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Pasifika As?

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Efeso Collins.

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Auckland Council has branded the month of March as “Pacific-As” – an assortment of events that showcase dance, weaving, music, basketball and rugby. The website and pamphlet for these events is colourful and alluring to the eye, but perhaps not one’s conscience. In Auckland city, Pasifika people represent 12 per cent of the population and that’s expected to grow rapidly over the next decade. Our population structure is youthful with nearly 40 per cent under the age of 18 years.* We’ve long been known and treated as the group in Auckland who bring colour and dynamism to events with the ability to move with rhythm and elegance; just look at the difference the Samoan and Tongan communities made to the Rugby World Cup. Brass bands playing along the road to the entry of Eden Park, but that’s as far as they got because many of them couldn’t afford the tickets to go in and watch the game.

Last June hundreds of Pasifika people took to the streets of Auckland to lift the silence on deeply rooted issues of poverty – high unemployment, overcrowded houses, low wages, ailing health and poor educational outcomes… indicators of a growing social underclass. Yet the mainstream media outlets spent all their time writing stories about how they didn’t march with one clear message. With all these issues to deal with it’s no surprise there was no single message, but this is the kind of intellectual incapability we’ve come to expect of mainstream media who can’t grapple with complex issues. The challenge for genuine Pasifika ‘voices’ in advocating our needs, is that the media sell sporting and musical accolades as the veneer to cover the socio-economic issues that are bleeding us of a prosperous existence.

Just last weekend was the Pasifika festival which drew thousands to Western Springs. You could hear the music, drums (and laughter in some cases) from about the time you hit the motorway off-ramp. Around the park were smiling faces, full plates of taro, chop suey, curried chicken wings and that delicious Tongan drink otai. People stopped and embraced, catching up with others they hadn’t seen in a long time. Tertiary institutions were there trying to nab any possible recruit, political movements gathered all the signatures they could and the place every so often sounded, smelled and looked like our islands scattered throughout the moana nui a kiwa. But at 5pm, we went home again to predominantly west and south Auckland where the smiles and memories of those sounds, smells and surrounds are substituted for the reality of entrenched hardship… the side of Pacific-As that perhaps the Council – and definitely the media – don’t want reflected at its ‘March’ events.

• 2006 census data

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Oh, it’s the old run-a-state-owned-enterprise-into-the-ground-with-idealogical-rhetoric-instead-of-prudent-management-and-then-privatize-it game

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Are you watching Seven Sharp? Don’t! Campbell Live has been running a series of investigations into the horror story of Solid Energy and as a citizen of this country, you must watch this.

I’d go as far as suggesting that if you are choosing to watch Seven Sharp over Campbell Live’s staggering expose, you are a traitor.

Harsh, but it is in fact true.

Now the right wing fruit loops of NZ will have you believe that the staggering incompetence exposed by Campbell Live is proof that the state shouldn’t run assets and that John Key’s flogging off of our public energy companies to the wealthy who he has given tax cuts to is justifiable.

Bullshit.

If you think you are paying a lot in electricity to these buggers now, wait until they are beholden to the private market with its vicious and myopic focus on profit.

Sadly however you can lead a John Key loving, bennie-bashing, climate denial, small Government, tax-cutting, National Party voting nutbar to a blog, but you can’t make them read.

The meme by our corporate mainstream media (who are of course benefitting from the multi-million dollar advertising campaign to sell these shares) is that 270 000 odd NZers have decided to invest and so the debate has been won.

Bullshit.

390 000 have signed against this, just because the wealthy fragment of NZ wants to rush in and buy doesn’t justify or delegitimize the rightousness of resisiting asset sales and nor does it water down the contempt of giving these same wealthy NZers tax cuts to subsidize their ability to buy our public assets.

A curse on all their leafy suburban households (including their multiple property speculations).

I digress.

Let’s get back to Solid Energy and the horror that Campbell Live has presented us with. How on earth Solid Energy managed to con everyone into believing that they had billions and billions in value when in fact every single mismanged idea failed is actually almost beyond belief. If we are wanting to crucify Don Elder, let’s make sure we have plenty of room on the cross for the bloody National Party as well. As the Greens righteously point out

The National Government encouraged Solid Energy expansion plans but never required it to submit a business case for its ambitious but ultimately futile $2 billion lignite developments, the Green Party said today.

…so while Solid Energy were fantasizing about valuations that never existed, the Government were utterly asleep at the wheel. The National Party’s ‘oversight’ on Solid Energy makes Pike River Mine look like a tightly regulated safety zone.

Of course you won’t get any of those questions answered by any mainstream corporate news media outside of Campbell Live because they are pulling their punches now as their bosses eye up all the bribe/advertising money being spent to sell these assets.

When the electricity prices spike once our energy companies are sold, let’s hear what the sleepy hobbits have to say then. 270 000 NZers venal enough to rush and make a quick buck buying shares from their tax cuts doesn’t justify a bloody thing.

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Dancing Darth Vader

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Dancing Darth Vader

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Face TV listings Tuesday 12 March 2013

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AM
7.00 Aljazeera News
8.00 In Focus
8.45 Classic serial
9.00 Bloomberg
10.00 Green Matters
10.30 Tomorrow Today
11.00 euronews
PM
12.00pm In Conversation
12.30 Bloomberg
1.00 TV Chile 24 Horas
1.30 euronews
2.00 NHK Newsline
2.30 Korean news
3.00 Dutch news
3.30 French news
4.00 German news
4.30 Box Office America
5.00 Euromaxx
5.30 DW Journal
6.00 Aljazeera News
7.00 Pacific Viewpoint
7.30 The Beatson Interview
8.00 The Couch [PGR]
9.00 Australia News
9.30 Songwriters Across Australia
10.00 Danger Man [PGR]
10.30 PBS News Hour
11.30 Dark Crimes classic: Cause for Alarm (1951) [AO]

Face TV broadcasts on Sky 89 & Auckland UHF

Face TV Twitter
Face TV Facebook

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A Right-Winger’s guide to life’s value

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A Right-Winger’s guide to life’s value

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Now the Judge knows what it’s like to be hit by a cop

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Now the Judge knows what it’s like to be hit by a cop

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Stephen Colbert schools James Franco on Tolkien knowledge

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Stephen Colbert schools James Franco on Tolkien knowledge

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What evil war mongers do in retirement

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What evil war mongers do in retirement

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peanut poo

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peanut poo

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Proverbs you won’t read on Whaleoil

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“Coward is an oppressed man who has no desire to rebel.”

Radical Proverbs

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In the 4pm Daily Blog Bulletin

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In the 4pm Daily Blog Bulletin…

Around the NZ Blogosphere

-Lynn at The Standard focuses on the economic benefit of the internet.

-Open Parachute rips whaleoil’s latest climate denial to pieces.

-Greenpeace look at the legacy of Fukushima.

-Auckland Transport Blog asks what is the cost of congestion in Auckland.

On the Daily Blog today

-Chris Trotter asks if the left are wasting their breath on the word mandate.

-Allan Alach looks at the neoliberal propaganda to sell the privatization of education.

-Martyn Bradbury asks when David Farrar and Cameron Slater will apologize for their Climate Denial?

-Dr Wayne Hope debunks the Holmes mythology.

-And today’s Daily Blog Reposts; Horus – making Jesus sound like a carbon copy, What Cigarette packs would look like if the Government actually wanted you to give up, Entering Mississippi, Lol cat Facebook blocked, and Save the Bankers.

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Making A Mandate

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NATIONAL’S MANDATE to partially privatise the State’s energy assets is strongly contested by the Government’s left-wing opponents. As a political strategy this is not only misguided but risky.

The groups behind the Citizens Initiated Referendum (Labour, Greens, CTU, Greypower) do not appear to have considered the possibility that as many people may end up registering their interest in acquiring shares in Mighty River Power as have already signed their CIR petition. With more than 200,000 Kiwis expressing an interest in the first ten days of the three-week registration period, the enthusiasm for buying shares in the people’s assets would appear to be at least as strong as the people’s opposition to their sale.

The larger danger in contesting National’s mandate is that it forces the Left to second-guess the electorate’s intentions.

Citing the actual policies of the political parties and the level of voter support those policies received doesn’t work for the Left because in 2011 National’s clearly signalled programme of partial privatisation attracted more electoral support (47.31 percent) than the combined support of its anti-privatisation Opposition. (46.21 percent)

Rather than rely on what the parties actually said and how the voters actually voted, the Left is reduced to offering essentially unprovable arguments based on its assessment of the electorate’s state of mind.

This throws up all sorts of speculative excuses for the 2011 election outcome. People were voting purely on the basis of the Prime Minister’s ebullient personality. Voters were troubled by the gloomy economic prospects and voted for National as the most competent economic manager. The electorate wasn’t convinced by Phil Goff. Thoughtless electors were backing the party that all the polls told them would win.

But this simply will not do. In ascribing a mandate to any political party – Left or Right – the only legitimate methodology is to assess the content of its black-letter policy commitments and then compute the level of popular support they attracted.

It was Queen Elizabeth I who said that she “would not make windows into men’s souls”. To retain their political credibility, left-wing opponents of privatisation should do likewise.

Curiously, the one lesson the Left has steadfastly refused to draw from the 2011 election result is the political potency of positive rather than negative policy commitments.

Rather than saying “No” to asset sales, why aren’t the parties of the Left saying “Yes” to public ownership.

What is it that makes so many New Zealanders tell pollsters that they prefer to keep key infrastructure and vital public services in public hands? The explanation surely lies in the public’s vestigial political memories of the old Left’s arguments for public ownership.

Nationalisation remained a viable political alternative for Labour parties around the world right up until the mid-1980s. It is worth rehearsing the four key justifications which, for more than three-quarters of a century, the Left advanced in favour of nationalising the industries and services crucial to creating a just society:

-One: Entrusting healthcare, education, housing, energy, communications, transportation and the provision of key financial services exclusively to private individuals and corporations gives them an unwarranted and potentially hazardous degree of economic, social (and, therefore, political) power. Nationalisation disperses that power.

-Two: Nationalisation redirects the vast revenues of natural monopolies from private to public stewardship.

-Three: Nationalisation permits the redistribution of these formerly private revenue streams across the whole of society. Resources thus become available for maximising such public goods as the elimination of poverty, cultural development and the protection of the natural environment.

-Four: Nationalisation both establishes and extends the rights of employees to play a significant role in the development and management of large enterprises – public and private.

Privatisation, by reversing the direction of these progressive objectives, can only augment the wealth and power of private owners, diminish the public treasury, impede the public good, and suppress the rights of working people. It is risible to claim that such objectives can be pursued “partially”. Once private interests are recognised in the administration of state assets, the power to assert the public good vanishes.

These are the sort of arguments the Left should be advancing.

That nationalisation remains off the agenda of nearly all the Opposition parties suggests a general left-wing posture of defensiveness and negativity. These are not the qualities that inspire voters to give politicians a mandate for progressive economic and social change. Indeed, they speak of a Left that prefers to simply “wait its turn” to manage the existing neoliberal regime under which New Zealanders have been systematically stripped of just about every instrument for making a good life generally accessible.

The ballot box remains one of the few places in which a mandate for progressive change can still be forged. A political party earns that mandate by telling voters what it is for – not what it is against – and why.

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Debunking the Holmes mythology

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After the nostalgic tributes for Paul Holmes; his life, loves, achievements and travails, a major biographical question remains. Here was a self styled rebel against `repressed grey suited public servant New Zealand`, someone who regarded his nightly TV show as a creation of `outlaws frowned upon by the establishment`. And yet he ended life desperate for establishment legitimacy.

Donna Chisholm`s recent Metro piece tells the tale. After a convivial interview with Kim Dotcom Paul suddenly realizes that the PM might disapprove. `Oh fuck,there goes my knighthood`. Why the shift? Why was a formal accolade from the establishment so important to him? Well, the answer lies in history as well as biography.

Not only had Paul changed, the establishment had changed too. There are political analogies. Alan Gibbs, Rob Campbell and Neville Gibson were committed lefties in the 1970s and members of the new right establishment after July 1984. They resolved to dispense with the economic past in favour of a brave new `free market` world.

Recall those familiar voices. The economy is distorted and inefficient, Muldoonism/interventionism has failed and deregulation is necessary. You can`t turn back the clock. What’s passed is passed. We were living beyond our means. It is time for New Zealand to join the real world. Television, radio and glossy magazines celebrated the elegance, charisma and entrepreneurial skills of financial moguls such as Bruce Judge and Colin Reynolds. Images of the Barclays Index, the foreign exchange room and the Auckland downtown building boom gave the impression of dynamism, prosperity and progress.

The social markers of this panoramic vista were career success, material acquisition and self promotion. An emergent celebrity culture drew in the truly accomplished and the tragically desperate from all walks of life. Senior politicians from both major parties embraced the new outlook as did a new strata of public servants committed to the credo of neo-liberalism.

Meanwhile, the deregulation of broadcasting commercialised news, current affairs and other content. Advertising, sponsorship and product placement pervaded media space. Ratings became the absolute measure of programme success and audiences were traded as commodities by broadcasting organisations and advertisers. To legitimise this arrangement it was necessary to evaluate programme quality in terms of ratings and publicity. Thus, at TVNZ a team of American news consultants transformed issues based current affairs into infotainment packages designed for the commercial half hour. The new format played upon the emotional extremes of human triumph and disaster. Stories about heroes, villians and victims were interspersed with celebrity/entertainment items and occasional political interviews.

As media analyst Joe Atkinson observed, the overriding purpose was to build and maintain ratings flow between advertising segments. It was also necessary to conflate ratings, publicity and programme quality in the public mind. There was one man uniquely dedicated to this task, on breakfast radio as well as prime time TV- Paul Holmes.

His craziness, narcissism and volatility, his populist convictions were a perfect fit for the times. On Newstalk ZB and his nightly TV show Holmes exemplified the new celebrity culture. His private and public life merged in real time; media fame, marriage, adultery, marriage break-up, alchoholism, family P addiction, brushes with death, debilitating illness……..how could we not identify with the man, his imperfections and tribulations?

Yet, despite the heroic `warts and all` persona` Holmes was not a man of the people. Rather, he sided decisively with the new right establishment. In the Holmes Show opening credits the Auckland skyline appeared as a stand in for the country at large, a reminder to some that regional television news had been erased from the schedule.

From the South Island Holmes seemed to be the archetypical JAFA, his provincial origins notwithstanding. During the early 90s when `Ruthenasia`, beneficiary bashing, health cuts, public sector lay offs and the Employment Contracts Act divided the country Holmes forged close relationships with Ross Armstrong and Jim Bolger. As Helen Clark gained political ascendancy Holmes adapted. He was not so amenable to the Alliance, the Greens or to anybody who challenged neo-liberal economics and its rewrite of New Zealand history. Later in life, amidst personal difficulties and declining health Holmes` deference to the new right establishment was supplemented by deference to remnants of the old order; royalty,the governor general and the honours system.

These were not the actions of a pioneering, independent broadcaster, despite the fawning eulogies. To find THAT kind of broadcaster we need to ditch the nostalgia and look further back in time, when commercial values were less rapacious. Ah yes….I can see him now, aging as he comes closer. Cerebral and avuncular, his name is Brian Edwards and there are others with him, David Excel, Sharon Crosbie, Gordon Dryden, Ian Johnstone, Ian Fraser.

May their lives and times resonate as the Holmes mythology fades away.

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The neoliberal propaganda to sell education privatization

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While it really goes against the grain to admit that the current government is good at anything, I am forced to concede their mastery of machiavellianism; ‘the employment of cunning and duplicity in statecraft or in general conduct,‘ in manipulating and controlling political discourse. The lack of critical analysis by main stream media has allowed the government to create memes that become accepted as the truth.

The government is also skilled at using events to distract attention away from other issues, and at creating myths that are published without critical analysis. East coast oil and gas reserves could have great benefits, so we are told. No evidence, just could. Anything after the ‘could’ is a fairy tale, yet what do we see and read in the media?

Education (my field of expertise) provides another example of this, utilising the furore over charter schools, the Christchurch school reorganisation debacle, Novopay, and the boundless stories around the performance of Hekia Parata, to distract from deeper agendas. Many have speculated why Parata was kept in as Minister of Education when the cabinet was reshuffled earlier this year. I’ve heard and read opinions that suggested her rapid promotion was a Key project, and that he therefore didn’t want to concede an error by demoting her. Maybe.

I believe that she was deliberately kept there, to draw attention from issues that needed to be kept below the radar. The revelation that she was ‘rolled’ over the Whanganui Collegiate decision speaks volumes. Who really controls education?

So what is being carefully hidden? National standards – remember them? What have you read and heard lately about these? Remember all the rhetoric about raising achievement through national standards, plain language reporting to parents, and so on? Gone without trace, it seems.

Charter schools are now being promoted as the way to solve the problem of the fictitious one in five children who are ‘failing.’

But…. National standards have not gone away. While the education sector unions, principal organisations, and the School Trustees Association are battling the issues of charter schools, school closures in Christchurch and Novopay (what a marvellous opportunity to divert attention) the stage is being set for national standards, student ‘achievement,’ and teacher and school ‘effectiveness’ to reappear in 2014, conveniently in time for election posturing.

National will produce ‘data’ that shows that New Zealand children are now ‘achieving’ and claim that this is all due to their education policies. Playing on parental fear over children’s education is a well tried tactic, both in New Zealand, and overseas. This worked for National in 2008 and will be tried again in 2014, roughly paraphrased as ‘Trust National to raise children’s achievement because Labour failed.’

We first need to examine the background to the government’s education policies, and then extend on this in future articles, to bring this scheme into the light.

Don’t be sucked into believing the rhetoric about ‘raising achievement.’ There is another unspoken agenda – the privatisation of the profitable areas of schooling for ideological reasons. Welcome to the mixed ownership model of education. New Zealand Education Ltd., shareholders including News Corp., Pearson Group, Microsoft, McGraw Hill and the rest of the usual corporates. Profit mining – too bad about the best interests of New Zealand children’s education.

Finnish educator Pasi Sahlberg, a peripatetic campaigner for true child centred education, has described the neo-liberal takeover of education as the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM) There is little in the current government’s education policies that is not a direct steal from GERM.

The rationale for GERM in Australia, England, Canada, USA, Sweden, Norway and New Zealand (the key players) is identical: schools are failing and that the country needs to improve its ranking on international tests of dubious value.

The prescribed solutions all include some version of national standards of ‘achievement’ in literacy and numeracy (the old 3Rs of Reading, ‘Riting and ‘Rithematic), a national testing regime of some sort, ranking of schools by achievement, the publishing of school league tables, attacking and vilifying teacher unions (hello Rodney Hide), larger class sizes, didactic teaching (teacher standing at the front of the class instructing children), performance pay based on ‘value added measurement’, closing ‘failing schools’ (which just happen to be in lower socio-economic areas, and privatisation of schooling through charter schools. I could go on but I’m sure you’ve got the drift.

There is one other feature that is so important it needs its own paragraph. GERM countries ignore educational research. They ignore the voices of reputable educators. They ignore the voices of experience and wisdom. Their policies are based on an economic ideology, postulated by neo-liberal Friedmanite economists, self appointed educational experts.

The New Zealand Treasury was the major instigator in the neo-liberal reforms of the late 1980s – this is clearly laid out in their briefings to the incoming minister of education in 1987. Nothing has changed since then, and current education policy is still heavily dominated by the New Zealand Treasury – economists who know the price of everything and the value of nothing. No minister of education since 1987, to my knowledge, has publicly refuted this dogma.

The GERM countries conveniently overlook the major flaw in their policies. It is recognised that the country with the most successful education system is Finland, a country that made a decision to go in the opposite direction some decades back; a direction that derived much of its structure from a study of New Zealand primary education as it was before the neo-liberal takeover that was started by the Labour government in 1989 and further implemented by the incoming National government.

Above all this, however, is the most significant and most vital issue of them all. The claim that one in five New Zealand children are failing is a complete fabrication. Far more learned people than I have published articles that debunk this in depth. Where did this one on five figure originate? Well, it has a nice ring to it, and makes great headlines to be propagated by the media and fed to a gullible public who, sadly, still believe that there is some honesty in politics. Not when Machiavelli is live and well, sorry.

Why was National allowed to get away with this overt piece of propaganda?

Why did Labour not defend their education policies in 2008? The New Zealand Curriculum, introduced that year, was an excellent document (ignoring the residual elements of GERM) that was the envy of international educators.

Why did Labour allow National to capture the education battleground with their one in five slogan?

Until this one in five myth is demolished, the opposition parties will stay on the back foot.

I’m not holding my breath.

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When will David Farrar and Cameron Slater apologize for Climate Denial?

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Every week that passes, more and more evidence and scientific certainty that human pollution is causing the planet to warm dangerously beyond the biosphere’s ability to cope come to light…

World warmer now than ever, study claims
The world is now warmer than at almost any time since the end of the last Ice Age and, on present trends, will continue to reach a record high for the entire period since the dawn of civilisation, a study has found.

A reconstruction of global temperatures going back 11,300 years, which covers the historical period from the founding of the first ancient cities to the space age, has concluded the biggest and most rapid change in the climate has occurred in the past century.

Scientists found that the warm period following the end of last Ice Age, called the Holocene, peaked about 5000 years ago when the world began to get cooler. However, this cooling went into a dramatic and sudden reversal about a century ago when global temperatures shot up to levels not seen for thousands of years, the scientists found.

…so when will the NZ climate deniers apologize to NZ for doing all they could to muddy the waters and allow the public to falsely believe that the evidence didn’t add up? David Farrar makes his living from being a hard right masquerading as lite right blogger who is the online mouthpiece and pollster for the Government. His carefully crafted spin lines accepts climate change but does all he can to paint anyone out who wants to do something about it as a climate alarmist. Farrar famously once backed Ian Wishart’s assertion that the ‘climate alarmists’ were predicting a global flood of 67 meters that turned out to be a false assertion by Wishart and his breathless support of Poneke’s work on ‘climate-gate’ (which was debunked) is testimony to the deciet Farrar spins.

Slater of course is one of the best known online climate deniers who specializes at twisting facts and science to concoct a narrative that the ‘green Taliban’ are attempting to strangle off freedom by dragging the world back to the stone age.

Why are right wing bloggers so focused on being climate deniers?

It’s because this stopped being a scientific issue a long time ago and has become a cultural issue. Slater, Farrar and their climate denial acolytes can NEVER accept that the green movement is right because they have far too much culturally invested in the green movement being wrong. The Achilles heel of rampant consumerist Capitalism is its inability to produce within the confines of the planet, and those who have the most to lose from being forced to scale back their pollution have spent billions on trying to spin and deceive relying on the vested cultural interests of bloggers like Farrar and Slater to do the rest.

The now infamous 2002 Frank Luntz Memorandum to the Bush White House, gives a very clear idea of how the polluters of the planet have gone about shutting down the climate change debate…

Winning the Global Warming Debate – An Overview

1: The scientific debate remains open: Voters believe that there is no consensus about global warming within the scientific community. Should the public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their views about global warming will change accordingly. Therefore, you need to continue to make the lack of scientific certainty a primary issue in the debate, and defer to scientists and other experts in the field.

…the polluters of the planet have simply adopted the same tactics the Tobacco industry used, cloud the ‘science’ behind how cancer and smoking are linked to create the perception that the debate hasn’t been decided yet so that there is no imperative to change. Rely on those who have a cultural vested interest in not changing and the debate gets shut down altogether.

The problem for the climate deniers like Farrar and Slater is that the impacts of climate change are now so apparent that they are being accepted by the masses.

Politically only the Greens are looking for real solutions (MANA will be launching their environmental policy later in the year) so only they can really trumpet any high ground on the issue. While our main Political Parties remain loath to change, the people who are being impacted must act.

Climate change will increase erratic, catastrophic weather patterns. I find an enormous irony that Farmers who are suffering the current severe drought are the same Farmers wanting to take more water and pollute more rivers and create more climate changing gasses through intensification of Dairy. NZ can be – SHOULD BE – the global leader at sustainable farming and charge a higher premium on the global market because of that purity. Government should be helping the Dairy industry invest hundreds of millions into research and development for those goals now, but while climate deniers still have the public’s ear, we won’t have that sea change.

Climate deniers are the creationists at a lecture on evolution. They need to be shown the contempt they deserve and we need to start making genuine efforts at greening our economy and giving our industries the research and development support that is going to help us adapt to the climate change our denial has already booked us in for.

It will take a change of Government for this to occur.

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