Hard News: 2014: The Meth Election
234 Responses
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Jake Starrow, in reply to
So can we assume you are rich CJM but not a prick?
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This morning's Q&A was meant to have included an interview with lawyer Bob Amsterdam, who has been looking at the Intellectual Property and net neutrality issues surrounding the Megaupload bust.
But the show filled up with politicians. Same same - some being handed lame Dorothy Dix questions and others unanswerable queries replete with an ad hominem sub text, so by the time the paid talent had their two bob's worth, there wasn't time to hear some really interesting commentary on the stark issues brought about by the current regime's policies interacting with tech changes.Woods told viewers that the Amsterdam stuff was available on the TVNZ site, but somehow it has been buried quite deep, especially if you go to where she suggested www.tvnz.co.nz/qanda.
So in case anyone is interested in this stuff this is a link to the Amsterdam interview -
CJM, in reply to
No. Certainly not rich. Earning less than 20k. But I can be a prick, especially when dealing with John Key fan boys and their lame-ass assumptions.
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CJM, in reply to
An amazing interview. 7.12 "You're dealing with a government that has systemic issues of political corruption".
Succinct. -
nzlemming, in reply to
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So in case anyone is interested in this stuff this is a link to the Amsterdam interview
Thanks for that. Smart man, and a point well made that lawyers would advise KDC to keep his head down.
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Is it my imagination or have we seen an influx of bad faith fanbois derailing conversations on PAS since Dirty Politics was released? It's almost like there was a deliberate campaign...
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SteveH, in reply to
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That said, Steve, I really don’t think anyone who was terribly keen to retrospectively amend under extreme urgency the Electoral Act to avoid a by-election nobody really wanted (or could afford to contest) could be characterized as “outsiders”.
By "outsider" I just meant that Key was not a career politician and therefore may not have the same respect for the process that someone who has focused on how the government works for a longer period might have. I see the use of urgency as a symptom of that.
Some of it was for election promises; they'd told us what they were going to do so there was some justification for just doing it, but the devil is often in the details and I believe following the process would have been wiser.
Of course there are legitimate reasons to use urgency, and some of this government's use of it probably is justified. Personally I think the test should be "is there bipartisan support for this?" If the answer is no then there would need to be pretty extreme extenuating circumstances to justify urgency.
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Lucy Telfar Barnard, in reply to
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That and his good looks do much for his popularity.
Erm, which good looks would those be? I don't see it, but maybe he’s attractive to men. I mean, I’ve read that apparently he’s considered attractive to some voters, but I think they’ve confused familiarity with good looks, a common mistake.
It’s not my political persuasion that makes Key not attractive. Simon Bridges, for example, is very good looking, despite being a National MP.
And I wouldn’t even go so far as to say Key’s unattractive, he’s just… there. If he was in a room full of people, I wouldn’t notice him.
’Course, I haven’t met him. Maybe in person he has charisma. I met Bolger once and was quite shocked to discover he had charisma, because I wouldn’t have guessed it from his photos or appearances on television. But charisma’s a funny beast.
Anyway, I think it’s the vanilla-ness of Key’s looks that work in his favour. People can project onto him whatever they want. -
izogi, in reply to
With Key, what you see is mostly what you get….a Prime Minister whose narrative is as clear-minded and open as it was when he was a highly-successful businessman. His task is to get things done.
Funny you should say that. One part of my view of John Key is that he’s leading a Cabinet which is more interested in operating government as if it’s a business whose sole purpose is to get done what it decides needs doing, instead of a government which is meant to do those things on behalf of the people it represents – not just those who voted for it. Only it’s not constrained by the inability to change rules and laws which typically govern corporations.
Often when one of those inconvenient laws or processes gets in the way of what this Cabinet wants to do, we’re seeing Cabinet do everything practical to sweep that inconvenience out of the way, regardless of the reason those constriants were placed there to begin with.
eg. Changing the law to let government do things it couldn’t previously do, like usurp democracy in Canterbury in the name of “getting stuff done”.
eg. Pushing changes through Parliament under urgency because they can be pushed under urgency instead of because it’s really needed, even when it’s inappropriate and treads on all those protocols that let the public get involved, consult and provide feedback and discussion.
eg. Separation of Cabinet responsibilities from political affiliations? Much of what Nicky Hager’s written about lately, and direct from Cameron Slater’s mailbox, demonstrates that several of our Ministers and their staff have little or no respect for that separation and responsibility, if it wasn’t already clearly evident. John Key is meant to be responsible for oversight of his Ministers, but it’s silly to believe he can be effective in this, without conflicts of interest, when his own office is tangled in the middle of the controversy and when his political future is tightly connected with the outcome of any real investigation.
This is the type of control and lack of accountability that some of our less ethical company directors would dream of. There’s no effective accountability to the law and so no accountability to anyone. Being able to set the law to suit themselves, and being able to simply ignore it when the only realistic accountability is to themselves. To me it seems that this is the type of operation which John Key is in charge of right now.
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Sacha, in reply to
I think his biggest mistake was trusting too much, even naively. But that's no hanging offence.
It *is* when you're the sole oversight mechanism for an extremely powerful and intrusive state agency. Doing your job is not too much to expect.
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nzlemming, in reply to
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Funny you should say that. One part of my view of John Key is that he’s leading a Cabinet which is more interested in operating government as if it’s a business whose sole purpose is to get done what it decides needs doing, instead of a government which is meant to do those things on behalf of the people it represents – not just those who voted for it. Only it’s not constrained by the inability to change rules and laws which typically govern corporations.
Precisely this!
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Is it my imagination or have we seen an influx of bad faith fanbois derailing conversations on PAS since Dirty Politics was released? It’s almost like there was a deliberate campaign…
They were all over the Dimpost for a while there. They start out expecting to gorge on the imagined low-hanging fruit Slater's assured them was out there, before squealing foul and retiring in high victim mode. And yeah, they're all hes.
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Steve Barnes, in reply to
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Anyway, I think it’s the vanilla-ness of Key’s looks that work in his favour. People can project onto him whatever they want
Key denies that, with extra refutingness.
I wonder if he did, in fact, consult a doctor or vet, or is it just another of his "refutable "facts" -
DM
The what now?
Yeh, good ol fashioned direct postal mail.
I can no longer see, read or hear of John Key without feeling that the analysts of Crosby Textor are there in the room/car/office with me.
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perating government as if it’s a business whose sole purpose is to get done what it decides needs doing, instead of a government which is meant to do those things on behalf of the people it represents – not just those who voted for it
As I said, not since ever has one government given so much to so few at the expense of so many.
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Sacha, in reply to
This is the type of control and lack of accountability that some of our less ethical company directors would dream of. There’s no effective accountability to the law and so no accountability to anyone.
Hence the character of these Ministers and their staff becomes all the more important. A moral compass is not an optional extra.
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Email
gets under your skins and drives you mad to the extent that resorting to vacuous abuse
See thats a cheap shot, you are ascribing motives, thoughts and actions which you can know nothing about. It just suits you to see it that way. Getit!
mull over a job well done and ring his mate Barrack
Which job is that? screwing over a country?
His mates in the barracks? OH MY... -
Danielle, in reply to
Yeh, good ol fashioned direct postal mail.
I get mail "from" John Key (he is, unfortunately, also my electorate MP since they redrew the boundaries of Helensville) while my husband, the lucky bugger, gets mail from the Green Party. Don't assume you can sway THIS middle-class mother with all your "family"-oriented keywords, John Key. I'm not as green as I am cabbage-looking.
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nzlemming, in reply to
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I’m not as green as I am cabbage-looking
Watch out for boats, you don't want to bump into the banks...
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nzlemming, in reply to
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They were all over the Dimpost for a while there. They start out expecting to gorge on the imagined low-hanging fruit Slater’s assured them was out there, before squealing foul and retiring in high victim mode. And yeah, they’re all hes.
Russell, might be worth comparing IP addresses with Danyl.
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Stewart, in reply to
Nice post, sir.
The one of yours above this one.
One thousand recommends.
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Lucy Telfar Barnard, in reply to
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Key denies that, with extra refutingness.
la la la not listening ew! He talked about the length of his tongue! I can't unread that you know.
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Jake Starrow, in reply to
Your counsel of perfection needs challenging somewhat Izogi. To postulate that a government must govern in the interests of all is based on a flawed perception. First and foremost, any government's primary responsibility is execute the promises it put forth and was elected upon.
To try and also placate the wishes of those who were opposed to these promises is nigh on impossible.
For example, If Key is re-elected and honours his pledge of no capital gains tax, he can't govern for all in that respect.
Stating the obvious I know but this "governing for all" concept just ain't possible in so many aspects. -
Trevor Nicholls, in reply to
Stating the obvious I know but this "governing for all" concept just ain't possible in so many aspects.
So you're a revolutionary now?
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Alfie, in reply to
To postulate that a government must govern in the interests of all is based on a flawed perception.
Bugger! There goes democracy as we'd hoped it might be.
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