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Saturday, July 11, 2026

Clive Bibby: Time passes but real friendships endure


A recent encounter with an old school mate from 1958 has provided the opportunity to share a story which reflects on a bygone era that helped to make us what we are today.

Sadly, due to the selfish and deliberately divisive activities of some modern politicians and community leaders, those days of racial harmony appear lost forever.

Caleb Anderson: Information and intelligence are not the same thing


It seems that we live in an age of abundant information. But is this making us more, or perhaps less, intelligent? Why, with vast amounts of information at our fingertips, are we more uncertain, divided, and confused, on so many fronts?

We are swimming in information and drowning in confusion.

Colinxy: Why the Minimum Wage Hurts the Poor.....


Why the Minimum Wage Hurts the Poor — And How Unions Used It to Enforce Racial Exclusion

Few policies enjoy such unearned moral prestige as the minimum wage. It is presented as a simple act of compassion: raise the legal wage floor, and the poor will rise with it. Politicians love it because it costs them nothing. Activists love it because it sounds righteous. Unions love it because it protects their members from competition.

John McLean: Jagose Stays Close


The frightful former Solicitor-General who refuses to go way

The New Zealand Law Association is doing an admirable job enabling subversive, activist lawyers to expose themselves. The Association is a divine reincarnation of the former Auckland District Law Society. Unlike the New Zealand Law Society, the NZ Law Assn has no statutory authority and doesn’t try to hound un-Woke lawyers out of the legal profession. I’ve previously covered the Law Society’s brutal, unlawful hounding of heterodox lawyers:

John MacDonald: Time to think bigger than solar panels on the roof


Whatever happened to this country’s ability to think big on the energy front?

And why is it that we’re not doing the same with solar energy and why are our politicians relying on households to do the heavy lifting?

I mention thinking big intentionally. Because that’s what we did back in the 1970s and 1980s, especially with the big hydro power schemes.

Brendan O'Neill: How Britain’s cops became the armed wing of wokeness


From arresting critics of Muhammad to mistreating white men, the police have become the enforcers of woke tyranny.

Insulting Muhammad. Criticising a local councillor. Being a white lad who gets punched in the head by a gang of black kids. In Britain in 2026, these are the ‘crimes’ that get the cops off their a***s. They might not be able to find the lowlifes who burgled your home or the gang members who groomed your daughter. But they’ll come running if you diss Islam or have a pop at a Green politician or commit the heinous sin of being white and male on a night out. Welcome to your two-tier tyranny.

Kerre Woodham: Bring on the solar


Everybody's into the solar energy now. National announced its solar energy policy last week and most people thought it was a sound idea, good common-sense idea. The party, if elected, would launch the Home Energy Fund by tweaking the Local Government Act and committing a one-off $7 million equity investment to secure a 20% shareholding in the new entity with the balance funded by participating councils.

Bob Edlin: Sex and leadership.....


Sex and leadership – Albanese says sorry for his indiscretion but Trump fights on in the courts

Australian supporters of the Socceroos went viral during the 2026 FIFA World Cup for an anti-Donald Trump chant.

The chant – widely circulated on social media – had simple lyrics:

Guest Post: RNZ National – Trapped?


A guest post on Kiwiblog by Fish Across Face:

This follows on from my recent post about the NZ media ecosystem and focusses more on the central challenge faced by the state radio broadcaster.

It’s now clear RNZ National has defied the laws of gravity, albeit in reverse. A massive increase in funding courtesy of the last Labour government has somehow transmogrified into serious erosion of fortunes – namely trust, and by extension, bums on seats.

Friday July 10, 2026 

                   

Friday, July 10, 2026

Robin Grieve: The Medical Council's Shocker of a Consultation Document


Simeon Brown was right not to renew the terms of the Medical Council's chair and deputy chair, but he should have gone further. The Council's consultation documents on its proposed cultural competency requirements suggest an organisation more interested in social engineering and promoting critical race theory than in setting professional standards relevant to the delivery of healthcare.

Barrie Davis: A Republican Commonwealth for Aotearoa?


I am fed up to the back teeth with the Treaty of Waitangi. We have been right royally rorted by academics and well-trained lawyers claiming to show that the Treaty means the opposite of what it says. So, you may well wonder why I recently purchased a copy of Te Tiriti, Equality and the Future of New Zealand Democracy (2026) by Dominic O’Sullivan (Te Rarawa, Ngati Kahu), political scientist and professor at Charles Sturt University in Australia (here).

Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: National's roading announcement was a massive letdown


Let's not pretend that this roading announcement is not a massive letdown for anyone who voted for the National Party believing it would deliver the roads it promised. It is a huge letdown.

Of the 15 Roads of National Significance promised following the last election, only six have construction dates: Takitimu North Link Stage 1 in Tauranga, Ōtaki to north of Levin, the Hawke's Bay Expressway, Warkworth to Te Hana, Cambridge to Piarere and the Ōmanawa Bridge. I don't even know where that is.

Breaking Views Update: Week of 5.7.26







Friday July 10, 2026 

News:
Landmark 35-year energy deal secured for Pirirākau Marae

In a move set to secure community resilience for a generation, the Pirirākau Tribal Authority has signed a historic relationship agreement with Contact Energy, locking in free electricity for four local marae for the next 35 years.

Brendan O'Neill: Nigel Farage lays down the gauntlet


In triggering a by-election in Clacton, he has disarmed the media elites and empowered working-class people.

With righteous indignation, Nigel Farage has resigned today as MP for Clacton, triggering a by-election that he intends to fight. He’s giving up his seat in the hope he’ll win it back. Why?

Rodney Hide: RODNEY HIDE - Breaking news, 15 December - “He’s done it again!”


Mr Winston Peters remains New Zealand’s most enduring and adaptable political survivor. First elected to Parliament in 1978—just months after Sir Keith Holyoake resigned as Governor-General -- Mr Peters and Sir Keith bridge nearly a century of our parliamentary history. Sir Keith entered Parliament in 1932; together, these two men span the modern era. With his bearing and suits, Mr Peters would have slotted seamlessly into Sir Keith’s cabinet. Yet unlike the tuatara, frozen in its Jurassic adaptations, Mr Peters thrives in new terrain. He masters social media with a precision few politicians match, turning tweets into scalpel-sharp commentary.

Mike's Minute: I'm not convinced the Reserve Bank was right


You can't bag the Monetary Policy Committee.

Well, you can, but in this case, you would be fairly churlish.

Personally, I would have held, but given the vote was done by consensus I clearly would have been a lone voice.

Ryan Bridge: National needs Labour's support on its social media bill


Where is National's social media bill at?

We know Seymour doesn't like it. Winston is apparently has reservations with the wording, though that's only according to Stuff, rather than the man himself.

Labour might need to step in and save the day by supporting it from across the aisle.

Dr Eric Crampton: You could have it so much better - The quiet victories of the NZ economy


Every July, members of the New Zealand Association of Economists – academics, practitioners, and officials – meet to tell each other what they’ve been working on. Work presented tends to be work-in-progress. We get a chance to see the work while it is still being built and discuss ways of improving it.

This kind of conference never tends to have an organising theme. Sessions run in parallel; people attend the ones that strike their fancy. If I had to draw a theme from the set I attended, I’d start with one of the last talks I saw.

Kerre Woodham: How would you rate the "liveability" of New Zealand's cities?


What makes a city liveable? The Economist Intelligence Unit, which is such a grand name, has released its latest list of the most liveable cities. There are 173. Three Australian cities are in the top 10 – Melbourne third, Sydney fourth, and Adelaide eighth. For all the bad press Melbourne gets for its crime, it's doing pretty jolly well to be there in the top three. Auckland came in at 12th place, down five – one of the biggest downward movers, along with the Gulf state cities. We all know why they lost their lustre, but we haven't got a war to blame that on, have we? Wellington is out of the top 20.