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Sunday, April 28, 2013
Ron Smith: Losers
For some while now it has been evident that President Obama is reluctant to talk about ‘terrorism’ and, still less, about ‘Islamic terrorism’, or ‘Jihad’, or ‘the war on terror’, or all those other things that are so offensive to the political correct. It is now becoming clear that this ideologically-driven denial is extracting a price. Apart from the absurdity of continuing to refer to the Fort Hood shooting as ‘work-place violence’, it is now emerging that the various agencies responsible for home security have seriously dropped the ball in regard to the Boston bombing.
Richard Epstein: In Praise of Income Inequality
You cannot
make the poor richer by making the rich poorer.
One month
into the second term of the Obama administration, the economic prognosis looks
mixed at best. On growth, the U.S. Department of Commerce reports the last quarter of 2012 produced a small decline in gross domestic
product, without any prospects for a quick reversal. On income inequality, the
most recent statistics (which only go through 2011) focus on the top 1 percent.
Friday, April 26, 2013
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Mike Butler: Bombers’ anti-West influence
“Dzhokhar was a normal American kid,” the flabbergasted, politically correct media reported after it was discovered that the Boston Marathon bombing was carried out by two Caucasian Muslim brothers, one an American citizen, the other likely a green-card holder. Talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh came under liberal media attack for linking the bombers’ behavior to the “liberal elite intellectual thought” that infects the Boston community.
Frank Newman: TV tenants
Monday, April 22, 2013
Mike Butler: What the principal principal said
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Mike Butler: Sparks fly in electricity fight
A proposal from Labour leader David Shearer and Green co-leader Russel Norman, announced on Thursday, to bring down power prices, is the latest round in a tit-for-tat political struggle started by the National-led government’s policy of selling assets to keep the ship of state afloat. Labour had joined the Green Party in collecting 320,000 signatures to oppose the part-privatisation of electricity generating companies, and then 400,000 pre-registered for the Mighty River Power float, with 400,000 trumping 320,000.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Karl du Fresne: Heaven protect us from self-righteous zealots
We tend to think of idealism as a good thing. Idealists want the best for the world and for humanity – or so we assume. Who could possibly object to idealism, then? Yet idealism can be perverted. It can morph into zealotry and fanaticism. People can become so convinced of the correctness of their ideals that they feel able to justify almost any action aimed at fulfilling them.
Frank Newman: A new uncertainty
I have for some time now expressed the view that the greatest risk to investors at the moment is political uncertainty. After this week news stories about changes to the electricity market I am certain that is the case. Just to recap, last week the Labour and Green parties jointly announced that should they become the government after the general election late next year, they would regulate pricing in the wholesale power generation market.
Friday, April 19, 2013
Mike Butler: The gay-marriage self-parody
The phrase “gay rights for nuclear-free whales” quite accurately parodies the shallow, trendy, bumper-sticker campaigns of the New Zealand left. Shallow trendiness dominated parliament this week as Labour MP Louisa Wall’s Marriage (Definition of Marriage Bill) Amendment Bill passed its third reading 77 votes to 44.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Chris Trotter: Not Debating the Constitution
I DON’T GET ANGRY very often. I’ve been around too long, seen history repeat itself too many times, for all that malarkey. Just occasionally, however, I stumble across something that truly infuriates me. Like discussions billed as debates where everybody is actually on the same side. No, I’m not talking about TV3’s “The Vote”. What’s got my dander up is a four-part series being hosted by the NZ Centre for Public Law (NZCPL) entitled “Debating the Constitution”. All four encounters to be broadcast subsequently on Radio NZ National.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Ron Smith: Climate change and the growing of the grape
A
report in The Guardian (UK), a few
days ago (8 April), was headed ‘Climate change will threaten wine
production’. A few days later (10 April),
the New Zealand Herald carried a
similar story, ‘Warming likely boost to
vineyards’. Of course, the two reports are
not as incompatible as they seem.
Friday, April 12, 2013
Mike Butler: Tolerating tribal 'charities'
How long will taxpayers tolerate the tax-exempt status of tribal “charities”? Last week Dr Michael Gousmett in his guest column on this site titled “Tax-payer subsidised charities and their business activities - time for change” looked at the operation of three New Zealand taxpayer-subsidised charitable businesses and argued that there was time for change in the tax-exemptions.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Mike Butler: Greens leader backs Maori dope trade
Maori in regions where jobs are limited who are growing and selling cannabis to keep their whanau fed shouldn’t be punished for their entrepreneurship, Green Party co-leader Metiria Turei told Maori TV on Monday night. “It has become an income supplement for whanau particularly in rural areas where they have very little income and few job prospects, particularly in the back blocks, and we have to very careful how we manage that,” Turei said on the Native Affairs show.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Ron Smith: An Iron Lady
I met Margaret Thatcher sometime in
early 1970 and she made an enormous impression on me at that single meeting. At the time I was employed by the Royal
Institute of Chemistry (now the Royal Society of Chemistry) at their offices in
Russell Square (London). She was
Conservative spokesperson on education. The
Institute had an issue to do with the recognition of its qualifications and I
was engaged in lobbying on the matter. We had lunch at a restaurant in
Charlotte Street. It was arranged by a
Conservative member of parliament, who was a chemist and a member of the
Institute; Sir Beresford Craddock. Mrs
Thatcher was also a chemist (as well as a barrister), though she was not a
member of the Institute. The crucial
thing was that (as noted) she was Party spokesperson and, just might become Secretary of State for
Education, should the Conservatives be successful at the coming election (they
were and she did in June of that same year).
Mike Butler: Clarity on Maorified protocol
It takes a visiting Danish politician to bring a moment of clarity to the rent-a-powhiri madness that occurs at any official function. Marie Krarup, who was welcomed on to the navy’s Te Taua Moana Marae last month, decried the wero or challenge, objected to being welcomed by a “half-naked” man “shouting and screaming in Maori”, and objected to being forced to touch noses.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Lindsay Mitchell: 4 in 5 Maori children born outside marriage
Four in five Maori children are now born outside of marriage. The earliest statistics kept on Maori ex-nuptial births were in 1968. The percentage of Maori children born outside marriage would have been even lower pre-1968.
Does marriage matter?
Does marriage matter?
Friday, April 5, 2013
Viv Forbes: Warm and well fed, or hungry in the dark?
Which is worse - gradual man-made global warming or
sudden electricity blackout? Alarmists try to scare us by claiming that man’s
activities are causing global warming. Whether and when we may see new man-made
warming is disputed and uncertain. If it does appear, the world will be
slightly warmer, with more evaporation and rainfall; plants will grow better
and colonise some areas currently too cold or too dry; fewer old people will
die in winter and sea levels may continue the gradual rise we have seen since
the end of the last ice age.
Karl du Fresne: RNZ must right its lean to the left
I have some advice –
unsolicited – for whoever takes over from Peter Cavanagh, the chief executive of
Radio New Zealand, who steps down toward the end of this
year. RNZ is a national treasure,
but it’s a flawed treasure, and that makes it vulnerable. By correcting the most
obvious of those flaws, whoever takes over from Mr Cavanagh could help protect
the organisation against political interference.
Reuben Chapple: Partnership? What Partnership
Only
in the last 25 years has anyone considered it an established fact that the
Treaty of Waitangi created a partnership between Maori and the Crown. For
almost 150 years, this view was largely unheard of. Moreover, there is not a
shred of evidence that the British authorities intended to establish such a
partnership, nor that the chiefs saw this as the Treaty’s object.