Wednesday, February 18, 2026
JD: If 3% of My DNA Is Scandinavian, Am I Norwegian?
Labels: JD, Maori blood quantumGuest post on The Good Oil by JD
The 1961 census in New Zealand counted 167,086 people as Māori, using a criterion of at least 50 per cent Māori ancestry.
Then, in the 1986 census, the Labour Government, led by David Lange with Phil Goff as minister of statistics, introduced new rules allowing individuals to self-identify as Māori and, as a result, the recorded Māori population began to increase.
Tony Orman: The disastrous conversion of Fertile Agricultural Land into Pine Monocultures
Labels: Farm to Forestry conversions, Tony OrmanWhat are the motives?
New Zealand was once a land of productive farms and independent food producers, but it is quietly – insidiously – being taken over by pine monocultures, fast growing water-sapping pine monocultures.
What lies behind the green curtain of ever-expanding pine forests energised by New Zealand’s illogical, irrational carbon trading scheme where once highly productive sheep and beef farms are planted in unmanaged, neglected forests.
David Farrar: A conservative landslide in Japan
Labels: David Farrar, Japan snap election, Sanae TakaichiNBC reports:
Japan’s conservative prime minister Sanae Takaichi has won a landslide victory after she gambled on a high-stakes snap election.
Takaichi, who took office in October after being elected leader of the governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), surpassed the 310 seats needed for a supermajority in the 465-seat lower house, Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported from the official election count Sunday evening. The supermajority allows her ruling coalition to override the upper house, where it lacks a majority.
David Farrar: This is why the Govt is sidelining the Teachers’ Council
Labels: David Farrar, Teachers' CouncilThe Herald reports:
A damning review of the Teaching Council says the agency has lost focus on its core function of safeguarding children and needs transformative change to ensure it is meeting critical regulatory responsibilities. …
The report says the council is focused on “building the mana” of teachers and “being liked by the profession”.
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Ryan Bridge: Beware the insatiable beast that is the state
Labels: Government spending, Reserve Bank, Ryan Bridge, TaxesAcross the Tasman, Jim Chalmers, the Aussie Treasurer is facing high debt and deficit. They've managed to achieve the highest level of spending to GDP of any government in 40 years outside the pandemic. Sound familiar?
Breaking Views Update: Week of 15.2.26
Labels: Breaking Views Update: monitoring race relations in the mediaTuesday February 17, 2026
News:
Iwi welcomes government's two year ban on harvesting rockpools north of Auckland
Local iwi Ngāti Manuhiri has welcomed the government's two-year ban on harvesting rockpools in the north of Auckland.
The ban is for all of the Whangaparāoa Peninsula, and further north at Kawau Bay and Ōmaha Bay and will take affect from 12 March.
Geoff Parker: Beware The Referendum Trap
Labels: Geoff Parker, Maori wards, Referendum on Maori Seats, Tribal-political machine, Winston PetersWinston Peters has a gift. He knows exactly how to press the public’s emotional buttons without ever quite delivering what many think he’s promising. His 2026 pledge of a referendum on the Māori seats is a classic example. It sounds bold. It sounds democratic. It sounds decisive. But New Zealanders should pause — because this may be the most dangerous way imaginable to deal with a constitutional issue.
If Peters were genuinely serious about ending separatist parliamentary seats, he wouldn’t be floating a referendum at all. He would campaign openly on abolition of the Māori seats. The legal mechanism already exists. Repeal section 45 of the Electoral Act 1993 — along with the consequential provisions that support it — and the Māori seats disappear. Clean. Parliamentary. Accountable.
Instead, Peters offers a referendum.
Pee Kay: The United Nations New “Bogeyman”
Labels: Global Water Bankruptcy, Pee Kay, United Nations (UN)Here it is, the United Nations new “Bogeyman”!
Be very, very afraid because it is on our door step!
As governments begin to sense the public’s growing disillusionment and disengagement with the threat inherent in climate change narratives, political focus, as it does when it senses a significant wind change, is shifting.
Fading climate hysteria is being replaced with a new urgent, unavoidable threat to human survival!
Richard Eldred: Marco Rubio Says Mass Migration is “a Crisis Destabilising the West”
Labels: Destabilising the West, Marco Rubio, Mass immigration, Richard EldredUS Secretary of State Marco Rubio has warned Europe’s leaders that mass migration is “a crisis destabilising the West” and that America does not want its allies “shackled by shame”. The Mail has the details.
Chris Lynch: Nearly 40,000 more building products approved for use in New Zealand
Labels: Building products, Chris LynchNearly 40,000 additional plumbing and drainage products already widely used in Australia have been approved for use in New Zealand, in a move the Government says will reduce costs, cut red tape, and improve building productivity.
Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk said the approval of the second tranche of overseas certified products would make it easier and more affordable to deliver new homes and public buildings.
Centrist: School lunches scheme cuts complaints 88% and tracks $130m annual savings
Labels: Centrist, Free School lunches, name changeThe school lunches programme is tracking $130 million in annual savings, complaints are down 88%, and more than 37 million meals are served each year.
This week’s political fight has focused instead on a name change.
Peter Williams: Why Maori seats won't be abolished
Labels: Abolishing Maori seats, Peter WilliamsNational's obfuscation means the status quo
Stop the presses!
A political party wants the Maori electorates back on the election agenda. New Zealand First says let’s have a referendum and let the people decide.
The Winston party thinks it knows what the people would decide – we’d vote for their abolition, although probably only by narrow margin.
David Farrar: Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me
Labels: Abolish Maori seats, David Farrar, Maori Seats referendumStuff reports:
New Zealand First is campaigning for a referendum to be held on the future of Māori electorates.
Let’s do the time warp again!
But this isn’t the first time Peters has called for a referendum on the Māori seats.
Mike's Minute: A mindset shift is needed to recapture our brightest
Labels: Emmigration, Iain Rennie, Immigration, Mike HoskingI am increasingly impressed by Iain Rennie, who is the Treasury boss.
He seems to say a bunch of interesting and insightful stuff.
Last year he warned about our growth rate, our debt and our inability to grow our way out of our troubles. He advocated for asset sales.
This past week he was at the Waikato University Economic Forum where he talked about our problem of exporting our best and brightest.
Monday, February 16, 2026
Geoff Parker, When History Becomes Theology
Labels: Academic activists, Colonisation a permanent bereavement, Dr Anaru Eketone, Geoff ParkerNew Zealand is told—again—that asking whether colonisation was good or bad is the wrong question. We are instead presented with a pre-packaged moral verdict: Māori are cast as permanent losers, settlers as permanent winners, and dissent is treated as heresy.
This framing, repeated endlessly by academic activists, is not history. It is theology.
Steven Gaskell: The Day the River Lawyered Up
Labels: Maori rights, Rights of Nature, Steven GaskellNew Zealand has always been a practical country. We built bridges across rivers, dams across valleys and farms across… well, everything else. Then one day the river hired a lawyer.
Judy Gill: When the Language of Governance Reaches The School Gate
Labels: Education system, Judy Gill, Maori languageAlternative headlines: From the Policy Desk to the School Gate; How a new public vocabulary entered everyday New Zealand life; The Words that Arrived Without a Lesson
Sean Rush: In defence of Tamatha Paul
Labels: Sean Rush, Tamatha Paul, Wellington’s wastewater issuesRecent coverage of Wellington’s wastewater issues has revived debate about decisions made during the city’s 2021-2031 Long‑Term Plan (LTP). At the time I was the portfolio lead for water and worked constructively with all Councillors to secure a record $678 million capital investment in the network over the ten-year plan, with more for a new sewage plant at Moa Point to minimise sludge. Public discussion has recently focused on two elements of that process:
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