploited American, Russian and Turkish interests. This culminates in country collapse, refugee explosion and out of control militant proxies.

Glenn Greenwald is damning…

The origins of ISIS are not even in dispute. TheWashington Post put it simply: “almost all of the leaders of the Islamic State are former Iraqi officers, including the members of its shadowy military and security committees, and the majority of its emirs and princes.” Even Tony Blair — Tony Blair — admits that there’d be no ISIS without the invasion of Iraq: “‘I think there are elements of truth in that,’ he said when asked whether the Iraq invasion had been the ‘principal cause’ of the rise of ISIS.” As The New Yorker’s John Cassidy put it in August:

By destroying the Iraqi state and setting off reverberations across the region that, ultimately, led to a civil war in Syria, the 2003 invasion created the conditions in which a movement like ISIS could thrive. And, by turning public opinion in the United States and other Western countries against anything that even suggests a prolonged military involvement in the Middle East, the war effectively precluded the possibility of a large-scale multinational effort to smash the self-styled caliphate.

Then there’s the related question of how ISIS has become so well-armed and powerful. There are many causes, but a leading one is the role played by the U.S. and its “allies in the region” (i.e., Gulf tyrannies) in arming themunwittingly or (in the case of its “allies in the region”otherwise, by dumping weapons and money into the region with little regard to where they go (even U.S. officials openly acknowledge that their own allies have funded ISIS). But the U.S.’s own once-secret documents strongly suggest U.S. complicity as well, albeit inadvertent, in the rise of ISIS, as powerfully demonstrated by this extraordinary four-minute clip of Al Jazeera’s Mehdi Hasan with Gen. Michael Flynn, former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency:

…while John Pilger compares the rise of ISIS with the rise of the Khmer Rouge…

In transmitting President Richard Nixon’s orders for a “massive” bombing of Cambodia in 1969, Henry Kissinger said, “Anything that flies on everything that moves”. As Barack Obama wages his seventh war against the Muslim world since he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and Francois Hollande promises a “merciless” attack on that ruined country, the orchestrated hysteria and lies make one almost nostalgic for Kissinger’s murderous honesty.

As a witness to the human consequences of aerial savagery – including the beheading of victims, their parts festooning trees and fields – I am not surprised by the disregard of memory and history, yet again. A telling example is the rise to power of Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge, who had much in common with today’s Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). They, too, were ruthless medievalists who began as a small sect. They, too, were the product of an American-made apocalypse, this time in Asia.

According to Pol Pot, his movement had consisted of “fewer than 5,000 poorly armed guerrillas uncertain about their strategy, tactics, loyalty and leaders”. Once Nixon’s and Kissinger’s B-52 bombers had gone to work as part of “Operation Menu”, the west’s ultimate demon could not believe his luck. The Americans dropped the equivalent of five Hiroshimas on rural Cambodia during 1969-73. They leveled village after village, returning to bomb the rubble and corpses. The craters left giant necklaces of carnage, still visible from the air. The terror was unimaginable. A former Khmer Rouge official described how the survivors “froze up and they would wander around mute for three or four days. Terrified and half-crazy, the people were ready to believe what they were told… That was what made it so easy for the Khmer Rouge to win the people over.” A Finnish Government Commission of Inquiry estimated that 600,000 Cambodians died in the ensuing civil war and described the bombing as the “first stage in a decade of genocide”. What Nixon and Kissinger began, Pol Pot, their beneficiary, completed. Under their bombs, the Khmer Rouge grew to a formidable army of 200,000.

So we are seeding the monsters we are now decrying? Like we always have.

Meanwhile, who really benefits from manipulating this fear to give away more of our civil liberties?

Why the arms industry of course…

Stock Prices of Weapons Manufacturers Soaring Since Paris Attack
The Paris attacks took place on Friday night. Since then, France’s president has vowed “war” on ISIS and today significantly escalated the country’s bombing campaign in Syria (France has been bombing ISIS in Iraq since last January, and began bombing the group in Syria in September).

Already this morning, as Aaron Cantú noticed, the stocks of the leading weapons manufacturers — what is usually referred to as the “defense industry” — have soared:

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TDB Political Caption Competition

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City Vision welcomes Phil Goff’s Mayoral Announcement and Prepares for 2016 Campaign

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“Auckland needs strong, progressive leadership so we welcome Phil Goff’s announcement that he will campaign to be Auckland’s next Mayor”, says City Vision Councillor, Cathy Casey.

 

“Phil has a strong track record in senior positions, and is well known for being pragmatic, open-minded, and acting with integrity. We are pleased to hear his solid commitment to retention of our publicly owned assets, his vision of a truly inclusive city, and his strong positions in favour of public transport and quality intensification;” says Cr Casey “I have worked with Phil in my capacity as ward councillor for the last two terms since amalgamation and have developed a good working relationship with him in this time as well as an appreciation for his commitment to the people of Auckland.”

 

“City Vision believes that Auckland is at a cross-roads. The Supercity structure has helped to give the region a voice, and real progress on developing an integrated transport network has been made as a result. However, there is no denying that many Aucklanders have lost confidence in Council in recent years and that a fresh start is required. While City Vision is yet to make a formal Mayoral endorsement decision, we believe that we could work collaboratively with Mr Goff to build a better Auckland”, says Waitematā Local Board Chair, Shale Chambers.

 

This week City Vision is launching a series of community report back leaflets to our communities, which set out the work that our elected representatives have been doing to deliver on their commitments. Highlights include:

 

  • Continuing to protect our assets against ongoing privatisation attempts
  • Actively enhancing our local environments and working to protect important heritage sites
  • Prudent financial oversight and fighting for a fairer rates system
  • Strongly pushing for better public transport, including early completion of the City Rail Link
  • Supporting decision making at the local level to ensure local communities continue to see investment in their areas

 

“Along with an effective new Mayor, Auckland will need to elect capable and strategic Ward Councillors, and community-connected Local Boards to work with that person. City Vision is up for the challenge. We have a strong track record and we are well prepared to take our message to our communities at the 2016 election”, says Albert-Eden Local Board, Chair Peter Haynes

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TheDailyBlog.nz Top 5 News Headlines Tuesday 24th November 2015

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Hiding The Homeless

A growing number of American cities are ticketing or arresting homeless people for essentially being homeless. The new laws ban behavior commonly associated with homelessness like reclining in public, sharing food or sitting on a sidewalk.

Supporters argue these measures are necessary to push homeless people into the shelter system and maintain public safety. Critics say the laws violate the rights of homeless people and ignore the more complicated drivers of homelessness like mental illness.

We found homeless people camping in the woods to escape police harassment, a homelessness consultant opposed to feeding homeless people and a city that uses solitary confinement to force homeless people into shelters. 

VICE News began its investigation in Boise, ID, where a group of homeless people have filed a federal lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of these laws. Their case could change the way homeless people are treated across the country.

Vice News

 

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THIS FAKE BOMB DETECTOR IS BLAMED FOR HUNDREDS OF DEATHS. IT’S STILL IN USE.

THE ADE 651 IS A SMALL, HANDHELD WAND with a plastic grip and a swiveling antenna, designed by a British company named ATSC for the ostensible purpose of finding hidden explosives. I saw one of these devices firsthand last year while driving up to a security checkpoint at Jinnah International airport in Karachi, Pakistan. As our vehicle approached, a security officer walked past us, waving the wand alongside our doors. In theory, had there been a bomb located inside, the device’s antenna would have moved, alerting officials to the danger nearby.

Happily, there wasn’t any bomb. 

However, even if there were, the fact is that the ADE 651 wouldn’t actually have found it. In fact, although it remains in use at sensitive security areas throughout the world, the ADE 651 is a complete fraud. A 2010 BBC Newsnight investigation into the device determined that it was based on pseudoscience and amounted to nothing more than a divining rod. Investigators from BBC also found that the ADE-651’s manufacturer sold it with the full knowledge that it was useless at detecting explosives. 

The device is once again back in the news as it was reportedly used for security screening at hotels in the Egyptian resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh. A Russian airliner that took off from that city’s airport was recently destroyed in a likely bombing attack by the militant Islamic State group. Speaking to The Independent about the hotel screening, the U.K. Foreign Office stated it would “continue to raise concerns” over the use of the ADE 651.

The sordid story of how the ADE 651 came into use involves the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. 

The Intercept

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Anti-immigration, anti-liberal: meet Sweden’s far-right future

Sweden’s liberal identity is under attack. As increasing numbers of refugees enter the country, anti-immigrant violence is rising. And the Sweden Democrats, a radical nationalist group, is now the third largest party in the country. Phoebe Greenwood meets the young Swedes who believe multiculturalism is a threat – and the migrants afraid of what this means for them

The Guardian

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2 Men Barred from U.S. Flight for Speaking Arabic

Islamophobic incidents have continued in the United States following the attacks in Paris. On Thursday, two men were temporarily barred from boarding a Southwest flight from Chicago to Philadelphia after a passenger heard them speaking Arabic. In Texas, meanwhile, armed protesters rallied outside the Islamic Center of Irving, decrying the “Islamization of America.”

Democracy Now!

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Siberia’s melting permafrost fuels climate change

Over the past year, a number of giant, mysterious holes have emerged in Siberia, some as deep as 200 metres.

Scientists say the craters may be emerging because the frozen ground, or “permafrost”, that covers much of Siberia has been thawing due to climate change, allowing methane gases trapped underground to build up and explode.

Permafrost is ground that is permanently frozen, where the ground temperature has remained below zero degrees Celsius for at least two years. It covers about a quarter of the northern hemisphere’s land surface.

When permafrost thaws, microbes digest the plant and animal remains that were locked in the permafrost and release greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere.

The phenomenon is a self-feeding cycle, explained Sarah Chadburn, from the University of Exeter.

“Permafrost soils contain vast amounts of carbon, nearly twice as much as is currently in the atmosphere. As the permafrost thaws in a warming climate, the soil decomposes and releases carbon to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide and methane. These are greenhouse gases, and they warm the Earth even more. This leads to more permafrost thawing, more carbon release, and so the cycle continues,” Chadburn said.

At the recent Arctic Circle Assembly in Reykjavik, Iceland, Max Holmes from the US-based Woods Hole Research Center (WHRC) said in a presentation that the Siberian sinkholes “are an additional indication that vast changes are under way in the Arctic”.

Aljazeera

 

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The Daily Blog Open Mic Tuesday 24th November 2015

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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.

 

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

Good news for Labour – bad news for Auckland

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The good news for the Labour Party is that their most right-wing MP could leave parliament after the local body elections next year.

The bad news for Auckland is that if Phil Goff wins the mayoralty the city will move further to the right to the benefit of big business while life will get tougher for families on low incomes.

Goff entered parliament as a Labour MP in 1981 and aside from a brief stint out (1990 to 1993) he has been an MP since.

He was the youngest cabinet minister in the 1984 Dave Lange/Roger Douglas government and changed from being a fiery left-winger (on a soapbox at least) to an apostle of the free market.

Goff’s parliamentary career from 1984 has been marked by blind adherence to neo-liberalism. Goff has championed such things as the sale of national assets; turning public services into profit-driven enterprises; contracting out public services (with lower pay and poorer working conditions for those providing the services); free trade (shifting New Zealand jobs overseas); maintaining cuts to benefits; reduction of health services; public funding for private, profit-driven education; tax cuts for the rich and tax increases for the poor.

He should be remembered particularly for his introduction of tertiary education fees (tertiary education was virtually free for NZ citizens before Goff) with all its associated hardship and introducing GST (Goods and Services Tax) which shifted taxation dramatically from the rich to the poor. (The poorest 10% of New Zealanders pay approx. 14% of their income on GST while the richest 10% pay less than 5% of their income on GST)

Goff was one of the Labour politicians chiefly responsible for 175,000 children remaining in poverty after nine years of Labour (1999 to 1008) in the best of economic times.

Goff has been a politician for the 1% while masquerading as a representative of ordinary New Zealanders.

Even the one bright spot from his launch speech today – he says he won’t sell Auckland City assets – has to be taken with a bucket of salt.

On many similar occasions (eg Roger Douglas in 1984 or Lianne Dalziel after election as Christchurch mayor in 2014) Labour politicians, after an election, have called for an independent audit of the books only to tell us – Shock! Horror! – things are much worse that we thought and asset sales are inevitable.

Goff has all the right-wing credentials the business and political elites need in an Auckland mayor.

I think he’s a shoo-in for mayor. Poor old Auckland.

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Labour and the Art of Deckchair Re-Arrangement: Andrew Little reshuffles his Shadow Cabinet

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SOMETIME THIS WEEK (the date keeps changing) Andrew Little will announce his Shadow Cabinet reshuffle. The refreshed line-up of senior Opposition spokespeople will be the electorate’s best guide as to who will be doing what in the next Labour-led government. Barring unforeseen circumstances, and unforgiveable cock-ups, Little’s promotions, reappointments and demotions will be the last such exercise before the 2017 General Election.

Very few New Zealanders will pay much attention to Little’s final choices. Labour’s ranks, thinned by successive and increasingly severe defeats, contains nobody upon whose shoulders the burden of the electorate’s hopes has  yet descended.

This is not 1977, when the occasion of the Mangere by-election, threw up the gargantuan figure of David Lange. This lawyer-turned-politician was not only larger-than-life but also (and this was the crucial point) larger than the incumbent Labour Leader, Bill Rowling.

For the next five years, the big question, both in and out of the Labour Party, wasn’t about if Lange would replace Rowling as leader, but when. Observing the deep impression the new Mangere MP’s ebullient personality, vicious wit, and soaring rhetoric was making on the public imagination, those Labour MPs determined to steer their party in a new direction lost no time in recruiting him to their caucus faction.

The Party President of the time, Jim Anderton, referred to this faction, derisively, as the “B-Team”. The truth of the matter, however, was that Roger Douglas, Mike Moore, Michael Bassett, Richard Prebble and, of course, Lange himself, constituted the most creative and dynamic politicians to be found within Labour’s parliamentary ranks. Regardless of whether one supported or opposed the ideas they were espousing, there was no disputing that theirs was the team to beat. Everybody understood that when Rowling fell (as he did, eventually, in 1982) things were going to change.

That is the way it is supposed to work in parliamentary democracies: Change is supposed to find its champion, and then, through the ballot box, acquire the power to make things happen. For good or ill, Lange guided the country out of the cul-de-sac into which Sir Robert Muldoon had led it, and the policies of Sir Roger Douglas (and his Treasury advisers) went on to change New Zealand fundamentally.

Nothing and no one of such prodigious capability lurks in Little’s caucus. Not only has Change failed to encounter a champion among its ranks, but she also struggles to find anyone interested in making much happen at all. Such reforms as Labour promised at the elections of 2011 and 2014 have been ostentatiously wiped from the agenda. And such rhetorical skill as Little is able to summon to Labour’s cause is of the sort that serves only to polish the achievements of the past. Lange’s extraordinary oratorical power; his ability to paint a future in which New Zealanders were eager to take up residence, is nowhere in evidence.

Certainly, there is nothing about his finance spokesperson which calls to mind the incandescent passion of Roger Douglas. Grant Robertson is not the sort of person who quotes Neitzsche, writes alternative budgets, or publishes a book entitled There’s Got To Be A Better Way. Although entrusted with heading-up a special party commission dedicated to The Future of Work, there is scant indication that Robertson’s investigation is likely to produce anything that The Listener wouldn’t be proud to publish.

The Wellington Central MP could, of course, be hiding his light under a bushel, and the final report of The Future of Work Commission could end up calling for a dramatic reduction in the length of the working week; a radical reformation of the law regulating workplace relations; state-subsidised retraining; and the introduction of a Universal Basic Income. But a Labour caucus willing to embrace economic and social policies of such radicalism is unlikely to look and feel as somnambulant as the one Little leads.

The latest public opinion polls in the UK are registering a sharp upward spike in support for the Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour Party among the 18-25 and 26-35 year-old cohorts of voters. Though well behind David Cameron’s Conservatives in overall terms, this surge of support from the young is of enormous importance to British Labour’s future as a viable political party.

As Little prepares to lead his re-shuffled shadows into Labour’s centenary year, he needs to consider whether his party’s future is likely to be rescued by people, or policies. If Jacinda Ardern and Kelvin Davis are the best politicians he has to offer New Zealand, then it is definitely bold new ideas that he needs to start bringing forward.

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Dear Phil Goff – let’s cut to the chase, what are you going to do for those Aucklanders with the least?

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Dear Phil

Glad you heeded my advice last month at the City Vision fundraiser (yes, I was the one in wings) when I said you should run for Mayor, I’m sure my comments may have been the tipping point for you.

Look, let’s cut to the chase. You are very probably going to be the next Mayor of Auckland so how about getting some ideas going now?

-Make Queen Street and every other main street car free pedestrian boulevards.

Destroy the privilege behind these bloody golf courses and convert 50% of them back for the development of  new generation state houses and affordable $400 000 homes for first time home buyers only.

-Living wage for all Council workers plus contractors.

-Adopt entire Generation Next public transport blueprint.

-Make all Central City, Inner link and Outer Link busses free

-Give students a further 25% discount on top of their existing one.

-A digital strategy to promote Auckland culture

 

 

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Bashing Bennies to shape the narrative for the Summer BBQ

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The great mythical Summer BBQs where NZers will gather to argue and debate the state of the nation got its usual helping heaping’ of festive spite.

Other than the mandatory story detailing what Prisoners will eat on Christmas Day, nothing stirs up the hiss on those BBQs more than knowledge beneficiaries are going on overseas travel. It’s as if a plane suddenly stops being a  flying bus and becomes a symbol for Scam Airways where lazy bludgers laugh it up over the duty free that they’re able to fly when those around the BBQ only have their waterfront Bach’s. Some will exclaim that they’ve been forced to scale back their holidays to the Gold Coast from Bali, and no one gives them a free trip! Others will sizzle about beneficiaries having kids they can’t afford.

The great mythical Summer BBQ will spit and foam over beneficiaries living the high life. Hence the announcement that 31 000 beneficiaries have been cut off welfare…

31,000 lose benefits for not telling Winz of foreign trips
More than 30,000 New Zealanders had their benefits cut last financial year for travelling overseas without letting officials know.

Ministry of Social Development figures show 31,714 people had benefits cut for going overseas without telling Work and Income – down on the previous year’s 35,565.

Benefits related to jobseeker support were those most often cut.

Whangarei Citizens Advice Bureau co-ordinator Moea Armstrong said some people received a “nasty surprise” if they went away for a week then came back and realised they had no benefit.

…that’ll soften things up when National returns its controversial report into privatising CYFs. Trumpeting cutting people off welfare who may be getting flights for funerals or family events helps give the rump some raw meat to chew and makes the unemployment rates look less damning.

All the Government are doing here by cutting poor people off welfare for the temerity to travel is lower the thresholds for disqualification.

There’s a myth from the right that welfare somehow makes people lazy and so denying it in the first place is the ethical thing to do. Apart from it being moralistic judgement pandering as reasoned opinion, the facts are welfare programs don’t promote laziness…

Economists tested 7 welfare programs to see if they made people lazy. They didn’t.
For as long as there have been government programs designed to help the poor, there have been critics insisting that helping the poor will keep them from working. But the evidence for this proposition has always been rather weak.

And a recent study from MIT and Harvard economists makes the case even weaker. Abhijit Banerjee, Rema Hanna, Gabriel Kreindler, and Benjamin Olken reanalyzed data from seven randomized experiments evaluating cash programs in poor countries and found “no systematic evidence that cash transfer programs discourage work.” Attacking welfare recipients as lazy is easy rhetoric, but when you actually test the proposition scientifically, it doesn’t hold up.

…the pettiness of treating beneficiaries in this manner for no real gain mocks the Rights hallowed morality and shows it up for the empty self-interested gesture it always was.

You treat people like this and it lessens the country as a whole.

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Latest TV3 Poll – Left’s embarrassing denial over Key’s popularity

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The latest TV3 Poll is out and it highlights just how difficult a job it is to take Key out. Paddy Gower desperately attempts to paint some silver linings for the Left as part of TV3s new attempt to woo back liberal and progressive viewers who have walked away from TV3 in droves because of that networks terrible pro-government bias, but the simple reality is that National are barely lower than their election night victory.

There have been some embarrassing attempts by comrades on the Left to suggest this is the beginning of the end of Key, but those are just grasping straws. The truth is that despite mass surveillance lies, despite selling off public assets, despite draconian conditions for beneficiaries, despite Dirty Politics, despite a housing affordability crisis, despite the economy tanking, despite growing unemployment. despite high incarceration rates, despite ideological experiments in education, despite killing off critical media, despite the PMs Office colluding with the SIS to smear the Leader of the Opposition months before the 2011 election, despite saying we wouldn’t go to war and then going to war, despite inequality, despite claiming Opposition MPs were backing rapists for highlighting human rights abuses – DESPITE ALL THAT – National are still on 46.7%.

Why?

The grim reality is that the middle classes have traded in their egalitarian values for housing property valuations that now make 3 times the average wage annually. The property speculating middle classes will allow creationism to be taught in their local school if it means putting  capital gains tax off for 3 more years.

We won’t see a substantial shift in the polls until the economy tanks and the property bubble pops, until then the property speculating middle classes are not leaving Key even if he kills a kitten live on Seven Sharp and uses it to play catch with Mike Hosking.

The silver lining is that Labour have stopped haemorrhaging and have built into the early 30s. They enter BBQ season safe but need to start fleshing out policy over the Summer. The sleepy hobbits of middle Nu Zilind won’t change votes until they realise National speak small business morality but govern for the corporations, the second the illusion of good economic management slips, Key will be gone burger.

 

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This is how humiliating it is living in NZ at times

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Oh, how terribly humiliating to be a Nuer at times…

NZ student mistaken for terrorist
Jaspreet Singh was sitting at Columbus cafe yesterday morning, outside Auckland Hospital, and a few metres away from the University of Auckland Medical School where he is studying to become a doctor.

Mr Singh is 21 and wears a turban as part of his Sikh faith.

He was meeting his mentor and research supervisor, Professor Luke Larkin, to talk about a research project he was keen to get involved with.

Two police officers entered the cafe 20 minutes later and asked Mr Singh to step outside. Prof Larkin initially refused on his behalf, arguing the officers were picking on him because of his race.

Mr Singh said he was shocked, but obliged and followed the police out.

“They took me outside and they explained that someone had called them and said I was doing something with wires in my laptop bag.”

…groan. Where to begin. Did the idiot paranoid member of the public who called from the toilets of the cafe understand that the person they were complaining to the Police about the supposed terror threat was in fact from a completely different religion than those who carried out the Paris attacks?

Fear of the ‘other’ has never been so embarrassing and stupid.

The good thing was that the young mans friends sitting with him initially refused to let the Cops take him out – it’s vital to let the Police know they are being watched when they embark on public checks of identity or else they’ll think they can just get away with it.

Odds on the person who complained is a National Party voter.

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TheDailyBlog.nz Top 5 News Headlines Monday 23rd November 2015

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5: 

Brussels faces week on lockdown as hunt for terror cell intensifies

Europe’s de facto capital faces an unprecedented security lockdown this week after Belgian authorities imposed a slew of safety-first measures to prevent a “serious and imminent” terrorist attack.

Schools, universities and kindergartens will be shut and the metro, shuttered all weekend, will remain closed, as counter-terrorist forces intensify their search for a network of Islamist militants involved in the Paris attacks.

“We still fear attacks here like those that occurred in Paris, involving several individuals striking simultaneously in several places,” Charles Michel, the Belgian prime minister, told a tense press conference, adding that there were “indications” that transport systems, commercial centres, shopping streets and busy places were targets.

Soldiers patrolled the streets with armoured vehicles outside the main stations and in public spaces, and last night there were reports of multiple operations in central parts of Brussels including the Grand Place.

The Guardian 

4: 

Phil Goff confirms Auckland mayoral bid

Mr Goff set out his broad plans at a campaign launch on Auckland’s waterfront this afternoon, telling supporters he would focus on solutions to traffic congestion and on building more homes.

“Bringing forward infrastructure funding and providing more bus, cycle and walkways would help ease the gridlock.

“Policies that give the building industry the confidence to gear up for construction will also make it easier for homebuyers.”

Mr Goff has also come out against the sale of strategic assets.

He said two reports commissioned by the Auckland Council argue the case for selling the city’s airport shares and perhaps the port company operation.

Mr Goff told several hundred supporters in Auckland he was also against further expansion of the city’s wharves.

“We should be opening up our harbours to our people, not extending the port further out into the harbour just to create parking spaces for imported cars.”

RNZ

3: 

Marco Rubio vows US troops will inflict ‘humiliating defeats’ on Isis

Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio has vowed to use American forces to inflict “high-profile, humiliating defeats” on Islamic State jihadis, to show the world they are not invincible.

In an interview with the Guardian while he campaigned across Iowa this weekend, the Florida senator detailed a strategy to fight Isis that left no options off the table – including US ground troops to support a coalition led by Sunni nations.

In a wide-ranging examination of US foreign policy, he also:

  • rejected Donald Trump’s controversial plan to broadly target mosques and create Muslim registries as “not a serious proposal”
  • accused Republican rivals Ted Cruz and Rand Paul of taking steps that would weaken American defense and intelligence-gathering capabilities
  • signalled that he would not be able to work with Russia as a partner in attempting to resolve the chaos in Syria.

Rubio spoke during a swing through Iowa, one week after the terrorist attacks on Paris that killed 130 people and injured hundreds more. The aftermath of those attacks and the stated threat of similar violence in Brussels provided a greater sense of urgency to his pitch for a more hawkish foreign policy.

Speaking with the Guardian, Rubio criticized President Obama for having only “components of a strategy” but no comprehensive plan to take on Isis. He nonetheless maintained that “the bulk of the ground work” would rest on the shoulders of Sunni Arabs in the region.

“The only way to defeat Isis is for Sunni Arabs themselves to reject them ideologically and defeat them militarily,” Rubio said. “They must be defeated on the ground with a ground force that is made up primarily of Arab Sunni fighters from Iraq, from Syria, but also from Jordan, from Egypt, from the Emirates, from Saudi Arabia.”

The Guardian  

2: 

CNN Punished Its Own Journalist for Fulfilling a Core Duty of Journalism

CNN yesterday suspended its global affairs correspondent, Elise Labott, for two weeks for the crime of posting a tweet critical of the House vote to ban Syrian refugees. Whether by compulsion or choice, she then groveled in apology. This is the original tweet along with her subsequent expression of repentance:

This all happened after the Washington Post’s Erik Wemple complained that her original tweet showed “bias.” The claim that CNN journalists must be “objective” and are not permitted to express opinions is an absolute joke. CNN journalists constantly express opinions without being sanctioned.

Labott’s crime wasn’t that she expressed an opinion. It’s that she expressed the wrong opinion: After Paris, defending Muslims, even refugees, is strictly forbidden. I’ve spoken with friends who work at every cable network and they say the post-Paris climate is indescribably repressive in terms of what they can say and who they can put on air. When it comes to the Paris attacks, CNN has basically become state TV (to see just how subservient CNN is about everything relating to terrorism, watch this unbelievable “interview”of ex-CIA chief Jim Woolsey by CNN’s Brooke Baldwin; or consider that neither CNN nor MSNBC has put a single person on air to dispute the CIA’s blatant falsehoods about Paris despite how many journalists have documentedthose falsehoods).

The Intercept

1: 

Russian strikes blamed for 400 Syrian civilian deaths

Russian air strikes in Syria have killed over 400 civilians since September this year, monitoring groups say.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said the death toll from September 30 – when the strikes were launched – until November 20 stood at 403 civilians, a figure that includes 97 children.

What the bombing has caused
Over 400 civilians killed since September this year, including 97 children.
The Syrian Network for Human Rights puts the figure at at least 526, including 137 children.
Since last October, at least 42,234 air strikes have been documented.
Over 22,370 ‘barrel bombs’ have also been dropped in that period resulting in the death of 6,889 civilians, including 1,436 children, and injuring another 35,000 civilians.
At least 100,000 people have fled from Aleppo, while another 1,000 fled an Atma displaced camp in Idlib’s suburbs.
The Syrian conflict has killed at least 250,000 people, according to the UN.
Sources: Syrian Observatory for Human Rights & Syrian Network for Human Rights
Meanwhile, the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR), another monitoring group, said at least 526 were killed, including 137 children, since Russia launched its first air strikes.
Aljazeera
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The Daily Blog Open Mic Monday 23rd November 2015

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