Pages

Saturday, July 27, 2024

Kineta Knight: High hopes for laser weeding system after successful trials here in Canterbury


Technology that uses Artificial Intelligence (AI) to hunt weeds and zap them with a laser has won praise from industry leaders after successful trialling.

A prototype of the Map and Zap® system, designed by a group of AgResearch scientists and engineers, led by Dr Kioumars Ghamkhar, was put through its paces at a recent demonstration at a Canterbury vineyard.

Graham Adams: Chlöe Swarbrick’s education in disaster management


Darleen Tana is only the latest chapter in an annus horribilis.

When she was recruited by the Greens in 2016, Auckland Central MP Chlöe Swarbrick probably never imagined that when she was finally promoted to co-leader it would mean a very public baptism in disaster management. Now having achieved her longstanding ambition to climb to the pinnacle of Green politics, her most immediate challenge has been to stamp out the smouldering fires among the ruins of the party and to somehow restore its battered reputation as its annus horribilis grinds on.

This year, the party’s ranks have been seriously depleted or damaged through death, defection and disgraceful behaviour.

Dieuwe de Boer: Judges Are Ruling by Psychobabble


Judge Michael Crosbie concocted a psychobabble explanation for why the paedophile did it.

The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care in NZ from 1950 to 2019 was released this month. The Government issued an apology and made the usual promises to do things better.

The entire thing rings a little bit hollow when this Government is currently in the next phase of irreversible child abuse in this country through sterilisation drugs and chopping genitalia off mentally ill adults. One day in the not-so-distant future some hapless Prime Minister will be making another empty apology for his predecessors. ‘We didn’t know, we followed the science, we listened to the experts,’ and so on.

Dr Michael Johnston: Dr Reti prescribes a bitter pill.


Health New Zealand has been quite economical lately.

I don’t mean ‘economical’ in the fiscal sense, of course. This is the public sector we’re talking about. No, like any good government agency, Health NZ has been spending like a drunken sailor on shore leave. Indeed, when it comes to financial extravagance, the organisation is an overachiever.

Guest Post: Amy and Hamish Bielski - Our Research down on the Farm - Part Two


Hi. I am Amy. We are the regen farmers who shared a story on this blog of our research into whether methane emissions from our livestock are a real problem or whether it is something caught up in a phenomenon of hyped-up pseudo-science.

This is a sequel.

Breaking Views Update: Week of 21.7.24







Saturday July 27, 2024 

News:
Hapu fights back against Waiuku Wind Farm proposal

A Māori trust says plans to bring people back to their ancestral land have been put on hold as it fights to protect sacred sites, one more than 1000 years old, from a proposed wind farm development.

Heather du Plessis-Allan: Andrew Coster not seeking a second term will upset almost no one

So Andrew Coster has revealed he will not be seeking a second term as Police Commissioner.  

Which will upset...almost no one. 

I think most of us will be happy to see the back of him. 

Because while he does seem like a decent and smart guy, he has been rubbish at the job.

Bob McCoskrie: Who is JD Vance and is he a social conservative?


Who is JD Vance

Ohio Senator JD Vance has been announced as the running mate for Donald Trump at the upcoming presidential election. He’s only been in the senate since 2022.

But this means he could be the next vice-president and replace possibly the worst vice president in history Kamala Harris. So who is JD Vance and is he a friend or foe of social conservatives.

Professor Ian Wright: Declining PhD student numbers are a warning sign for NZ’s future knowledge economy


The decline in the number of doctoral candidates at New Zealand universities is a worrying sign for the country’s effort to build a knowledge-based economy.

Aotearoa New Zealand’s economic trajectory has long been characterised by its reliance on primary commodities, such as unprocessed forestry exports, where high volume and relatively low value are common.

Successive governments have recognised the need to shift towards a more knowledge-intensive economy – one that fosters innovation, higher productivity and greater value.

Dr Bryce Edwards: NZ’s health system in crisis


As of today, New Zealand’s public health system – the biggest government agency in New Zealand’s history, which goes by the name of Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora – is being run by just one reforming bureaucrat – Prof Lester Levy, after the Government sacked the recently installed board. This is because the hospitals around the country that employ nearly 90,000 staff and have a budget of about $28b and assets of $25b are apparently in financial crisis.

JD: The Ex-Pollies at the Trough


JD writes on BFD as a Guest Post:

When you look at the rewards our politicians reap, it is patently obvious to whom their service was, and is, rendered.

As the miasma thickens around the John Tamihere, Te Pāti Māori, collusion case I wondered how JT got those highly paid chief executive jobs at Waipareira and Whānau Ora, with his wife Awerangi similarly ensconced as CEO of both operations.

Lushington D. Brady: They’re Not Even Hiding It


Is no one listening to what Muslims around the world are saying, loud and clear?

They’re not even hiding it – but is anyone in power taking notice?

History, as they say, repeats. Looking back on the inevitability of WWI,
H G Wells wrote, “Why did humanity gape at the guns and do nothing?” As it happens, he wrote that in 1933. In the same text he also foresaw the inevitability of war with Nazi Germany, even getting the location of the spark (Poland) right, if for the wrong reasons. Wells was also only a year off, guessing the outbreak of War in 1940.

Friday July 26, 2024 

                    

Friday, July 26, 2024

Point of Order: Buzz from the Beehive - 26/7/24



Tax relief is on the way (hurrah), but help for the wine industry draws attention to the issue of corporate welfare

From one part of the Beehive comes a reminder that tax relief will be delivered next week.

From another comes a reminder that this government is no less willing than its predecessor to dispense the taxes it does collect to provide corporate welfare.

Jeffrey A. Tucker: During the Crisis, Free Speech Worked Brilliantly


There is only one major social media platform that is relatively free of censorship. That is X, once known as Twitter, and owned by Elon Musk, who has preached free speech for years and sacrificed billions in advertising dollars in order to protect it. If we don’t have that, he says, we lose freedom itself. He also maintains that it is the best path to finding the truth.

Dr Bryce Wilkinson: Replacing Health NZ board offers glimmer of hope


In a dramatic move this week, the government replaced the board of Health New Zealand (Te Whatu Ora) with a commissioner.

Dramatic but not much of a surprise. Last November, health expert Ian Powell wrote, “The health system is in a state of chaotic crisis (carnage is what it often feels like to those at the clinical frontline).”

He thought that if the new Minister of Health did not decisively change the board’s direction “nothing would change”.

Take a bow then on this first step, Minister Reti.

Ele Ludemann: Fundamental flaws in freshwater targets


An independent review has highlighted fundamental flaws in freshwater targets:

Beef + Lamb New Zealand (B+LNZ) is calling for urgent changes to the sediment and E. coli attributes and national bottom lines (NBLs) following the release of an independent review which shows the way they were determined was flawed, they are not achievable, and trying to achieve them will decimate farming and rural communities.

Professor Robert MacCulloch: Robertson's First Task as VC of Otago University.....


Robertson's First Task as VC of Otago University: stop competition & defund doctors by lobbying in Wellington to prevent Waikato getting NZ's third medical school

Former Finance Minister Grant Robertson officially became the Vice Chancellor of Otago this past 1 July. No longer does he need worry about homelessness along with his friend, Jacinda Ardern, who is similarly entrenched in gilded halls - in her case at Harvard, funded by America's billionaires. Robertson can now enjoy his $629,000 pay package, including a stately home thrown in for good measure. As a symbolic gesture of the total takeover of the University by the Labour Party, the Opposition Leader & former PM Hipkins attended his mate's swearing in ceremony. Asked what is his priority, predictably Robertson replied it was getting the University's finances on track. Not research, not teaching - its all about the cash. How's he going to do that?

Rodney Hide: On another planet


Prime Minister Chris Luxon during the election campaign: "You are on another planet if you want to have a conversation about bathrooms and make that an election issue.”

That’s me. On another planet.

I want my daughters safe.

And not just my daughters. All daughters. All wives. All mothers. All sisters. All women. All girls.

They are not safe now.

Mike's Minute: Military academies - let them give it a crack


At the end of the week the Government's much debated military academies for young offenders will be underway.

They are probably the headline aspect of this weird, overall scrap we seem to have been having post the election around ideas that are to be enacted and yet don’t have a level of acceptance from the opponents, despite the fact that what those opponents propose and support doesn’t, and hasn’t, worked.