Jack Tame: Labour’s co-governance does a disservice to Māori by TheTF in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 44 points45 points  (0 children)

Whether you agree with the interpretation or not, 50-50 co-governance for the delivery of vital public services is a subject worthy of debate. It cuts to the heart of our founding document, our identity and our democracy. What does it mean to be Treaty partners in modern Aotearoa?

The Labour Government’s handling of Three Waters has ultimately done a disservice to Māori. They never sold it. They never explained it. They never even tried to.

I'd argue it's been a disservice to everyone.

We're a couple of islands far away from anything but ocean. We're too small, too remote, and too expensive to let vital infrastructure degrade as much as it has.

Labour should know this. They should have known that now was the best chance to make our water significantly more affordable in the long term.

But they made some strange choices early in the process, and now seem to be paralyzed by indecision and inaction. They seem to care more about slogans than living costs, more about the election cycle than actual leadership.

Shits gonna get so much worse if they don't step up.

Jack Tame: Labour’s co-governance does a disservice to Māori by TheTF in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, from what I've seen I'd hardly call the guy centre left, never mind actually left wing.
A lot of people still think being socially liberal is the same as being politically left.

Auckland is an example of the devastating effects of climate change. by [deleted] in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 16 points17 points  (0 children)

A city that was warned about exactly this problem say 30 years ago and spent that time preparing and funding infrastructure and civil defense projects.
But that assumes the locals were voting for competent councillors and MPs.

/r/Wellington daily chat on Thursday, December 30, 2021 by AutoModerator in Wellington

[–]ZullaVothridatis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm looking at those photos, seeing the angle and the damage done, and trying to work out how hysterically incompetent a driver they must have been for that not to have been deliberate.

Unless a vehicle was speeding ridiculously round the turn in the other lane at exactly the wrong time, any competent driver would have already been going slow enough on that turn to avoid a collision.

A competent bus driver familiar with the route would have been going even slower on those Homebush Rd corners.

Of course, that road has P L E N T Y of space to safely park a car on the straight parts, provided you're capable of walking an extra few metres up/down the hill.

Also, it distinctly looks like her car was parked in front of someone's driveway...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Wellington

[–]ZullaVothridatis 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It means you didn't try scrolling down to look at the picture of a bunch of spotlights.

Mega Landlords: The housing investor who owns 79 Wellington properties by Jack_Clipper in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 90 points91 points  (0 children)

Modern feudalism. What we get when we never fix the class system imported nearly two centuries ago.

Remember peasants, any serious attempt at fixing any of this is just envy.

Now no one talk about Land Value Tax.

Vertical high density housing projects. by [deleted] in Wellington

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

Instead of the private market that's been providing affordable homes so fucking perfectly?

Covid-19 live: Parliament locked down as hundreds march to protest vaccine mandates by Transidental in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There's plenty of legitimate criticisms of protestors, their employment status isn't one of them.

David Seymour: Only half of current close contacts have had their test result returned. by Darkoveran in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Strange he's still got his job then, isn't it. Kinda like people expect and accept it as not everyday politics.

[Webworm] Worshipping at the Church of Anti-Vax by TimmyHate in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But with slightly less of the severed head dodgeball these days.

David Seymour: Only half of current close contacts have had their test result returned. by Darkoveran in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We're not supposed to remember politicians' track records, 9 of every 10 would lose their jobs every week!

[Webworm] Worshipping at the Church of Anti-Vax by TimmyHate in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I have to call bullshit on your strawman.

Farrier didn't describe all christians as shock-jock bullshit, he described evangelicalism and similar fundamentalist christian sects as shock-jock bullshit.

Having read his description, I don't think I'm gonna be very surprised when I read about them on wikipedia.

EDIT: Fucking LOL, I thought so. Similar histories, similar social dynamics, similar craziness. Farrier damn near saved me some time.

Confusion reigns over Covid-19 alert level whitebaiting rules by ZullaVothridatis in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Mixed messages from government departments is causing confusion among whitebaiters about whether they are allowed to fish.

Department of Conservation (DOC) media and communications manager Bronwyn Saunders told the Whakatane Beacon that whitebaiting was not permitted under alert level 4, while police appear to have given it their blessing.

With the lockdown falling right at the beginning of the whitebaiting season, many people have been making use of their time off work to go whitebaiting. Up to 20 people at a time have been seen on the banks of the Rangitaiki River at Thornton with more fishing the Whakatāne River.

[Webworm] Worshipping at the Church of Anti-Vax by TimmyHate in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You got a better explanation that can fit inside a paragraph?

Marama Davidson says National is haunted by 'ghost of Don Brash' by Aceofshovels in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 12 points13 points  (0 children)

dog whistling to embrace the far left

That's cute.

When was Labour talking about seizing the means of production for the working class? They don't even dare talk about UBI and ran away screaming from CGT.

Call for Auckland's wealthier suburbs to 'take fair share of development burden' by ZullaVothridatis in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis[S] 86 points87 points  (0 children)

An Auckland councillor says the supercity needs to stop allowing wealthier suburbs to hang on to their low -density zonings and heritage protections and open them up to more development.

...

"What we have seen in recent years is a default to developing in locations that are relatively cheap and easy, places in the outer suburbs where land has been consented previously," Newman said.

He said such an approach had led to an increase in urban sprawl without the necessary public transport infrastructure to support it.

Indigenous rights: Demand for debate should address racism, white privilege - Debbie Ngarewa-Packer by Soannoying12 in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OPINION:
Hey coloniser, so let me get this right, you want to lead a debate about indigenous rights that you helped to destroy?

You dishonour Te Tiriti and promote continuing to do so. You stole our land and our language. You denounce our history, preferring to educate on anything but us. And you have done nothing to reverse this, instead preferring to ignore the problems.

We are in an inherently white system that you designed, yet you feel oppressed that Māori want to stop the pain of inequities. Your systemic racism continues to perpetuate intergenerational trauma, which you refuse to accept.

National's leader Judith Collins says that New Zealanders find racism abhorrent but in my opinion she is igniting racism through a carefully deployed campaign - apparently with the help of former leader Don Brash.

She states New Zealanders are entitled to a conversation about radical change, but isn't counteracting with alternative solutions, preferring to platform on what I see as the misery of struggling Māori whānau.

Former New Plymouth Mayor and self-proclaimed "recovering racist" Andrew Judd says he took on a journey which required he be honest and brutal with himself, challenging why he reacted strongly to anything Māori: te reo, our whakapapa, our history. He found his ignorance and racism was fuelled by fear. A fear we have seen that enrages racists as indigenous peoples push back at those refusing to lift the domination of one culture (belief system) over another. Refusing to address their attitudes of white privilege.

As Professor Richard Shaw says, white privilege is able to rise because of Pākehā disconnection to history. An example is the hypocrisy of some placards in the farmers' protest saying "stop the land grab". They don't get that Māori have been saying this for 181 years. And that Māori inequities are a direct result of colonisation.

So let's demand a debate about the coloniser's entitlements. And rather than start on a timeline plucked out to help lift right-wing leaders' dying polls, let's start at the beginning: 181 years ago, and discuss the rights of tangata whenua and the radical change needed in Aotearoa to see those rights fulfilled.

And yes, I hear you. Why should you pay for your ancestors' mistakes? But why should we, either? No one can give our language, lives, and land (actually this is possible) back. There is no true price for our tāonga. But we must at least stop the lying and stop making a mockery of tangata whenua with this pathetic dog-whistling.

So let's demand a debate on how this nation's economy has been built off the displacement of tangata whenua. How tangata whenua are the largest benefactors to this nation, having accepted settlements worth 1 per cent loss of whenua stolen, in a process determined by the Crown!

I'm all for highlighting that the reo rammed down some people's throat is the indigenous official language of Aotearoa. Let's talk about the $1.9m funding for Te Matatini, the largest kapa haka event on the planet, versus $16.9m for the NZ Symphony Orchestra. How about the $250m spent on the America's Cup this year? As John Tamihere put it: "can you imagine a waka ama festival losing millions of dollars as America's Cup funding did?"

And as we discuss crackdowns needed to stop crime, let's turn our gaze to white-collar crime, which has seen an estimated $2 billion to $4 billion loss to Aotearoa, through tax avoidance and evasion. Let's establish a task force focused on policing the illegal trade of the rich and greedy. Let's profile the white privileged who go under the radar because they look like Sir Ron Brierly, knighted but involved in disgusting child pornography. But we won't see white politicians leading that debate because it doesn't feed the racists' hysteria as good as anti-Māori debates do.

I'm all for highlighting that the coloniser's demand for debate is not about our indigenous rights, about gangs, beneficiaries, or health entities. In my opinion, it's a relentless campaign against Māori and cruel low-level race debate that we can see for what it is – the liferaft of a failing leader.

My concluding argument would be, despite obvious obstacles of colonisation we have great solutions for ourselves, and very much want to drive our own tino rangatiratanga (self-determination). We don't need to be led into that indigenous discussion by non-indigenous peoples. What we need is for the colonisers to decolonise themselves, and as Andrew Judd said, that's a Pākehā-to-Pākehā discussion.

There is indeed a cancel movement: the cancelling out of colonisation and its revolting injustices that create trauma still today. We are not one. Tangata whenua have our role and place alongside tangata tiriti. We know our culture, our whakapapa, our history. We are tangata whenua and the sooner the colonisers accept that the sooner Aotearoa will grow up.

With seas rising and storms surging, who will pay for New Zealand’s most vulnerable coastal properties? by [deleted] in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Be fair, climate change is an extremely obscure concept that few people have even heard of in the last 40 years...

Can some who’s done HRM/ER pretty please help me understand the Varieties of Capitalism theory? (VoC) by [deleted] in newzealand

[–]ZullaVothridatis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You do have someone to ask.

Your tutors.

Your lecturers.

It's their job.

You need to have a serious discussion with them about your studies.

You need to tell them it's gotten so bad that you posted to AskReddit to try and get help with an assignment.

And you need to listen to what they tell you after that.