Should be charged with child abuse

Stuff reports:

An intoxicated woman drove off with her two young children in the back seat while her partner was being processed for drink-driving.

The incident happened on State Highway 1 between the South Otago towns of Clinton and Balclutha on Saturday.

Police were contacted by a concerned motorist who saw a vehicle repeatedly crossing the centreline and passing other vehicles on blind corners, Detective Sergeant Scott McMulkin said.

The vehicle was later spotted in Balclutha travelling on the wrong side of the road and above the speed limit.

The 25-year-old male driver, who had driven from Invercargill, was processed for drink-driving and recorded a breath-alcohol reading of 600 micrograms. The legal limit is 250mcg.

The man had been heading towards Milton, which was where his partner tried to go when she drove away from the scene with their children – aged 1 and 2 – in the back seat.

She was later stopped by police and recorded a breath-alcohol reading of 861mcg.

Both drivers will appear in the Dunedin District Court at a later date.

So both adults are pissed. He is less pissed and driving and driving so badly he is on the wrong side of the road and speeding – all with two babies in the back seat.

Once pulled over, she (while more pissed) tries to flee the Police and drives drunk and speeding with the kids in the back.

I say charge them both with child abuse.

Net Presidential Approvals as they leave office

As Trump leaves office next week, how does his net approval compare to other Presidents? The data from 538 is:

  1. Reagan +34%
  2. Eisenhower +34%
  3. Clinton +31%
  4. Kennedy +28%
  5. Bush GHW +18%
  6. Ford +18%
  7. Obama +14%
  8. Johnson +11%
  9. Trump -20%
  10. Carter -21%
  11. Truman -24%
  12. Bush GW -39%
  13. Nixon -40%

What is interesting is some one term Presidents were still popular at the end of their term. Americans didn’t want them to carry on as President but still approved of them – George HW Bush and Ford.

The only one term President more unpopular than Trump was Carter. However three two term Presidents were also more unpopular.

The leader of the free world

Pew Research has some amazing approval ratings for Angela Merkel. The percentage who say they have confidence in her to do the right thing regarding world affairs is:

  1. Netherlands 88%
  2. Denmark 87%
  3. Sweden 87%
  4. Germany 81%
  5. Belgium 79%
  6. France 78%
  7. UK 76%
  8. Canada 74%
  9. Spain 72%
  10. Australia 72%
  11. South Korea 69%
  12. Japan 67%
  13. US 61%
  14. Italy 50%

Merkel is the de facto leader of the free world, which is astonishing as she was raised in a Warsaw Pact country!

It will be interesting to see who becomes the de facto free world leader after she retires in September.

Luxury tourist hotel for the homeless

No Minister blogs:

The Kingsgate Hotel Autolodge in Paihia is located on a prime site facing Marsden Road, 20 meters from she sea, slap in the middle of any number of motels and apartment buildings and only 100 meters from the wharf and main shopping precinct. It has 113 rooms and markets itself as family friendly boasting a restaurant and bar and large outdoor pool area. Go to their website right now and their cheapest room on offer is priced at $170.

I have it on very good authority that the Hotel has signed a sweetheart deal with MSD to house the homeless. The deal reportedly is for one wing of the Hotel and runs through to 31 March 2021 unless renewed. Whenever the contract is terminated MSD is required to completely refurbish the rooms before handing them back to management.

Not sure that regular paying guests will see this as overly desirable and I am aware of some guests who have vowed never to return. I guess that’s the risk you take but, if you’re going to get your rooms refurbished for free, then clearly management sees it as a risk worth taking.

No doubt the Minister for the Homeless sees this a win, win. Prime site accommodation for the homeless by the sea at the height of the tourist season. Not sure the taxpayer will necessarily see it the same way.

One wonders how much this will cost.

Guest Post: Will Charles Upham VC & Bar make THE NZ History Curriculum?

A guest post by Alwyn Poole:

History is primarily about people and their interactions in time and space. What we know of it depends on many factors such as whether someone survived to tell the story, how they told/recorded it, were they on the “winning side”, how events are seen in the rear-view mirror (especially in a generation as conspicuously self-righteous as ours), and in terms of current struggles.

I have just completed Tom Scott’s wonderful biography on a NZ man many regard as the bravest man of WW2: Charles Upham VC & Bar (a way of making two Victoria Cross awards). Scott is clearly no fan of war and is careful to detail the horror of it while acknowledging that sometimes it is necessary to fight them. He also meticulously researched the character of Upham through secondary and primary sources to discover, in part, what made him so good at removing enemy soldiers from the theatre of battle while also being a leader with qualities seldom seen to such an extent.

The book is so well written, the story so compelling, the time axial to the world (let alone NZ) that I would make it COMPULSORY history reading for EVERY NZ student. A non-sensical thing for me to suggest of course.

Here-in lies a big problem that many New Zealanders will be unaware of. From 2022 NZ Children are going to be taught a fully “prescribed” NZ History Curriculum. This from PM Ardern:

“We have listened carefully to the growing calls from New Zealanders to know more about our own history and identity.

The National Curriculum currently enables schools and kura to decide how New Zealand history is covered, but variation in delivery means too much is left to chance in the teaching and learning of New Zealand history, Jacinda Ardern said

“The curriculum changes we are making will reset a national framework so all learners and ākonga are aware of key aspects of New Zealand history and how they have influenced and shaped the nation.”

https://mch.govt.nz/nz-history-be-taught-all-schools

From the Ministry of Education:

We want the next generation to be able to apply lessons from the past as they shape our future.

https://education.govt.nz/news/including-new-zealand-history-in-the-national-curriculum/

The Ministry of Education will work collaboratively to develop a New Zealand histories update with historical and curriculum experts, iwi and mana whenua, Pacific communities, the sector, students and ākonga, parents and whānau, and other groups with a strong interest in shaping how New Zealand history is taught.

https://nzcurriculum.tki.org.nz/News/New-Zealand-history-in-the-national-curriculum

From a Waikato University Professor:

New Zealand history will stand alone as a prescribed subject.

https://www.newsroom.co.nz/ideasroom/the-nz-history-curriculum-a-trojan-horse

Will Charles Upham VC & Bar make the cut?

What should the New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties rename itself to

Was sad but not surprised to see the NZ Council for Civil Liberties attacking Simon Bridges because he said that the suspension of NZ twitter accounts was an over-reaction.

Banning Redbaiter from Twitter is bad. And I say this as someone he has attacked or criticised for most of the last 25 years. People can simple not follow him or block him.

Anyway as the NZ Council for Civil Liberties no longer defends freedom of speech as a civil liberty, I think they should reflect their new position with a more honest name.

So vote below as to what their new name should be.

Create your own user feedback survey

Pelosi’s father was a friend of Israel

The Jerusalem Post in 2007 noted:

When Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the US House of Representatives, stepped to the podium at a Knesset dinner during her visit earlier this month, she made history in more ways than one. Not only was she the first woman Speaker of the House to address Israel’s lawmakers, Pelosi was also addressing the parliament of a country whose creation her own father championed, at the risk of his career – and perhaps her career, as well. Speaker Pelosi’s father, the late US congressman Thomas D’Alesandro, Jr., of Maryland, was known as a Roosevelt Democrat. What is not widely known is that D’Alesandro broke ranks with president Franklin D. Roosevelt on the issues of rescuing Jews from Hitler and creating a Jewish State. D’Alesandro was one of the congressional supporters of the Bergson Group, a maverick Jewish political action committee that challenged the Roosevelt administration’s policies on the Jewish refugee issue during the Holocaust, and later lobbied against British control of Palestine. The Bergson activists used unconventional tactics to draw attention to the plight of Europe’s Jews, including staging theatrical pageants, organizing a march by 400 rabbis to the White House, and placing more than 200 full-page advertisements in newspapers around the country. Some of those ads featured lists of celebrities, prominent intellectuals, and members of Congress who supported the group – including D’Alesandro. D’Alesandro’s involvement with the Bergson Group was remarkable because he was a Democrat who was choosing to support a group that was publicly challenging a Democratic president.

I admire people who will break with their party leader, when their party leader is wrong.

AFTER THE war, D’Alesandro continued supporting the Bergson Group as it campaigned for the establishment of a Jewish State in Mandatory Palestine. That sometimes meant clashing with the Truman administration, which wavered back and forth on the issue of Jewish statehood. 

D’Alesandro died in 1987, two months after his daughter Nancy was first elected to Congress.

I agree with very little of Pelosi’s policies and political outlook. But it is interesting to know more of their background.

The “success” of free fees

Some interesting data in the Herald about the impact of Labour’s free tertiary frees policy:

  • Increased students from wealthy areas (deciles 6 to 10) from 62% to 69%
  • Decreased students going to polytechs from 33% to 30% of all students
  • Decreased students going to wananga from 1.7% to 0.5%
  • 42% of fees free students who studied for two years failed at least one course
  • Enrolments fell by 7.000

So the summary is it resulted in fewer students overall, more students failing, fewer students from poor areas and fewer students going to polytechs or wananga.

Well done Labour.

Trump impeached 232-197

The US House of Representatives has impeached Donald Trump (for the second time) by a vote of 232-197.

10 Republicans voted for the impeachment. This is the most votes ever in the House for an impeachment from members of the same party as the President. The other votes have been:

  • Andrew Johnson was impeached with 126 Republican votes and 0 Democrats
  • Bill Clinton was impeached with 223 Republican votes and 5 Democrats
  • Donald Trump in 2018 was impeached with 229 Democrats, 1 Independent and 0 Republicans
  • Donald Trump in 2021 was impeached with 222 Democratic votes and 10 Republicans

The trial in the Senate will start on 19 January and not conclude before his term expires on 20 January. However a conviction would not be inconsequential as the Senate could also vote to bar Trump from any future federal office.

The GOP leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, has said he will only decide how to vote after listening to the evidence. This is significant as in the previous trial, McConnell and most Republicans said outright they would not convict before the trial started.

Guest Post: The property crash is coming

A guest post by a reader:

There is a story regarding the 1929 sharemarket crash involving Patrick Kennedy (the father of assassinated US President John F Kennedy).  At that time, Mr Kennedy was a leading stock market investor and entrepreneur (this was the original source of his personal wealth, which after the crash he then allegedly applied even more successfully to bootlegging during the prohibition error of the great depression that was to follow). 

But the story explains why, unlike virtually all of his fellow investors in the over-heated US stock market in 1929, Mr Kennedy still had any wealth left to invest in illicit alcohol after the spectacular Black Monday crash in October 1929.  In fact, Mr Kennedy was one of the very few investors who shrewdly foresaw the impending crash and sold his shares for a handsome profit.

The storey explaining why Mr Kennedy knew to sell his over-priced shares in mid-1929 may be apocryphal but it is still relevant.  At that time, the movement and developments on the US stock market were followed closely and widely discussed by both investors and watchers alike.  It was the historic equivalent of the current New Zealand public and media’s fixation on property prices and everyone joined in.

And at its peak in mid-1929 Mr Kennedy is reported to have fallen into conversation with one of the many shoe-shine boys who worked around the New York Stock Exchange.  To Mr Kennedy’s surprise the shoe shine boy started swapping stock tips with the million investor.  Intrigued, Mr Kennedy enquired as to the boy’s stock positions and predictions for the market. 

Afterwards Mr Kennedy pondered how a nearly impoverished child could possibly have invested all he had in the stock market – and what this meant for the market over-all.  He quickly realised that, once the shoe shine boys were investing, there was literally no one left to sell too and the market had become saturated – so he then liquidated all his positions and sold his holdings, mere weeks before his predication proved true.

Mr Kennedy’s decision to sell his shares was an instinctive example of what economists call “the greater fool” theory.   That theory goes that, when a market is “hot” and everyone is participating, investors stop properly weighing the risk of future losses but instead focus upon the fear-of-missing-out (FOMO) on future price rises. 

Each new sale provides evidence of price rises and so draw in even the most cautious investors.  Soon prices become detached from the inherent value of the asset (its actual financial return from normal ownership or use).  Instead, the focus is now upon the profit from a future on-sale of that asset and not from its financial return in the interim.  

An investor may be prepared to take a short-term loss while it owns the asset provided s/he thinks that asset can soon be on-sold at a profit.  But this strategy is based on the assumption that there will be someone willing to buy that asset at an even higher price – a “greater fool”! 

But eventually the music must stop and someone will be left holding the asset – and s/he will be the greatest fool of all, who suffers both an ongoing loss while they continue to hold that asset and also a loss if they try to sell it.

Applied to the New Zealand property market, for nearly 40 years the tax system effectively guaranteed the profit of each greater fool.  Ongoing losses could be offset against other sources of current income (thereby providing a cushion against poor rental investments) and the proceeds of any future sale to another fool were tax exempt.  So any fool who could wait out market corrections was largely protected until the music started again and a greater fool could be found.

But in the past 5 years those tax protections have been stripped away.  Ongoing rental losses are now “ring fenced” and cannot be offset against other income – the cushion has been removed.  And under the Brightline rule, tax is now routinely imposed on most on-sales of rental properties (and may soon be imposed on repeated sales of the investor’s own home). 

These tax changes leave the fools exposed – yet fools continue to flock to the over-heated New Zealand property market.

In my professional capacity I advise many career property investors.  For almost 20 years I have had a ring-side seat to the activities of these professionals.  These are hard-bitten men and women who have spent years to learn and understand the market, know how to weigh the risks and crunch the numbers, and have nerves of steel.  The skill and courage necessary to succeed in “the property game” is beyond me – and it is not for the faint hearted.   But win or lose, they know what they are doing.

Unfortunately in the past year I have noticed a different calibre of clients.  These are mum-and-dad investors with no previous experience in property development or trading.  Accordingly, their understanding of the market is lower and correspondingly their risks are greater.  They are risking it all to enter the property market, driven by FOMO and the hope of a greater fool. 

This cannot end well.  With the New Zealand economy shut in its bubble, Covid-19 ravaging all our international trading partners, local business suffering and unemployment rising, the market is propped up solely by the historically low interest rates upon which all profit projections are based.  But even a small change to those interest rates could prove devastating to many of my new clients.  There may be no greater fools left.  Because in 2021 all the shoe shine boys have become property developers …

Republicans start to join the impeachment call

Reuters reports:

President Donald Trump’s iron grip on his party showed further signs of weakening on Tuesday as at least three Republicans, including a member of the House leadership, said they would vote to impeach him after his supporters stormed the Capitol.

Liz Cheney, the No. 3 Republican in the House of Representatives, said: “There has never been a greater betrayal by a President of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constitution,” as the Democratic-led chamber moved forward on a path to remove Trump from office.

Trump “summoned this mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame of this attack” on the Capitol last Wednesday, Cheney, the daughter of former Republican Vice President Dick Cheney, said in a statement, adding: “I will vote to impeach the president.”

Two other Republican House members, John Katko and Adam Kinzinger, said they would also vote for the historic second impeachment of the Republican president, who leaves office in just eight days.

If inciting the invasion of the Capitol to disrupt the counting of the votes of the electoral college doesn’t warrant impeachment, then hard to imagine what would.

It is still highly unlikely the Senate will convict Trump, but that may depend on McConnell. If he was to vote for conviction, then he would probably carry 20 or so Senators with him. Without McConnell you probably get 56 votes max for conviction, 11 short of the 67 needed.

Also of interest is that if convicted, the Senate can vote by simple majority to bar the person convicted from any future federal office.

Guest Post: Compulsory History in Our Schools

A guest post by Hon Dr Michael Bassett:

If modern New Zealand History is to be taught to all students in schools the curriculum should not start in 1840. By then Maori had been 500 years in Aotearoa, the last forty of them in a state of almost perpetual warfare. One historian, Angela Ballara, has noted that warfare “was endemic in Maori society; it was an integral part of the Maori political system”. Once chiefs acquired muskets wars were waged with a new intensity. Between 1800 and 1840 most traditional iwi were raked fore and aft, and between 40,000 (Keith Sinclair’s estimate) and 50,000 (Ron Crosby’s estimate) Maori were killed, eaten or enslaved. This was approximately 25% of all Maori in the country at that time. More lost their lives during the Musket Wars than all the Kiwis killed in World Wars One and Two combined. Lands were pillaged, iwi borders changed, and livelihoods disrupted on a huge scale.

As the late Michael King observed in the introduction to Ron Crosby’s The Musket Wars: A History of Inter-iwi Conflict, 1806-45, applying the 1840 rule for starting New Zealand history “has as much logic and fairness” as the application of a 1940 rule would have for Europe after Germany had over-run much of the Continent. The Waitangi Tribunal that I sat on for a decade was required to examine Maori grievances dating back to the Treaty of 1840, but not before that. In reality, as I soon discovered, many of the grievances had an earlier origin. This became clear when inquiries were made into disputes over the Crown purchase of lands in the 1840s and 1850s that led on to the New Zealand Wars of the 1860s. Historian Ray Fargher has shown in his biography of Donald McLean, the Crown’s Maori-speaking chief land purchaser, even at his most scrupulous in earlier times where he tried hard to ascertain which iwi owned what before buying, McLean ran into conflicting claims. They often came from Maori who had been dispossessed of their land by other Maori during the Musket Wars. The large number of Maori who supported, or fought alongside the Crown in the 1860s – Kupapa (or friendly) Maori – were often people with grievances against other tribes which had destroyed their homes and/or dispossessed them of their lands before 1840. Many were happy to see General Cameron and his forces deliver rough justice to their old enemies.

What this all means is that bleeding heart versions of our history (Australia’s John Howard called it “black armband history”) need to be treated with great caution. Those who push the line that everything was lovely in Aotearoa until the colonists arrived, and that they were responsible for depriving Maori of their ancestral lands, are telling selected and often misleading bits of our story.  In reality, Maori society was in a parlous state when colonists arrived in significant numbers in the 1840s and 1850s. Yes, governors, politicians and settlers wanted access to Maori land. Some cut corners acquiring it. But even the most scrupulous land purchasers found many parts of Maori society a minefield of ancient hostilities and were worn down by conflicting assertions about historical ownership. It needs to be remembered that while the wars of the 1860s did terrible damage to what remained of the Maori economy, much damage had already been done to it by other Maori before the colonists arrived.

Choosing textbooks for students will be difficult. One current contender I’ve read provides no detail about the Musket Wars and fails to mention either Ron Crosby’s or Ray Fargher’s books for “further reading”. Students will get an unbalanced version of our history from texts of this kind. The current craze for painting all Maori as innocent victims of dishonest Europeans also needs to be evened up with stories about how welcome were the new traders, settlers and Pakeha authority amongst Maori in areas like Auckland. By 1840 Maori numbers in what we now call the City of Sails had been reduced to barely 800 people inhabiting one million acres between Kaipara and east Tamaki because of the depredations of Ngapuhi over the previous twenty years.

Teaching a fair and accurate version of New Zealand history won’t be easy unless the Ministry of Education seizes control of the process and ensures that it doesn’t become the preserve of single-minded fanatics claiming to be historians but with axes to grind. They have the potential to stir unwarranted racial animosity in a country which, for much of its existence, tried to be fair to all people according to the norms of the day.

Dr Bassett taught New Zealand history at the University of Auckland, Georgetown University and the University of Western Ontario and sat on the Waitangi Tribunal 1994-2004. He was a Cabinet minister in the 1980s.

NZ missing in action

The Australian reports:

Australia has banded together with three of its Five Eyes security partners to demand China respect the freedoms of Hong Kongers, in a joint statement attempting to ensure Beijing can’t single out the Morrison government for punishment.

Government sources confirmed the show of diplomatic force, made days after the arrests of 55 politicians and activists in Hong Kong, was designed to make clear that China’s aggressive actions there following the passage of a new security law were a global concern. There would be more joint statements in the months ahead when people’s freedoms and rights were under threat.

Analysts said it would enforce the message that Australia was not acting alone. Foreign ministers Marise Payne, Francois-Philippe Champagne (Canada), Dominic Raab (UK) and US secretary of State Mike Pompeo ­expressed their “serious concern” at the mass arrests in Hong Kong for subversion under the national security law.

Sad that NZ Govt decided not to support Australia in standing up for Hong Kong.

There have been several joint statements issued by Five Eyes countries concerning Hong Kong in recent months but in this latest rebuke New Zealand remained mute. A New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson said the country had “serious concerns” about the situation in Hong Kong. While it would make joint comments with allies, on this occasion Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta responded independently last week.

The Australian understands there was a delay in issuing the joint statement following 72 hours of diplomatic exchanges between all five partners resulting in just the quadrilateral statement.

NZ deliberately decided to stay mute. This will embolden China as they will see that fear of retribution works.

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