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  1. “NZ’s free market capitalism” is the western world’s free market capitalism, at the very least. As such, mass immigration is a common issue all throughout the western world. Why, why do our pollies adopt these common goals when a good deal of us – everywhere – finds them troublesome.

    Who is really pulling their strings…we don’t need an answer – we just need to put a stop to it by pressuring our politicians to act for us for a change. Sooner, rather than later, we will wake up.

  2. “The reason of course as to why so many couriers are Indian is because they are the ones most exploitable by NZ free market capitalism.
    This isn’t a race issue, it’s a class issue!”
    Indeed!
    And after their families have sacrificed savings, mortgaged land, begged, borrowed and stolen in order to get their kids what they’ve been told is a ‘good education’ at some shitty PTE.

    What amuses me most, is that we then go begging for a “free” trade agreement. I’d have thought by now all those policy boffins at MFAT, MBIE and elsewhere would have realised Indians (in India) really don’t like seeing their fellow countrymen and women treated like shit – even though some of them in NZ are prepared to pull up the ladder Paula Bennett style.

    And not just NZ Post, ANZ Bank, UBER and elsewhere in the gig economy.
    It’s taken a bloody long time of MBIE/The Labour Expectorant to start taking exploitation seriously, and even as they do, they’ve been in large part responsible through idiotic, facile policy advice to Munsters (often based on copying it from elsewhere in the Empire).

  3. “so of course the solution of universal union membership will be ignored”

    Really? I reckon the solution is to agree that a population of 5 million is the max the environment can afford when primary production and tourism are almost the only source of overseas income.

    Then without the immigration companies would have to invest to increase profit through productivity, salaries will rise and the young will stay.

    Unions reps could stand at the airport and sign up arriving workers but they don’t. And if they did it would be in their interest for more immigration.

  4. The immigration issue is only one facet of the complete abandonment of responsibilities that characterizes our political classes.

    We’re not training our people anymore.

    We’re not building enough.

    We’re not taxing enough to maintain core services like health.

    And our delinquent political classes dare to show their shameless faces in public.

    Tiger food the lot of them.

  5. The root cause is always the same….as simple as Maslows law…food and shelter.
    When people can have a secure place to live ,and enough food to eat,everyones…better off.

  6. I’ve read that a good many consider immigration in parts of Europe a “failed experiment” but I haven’t been there to see it with my own eyes or talked in depth to those with a view. Mind I get the feeling immigration in Europe consists mostly of refugees fleeing trouble and seeking a new start. Angela Merkel was strongly criticized for opening Germany up to Syrian refugees some 5 years back – setting an unwanted precedent – but from recent accounts the Syrians have integrated well. Germany may not be the best case study. After all it is the powerhouse of the EU economy and can easily absorb migrants.

    NZ is a different kettle of fish. Yes we do resettle a few refugees, but only those UN approved (other than a relatively few asylum seekers). Ours is an economic model. Labour or National it makes little difference to the settings. Treasury sets these with an eye to growing the population for future tax intake and the funding of NZ Super. Yes, on the face of it its all about meeting current labour needs, some semiskilled or unskilled, much legitimate but some rather dodgy, but 20 years hence the kids of many of these new immigrants will be the new professionals. Especially those that have educated parents. Evidence from Aussie suggests the kids of migrants (and refugees) who do best are those with educated parents. Its already happening. The kids of those immigrating in the late 90s and early 2000’s – before the explosion’s in work / work to resident visas – have largely done pretty well from where I’m sitting.

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