Friday, March 13, 2026
Caleb Anderson: Critical Race Theory - At what price?
Labels: Caleb Anderson, Critical Race Theory (CRT)David Lillis: A Submission on the Health and Safety at Work Amendment Bill
Labels: Dr Davis Lillis, Healthy & Safety legislation, Workplace bullyingPerspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: Do we need to panic about fuel supplies?
Labels: Fuel supplies, Heather du Plessis-Allan, Middle East conflictRyan Bridge: Teachers deserve a pay rise
Labels: Ryan Bridge, Teachers' payIf that sounds weird, it's because it's the union complaining.
The union that's always saying teachers are undervalued and underpaid doesn't want the pay rise. They're actually going to take legal action to try and stop it happening.
Steven Gaskell: Kharg Island - The Strategic Choke Point That Could Break Iran’s Regime
Labels: Iran's oil economy, Kharg Island, Middle East conflict, Steven GaskellBreaking Views Update: Week of 8.3.26
Labels: Breaking Views Update: monitoring race relations in the mediaFriday March 13, 2026
News:
Government bails out Bay of Plenty kiwifruit project with second PGF loan
The Government has extended a second loan to a struggling Bay of Plenty kiwifruit development through the Provincial Growth Fund (PGF). It brings total Crown support for the project to $8 million.
An extra $3m loan was granted to Te Whānau A Maruhaeremuri Hapu Trust, which had already received a $5m loan through the PGF to develop 33.8 hectares of green kiwifruit orchards at Raukōkore Waihau Bay.
John McLean: The Pravda Post
Labels: John McLean, Journalism, Pravda, Public Interest Journalism Fund, Suff, The PostThe paper propagandizing for a New Zealand neo-Marxist Government in waiting
Pravda was the official newspaper of the Soviet Union’s Communist Party. Although Pravda means “Truth” in the Russian language, the Pravda newspaper wasn’t about truth. Quite the opposite. It was propaganda for the Soviet regime.
Lindsay Mitchell: RNZ catches up on news reported here over a month ago
Labels: Beneficiary numbers, Lindsay MitchellColinxy: The Tyranny of the Motivated Minority - Why Moderates Don’t Drive History
Labels: Colinxy, Motivated minority, TyrannyPolitical culture loves its comforting myths, and none is more persistent than the idea that moderates hold the real power. We’re told that the “sensible centre” keeps society stable, that the majority reins in the extremes, and that the middle ground is where history is written.
But the evidence — historical, psychological, and empirical — points in the opposite direction.
Dr Oliver Hartwich: Voters will decide whether to punch holes in Europe’s nuclear umbrella
Labels: Dr Oliver Hartwich, Europe, France, Nuclear umbrellaWhile American and Israeli jets were bombing Tehran last Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron stood before nuclear submarines at the Île Longue naval base in Brittany. He announced that France would extend its nuclear umbrella across Europe.
America had launched a major war without consulting its NATO allies. British bases in Bahrain, Qatar and Cyprus were hit by Iranian retaliation, even though London had refused to support the operation.
Alwyn Poole: Why governing for the whole nation – and respect for every voter – counts.
Labels: Alwyn Poole, Respecting all votersThe vote of an 18 year old deliquent in New Zealand is as important as that of Willy Apiata.
Anyone who wants to be in government and succeed in their ministerial portfolios needs to respect every voter and all of those who cannot vote – primarily children.
Mike's Minute: My observations on the Covid Inquiry
Labels: Covid inquiry, Mike HoskingSome simple observations on part two of the Covid Inquiry.
1) It's cheaper than the British equivalent finished last week that cost over half a billion dollars.
2) It says pretty much what you thought it would.
William McGimpsey: The Genealogy of Neutrality
Labels: Neutrality, William McGimpseyThis essay examines the evolution of the concept of “neutrality” as it applies to the central institutions of liberal democracies. The paper argues that neutrality is a contested concept, that over time competing conceptions of it have arisen within liberal societies, and that those societies have evolved towards an internal balance of power between them across their institutions.
Deboragh Palma: Brazil at a Historical Crossroads
Labels: Brazil, Deborah Palma, Economic freedomCorruption, taxes, and authoritarian labor shackles.
Brazil finds itself at a historical crossroads that demands a rigorous analysis of its institutional structures. The release of the 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), record-breaking data from the Impostômetro, and the persistence of an authoritarian labor framework expose a system of economic asphyxiation and moral erosion. The State, under the pretext of protecting the citizen, in reality hinders their initiative, their property, and their future.
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Insights From Social Media: When Did Mythology Become “history”?
Labels: Hawke’s Bay Regional Council, Insights From Social Media, Myth-making dressed up as history, Tom HenryTom Henry writes > This official Hawke’s Bay Regional Council placard at Waitangi Regional Park claims to present a “rich history”. What it actually presents is a mix of legend, folklore, and real historical events — all blended together as if they are the same thing.
Geoff Parker: How Treaty Requirements Quietly Spread Through New Zealand’s Institutions
Labels: Embedding Treaty frameworks, Geoff Parker, List of Treaty requirements - NZ institutions, Treaty obligationsIf most New Zealanders were asked when Treaty obligations began influencing professional life, many would assume it happened recently. The reality is quite different. What we are seeing today is the result of a gradual institutional expansion that has been unfolding for nearly forty years.
These developments are documented in statutes, court decisions, and the public charters of professional and educational bodies across New Zealand.
The starting point was the 1987 Court of Appeal decision in New Zealand Māori Council v Attorney-General (1987), commonly known as the Lands case. In that decision the court ruled that the Crown must act consistently with the “principles of the Treaty of Waitangi.” That phrase – “Treaty principles” – became the mechanism through which Treaty considerations began to play a larger role in New Zealand law and public administration.
Penn Raine: Where are the spads when Chris Luxon needs them?
Labels: Government advisers, Local council, Penn Raine, SpadsThe spad is an unelected position made by government ministers or local councils whose appointee will tell bosses what they want to hear and generally confirm all their prejudices. They are allegedly of a different stripe from the civil service which my sources amusingly describe as ‘neutral’ and unlikely to have political bias.
Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: The pressure's on for the primary teachers' union
Labels: Education system, Heather du Plessis-Allan, Teahcers' UnionBrian Roche, the Public Service Commissioner, has gone around the union and offered a 4.7 percent pay increase to primary teachers who are not in the union. If they agree to it, the first chunk of the pay rise will kick in 19 days from now and the next chunk will take effect in January next year.
Ani O'Brien: COVID Inquiry should raise serious questions about Chris Hipkins’ leadership
Labels: Ani O'Brien, Chris Hipkins, Covid inquiry, Royal Commission’s reportWe were told “Trust the Experts.” The Report shows ministers didn’t.
It is easy in hindsight to forget the atmosphere of early 2020. It felt like COVID-19, Corona Virus as we initially called it, came out of nowhere. China was lying to everyone. No one knew if we were under or overreacting. Whatever Trump said the media said the opposite. Governments across the world were facing a virus that appeared highly contagious, poorly understood, and potentially catastrophic. “Experts” were issuing advice based on incomplete data and information which politicians were then making decisions with.
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