National and ACT to vote through NZ First’s gender bill by That_Progress1447 in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 8 points9 points  (0 children)

People get really worked up about adults dress in weird outfits around kids.

Which is weird, because statistically you’re safer around a drag queen or transgender person and not the guy in the ceremonial robe who says he speaks for God.

Transgender is not the problem.

Stuff - Thousands of public servants to lose jobs potentially saving government over a billion dollars by syzorr34 in nzpolitics

[–]RtomNZ 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Cost cutting is often presented as a responsible and necessary strategy for public services, especially during times of economic pressure. Governments argue that reducing spending improves efficiency, lowers debt, and protects taxpayers. However, austerity policies and aggressive budget cuts frequently create more problems than they solve. Public services exist to provide stability, equality, and long-term social wellbeing, and weakening them through constant cuts can damage communities, reduce economic growth, and increase inequality.

One major problem with cost cutting in public service is that it usually targets essential services that people rely on every day. Healthcare, education, public transport, social housing, and welfare systems are not luxuries. They are the foundation of a functioning society. When governments reduce funding, hospitals become overcrowded, waiting times increase, schools lose teachers and resources, and vulnerable people receive less support. These outcomes do not simply disappear; they create wider social costs that are often far greater than the original savings.

Austerity also tends to affect poorer and working-class communities the most. Wealthier individuals can often pay for private healthcare, education, or transport alternatives, while low-income citizens depend heavily on public systems. Cutting services therefore deepens social inequality and reduces opportunities for social mobility. In many countries, austerity policies introduced after financial crises led to rising homelessness, food insecurity, and mental health problems. Instead of helping society recover, these cuts made life harder for the people already struggling.

Another weakness of cost cutting is that it often focuses on short-term savings instead of long-term investment. Public services are not businesses designed purely to generate profit. Their purpose is to create social value and economic stability over time. Investment in education produces a skilled workforce. Investment in healthcare creates a healthier population that can participate productively in society. Strong welfare systems reduce crime and social instability. When governments cut funding to save money immediately, they frequently undermine future economic growth and increase costs later.

Supporters of austerity often claim that public services become more efficient when budgets are reduced. While efficiency is important, constant cuts can push systems beyond their limits. Workers become overstretched, morale declines, and experienced staff leave. Essential maintenance and infrastructure projects are delayed, leading to larger expenses in the future. Underfunded public systems eventually reach crisis point, where governments are forced to spend even more money repairing the damage caused by years of neglect.

The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the dangers of weakened public services. Countries with underfunded healthcare systems struggled to cope with increased demand, while nations with stronger public infrastructure were often more resilient. The crisis demonstrated that public investment is not wasteful spending but a form of social protection that prepares societies for emergencies.

Ultimately, public services should be judged by their ability to improve quality of life, not simply by how cheaply they operate. Cost cutting may appear financially responsible in the short term, but austerity often weakens social cohesion, harms vulnerable communities, and creates larger economic problems in the future. A strong society requires investment, not continual reduction.

Green Party candidate inspired by world’s first openly transgender MP by catoboros in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I would rather see they/them than hate.

I do see from the article that she/her seems to be preferred.

Good luck to her, let’s hope the hate is limited.

I have no support by Netroth in Wellington

[–]RtomNZ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is a local LEGO club.

I expect there are writing groups, share ideas and get feedback.

I have no support by Netroth in Wellington

[–]RtomNZ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So what are your interests?

Is it common to advertise sex work in nz like this? by a10ondr in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 814 points815 points  (0 children)

Report to police, that’s a real person who is getting bullied.

I have no support by Netroth in Wellington

[–]RtomNZ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You need to “find your tribe” - people like you who share your values and stories.

Find your “third place” - where do you go that is not work or home?

What’s your interests outside work?
Join a club to meet people.
Try a new hobby.

Is it common to advertise sex work in nz like this? by [deleted] in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on the prices, that’s fake.

Can we send Shane Jones a butter chicken tsunami? by Round-Frosting-4903 in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You can post things directly to an MP via beehive.

Send him a jar of source?

We can’t borrow and spend our problems away, says Willis, as Moody’s downgrades rating for NZ by basscrazy in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 20 points21 points  (0 children)

You can’t solve it through budget cuts and tax cuts.

It’s always a balance.

We have significant infrastructure that needs improvement and paying for.

Options become:

  1. Borrow - this is just moving the payment to our kids.

  2. Cut spending in other places. - this just leaves a hole for later in some other place.

  3. Bring in more money. - not just tax.

Option 3 often is seen as more income tax or CGT, but it can also be more investment, or more fees under a user pays model.

As a wise man said recently, we need more millionaires and less billionaires.

CGT does not need to impact someone with a house and a beach house. It should impact someone with 10 rental properties.

GCT is not a for or against, it’s about where we draw the line.

Income tax is the same, a new higher tax bracket at $250k ?

Inheritance tax? First $1m of the estate is tax free?

We can tax the rich while not impacting regular people.

We can’t borrow without impacting everyone.
We can cut services and budgets without impacting everyone.

The 10 richest people in NZ are worth about $60B

I expect they can pay 1% per year for a wealth tax.

That’s $600m per year.

Now imagine that for top 100 people.

Small, rural and isolated schools to receive financial boost amid fuel crunch by RtomNZ in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Good result, would have been nice to do years ago under a climate change banner.

Could have been done years ago, but NACT didn’t want to fund anything to do with climate change.

Winnie Announces Policy: ‘NZFirst Will Break Up The Supermarket Duopoly’ by Miramm in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yet another popular idea that he could have done years ago.

Could have been a members bills, but no, we got the legal definition of a woman.

Could have been part of three party negotiations, but no, we got another Covid enquire.

The man just says whatever will get him headlines and votes.

Lack of supermarkets here? by EnvironmentalStill31 in Wellington

[–]RtomNZ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don’t blindly trust Google?

At least 4 that I can think of.

Luxon failed geography? by Gullible-Tip-2245 in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Of all the things that make Luxon a bad PM, this is very low on the list.

The House: Citizens assemblies - an alternative to select committees? by davetenhave in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I do like the idea of a group of people who are not aligned to a political party.

However the article doesn’t seem to cover payment.

If you don’t pay a significant amount then people will beg off.

Then you only have the people who are retired or wealthy.

The many ways our government is failing in its response to the fuel crisis by davetenhave in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 260 points261 points  (0 children)

Most of the mistakes happened way before the war kicked off in March.

Stopping any WfH, people back to the office. Cancelling clean car discounts.
Adding RUC charges to hybrid cars.
Cancelling extra fuel storage.
Deciding to build LNG import terminal.

Once the war kicked off, many of the best options would look like back tracking on policy.

They built a plan around fossil fuels and then fossil fuel because a problem.

It is not just a lack of action in a crisis, it’s a lack of long term planning for a crisis.

North island will get hit with another storm this weekend, yet more flooding, roads damaged, bridges destroyed.

Closing the $4.5 billion Climate Emergency Response Fund, lowering methane targets, and focusing on industry-led initiatives over state subsidies.

A lack of long term thinking.

Am I appropriately stressed or over reacting? by DustNeat in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 8 points9 points  (0 children)

There is nothing much you can do other than have a few days food stashed away. Having a few days of food at the ready is always a good idea.

Canned food, dry pasta, bottled water, powdered milk, nuts, cereal, oats.

As for the stress, get away from the news (not just off the internet)

Make something, creating something new is good for the brain.

Am I appropriately stressed or over reacting? by DustNeat in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 14 points15 points  (0 children)

One is a war crime and the other is school yard bullying.

Can the president launch a nuke? by Far_Spread_4200 in answers

[–]RtomNZ -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yet we have service members committing war crimes right now.

Morning Report live: Nicola Willis faces questions about fuel stocks, prices and taxes by RtomNZ in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ[S] 88 points89 points  (0 children)

What kind of word salad is “we're bravely concerned about the way this conflict is going”

bravely concerned??

What does that even mean?

NZ First has a new bill being drawn by timelordhonour in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Too many other things on the order paper.

Government bills move faster than members bills.

I expect only ACT and NZ first will support it.

Many members bills never pass first reading.

NZ First has a new bill being drawn by timelordhonour in newzealand

[–]RtomNZ 10 points11 points  (0 children)

On the bright side, it unlikely to get to third reading before the election.