So, according to the Prime Minister, we all have an obligation to get in behind his zombie TPP deal, because of all the “jobs and income” it will bring in its wake.
Really? That’s hilarious. This new “TPP 11” deal is entirely a pig in a poke. English has not got the foggiest idea what benefits this deal stands to bring right now, in a month’s time, or by year’s end – much less longer term out until 2030. More>>
Gordon Campbell: On Housing, Exploding Lap-Tops And Jon Taplin
Evidently, only 13,500 of this new build will be state houses/social housing and much of that will be catch-up, since the government will reportedly be demolishing 8,300 state homes over the same period. The other 20,600? About 80% will be sold privately, at the going market rate. More>>
Peter Dunne: Where To Now For Drug Policy?
Recently, the Police, with significant sponsorship from the Ministry of Health, hosted a major Australasian conference on alcohol and drug policy... In my own remarks to the conference I spoke about New Zealand’s National Drug Policy, and where it might head in the future. More>>
Tobacco Sticks: Charges Laid Against Philip Morris
The Ministry of Health has laid charges against tobacco company Philip Morris (New Zealand) Limited relating to the importation and selling of its tobacco sticks known as HEETS. More>>
Schools: Measures To Support Teacher Supply And Quality
In a speech at Onehunga High School, Ms Kaye told principals that alongside funding 90 additional teachers through the Teach First NZ initiative the following measures are being taken to improve the supply and quality of teachers... More>>
April 2016: Wellington Waterfront Pursuit An Unjustified Risk
The Independent Police Conduct Authority has found that an officer who pursued a fleeing driver along the Wellington waterfront put the public at unnecessary and unjustified risk. More>>
Deregistration: Greenpeace Head Backs Family First Charity Status’
“Russell Norman said this morning that the way the Charities Board is applying the law will reduce the scope for advocacy and that it's having a chilling effect in the NGO sector...” More>>
Budget: Irrigate (Good Times, Come On!)
Additional grant funding of $26.7 million over the next three years plus a capital boost of $63 million towards irrigation investments in Budget 2017 will deliver economic and environmental benefits through better use of water... More>>
Silver Fern Farms: Proposal To Close Fairton Sheepmeat Plant
Silver Fern Farms has advised its people of the proposal to permanently close the site, and has discussed potential transfer options to its other sites in the region as part of the consultation process...
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MPI: Myrtle Rust Appears In Taranaki
The nursery in Waitara (just north of New Plymouth) reported suspected myrtle rust symptoms on young plants to the Ministry’s 0800 number yesterday (Tuesday). More>>
Aged Care Survey: Job Stresses Put Pressure On Workforce
Staff in the aged care sector are stressed, struggling with work hours and aren’t feeling financially rewarded for their efforts. More>>
De-Sanctioning: First Iran Meat Shipment Welcomed
Primary Industries Minister Nathan Guy has welcomed the first export shipment of meat to Iran, scheduled for processing and export later this month by Wellington company Taylor Preston. More>>
Adam Fishwick: Organising Against The Gig Economy
Workers in the so-called ‘gig economy’ face heightening conditions of precarity and exploitation... To combat this, innovative new strategies of organisation and mobilisation have been developed. More>>
Gordon Campbell: On The Kim Regime
There’s no clarity about what the US is seeking, or offering... It hasn’t helped that the US and the global media consistently agree on calling North Korea and its leadership “crazy” and “irrational”. More>>
Binoy Kampmark: Anzac As Apologia And Religion
Each year, the secular religion of Anzac (the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) receives more adherents, gathers a few more followers, and nabs a few more converts among the young. More>>
Le Pen Beaten: English Congratulates Macron On French Election Win
Prime Minister Bill English has this morning congratulated Emmanuel Macron on his victory in the French presidential election. More>>
Gordon Campbell: On The French Election Result
Macron is shaping as the third major test case, after Bill Clinton, after Tony Blair – on whether the aim of ‘progressive social policy’ and realities of ‘neo-liberal economic settings’ can be made to credibly co-exist within the same sentence, let alone within the decrees from the Elysee Palace. More>>
Werewolf: The Maverick On Moloka’i
Monday, April 17 was Moloka’i’s turn for some face-to-face time with Tulsi Gabbard, who is part Samoan and part haole (pakeha), a practising Hindu, and a Middle East combat veteran. More>>
Gordon Campbell: On The Snap Election In Britain
The election call is entirely opportunistic and self-serving and will – regardless of the outcome – put Britain in a worse negotiating position for managing its Brexit. More>>
Turkey: Observers Say Erdogan’s Constitutional Referendum Flawed
Lack of equal opportunities, one-sided media coverage and limitations on fundamental freedoms created unlevel playing field in Turkey’s constitutional referendum, international observers say. More>>
Westminster: NZ PM Condemns London Attack
“London is a place many thousands of New Zealanders have visited and called home, and where many more have friends and family based, so this attack feels very close to home,” Mr English says. More>>
This is an excellent and timely book, since apart from general statements about increasing or mostly reducing tax, there has been very little comment or debate as to whether we should pay tax at all and how much tax should each of us pay. More>>
Ockham Awards: Globally Lauded Novelist Wins NZ’s Biggest Fiction Prize
Internationally renowned Ngāruawāhia resident Catherine Chidgey has won New Zealand’s richest writing award, the $50,000 Acorn Foundation Fiction Prize, for her novel The Wish Child. More>>
NIWA puts a lot of things in the ocean... this is a story about something that accidentally ended up in the sea and thanks to the wind, ocean currents, good luck and good people, came back. More>>
Scoop Review Of Books: Individual Happiness Now
The recent launch for the previously unpublished Individual Happiness Now by New Zealander Len Lye and UK academic and classicist Robert Graves by the Govett Brewster Gallery brings an essay first written in 1941 to a contemporary audience. More>>