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  1. Excellent article, Mike.

    Divide and conquer. Keep the masses fighting amongst themselves and they won’t notice us exploiting all of them. Very clever. The cleverest part is to retain labels for political parties that are the opposite of what they actually stand for: thus National is a party that stands for a divided nation in which the proceeds of effort go to the few at the top, whilst Labour stands for the exploitation of labour and transfer of the proceeds of effort to the few at the top (it once did stand for the betterment of the lives of the laboring classes). Both stand for more-or-less unrestrained capitalism and for control and exploitation by international money lenders. A few more breadcrumbs fall off the ‘elites’ table and into the mouths of the proles under Labour.

    Trump’s lurch from covert fascism to overt fascism is stirring the pot in ways he did not anticipate.

    ‘After mounted police, flash-bang explosives, rubber bullets and tear gas had cleared a path for him, President Trump preened and strutted to his Dear Leader photo op like a wannabe Pinochet, trailed by his wannabe junta — Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper, Attorney General William P. Barr, daughter Ivanka Trump and Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who was, absurdly, wearing camouflage fatigues as though he were in Baghdad or Kabul, not downtown Washington.

    Trump stood in front of historic St. John’s Episcopal Church and held aloft a Bible as though it were some new-and-improved gadget he was hawking in an infomercial. Trump cuts a ridiculous figure, so yes, we can laugh at him. But his authoritarian, call-in-the-troops response to the protests over George Floyd’s killing shows — as if more evidence were needed — how dangerous he is to the very idea of America.
    The Lafayette Square atrocity moved Trump’s first defense secretary, Jim Mattis, to finally speak out. “Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people — does not even pretend to try,” Mattis wrote in a statement published by the Atlantic. “Instead he tries to divide us. We are witnessing the consequences of three years of this deliberate effort.”

    https://www.msn.com/en-nz/news/world/opinions-trump-is-uniting-americans-—-against-him/ar-BB155ofq?li=BBqdg4K

    It worked for such a long time, and is still working.

  2. Blah, cops who are openly racist on the street, surely show signs at their job interview.

    1. No not at all Zack. When you go for an interview do you show signs that you smoke dope occasionally. Anyone could hide this at an interview, tick the right boxes and you are in.

  3. Yep as long as you have troops in countries patrolling people who never harmed you- you are worse then a racist. Justify that please.

  4. Thanks for this piece Mr Treen, I read it earlier today but didn’t have any words at the time. But watching this Kat Blaque video brought it back to mind – particularly this line (around the 14 minute mark):

    “…I felt, somehow, more safe around my rapist than I did around my own father…”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dM4dP-S2SWM

    I guess I am agreeing with AFKTT, about “Divide and conquer”, but I’d more say; within themselves, than “amongst themselves”. For one thing, there is the racism of Maori against other Pasifika; it is not that uncommon, especially in the older generations, to hear Islanders called “coconuts” (or worse). Or Marai vs urban Maori. Community vs individualism.

    Solidarity requires seeing common cause with another, but; who then is the other that defines us? Love of an ingroup implies hatred of its opponents. Instincts that served us well when homo sapiens first evolved in southern africa, may be counterproductive in our present societies. But we remain more rationalising than rational.

    But then again, you can’t let the; apparent hopelessness of it all, bring you down. There are plenty of people all too willing to do that for you anyway. Sometimes all you can do is chip away at the tasks in front of you and trust that the cumulative effect is positive.

    1. Marc what are you on. I want to live in a better, egalitarian, caring society. That means I acknowledge that we have appalling racism in this country and I work to change that.

  5. At the same time Maori and Pacific unemployment rates are more than double those of workers who are Pakeha….

    Not sure that the current unions efforts to bring in cheaper workers from around the world and give them NZ benefits is helping wage growth, housing or any benefit for Maori and Pacific Islanders in NZ.

    The statistics are saying the opposite, NZ’s neoliberal labour market based on cheaper bums on seats is making their plight worse…

  6. But the protests are about class war so lets not be divided on race, religion or color.

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