On School Lunches – A Response to Jonathan Ayling

(My response to his words in point-form).

More than lunches, children need parents – Jonathan Ayling

– Clearly a truism.

“While there has been much talk about the quality and cost of school lunches, the debate misses a larger point, argues Jonathan Ayling – why is the Government in the business of feeding our children at all?”

– Because through the abject and ongoing failure of the State Education system (stats galore on this), poor economic management, combined with the explosion of welfare dependency the State has to accept SIGNIFICANT responsibility.

Lindsay Mitchell details:  At 31 December 2025 there were 255,300 children aged 0-17 reliant on a caregiver on a main benefit (234,429); or on an Orphan/ Unsupported Child benefit (20,871). More than a third of all Maori children were dependent (36.5 percent) versus 16 percent of non-Maori. Of the 57,705 births during 2025, one in five babies was welfare-dependent by year end. Dependence is established very early, often from birth. This pattern has persisted since the 1990s. Over two thirds of the [benefit dependant] children rely on a single parent. Half of the children depending on Sole Parent Support are Maori.

2023 census data shows 213,534 single parent families, up from 197,946 families in 2018 – a growth of 7.9%). Almost 1 in 5 children in NZ.

“My wife and I fell in love cooking together, but with three children 4 and under, dinners are no longer a leisurely affair. … It’s hardly glamorous, but it is the stuff of parenthood.”

– That is a credit to you. It is pretty much the situation I was in in the mid-1990s – except I was/am an appalling cook.

– Your table and high chairs may not be the best viewing platform for more trying situations. To mangle Captain Kirk, your situation is “life Jon but not as many know it”.

“But has the debate missed the more basic point? The first responsibility for feeding children belongs to their parents. Full stop.”

– It should be “full stop” but – in 2026 NZ – it isn’t. Firstly – as noted above – the State has been complicit in creating deep economic crises and divides in NZ. Secondly – when my children were in their teens the biggest Pac’n’Slave carts could barely contain the weekly groceries. When the oldest left home in 2011 the weekly saving was $183. A rough calculation of 15 years of NZ inflation sees that cost at above $300 to healthily provide for an active 18 year old. As I walk around the super-market now – with no dependents – and look at prices – I have no idea how many families – or solo parents are even close to affording things.

– In some semi-remote places, the simple things make life far more difficult. For example, the Far North many homes are reliant on rainwater. A broken gutter costs a local fortune to repair. In summer 2l of Coke is $2.50, 400mls of Pump is $4.99.

“Why has providing lunches for almost 250,000 children become a task for the state at all?”

– As above across the cumulative points.

“It is not the state’s responsibility to feed our children.”

– Until the current, and very genuine, cost-of-living crisis is solved for many families – the State does have significant responsibility. Even on the education front the State claims to be taking responsibility for challenged demographics through the Equity Index. And yet it is only $250m (of a $7.5b Vote Education) and for high EQI schools is only about 3% of their funding. We have only 460 high schools. The top 50 see an average of 85% of their students off with UE. For the bottom 50 schools the average is 4%. Many high EQI schools have over 30% of their students leave before their 17th birthday.

“And doing so is almost certainly doing more harm than what existed before the Labour Government announced funded school lunches, both to our fiscal future, but more importantly, to the fabric of our communities.”

– Nonsense. The approach of ACT has degraded a policy that was beginning to have a positive effect in many schools/communities. I saw examples first hand.

– In terms of “our fiscal future” – the annual cost of the lunches is 2.8% of VOTE Education. The government would save more if NACT had kept the promise to bring the FTE’s of the Ministry to 2700 – and do considerably more good.

“There are, of course, families in New Zealand who are genuinely unable to provide the lunches their children need. For a variety of reasons – poverty, illness, or addiction – some parents struggle to meet their children’s most basic needs.”

– Yes there are. Many of them!

“Yet, for decades, it was religious communities, charities, and schools that stepped up, targeting support to fill the gap for these few, while the majority who are perfectly capable of bringing their own lunch did.”

– In many of the towns and communities where school lunches are needed the churches, charities and schools are hardly flush – and you might note we have a HUGE decline in volunteering.

– In some communities that was happening with the school lunches under-Labour with some employment, feel-good, and much better quality food (and less waste). The centralisation and obsession with saving a few bucks by Seymour has undone much of the very good work.

“The overwhelming majority of Kiwi parents are able to make a sandwich, cut up an apple, and put together a lunchbox before school.”

– A SIGNIFICANT minority are genuinely struggling to do so. Good quality school lunches, a much better EQI provision for schools, localised provision, etc – can be one means that enable NZ to be in your parents providing lunch UTOPIA in 10-15 years.

“I’m not saying this because it saves taxpayer dollars and wasted food, though it undoubtedly does.”

– As above … ending school lunches would save stuff all in comparison to much more significant waste in education – let alone other Ministries.

“More importantly, it is about recognising that a healthy society depends upon responsibilities resting with the people best placed to fulfil them.”

– Far more people that you think are not well placed – and their children are struggling. When working with South Auckland Middle School I was aware of families with up to 14 living in a garage – with their grand-parents doing a remarkable job of caring for them.

“This is the insight behind the principle of subsidiarity, one of the oldest ideas in political philosophy. It holds that responsibilities should be exercised by the smallest and closest community capable of carrying them. Larger institutions should support families, but never replace them or their duties.”

– It would be good for you to go into some of NZ’s poorest communities and elucidate them on the “principal of subsidiarity”.

– At this stage in NZ’s history – things like school breakfasts and lunches are one of the ways “larger institutions” can support parents (not replace them).

“Nonetheless, to compensate, governments build layers of procurement, logistics, contracts, nutritional standards, reporting requirements, audits and compliance systems.”

– Yes. In one of the great ironies of current NZ politics, ACT took a devolved and improving system, centralised it and created the problems you mention – while lowering quality and increasing waste.

“The result is exactly what we have witnessed: enormous complexity devoted to performing a task that millions of parents quietly accomplish every morning, incredibly, without a single ministerial briefing, procurement framework, or threat of an Auditor-General’s report.”

– As the comment just above – well done Ass. Minister Seymour.

“The Government should commit to removing this untargeted policy.”

– No. It was reasonably well targeted before and what all parties should commit to do is creating an economy that is actually growing with gains across the demographics and creating an education system with the characteristics that actually lifts challenged groups up. When we have the worst education system in the OECD for gaps between demographics, and full-attendance around 50%, and 14% NEETS – as well as the social stats above – there is little hope. Add top that the cabinet paper that noted that the new qualifications system is likely to make things worse for marginalised groups.

– We need an approach where NZ improves all of these areas, and fully supports parenting, and aims to eliminate the need for food support in schools by 2041.

“Where parents cannot provide, we must ask why. A hungry child at school points to a deeper problem. We must address hunger, but we should do so by investing in its cause, not merely outsourcing the parental role.”

– As above – decades of failure and neglect via the State education system (20% currently leaving with no qualifications), decades of poor economic management, a social welfare system that has not encouraged social responsibility.

“The objective should always be to help parents resume the indispensable role that only they can fulfil.”

– Yes – but it is a far bigger problem than you seem to be able to understand. The political will to help poorer families in NZ is almost entirely missing and can be generalised by seeing that – for those that vote from poorer/Maori/Pasifika homes – National/ACT don’t care as they will never vote for them and Labour don’t care as they will vote for the LEFT anyway.

“The strongest societies are not those where government does the most. They are those where families are expected, equipped and encouraged to do what only families can.”

– A society becomes strong when the government is a good economic manager, the education system provides for all students (not just the middle class), and families that need it get high quality help in the short-term and genuine mechanisms to break inter-generational cycles.

– Children being able to pull themselves up by their boot-laces is a myth (with a few exceptions) that goes back to the times of standing in cow-pats to warm your feet on the way to school.

– To quote MLK from 1964: “I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits. I believe that what self-centered men have torn down men other-centered can build up.”

Jonathan – you need to get out a lot more. Please drop me a line and I would be happy to take you around some communities/schools in South Auckland, West Auckland and the Far North so as you can get a better understanding of how the other third live. It is a genuine offer.

[email protected]

Dunedin CC loses $100k

Matthew Littlewood at the ODT reports:

A $100,000 spend on the failed rol­lout of cam­era cars to issue Dunedin motor­ists with park­ing fines has been labelled a ‘‘fiasco’’.

The Otago Daily Times was told by an insider that Dunedin City Coun­cil’s exec­ut­ive lead­er­ship team recently decided to shelve the licence plate recog­ni­tion (LPR) project, which involved fit­ting a pair of cars with spe­cial cam­eras.

Had it worked, the auto­mated cam­eras would have iden­ti­fied drivers over­stay­ing their time limit in car­parks.

The ODT has been told the decision by the coun­cil’s exec­ut­ive lead­er­ship team was not unan­im­ous.

‘‘It’s a fiasco and a buttcov­er­ing exer­cise,’’ a city coun­cil employee told the ODT. They said coun­cil staff were con­sid­er­ably aggrieved about the whole pro­cess.

This should be simple to do. It is not rocket science.

Private parking providers have managed this. There are now quite a few parking buildings where they scan my number plate as I enter. It knows I have an account, and activates my app. When I leave it charges my account for the time I was there. So basically I can enter and leave parking buildings now without needing to do anything. Is very user friendly.

Why is the PPTA not worried about far-left extremism?

The Press reports:

A secondary teachers’ union is hiring an expert to develop guidelines for dealing with the rise in far-right extremism in the classroom.

The successful applicant will be paid $10,000 to write “specific advice and guidelines for the membership on dealing with extremism in the classroom”.

Do they mean Marxist extremists? I suspect not.

Abercrombie said the union hired an expert to ensure teachers had the necessary tools.

He insisted it was not about limiting students’ free expression.

“It’s definitely not about kids can’t have right-wing political views. Of course they can, this is about keeping people safe and making sure our students can be critical of the information they receive.”

Really?

General Debate 11 July 2026

More academic censorship

The FSU released:

A peer-reviewed paper by a Māori clinical psychologist has been removed from her profession’s journal on the grounds that keeping it accessible could harm Māori. It was not retracted for error, fraud or misconduct, which are ordinarily the only reasons for such an action.

Censorship knows no bounds. How dare she have a different opinion to other Māori.

Michael Johnston at the NZ Initiative points out:

New Zealanders who visit psychologists would expect their clinical conversations to be private and confidential. But a draft Code of Ethics from the New Zealand Psychologists Board (NZPB), the professional body that registers practising psychologists, would weaken the privacy rights of Māori clients.

The NZPB claims that “…concepts of privacy and confidentiality may be somewhat altered [for Māori] when the sharing of information leads to additional support and culturally appropriate processes…”

In other words, psychologists may be required to water down the privacy rights of Māori clients based on the NZPB’s characterisation of Māori as a “collectivist culture” in its draft code.

So the article pointed out the assertion that Maori have different concepts of privacy could lead to Maori having fewer privacy rights. Rather than debate this assertion, they censored the argument.

World Cup tourists appreciate the REAL America

Having lived in Australia and the UK, as well as of course being raised in NZ (all combined for well longer than my time in the US), and having more than half of my regular business colleagues based in Europe, Canada and other foreign countries, I am fully aware of how the US is perceived internationally. Foreign mainstream media and elite opinion are universally hostile to the US and often paint an ugly stereotype of Americans as: loud, ill-informed about world affairs, obese, with tacky poor fashion sense, entitled, racist, gun-toting — which leads to mass shootings, subsisting on junk food and full of jingoistic, misguided patriotism. These stereotypes are bipartisan in that foreigners have held these misconceptions regardless of what political party or President is in power. In the era of a Trump second term, elite and mainstream media opinion layer over the top their loud and incessant condemnations of Trump’s aggressive illegal immigrant removals, his bombastic attacks on his opponents and the media, his widely condemned Iranian war, his capricious and seemingly arbitrary tariff policy, and his loud pro-American rhetoric. When you add in the fact that football (or soccer as they universally call it here, to differentiate from their own American football or gridiron) is only the distant 5th ranked sport in the US (after baseball, basketball, gridiron and ice hockey), American disinterest in the 2026 FIFA World Cup was predicted by some negative European and Latin American sports commentators to result in the tournament being a disaster.

Foreign media’s negative portrayal of America has been so pervasive and widespread that it was predicted that hordes of global football fans, fearful of ICE raids at airports, gun violence in the streets, hostile and insular Americans, and a lack of experience in hosting the world’s largest sporting event, would vote with their feet and stay away from the World Cup, and that those who braved the journey would be in for an unpleasant experience.

Then something interesting happened. When foreign football fans got here, they found the REAL America to bear little resemblance to the negative stereotype that foreign media had sold them. Thousands of these visitors took to social media not only to apologise for their incorrect misconceptions, but to detail the many things about America that they found different, exciting, fun, amazing, and the opposite of what they had been led to believe. I thought that perhaps these social media posts were exaggerated and that pro-American influencers were merely replaying a handful of pro-American social media posts for almost propaganda effect. But the trend was undeniable. The algorithms on my social media (I use, in order of frequency: X, YouTube, Instagram, Rumble and Facebook, with a scattering of Truth Social) are not accustomed to jingoistic content, as I view a wide variety of material and only a percentage of it is political in nature. Yet within the first week of World Cup games, I was inundated with literally hundreds of social media posts of happy World Cup attending football fans from all over the world. As a person who has made America home and has taken for granted what America has to offer, it was somewhat heartwarming to see first-time visitors to the US discovering and extolling various unique and pleasant aspects of life here. This is a summary of what World Cup tourists are saying. I could link to a different social media post for every single item I am about to detail:

The Attendance

The doomsayers got their predictions entirely wrong. By the end of the group stage alone, there had been 4.6 million attendees, already more than the entire 1994 tournament (the last FIFA WC in the US), with an average of about 64,500 per match and a reported 99.7% stadium occupancy rate (as per the Ministry of Sport). Projections for total attendance for the entire tournament exceed 6,000,000. Global media viewership is similarly off the chart and far ahead of expectations.

The Stadiums

Various football-oriented commentators from overseas have commented positively on the US stadiums. This ought not come as any surprise, given the huge multi-billion investment by the NFL franchises and college football programmes into the building of large, world-class stadiums. In addition to the 32 NFL football franchises, each of which possesses a modern, large stadium, there are dozens of very large, world-class college football stadiums, so in many respects there was an embarrassment of riches when it came to stadium choices. Even some of the best stadiums in the United States were not part of the FIFA World Cup offering, because FIFA requires each stadium to be what is called “clean” meaning absent any stadium advertising. Quite extraordinary lengths have been taken by various stadiums to cover up their sponsor names. To give an example of how far this has gone, take Levi’s Stadium, which is the home of the San Francisco 49ers in Santa Clara CA in Silicon Valley. Every single seat in the stadium has the Levi’s logo, so in addition to putting an awning over the giant Levi’s logo on the side of the stadium, they had to put tape over every single Levi’s logo on all 68,500 seats in the entire stadium. Various social media reports came from people who have extensive experience attending international football matches in stadiums in Europe and Latin America, and each of these commenters spoke very positively about the size, quality, and amenities of the US stadiums.

The Air-Conditioning

Social media posts on this topic ought not come as much of a surprise to Americans, who take ubiquitous air conditioning for granted, but nonetheless that fact is perhaps not as well known outside America as you’d think. All but three of the US stadiums (Los Angeles, Santa Clara, and Seattle) are in parts of America that get very hot and humid in the summer. Almost all of the games are being played in temperatures in the 30°C+ range. Fans braving the intense heat and humidity and bracing themselves for 2 hours of profuse sweating became very pleasantly surprised to walk into a fully air-conditioned stadium. This is of course not the norm in Europe and other parts of the world, so the climate-controlled environments that American fans take for granted in most US stadiums was a whole new experience for foreign football fans.

But the air-conditioning story does not stop there, because anyone who has ever travelled to the United States and spent time in the sunbelt, or even in the Midwest and other older parts of the country, will find that air conditioning is virtually ubiquitous: every car, every commercial property, every shopping mall, every school, and almost every home. The few exceptions are older homes in more temperate parts of the country like California, Oregon, and Washington. You will also find that many older homes in the more humid parts of the northeast and the Midwest have bolt-on after-market air conditioners similar to NZ style heat pumps.

When you juxtapose the ubiquitous air conditioning that foreign tourists found in America with reports coming from European media of people suffering through Europe’s recent heat wave, the comfort that Americans take for granted was something frequently commented on. Now of course all kinds of environmentally sensitive foreign liberals will opine about America’s energy-hungry habits and become very self-righteous about their lack of air conditioning, but it is important to point out that significantly more people in Europe die in the summer from heat than in the United States, and the big difference is the significant percentage of spaces that are air-conditioned.

The Hugeness

Anyone who has been to America almost always comments on the size of the place. America is a large country, but it is large in so many ways, and the hugeness was something frequently referred to by many social media commentators from overseas. They began with the roads; there are more of them, motorway lanes are wider, and many urban freeways in the United States have many more lanes. It is not uncommon to have four, five, or six, and in extreme examples up to ten lanes, going each way. It is rare for European motorways to have more than three lanes even in urban areas. Another aspect of the size of roads in America is the size of parking spaces and car parks. When you come into a car park, particularly in the western United States, there is plenty of room for cars to move around. I always find when I come back to New Zealand that navigating shopping centre car parks is a much more difficult task because the space is much more constrained and this is even more so in Europe.

Visitors travelling around America would often comment on the vast distances in the United States, and it is very true that Americans take for granted driving long distances as just a matter of course. Some of the big cities that are very spread out take multiple hours to traverse, and various people commented that it is not uncommon for locals to drive an hour just to go to a restaurant they like. For my own part, I have quite often jumped in the car and driven ten hours from one city to another with nothing more than fuel and food stops, and thought nothing of it.

As expected, there were frequent comments about the size of American vehicles and the ubiquity of pickup trucks and SUVs. What is less well known is the number of pickup trucks and SUVs manufactured by non-American car manufacturers in the United States specifically for the American market, models almost exclusively not found in any other market, owing to Americans’ love affair with large vehicles. Obviously, you also see a lot of older restored cars from previous eras —  large sedans and station wagons from the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s, and even early ’90s still on the roads. I have seen footage from British and European tourists who have rented a large SUV simply marveling at the sheer size of the vehicles. American vehicles reflect America: American families are larger, the roads are larger, the distances are larger, and petrol is cheaper, so it makes sense that the culture around large vehicles is enormous. For first-time visitors to America, it comes as quite a surprise.

Many visitors also notice that the hugeness of America extends to the size of houses. American houses are on average bigger — they have larger living areas, larger bedrooms, and bigger appliances. The average American fridge is often twice the size of those in other countries. The same is true of washing machines, dryers, microwaves, and virtually any kind of appliance. Things like trailers, caravans, and RVs are all much bigger than their equivalents in other countries.

There is a huge amount of media coverage of portion sizes in American restaurants. Anyone who has ever eaten in US restaurants will know that the size of food portions can be quite staggering. But even more commented on was the size of soft drinks, both those served in fast food restaurants and those available at petrol stations. People would comment that a medium from a 7-Eleven is the size of somebody’s head. The size of soda cups is very frequently commented on.

Perhaps the poster child of American hugeness comes in the form of the famous Buc-ee’s gas station franchise. For those unfamiliar, Buc-ee’s is a chain of giant petrol stations with up to 120 petrol pumps and a gigantic main building that sells huge amounts of different types of food, almost like a giant supermarket. They have specialty foods like 30 different varieties of beef jerky, a whole section on doughnuts, a whole section on pulled candy, huge sections of clothing, and probably most famously the most luxurious and best-kept public toilets in America. Visiting a Buc-ee’s became almost like a pilgrimage for travelling foreign football tourists, with so many people expressing amazement and awe at the sheer size of what they see.

The wonderment at the size of stores extended even to Walmart, which is of course a very well-known American chain. Many foreign tourists expressed amazement at going into their first Walmart Superstore, commenting that they could buy a gallon of milk, some baby nappies, and a gun all in the same place. Whilst it is true that the quality of some of the food at Walmart is not the highest, the sheer size and amount of choice, the long double aisles of just cereal were often commented on and comes as a surprise if you are from Europe, where everything is on a much smaller scale. As for Costco: whilst it does have stores in Australia and New Zealand, there are many countries in Europe where it does not exist, and the sheer size, volume, pricing, and concept of Costco comes as a surprise to an amazing number of foreign tourists. I was also surprised to see the number of people who went into a Bass Pro store, a chain of giant sports shops in America, gob smacked at the giant aquariums in the middle and the huge range of guns and sporting equipment available all in the one place.

A final shout-out goes to American movie theatres and the huge buckets of buttered popcorn that can be purchased. Once again, that is an aspect of American culture that locals do not even think about, and yet it comes as a big surprise to foreigners.

The Convenience

A topic of frequent comment was how convenient American society is. Various people would talk about shopping hours and how late shops and restaurants stay open. The ubiquity of drive-throughs is remarkable, not just fast-food drive-throughs, which are present in other countries, but banks, pharmacies, coffee shops, ice cream parlours, liquor stores, and dry cleaners.

Commenters singled out American restaurants for positive comments as good examples of efficiency: the professionalism of most wait staff, the relatively short length of time you usually have to wait for food, the longer hours that restaurants tend to be open, and of course the fact that almost all of them offer takeout service. An extraordinary number also have an online presence that enables online ordering. That is not to say that equivalents are not available in other countries, because they are, but in America it is simply more ubiquitous.

Convenience extends to children going to school. Most foreigners are familiar with the iconic American yellow school buses because they feature so often in US movies. What a lot of foreigners do not realise is how prevalent school buses are in urban America. Virtually every school district has an extensive school bus fleet and network, and almost every child has access to a school bus route with stops a few minutes’ walk from their home that enables them to get to school. It is very common during school hours to see huge numbers of yellow buses all over the city. School buses do exist in other countries, but they are more limited, often for rural, sparsely populated areas. In other countries, children tend to walk, ride bikes, or catch public transport to school.

Whilst many countries, particularly in warmer climates, feature public pools, the extent of private swimming pools in America comes as a bit of a shock to many visitors. In sunbelt areas, where a higher percentage of people live in standalone single-family homes, the percentage of homes with in-ground swimming pools is quite extraordinary and significantly higher than in other countries. An in-ground swimming pool in most other countries is the preserve of wealthy people, whereas in suburban sunbelt America, large numbers of middle-class homes have swimming pools.

Americans are of course convenience-hungry, so a significantly higher proportion of homes have waste disposal units, automatic garage door openers, washing machines AND dryers, and microwave ovens. When it comes to consumer durables of whatever type, whilst all of these products are available in other countries, they are simply not adopted with nearly the ubiquity found in American households.

The Food

Foreign commentary about American food frankly came as a surprise to me. When you talk to some people overseas, they speak of going to America as stepping into a giant food rubbish dump. Perhaps the biggest surprise was foreign tourists’ obsession with ranch dressing. If any of you have ever been to America, ranch dressing is a creamy, thick, tasty dressing that is probably the most popular in the country and simply does not exist outside of America. The number of social media clips of people obsessing over ranch dressing was quite extraordinary. In fact, the obsession got to the point where the TSA had to issue a warning to foreign tourists leaving America that they cannot take ranch dressing in their luggage unless it is properly sealed, because so many people were taking home large bottles of the dressing!

The next most prevalent positive comments came when people came across Texas BBQ for the first time. Anyone who has ever been to Texas and tried top-quality BBQ will rightly tell you that it is really quite the most extraordinary food. The number of foreigners seen literally drooling and marveling over the flavour and texture of barbecue in America was quite extraordinary. In addition, it was staggering to see the number of foreign visitors who became obsessed with various American fast-food chains not available overseas, like Chick-fil-A and In-N-Out Burger. In-N-Out is the anti-McDonald’s for those who have not travelled to the western United States. Their burger outlets are wholly corporate-owned with no franchises, and the menu has not changed since 1948. All of the ingredients are prepared fresh on-site and nothing is frozen, the fries are cooked from scratch, as are the hamburgers. The workers are the highest-paid fast-food workers in the industry, the In-N-Out stores are the cleanest and most consistent in the industry, and their managers are paid around $180,000 a year.

Other iconic American food outlets were also singled out for praise. One of them was Waffle House; people going there at 2:00 in the morning and having what is considered pretty standard fare, cooked quickly and very cheaply. The numbers of Brits drooling over biscuits and gravy and raving over pancakes at various locations was notable. There were also a lot of positive comments about the pricing of food in American restaurants, which is generally pretty competitive. The free soda refills were frequently commented on, as was the fact that a number of restaurants (like Texas Roadhouse) provide free unlimited bread and butter, and that all Mexican restaurants provide unlimited free chips and salsa. Such things are very rare outside the United States, so it is no surprise that a number of people would comment positively on them.

The American obsession with soda, soft drinks, and ice was frequently commented on — not just the size, which I have already mentioned, but the sheer range of options. A number of petrol stations, not just Buc-ee’s, have huge banks of dozens of different flavoured sodas. And then of course there are the soda mix machines, where you can take a base brand like Dr. Pepper and add different flavoured syrups to customise virtually hundreds of different drink combinations. I am not sure whether those sorts of machines exist anywhere outside the United States, but they came in for very positive comment. Finally, the fact that water, even with ice, is brought to the table automatically at every restaurant in America and constantly refilled, without you asking, even if you order an alcoholic beverage or a soft drink, was noted with approval. You will always get a free water with free refills, whereas in various parts of Europe water quite often has to be purchased and ice is rare. Whilst plenty of foreigners do not share Americans’ obsession with ice, it certainly was commented on.

The Scenery

Football tourists coming to the United States for the first time are travelling around the country between games, and it was amazing to see the number of glowing comments about the scenery. The United States is not only an extraordinarily large country but an incredibly diverse one, with huge climatic and vegetation differences between states and some very spectacular scenery to be found in various National Parks. When you are from New Zealand, where we are used to pretty amazing scenery, you can get a little jaded, but I have to say that despite coming from New Zealand, there are a number of places in the United States where the scenery can be quite breathtaking. I think a number of tourists were simply not prepared for the sheer diversity and spectacular grandeur of American scenery.

The Hospitality

American hospitality was frequently commented on positively. Earlier in the tournament, the Tartan Army from Scotland came in for particular attention, not just because they drank all the pubs in Boston dry, but because their antics ingratiated themselves with the locals in a very positive way, to the extent that law enforcement often got into the spirit of their revelry. Anyone travelling in the South almost always commented on southern hospitality. If you have ever spent time in the South or in Texas, the people there are genuinely friendly, much like they are in New Zealand, and Southerners will help complete strangers with all kinds of things in ways that rarely if ever happen in European countries.

Brits and other Europeans commented on how open and friendly Americans are to strangers compared to Europe, where people tend to keep themselves to themselves. Americans will strike up conversations with you in queues, on public transport, and in other settings, in a very open and genuine way that does not exist in a lot of countries. That was frequently commented on.

The Safeness

One of the topics that became the subject of apologies was safety. People who came to America fearing they would be caught in the crossfire of gunfights and urban violence were surprised by how low the crime rate actually is. Historically, certain cities in America have had quite high crime, particularly violent and gun related crime, but one of the trends of the last six months has been the dramatic reduction in violent crime since the Trump administration began aggressively targeting certain key cities. It has been shown that up to 50% of violent crime in the United States was being committed by illegal immigrants, and ICE enforcement has been targeted mostly at violent illegals and those who have been prosecuted for crimes other than just being in the country illegally. The removal of such a large number of violent illegals, now over 700,000, is having a dramatic impact on the levels of violent crime in the United States. Perhaps the most dramatic example of this is Washington DC, which for a long time has been crime-infested, blighted by homeless encampments, graffiti-covered monuments, and non-functioning landmarks like the famous Washington Monument reflecting pool that has been filled with stagnant algae infested water for decades. Because it is Federal territory, Trump made it a priority to clean it up and police it more aggressively, and Washington DC has, in the space of nine months, been transformed into a clean, welcoming, and relatively low-crime city. A number of tourists have noticed this and commented positively. I think it is fair to say that most tourists realise that everyday life in America progresses on a naturally peaceful trajectory, and that the negative aspects of American life that attract a lot of foreign media attention are a microscopic, overhyped fraction of real American life.

The Patriotism

The patriotism of America has also come in for frequent comment. It is fair to say that the fans of many nations are passionate and will lustily sing their national anthem and be very proud of their team, but there is a pervasive national pride in the US that manifests itself in enormous flags, the ubiquity of flags, and the remarkable prevalence of the singing of the national anthem. People see American fans standing with their hand on their heart, lustily singing the Star-Spangled Banner. But most foreigners do not realise that virtually every high school and college sporting event begins with the national anthem, there are not many countries in the world that do that. Almost all public and private meetings held in all levels of government begin by pledging allegiance to the flag as do almost every school district every day in the first class of the day. Foreign football fans who have been present at American stadiums during a US military flyby are normally quite gob smacked at the sheer size of the American military and its presence at events like that. To give an idea of how grandiose things can be: on this 4th of July, there was scheduled essentially five hours’ worth of flyovers over Washington DC, involving more than a dozen separate divisions of either Air Force or Navy aviators, an in your face over-the-top display of American military might for the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence on 4 July 1776.

4th of July

Fans of teams still in the knockout rounds of the World Cup who were still in America over the 4th of July holiday got to see another unique window of American life that prompted fresh rounds of social media reflection and amazement. If you’ve ever been in America on the 4th of July then you’re in for a pretty incredible outburst of nationwide celebration and patriotism. First off is all of the clothing, merch and food implements that come in patriotic Stars and Stripes or red white and blue. This year everything was on steroids because of it being the 250th birthday but the wearing of patriotic attire of many varied types is a feature of this holiday. Another big feature is the parades which universally are popular and very well attended. I’ve been to parades in: a small mountain holiday town, a luxury gated community in Southern California, suburban Salt Lake City Utah, downtown Tacoma Washington as well our neighbourhood parades and commemorations. Large stretches of roads are closed off, people go to elaborate lengths days in advance to reserve seating by way of placing a folding chair or a picnic blanket. There’s normally a very large law enforcement presence but not only to police traffic but to join the celebrations and the parades can last for well over an hour involving floats and vehicles of every kind (motorcycles, World War 2 jeeps, big trucks with big fat tires, off road razor 4 wheel drives, ATVs, collectible muscle cars, floats representing the police, the fire service, candidates for political office, school districts, sports clubs, churches, local businesses – you name it, if you know the Marshall and pay the fee, then you’re in the parade). Then there’s the barbecues which are normally huge family affairs with copious quantities of hot dogs and hamburgers and soft drinks and alcohol everybody drinks and eats a lot and then finally are the massive fireworks displays which in some jurisdictions can be as big as any you’ll ever see anywhere in the world. I think it was said that the fireworks display in downtown Washington DC after the drama of the weather delay was something like over 800,000 fireworks! The whole thing is a massive nationwide intense happy good-natured celebration of the country’s independence from Great Britain. Now I’ve not been to France on Bastille Day but I have been in Canada on Canada Day, in Australia on Australia Day, in the UK for Queens/King’s Birthday and Remembrance Day and of course in New Zealand on Waitangi Day and, combining those experiences with the views of various expats living here in the US from other countries, we all agree that nothing matches the vastness, the participation, the intensity and the sheer showmanship of America’s 4th of July celebrations.

The American Spirit

First-time visitors to the US often comment on Americans’ can-do spirit and innate, pervasive optimism. Some have noticed the relative lack of discrimination based on your origin. There was a poignant clip from a French lady who had only recently moved to the United States, in which she talked about the freedom of individual expression without judgment. In France, women are judged for what and when they eat because a culture of thinness amongst women is so pervasive. She was celebrating the fact that she could eat whatever food she wanted, whenever she wanted, without judgment and that she could walk down the street wearing whatever she wanted in America, whereas in France there is a lot of social pressure to dress correctly and within the norms of French culture.

Various Brits, Australians, and New Zealanders have commented on the absence of the tall poppy syndrome in the United States. I have commented on this in previous posts, but it is a very real thing. Americans are admiring and encouraging of success, whereas in other countries success is equated with exploitation, ambition looked on with contempt, people are jealous and will do a crabs-in-a-bucket, tear-you-down routine. Likewise, Americans treat failure (especially in business) as simply a learning curve with almost no stigma attached, you are encouraged to pick yourself up and have another go. In many Anglophone countries, by contrast, failure can result in a very lengthy and sometimes permanent black mark against you and at times copious quantities of judgement from ruling elites who have already made it.

Conclusion

A lot of the clips that I saw were very pleasant to watch. It is interesting to observe the extent to which negativity about America is so pervasive amongst elite classes overseas, and yet ordinary foreigners come to America and find a very different place to what they have been sold. I think that has come as a satisfying surprise to a lot of Americans. America is not perfect by any means, but it is certainly nowhere near as bad as a lot of media outside the country portray it, and it has been very pleasing to see foreigners discover all kinds of positive aspects of American life that we take for granted.

The US far left

Evan Barker writes:

I first joined the progressive movement in 2018 because I was born with a rare, genetic lung condition, and I support universal healthcare. But by 2020, progressives were no longer focused on bread-and-butter issues like that. Instead, I witnessed a daily bashing of white people, animosity for the “deplorables” who voted for Trump, deep hatred of men, and an obsession with race that infiltrated every conversation, policy proposal, and objective.

Working-class people don’t want to abolish ICE. They want prisons to exist and for the police to be well funded. Obsession with identity politics is not at the forefront of their minds. They want candidates who focus on the economy, and who will stand up for their safety.

The obsession with race happens here also.

We need a Count Binface

General Debate 10 July 2026

Guest Post: RNZ National – Trapped?

A guest post 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.

As much as some might like to deny it, the organisation (and its parent company NZ Inc) cannot continue to extract money from the taxpayer whilst exhibiting a clear trend of radio decline. Even with its new, old recruit on board, RNZ can’t wait, Mr McCawber-like, for something to turn up. 

Interestingly, the pedigree of RNZ’s refreshed board already seems to herald action – commercial heavyweights like Brent Impey and Andrew Szustermann aren’t there for nothing. 

But governance is one thing; a new chief executive is another. There are many educated guesses as to who this might be, but most of them are broadcasting adjacent. In my opinion, this individual needs to be a practitioner – someone who can fly the plane, recalibrate the engines and do a flight attendant’s job too. 

Why? For obvious reasons, the tasks at hand can’t be farmed out to the executive, who are either quite happy with issues like the routine stacking on The Panel’s weekly politics slot or they don’t listen to their own product.

A few weeks ago, The Whip featured Phil Goff, Andrea Vance and Tuwhenuaroa Natanahira to discuss this year’s budget cuts. They all agreed they were awful. RNZ can’t continually tolerate this and expect to be taken seriously as an impartial broadcaster. 

Certainly, there are many bright spots of radio sunshine, such as that very programme’s fast, funny everyman Panel host Wallace Chapman himself, but there are gaping holes in the schedule too – entire swathes of output don’t seem to have any oversight. It beggars belief some shows such as the Saturday morning offering were commissioned in the first place. Is the radio format anybody’s responsibility, or is set up so that nobody’s neck is ever on the line? If I were a shareholding minister, the letter from outgoing chair Jim Mather would not fill me with confidence. Nothing in it indicates anything other than tinkering.

There’s no way around it. Someone is going to have to get their hands very dirty.

Assuming the company becomes a bit more mainstream and climbs back into the Top 3 – and doesn’t experience outright revolt by staff en route – RNZ radio faces two problems.

1: A shift to the ‘middle’ could mean losing habitual listeners off the ‘other end’ – those discerning people who relish obscure, academic topics, longform discussions and challenging music – putting the station back to square one; declining numbers – the bane of a broadcasting minister’s existence. 

2: A publicly funded broadcaster moving into the mainstream can create a distortionary effect. Robbing the commercial sector of consumers is a lose-lose for any responsible government. Money out (taxpayer funding) and money out (a company with guaranteed income competes with those that don’t; the affected companies get less consumers = less advertising = less tax).

My suspicion though, is that this is what will really happen.

1: If RNZ radio starts resonating again, then the five commercial behemoths that have happily taken advantage of its absence will shrug and pull those listeners back with an Instant Cash Prize, or an iLoad. In short, RNZ’s quandary is that if it moves to the middle of the road, the existing, battle-hardened, professional operators who inhabit this part of the ecosystem will simply run it over. 

2: Becoming a more mainstream amalgamation of the radio brands on offer, and delivering what people actually want (and unfortunately that will mean ‘Sweet Child o’ Mine’ on occasion) equals duplication. This administration, and those of the foreseeable future cannot afford duplication.

The state broadcaster is trapped. 

It either stays where it is, diligently sharpening a wooden axe head, or it makes wholesale changes, losing its progressive audience in the process, only to be eaten alive by the commercial operators, and perhaps closed down – because at that point it becomes clear the private sector already provides a similar service with no cost to the taxpayer.

Perhaps there is one way they can pull this off. 

Dump the strangling effect of the RNZ charter and replace it with these three words: make great radio. The challenge will be making great radio that no-one else is already delivering (for nothing). 

Former TPM co-leader calls for a leadership change

Radio NZ reports:

A former Te Pāti Māori co-leader says a change of leadership would see the pary’s supporters “come home”, after being approached by many who are “frustrated and uncertain”.

Te Ururoa Flavell wrote on social media on Wednesday, saying he’d tried to stay neutral but felt it was “time to say something.”

It comes after the party faced a period of turmoil and infighting, resulting in one of its MPs being expelled and another leaving to start her own party.

The co-leaders only have the support of themselves and their boss, John Tamihere. The two former MPs had no confidence in them, and it is no secret the other two backbench MPs are somewhat estranged from them also.

Staggering incompetence

Radio NZ reports:

The US Secret Service did not receive 102 local radio transmissions about the gunman who attempted to assassinate President Donald Trump at a 2024 campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, according to a government watchdog report released on Thursday.

The agency was unaware of the transmissions on 13 July 2024, because it had failed to establish a joint communications room with local law enforcement, which was receiving reports about the search for a suspicious person later identified as Thomas Crooks, according to the report by the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general.

“Instead, we found that the Secret Service received only five phone calls and three text messages about Crooks,” the report notes.

“As a result, Secret Service members did not alert President Trump’s protective detail about concerns of a suspicious person.”

This level of incompetence is hard to believe. The gunman was reported in 102 times by law enforcement staff, but none of this got through to the protective detail. It’s almost a miracle Trump wasn’t killed, and if he had been, Secret Service incompetence would have been why.

General Debate 09 July 2026

We need to fix teacher colleges

Michael Johnston writes:

Victoria University of Wellington wants the teachers it trains to be ‘agents of change.’ 

According to the university’s handbook for teacher education programmes, teaching graduates must be committed to “social, cultural, and ecological justice.” Decoded, that means attending protests about political causes the activists lecturers find important.

Imagine if the handbook said teaching graduates must be committed to free markets, free speech and property rights? Both are equally valid political viewpoints.

The left always try and take over institutions to indoctrinate people so that their views are the only valid ones.

Providing teachers with skills to manage a classroom is not part of the brief. Neither is ensuring they can teach their students even a modicum of knowledge. It is crucial, however, that new teachers can critique their ancestors.

Yes, you read that correctly.

Akopai 1 is one of two courses focussing on practical teaching skills. One of its assignments, worth 45% of the marks, is called Ko Tōku Tupuna Ko Au (my ancestor, myself).

For this assignment, students must critically analyse one of their forebears, living or dead. 

That’s 45% of a course on practical teaching skills!!!

Surprise – guy with Nazi tattoo turns out be a bad guy

Politico reports:

A woman who dated Maine U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner says he forced her to have sex with him nearly five years ago despite her repeated objections, an allegation Platner denies.

The woman, a 41-year-old Maine resident named Jenny Racicot, detailed the alleged incident to POLITICO in three interviews over the past two weeks. POLITICO also spoke with a man Racicot dated and confided in the years after the alleged incident, and reviewed documents, including emails between Racicot and her therapist and messages between Racicot and an acquaintance whom she warned against getting involved with Platner years before he ran for office.

Platner has managed to shake off having a Nazi tattoo, identifying as a communist, saying all cops are bastards, calling rural white Americans racist and stupid, promoting armed resistance, blaming women who are victims of sexual assault, serial infidelity, violence in relationships etc. None of that was enough to get Democrats to drop him, but finally this may do it.

Where this is harder to shake off is that she told people about what happened at the time, long before Platner was a candidate. And she has also said she shares his political views, explicitly saying she supports his policies, just not him as a person.

I am a believer that character is more important than party. This is why I want both Platner and Ken Paxton to lose.

The media should expose their own lobbying!

The Post headline:

This was a law to legalise theft where tech companies would be forced to fund media companies, on the basis that people now choose to advertise on Facebook and Google rather than in the print classifieds!

Google and news publishers were given a private look at the Government’s proposed changes to the law that would have made tech giants pay for New Zealand journalism before those changes went to Cabinet, briefing papers show.

So no favouritism – both sets of stakeholders were given a look at proposed changes. This is entirely normal.

A month later, Google put out a public statement threatening to stop linking to NZ news sites if the bill passed.

“This bill proposes a ‘link tax’ that would require Google to pay simply for linking to news articles. While Google supports efforts to foster a sustainable future for New Zealand news, this bill is not the right approach,” Rainsford said at the time.

NPA public affairs director Andrew Holden then accused Google of “corporate bullying” and said its position deliberately misrepresented the legislation.

“The bill is not a tax; it creates the environment for New Zealand media companies to sit down and have a proper commercial negotiation with big tech companies about their use of our journalism.”

Very Orwellian. The NPA claiming it merely creates an environment to negotiate. Bullshit. It was indeed a law that would require tech companies to fund media.

He also later said it was shelved because of concerns over how US President Donald Trump would react, telling Parliament: “As is highly obvious to everybody, circumstances changed somewhat at the end of 2024 with the US presidency changes, and a more cautious approach was adopted.”

Donald has his uses.

The real story here should be an expose of how the media companies forced Melissa Lee out of office because she refused to tax Google to fund them, and then carried on an aggressive lobbying campaign with the new Minister who also went along with their plans, until Donald stopped them.

A VPN ban would be terrible

The Post reports:

Education Minister Erica Stanford says she is not pursuing restrictions on Virtual Private Networks as part of her under-16 social media ban, soon after ACT said this would be a red line for it.

The Post reported on Tuesday morning that the Government was pursuing some kind of restriction on VPNs as part of its work on an under-16 social media ban, after being told by multiple sources with knowledge of the work that this was the case.

It had put this to Stanford’s office on Monday morning and not received any denial.

But on Tuesday morning, soon after ACT leader David Seymour made clear that ACT would never support such a move, Stanford’s office emailed The Post to say it was “not looking at restricting or banning VPNs”.

It seems the Government was looking at doing so, but ACT has stopped it. Regardless of why, it is good there will be no attempt to ban VPNs, such as China does.

VPNs have many many legitimate uses. They provide extra security. I use one sometimes for a legitimate purpose. I do a monthly newsletter which includes in it the odds on governments getting re-elected in Australia, Canada, NZ, UK and US. Since the Government banned NZers from overseas online gambling sites, I am unable to even browse those sites to find out the odds. A VPN allows me to do this – and I have a legal right to browse these sites – just not to actually use them.

If the Government did try to ban VPNs, I would hope there would be a huge huge backlash to fight against this.

General Debate 08 July 2026

National’s trade ambitions

National has said it wants to initiate seven more trade deals, if re-elected

If we can double exports to those seven countries, that would be another $1.7b a year in export income for NZ.

Countries like Brazil and Argentina must have the potential for exponentially larger increases.

Fast tracked renewable electricity

One of the major benefits of the fast track consenting law has been renewable electricity. Climate change activists should be praising the law. Here’s how much extra renewable has been consented:

  • Kaimai (re-consent): Hydro, 42 MW and generates approximately 169 GWh per annum.
  • Lake Pukaki: Hydro storage, 545 GWh of realisable energy available over 3 years
  • Mahinerangi: Wind, 190MW and generate approximately 549 GWh per year
  • Southland: Wind, 385MW
  • Tekapo (re-consent): Hydro, 190 MW, 187- GWh per annum
  • Waitaha: Hydro, 23 MW, 130 GWh per annum

These six projects between them can power almost 400,000 homes.

General Debate 07 July 2026

Five years of taxpayer funded leave without pay

Stuff reports:

A former Lotto presenter who delivered six bars of gold bullion to the Comancheros’ “International Commander” in Turkey was suspended on full pay from his government job after he was arrested as part of a global FBI sting targeting organised crime.

Russell Harrison, 56, continued to receive his taxpayer funded Ministry of Justice salary for five years, tallying hundreds of thousands of dollars, until he pleaded guilty to a charge of money laundering a fortnight ago and his employment was terminated.

Unbelievable. The contempt for taxpayer money. No private sector employer would keep paying someone a salary for five years while they were up on serious criminal charges.

“From that point on, Mr Harrison was not permitted to work in his role. But because he was in [the eyes of the] law innocent until proven guilty, a decision about whether to terminate his employment needed to wait until the outcome of the charge was clear.

Nonsense. The Ministry of Justice seems to know nothing about employment law. It’s insane to think someone can work for you for a week and then they get arrested and you pay them five years pay on leave.

Harrison actually got paid more by the Ministry of Justice than the value of the gold he was laundering!

If an employee is charged with a crime, you do not have to wait for trial. You start an employment investigation.

General Debate 06 July 2026

An excellent NZ First policy

NZ First announced:

New Zealand First has today announced that we will be campaigning to change the electoral law to ensure that only citizens have the right to vote.

Currently, any permanent resident who has gone through the normal process, after just two years living in New Zealand, can vote.

In addition, anyone who is here on certain visas that have no expiry date, are technically eligible to vote after just one year living in New Zealand.

I have supported and advocated for this change for 20 years or so. I think it is important that people become citizens of a country, not just reside there. Citizenship is important, and NZ provides very little incentive for residents to become citizens.

Around one in five people in NZ are not citizens. That is a very high proportion. I’d like to see it reduce. Not by having fewer immigrants, but by more of them becoming citizens.

In Australia and the UK only around 10% of residents are not citizens.

It is very rare for a country to allow non-citizens to vote. We are one of the few in the world, and our regime has been described as the most liberal in the world.

While I strongly back changing the eligibility from residents to citizens, I don’t like the idea of someone who has been eligible, losing their eligibility through no fault of their own. So I would grandfather in anyone currently on the electoral roll.

It is good to see NZ First promote this change. It should not be controversial.

We need transparency over when Iwi are paid not to object

Don Brash e-mailed:

Hobson’s Pledge has always stood firmly for the protection of private property rights. When a major infrastructure project directly impacts local communities or land, it is completely right for legitimate, proportionate claims to be recognised and mitigated.

But what is happening right now with the Port of Tauranga expansion is not a defence of property rights. It is something else entirely.

A Tauranga-based hapū, Ngāti Kuku, is reportedly demanding $19 million annually in compensation as a condition for not opposing a planned expansion project. While mainstream media are saying this could amount to between $335 million and $475 million over the 35-year life of the project, doing the actual maths ($19 million x 35 years) is more like $665 million! No matter the actual amount, every one of these figures is huge.

To put that in perspective, the Port of Tauranga has already put a substantial $7 million offer on the table to address cultural and environmental impacts.

The hapū is not claiming a loss of their own property rights in any proportionate way. Instead, they are using the current RMA consultation system to extract an astronomical sum simply as a condition for “not opposing” a planned wharf extension.

We should know how many millions of dollars are paid out to Iwi and other groups just so they won’t object to a development. I would support a law change that requires any organisation seeking a consent to file an annual report detailing payments made to any organisation with regard to resource consent applications.

Sunlight is the best disinfectant.