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  1. Bomber read Generation Rent by Shamubeel and Selena Eaqub.

    The group which includes the homeless, those living in garages, sheds, caravan parks and the renters of shacks which kiwis calls houses who are being turfed out every year or so by capital gains focused landlords, this group are in fact the majority of adults in NZ. Add in parents and grandparents who are worried their kids will be stuck in the ‘generation rent’ lifestyle forever and you have a clear majority.

    Once this group unite politically then the self entitled rich p…ks who have rigged the system will be history.

    I am hoping for earlier than 2023.

    1. Beautiful piece of swordsmanship there Martyn.

      Very well put.

      Yes the penny will drop maybe earlier than that as the global economy is now tettering on a knife edge.

      All this as our Crown Debt balloons and the balance of payments worsens.

      Time of another blowout looms large.

  2. Does anyone really believe the current system will keep going till 2023?

    Everything I have seen and read over the past decade -that is financial analysis, economic analysis, energy analysis and environmental analysis- indicates ‘the system’ will implode by 2020.

    For example, ZIRP, NIRP and QE have run their course, and have generated the expected result: failure. BoJ can’t even prop up the Nikkei

    https://in.finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?=%5EN225&t=my&l=on&z=l&q=l&c=

    Then there is the ‘small’ matter of energy depletion:

    http://crudeoilpeak.info/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/US-crude_production_7regions_rest_2007-Mar2016.jpg

    Environmental collapse accelerates:

    https://ads.nipr.ac.jp/vishop/vishop-extent.html

    And how can you run an industrial system if you are running out of water?

    http://mead.uslakes.info/level.asp

  3. 2023 is two to three elections away, I fear.

    Key will surely be gone by then, but National may still be playing a role in politics, perhaps even in government then.

    The battle is one between haves and have-nots, between those that have money, wealth and influence, and those that have none of that.

    A look at the USA shows us how neoliberalism and vested interest players manage to manipulate and control the MSM and with that the rest of society.

    I fear New Zealand is in a similar situation, where Nats and ACT have willing donors, those that are the elite, and they will do all to keep their parties funded, to also influence the media and to brain wash people, so that the right will have just enough support to keep control of society and of politics and the economy.

    When was there last a revolution in the US, I ask? When was there a revolution in New Zealand, a real one, I ask?

    See the challenge, see the problem?

  4. So once they get old enough and outnumber the boomers, Gen X and Y will suddenly become more socialist, despite a lifetime of user-pays rhetoric? Don’t think so somehow.

  5. It’s too late already for me. I have given up on NZ and will leave shortly. I’m “unemployable” because I am not young, pretty, inexperienced, and have no influential friends to help me land a job. And that’s with two university degrees and shitloads of “life experience” (read that as the experience that matters most in the world).

    WINZ have not only refused to help but they’ve actually taken every opportunity that can to reduce entitlements, all with the spectre of “fraud” threats looming in the background.

    I accept that there is no future for me in NZ but I wish with all my heart that John Key and his fellow phonies end up in prison because they are the real criminals. They are corrupt sociopaths who don’t care about anyone other than themselves and their mates. The only thing I am unsure of is whether they know what they are doing or they are completely blind (that determines whether they are sociopaths or psychopaths).

    So Fuck John Key, fuck the Natzi Party, and fuck WINZ. Oh and while I am venting FUCK all the apathetic sheep in this country who allowed this to happen and then had the nerve to blame the people at the bottom.

  6. I recently heard that in Aussie it is an offence if you dont vote. If you dont vote you are fined. Perhaps it needs to be the same here in NZ

  7. I must say once again, this cannot simply be a generation conflict issue. There are enough millennials and Gen Y people who have parents who belong to those doing well, and they will like most have done in the past rely on their parents to give them some help to get their first car, home and so forth.

    And not all boomers are well off, I can assure you this.

    Many boomers did well though, but they will also leave inheritance to their offspring, the privileged kids raised with a bit of a silver spoon.

    They admire one Max Key, as they also fall for the gloss and glitter that may come with “success”, a high salary, successful entrepreneurship and privilege.

    We have networks, and those that are connected tend to get ahead in the law of the jungle system we have now, those without good connections are left to battle for the casual or part time, term contract and precarious, low paid jobs.

    “Social services” are no longer that but in name only, as they are now designed to swiftly show you the way out of the door again, to point out where to try and look for work, rather than seek “support”.

    Even the MSM is so damned stupid and biased, they do not even see that the new WINZ and MSD programs promoted as “wrap around services” do not actually offer extra services, that is besides of “intensive case management” (see my reference for being pointed out the door above).

    Next will come the “social bonds”, of which the Waipareira Trust seems to have fond ideas now, and which it wants to adopt widely, to “support” the profiled risk persons so they save the government money. I saw an interview on The Nation, it was astonishing how the media (Lisa Owen) simply seems to accept their words for all this salesman talk by Waipareira’s spokesperson.

    Laila Harre (on the panel) was right in questioning their figures and historic “success” or “performance” rates.

    So we get more neoliberal outsourcing, contracting out, sales of state houses to NGOs and even overseas “community housing” operators, few new homes, virtually NO affordable homes for those needing such, and actually no solutions for the future.

    Indeed, this house of cards will inevitably collapse, the sooner the better, I cannot wait until 2023.

    1. Laila Harre did a good there and had clearly done her homework. She needs to, because the journalists don’t bother.

  8. A property capital gains tax, on other than a primary residence, would have had a powerful ameliorative effect.

  9. well if they wont vote what hell do they expect key could be gone by launch time in 2017 if apathetic complainers would vote they handed power to the greedies by not voting democracy require participation

  10. Some of those property investors are getting there fingers burnt with those marvellous properties they have bought as that magical capital gain .

    Time and time,again they are being burnt as people who cant afford the rents do a runner and leave the landlord holding the basket with a flat full of crap to dump at the local dump.

    I see this happen multiple times everyday here in Christchurch at my place of work which happens to be one of the local dumps.

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