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  1. Thank you Frank, as usual you summed the situation up clearly.
    The best present is caring for each other. May we see the fruits of it.

    1. Thanks, Patricia. there was much more I could have added. As I wrote, there are more “gifts” in the bag.

      Another one is to wind back the surveillance powers of the State – notably the GCSB and SIS. As I explained at a Select Committee hearing some years ago, my starting point would be to return to the original status quo of the GCSB’s powers as set out in the original 1977 legislation.

      But maybe the first priorities should be the ones I listed. Everything else will flow from there…

      1. I care to disagree, Frank, when you write:

        “..But maybe the first priorities should be the ones I listed. Everything else will flow from there…”

        When it comes to the Five Eyes, and surveillance and spy legislation, there will be nothing flowing from anything, except action demanded by a strong and vocal public call for changes to reverse some of the draconian measures the Nats and their allies brought in.

        I remember even Labour were supportive of what we have now.

        After the Dotcom debacle, and what Edward Snowden and Assange have revealed, we should seriously consider leaving the Five Eyes arrangement.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Snowden

  2. Too expensive for one person Frank but if we had a whip around we could easily afford it.

    Go well mate.

  3. Well put, Frank. The shocking thing is that these are all things we are wishing for in 2017, soon to be 2018. Homelessness and poverty should never have become problems needing to be addressed.

    I hope there’s a gift in that remarkable bag marked “Funding for Mental Healthcare”. Mental health services have been badly under-funded the last 9 years and is barely functioning. That was National’s gift to us.

    That would be my gift to NZ: fully funded mental health services.

  4. Here here Frank.

    All the best for the festive season. May 2018 be kind and caring to all Kiwis, with decreasing poverty and homelessness. Let kindness and generosity of the heart be the legacy of 2018.

  5. Very well put Frank and i would agree with all your sentiments, i do fear though that your last wish may not be quite as prevalent as we would hope after the years of me first and devil take the hindmost. A happy and relaxing festive season to you and yours

  6. Thank you for all the work you have done over the year, Frank.

    Would it be a good idea to recognize that Christmas is actually a completely phony festival imposed on pagans by the Roman Catholic Church, and is actually the northern hemisphere winter solstice.

    Wouldn’t it be a good idea to recognize that Christmas has absolutely nothing to do with the birth of Christ.

    Wouldn’t it me a good idea to recognize that in modern western societies the way Christmas is celebrated is the very opposite of anything Christ ever suggested!

    1. You are right, but if you look at what humans do, what humans celebrate, very much is phony, and humans just love myths, make belief and fairy-tales, we had nine years of it, under one John Key. “Booming economy”, “brighter future”, “hard working NZers”, “growth” which was largely only a natural disaster following rebuild, a brief ‘white gold rush’ dairy boom and lots of net migration gains.

      Enough people believed it and kept voting for more of the same, even though only by a narrow margin, again and again.

  7. This, on top of an eye-watering, jaw-dropping $20 billion “investment plan” for New Zealand’s military. The Fairfax article appeared to parrot the previous government’s spin with these opening paragraphs

    And that that $20 billion was less than what was needed to even maintain our present capabilities and that even then it hadn’t been budgeted for.

  8. Most if not all of the above seems fine to me, but let us get real, the future of New Zealand is not so much determined by what our central government in Wellington may decide over the next year or so, it will be decided off-shore.

    Hence I wish for New Zealand, that we finally get a bolder kind of government, that takes a lead internationally, on addressing climate change issues, on addressing nuclear weapons reduction – leading to abolition of all nuclear bombs (following the lead of ICAN), on addressing poverty and social injustice, on addressing the foreseeable resources crisis by making our economy and society truly sustainable, on addressing the threats to the environment overall, e.g. pollution, species extinction, spread of pests and so forth.

    With what I have heard so far, we will have another government that will offer more talk than action.

    If we don’t address those issues globally, forget the above, it may only be a temporary improvement, that will not last.

    As for social and income injustice within New Zealand, the solution is not that difficult, reform the tax system, by for instance bringing in a fair, progressive tax regime for incomes, by considering and introducing a CGT, by also considering different taxation on property (incl. land), by reducing or abolishing GST on essential goods, and by creating a new benefit system, that is easier to administer, and where benefits are paid that people can actually live off.

    A UBI may be worth considering, also in line with creating a matching annual tax credit for all, so that incentives remain for people to work and earn extra.

    Endless solutions are there, but the start will have to be made, to make New Zealanders aware of future challenges, of need for change and justice, for a need for some to make sacrifices.

    And to get there, we need INFORMED citizens and voters, not commercially brain washed and dumbed down ones, so we need a new media, also publicly funded, that is more independent, and that actually informs in an objective manner about the whole range of challenges we face.

    If this is not done, forget all the above, we will simply carry on as usual and rush towards the abyss, that will destroy us all, at least most of us.

    Despite that gloomy assessment, a merry Xmas, thank goodness, it is nearly over.

    1. Yes.

      A few of the aspects decided overseas:

      Oil prices -and hence a large portion of New Zealand’s energy bill
      .
      Exchange rates -and hence the cost of imports and the value of exports.

      Interest rates -and hence the cost of mortgage repayments and other loans, and the amount of fiat currency sucked out of NZ by overseas-owned banks.

      The value of exports -especially dairy products, meat and timber- and hence the relative income and overall wealth of the nation.

      Since NZ is a corporation, run by the government for the benefit of the overseas owners, it naturally follows that the best the populace can look forward to is slight tinkering of the business-as-usual settings.

      That means none of the fundamental aspects -which are currently destroying everyone’s future and which were well identified more than 15 years ago- will even be mentioned by the government, let alone actually dealt with.

      Sadly, we can look forward to yet another year of ‘merrily off the cliff’ and into the abyss of energy starvation and environmental collapse accompanied buy financial and societal collapse, with the bulk of the population totally unprepared for what has been on the horizon for a long time because the general populace has been systematically lied to by politicians and the mainstream media for decades.

  9. To add to the Housing wish: that there is a right to remain in state housing for as long as the person/family meets the criteria. With particular reference to disabled people and their carers.
    And, for older people who have been long-term tenants – to have access to seniors housing within the same community to keep connection to networks and support and familiar places.

    Student loans – there was never ‘free education’ at tertiary level: the cost of text books and accommodation was always there.
    However, what was also there was part time work and holiday work to offset the cost of texts the price of a weekly wage.
    When the governments ‘went American’ they failed in two areas: first, to give parents/potential students enough time to actually SAVE for tertiary education; and, to keep enough ‘student’ work in a volatile economy so the first lemmings off the cliff had a fair chance of being able to swim before they sank.

    Successive governments have also failed dismally.

    And, isn’t it truly amazing that the same wretched students who whinge and moan about ‘entitled baby boomers, waaaah’ have equally failed to get their similarly entitled ‘votes at 18, not 21’ behinds along to the polling booths and local MPs to pledge to vote for the party that fixes the mess? Don’t you find that ODD? When will they get the connection?

    Health – it could be ultra-useful to disconnect the extravagant demands of WINZ from the overworked GPs. The bits of paper necessary to them and their systems yet of zilch benefit to either GP or client. Time for an austerity diet for WINZ.

    It would also do the health of the country a lot more good if we focused on wellness at least as much as sickness recovery. I know that’s where the medical profession tends to make its income – yet it does very little at all to raise the level of health in the nation.

    Fir for purpose public toilets, safe water, the end of sewage discharge into sea and other waters, air pollution (yes, we have it), health testing in schools to catch sight and hearing, breathing, heart problems early enough. Social issues to reduce bullying and childhood exclusion/isolation.

    And, for me, oh please! no more pictures of that horrid little man Key, followed by Ms Animal Prints Bennett. Should be a part of every diet – enough to put you off your tucker for a day at aleast.

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