The 10 best things Trump has done in his first year

Marc Thiessen of The Washington Post writes:

As we approach the end of President Trump’s first year in office, the list of extraordinary things he has done — for both good and ill — is nothing short of remarkable.

Trump inspires such deep emotions in his critics and supporters that many have struggled to objectively assess his presidency.

Some are so blinded by their hatred of Trump that they refuse to acknowledge the good he has done, while others are so blinded by devotion that they overlook almost any transgression.

In my columns, I’ve tried to give Trump the credit he deserves when he does the right thing, while calling him out when he does the wrong thing.

So, here is my list of the 10 best things Trump has done in his first 11 months. (Later this week, I will give you my list of the 10 worst.)

This is good analysis – the ten best and the ten worst. It will be interesting how many of the ten worst will be things he said rather than did. Anyway the ten best are:

  1. Enforced President Barack Obama’s red line against Syria’s use of chemical weapons
  2. Taken a surprisingly tough line with Russia approving a $47 million arms package for Ukraine, sent troops to Poland’s border with Russia and imposed new sanctions on Moscow for violating the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.
  3. Recognised Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Four American presidents promised to do it, but only one actually did.
  4. Withdrew from the Paris climate agreement helping usher in a new age of American energy development.
  5. Got NATO allies to kick in $12 billion more toward our collective security
  6. Virtually eliminated the Islamic State’s physical caliphate
  7. Admitted he was wrong on Afghanistan and reversed Obama’s disastrous withdrawal.
  8. Enacted historic tax and regulatory reform that has unleashed economic growth.
  9. Installing conservative judges who will preside for decades
  10. Delivered the coup de grace that ended the Clinton political machine.

The ones I most approve of are 1, 3, 6 and 9.

Guest Post: Road deaths are part of life

A guest post by David Garrett:

At the start of the summer holiday season we are already hearing the familiar lament about the road toll (or “road carnage” as more hysterical members of the constabulary sometimes call it). As I write this, there have been 368 people killed on the roads this year, compared with 311 in the whole of last year. Sadly we can pretty much guarantee that half a dozen more people will die in what is left of 2017.

What can we do about this loss of life on the roads? I say there is very little more we can do; arguably we have already accepted unreasonable limits on our freedoms in pursuit of the holy grail of “getting the road toll down”. Down to what? Does some fool really believe we can eliminate road deaths entirely? Or even nearly so? If so they are as deluded as those  seeking  to entirely eliminate child abuse.

First some context.  Back in 1987, 795  people died on our roads, not much short of three times last year’s toll. Since 1987 there has been a steady downward trend in yearly road deaths. It is important to remember that during that 30 year period the number of cars has more than doubled – apparently there are now three times as many cars on our roads than in 1977. Without the  massive changes since  then, we could expect an annual road toll of near on 2000 rather than 300 odd.

What has changed since 1987? The biggest changes must be the engineering of cars and the compulsory wearing of seatbelts. I can still remember my astonishment when visiting State Insurance’s crash yard in the late 90’s. There was a Japanese car – I forget the make – crushed so severely that the headlights were about a foot in front of the firewall. I asked how many had died in the crash. The answer – “None, and the doors still open”. I tried them, and sure enough, they did. I asked where the engine was, and the guy said “down on the road where it’s supposed to go”

Until that time I, like all crusty old Kiwi males, thought “energy absorbing crush zones” were just a bunch of hooey, and I would stand a better chance in my old Jag than in  some “Jappie”. Wrong.

There have been other major engineering changes: collapsible steering columns; side impact beams, and of course front and later side airbags. In other words, the car rolling off the line in 2017 is immeasurably safer than a vehicle that looked roughly the same 30 years ago.

Attitudes to wearing seatbelts have completely changed in 40 years. I can still remember it being seriously argued that you were much safer not wearing one so you could be “thrown clear” in a crash. Forty years later my old mate Hughie religiously wears his seatbelt even in his digger, and lectures me about doing the same.

Perhaps the biggest attitudinal change is that to drinking and driving. Like all males of my generation, I have shameful memories of driving so drunk I had to close one eye to stop seeing double. Men would openly boast to each other about  consuming some enormous amount of booze, but still driving home. It is something of a wonder that so many of us have reached the ages we have.

But has the obsession with booze – like that with speed – gone too far?  Penalties for being “intoxicated” now begin  at 250 mcg of alcohol to a litre of breath. I have experimented with that level of “intoxication” – I use quotation marks deliberately – and felt not just quite capable of driving, but  completely  unaffected. I have had clients utterly bewildered at getting a ticket while having that level of alcohol aboard.

We have long recognized the difference in behavior between 20 year olds on or about the legal limit and men and women 20 or thirty years older. In short, the intoxicated 20 year old thinks he’s even more bullet proof than normal, and imagines he is a Formula One champion. The 50 year old by contrast drives strictly on the speed limit, and treats every amber light as a red. Ironically it is this very caution that often gives him away to the ever vigilant police.

This arguable over reaction to drink driving has come at a cost: the traditional country pub is dying, with 10% of them closing a year. In less than ten years they will almost all be gone.  I live in a rural area where taxis and dial-a-driver are simply not options. Because two pints in an hour will put you over the magic 250, the locals either take the risk, or more often simply stay home. So our local, like so many others, is slowly dying.

There may be some evidence that lowering the breath alcohol level to 250 mcg makes a significant difference; if there is, I would be most interested in it. Speaking as a middle aged driver who has in the past been a big drinker, I would be very surprised if there is anything like the positive benefit of making the blood/alcohol limit for drivers under 20 zero, and  the reduction for over 20’s to  250 .

Speed is the other obsession of those seeking the Holy Grail. Last Christmas period the police were bewildered when their much trumpeted zero tolerance policy – as opposed to the standard 4kmh usually allowed – not only had no effect on crashes but  the number of deaths  was UP on previous years. They shouldn’t have been surprised.

I simply do not believe that someone doing 120 or 130 in good conditions on the open road is any more of a risk than someone religiously sticking to 100. Everyone knows that it is quite simply impossible to overtake the old dear doing 85 or 90 without going 120 or so for a short period. To do otherwise would lead to an overtaking manoevre lasting a minute, and using up a kilometer of road – something that is hugely dangerous in itself.

There is grudging recognition  by way of  the new 110 kmh roads that a modern car  can be driven safely at more than 100. Inevitably that will mean we drive them at 120,  conditions permitting.

So what am I saying? Simply this. We have a large number of cars on roads which are still for the most part two lane. There will inevitably be fools – one of them died yesterday – who cross the centre line at high speed. Regardless of engineering advances, the human body simply cannot survive rapid deceleration from a speed of over 200 kmh to zero in a fraction of a second. Princes Diana died of a torn aorta in just such a crash.

While we should always look for improvements in road safety we need to be realistic – and consider the costs and benefits of, for example, driving country pubs out of business. We accept the miniscule number of aviation deaths a year as one of the costs of air travel. Perhaps it is time to reach the same acceptance regarding road deaths.

Australian terror attacks

Terror attacks in Australia used to be extremely rare. Around one every five to ten years. You had one in 1986, 1995, 2001 and 2009.

But here is the record of the last few years:

  1. Sep 2014 – 18-year-old Numan Haider stabbed two counter-terrorism officers in Endeavour Hills
  2. Dec 2014 – Man Haron Monis, a lone gunman, held hostage ten customers and eight employees of a Lindt chocolate café
  3. Oct 2015 – 15 year old Farhad Khalil Mohammad Jabar, an Iraqi-Kurd, shot dead Curtis Cheng
  4. Sep 2016 – A 22-year-old man, Ihsas Khan, inspired by Islamic State stabbed a man before being arrested and charged with attempted murder.
  5. Apr 2017 – a pair of 15 and 16 year old boys entered a service station in the small town of Queanbeyan in NSW and stabbed a 29-year old Zeeshan Akbar of Pakistani decent and Zeeshan soon died at the scene
  6. Jun 2017 – Yacqub Khayre shot dead a Chinese-Australian receptionist in a serviced apartment complex
  7. Dec 2017 – Saeed Noori charged with attempted murder of 18 people he ran over. Not yet known if motive was terrorism or not.

Also we have some of the foiled plots:

  1. plans to kidnap members of the public in Sydney and Brisbane then behead them on camera and release the footage
  2. detonate bombs at a Mother’s Day running event
  3. stab and shoot police and members of the public at Anzac Day ceremonies
  4.  target government buildings including the Garden Island Navy base and Parramatta Court House

 

Good move from UK Government

The Guardian reports:

Jo Johnson is to tell universities that they should uphold free speech and clamp down on student unions that do not give a platform to controversial speakers.

The higher education minister will claim on Tuesday that some student campaigners are trying to stifle debate and will reiterate plans to allow the newly created Office for Students (OfS) to fine or suspend institutions that fail to protect freedom of speech on campuses.

A university without freedom of speech is not a true university.

Is this what awaits up with Fair Pay Awards?

Tim Blair writes:

If you know the difference between “stop” and “go”, you can earn more money as a traffic controller than do many of the people in the traffic you’re controlling. …

CFMEU NSW state secretary Brian Parker said there are some traffic controllers on $180,000 per year.

He said under a new EBA agreement many workers like Ms Dowsett will get a 3.5 per cent pay increase in March next year.

Asked how the CFMEU justifies such massive pay packets, he said: “They stand outside all day in all sorts of weather and they cop abuse from the public.”

This is what you get when unions control the politicians.

Lorde will do Russia but not Israel

The Herald reports:

Lorde has cancelled her show in Israel after facing criticism.

Fans had demanded the Kiwi songstress join the Boycott Divestment Sanctions Movement which is making a stand against Israel’s oppression of Palestinians.

Some fans. Some fans also demanded she not give in to the bullies.

Lorde is also playing in Russia which has annexed The Crimea and effectively invaded Eastern Ukraine. If performing a concert in a country is now regarded as endorsing the Government of that country, then by that logic she should cancel Moscow also.

A real pity that all her fans in Tel Aviv won’t be able to attend one of her concerts.

Merry Christmas

Can Ardern save the ballet?

Stuff reports:

The embattled Royal New Zealand Ballet will be asked to meet with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in the new year as dancers continue to exit, stage left. 

Ardern, who holds the ministerial responsibility for Arts, Culture and Heritage, said she had become concerned about the lack of New Zealand dancers in the national ballet company and fewer local shows for New Zealand’s regions. 

The biennial Tutus on Tour used to bring top quality ballet shows to almost 50 regional towns in New Zealand. But in 2018, Tutus will tour only seven regional towns – which ballet lovers say will create problems at the grassroots of ballet. 

This sounds like an absolute crisis. I’m glad the Prime Minister is personally intervening to solve this. It’s the height of inequality to have 43 fewer towns miss out on the ballet.

Newshub thinks everyone is a bigot!

 

Newshub have run a story promoting Bigot Bingo, taken off someone on Reddit. In their desperation for Newshub they are smearing anyone that is basically not a left wing activist. In fact if you even criticise Labour or the Greens, you are a bigot.

And again some wonder why trust in media continues to plummet.

NZTA need to explain

This official NZ Transport Authority twitter account decided to have a rant against the US, Israel and free trade. Massively inappropriate and NZTA bosses should be investigating who did this and take appropriate disciplinary actions.

Official Government twitter accounts for not for agency staff to use as their personal outlets for political musings.

Thoughts by Colin James on journalism

Colin James has retired after 50 years of writing and analysis. One of the most insightful people I know.

His final column has some wisdom worth sharing:

Journalists live two lives: the inner and the craft.

When David Lange died and the Greens stood in his memory opening their 2005 election campaign, I the journalist stayed sitting while I the inner person behind the journalist secretly stood. There was the same wrench when the Council of Trade Unions conference in 2015 stood in memory of the fine Peter Conway.

Journalists are close in to events but never part of them. They meet the powerful and the celebrated. Some are seduced into thinking themselves their equals. They are then lost to journalism.

Wise words.

Journalists make no momentous decisions. Celebrity ill-becomes them. They are a channel through which the powerful and celebrated talk to the people and the people talk back.

To others, the journalist seems greatly privileged to be alongside power and stardust. And the journalist is privileged. But not in the way most non-journalists think.

The privilege is to spend a lifetime learning.

A journalist can ask questions of almost everyone and almost all will answer: the powerful and celebrated, the knowing and skilled, the repositories of arcane science or ways of thinking and the “ordinary” guardians of understanding of a community or of a simple truth or of a good way to live an “ordinary” life.

They are all at the journalist’s call. They all teach a journalist who listens.

Listening is the real skill.

For some, expression is journalism’s pleasure. They are would-be writers and journalism is as close as they can get.

For me, writing it down was the grind. Words shuffled off the keyboard or sat stuttering. They often said to readers different things from what I thought I had said. Words, I found, are wilful and wayward.

Nevertheless, for five decades generous editors and readers encouraged me in my attempts at this exacting craft. They privileged me to go on learning.

So I have had a working life beyond any of my youthful imaginings. It usually scarcely felt like work. I often pinched myself: surely I can’t be here doing this.

It seems weird to me to think of political reporting and analysis without Colin James. But while his weekly column is ended, I am sure we will still get to read him from time to time.

My first MP died

Gerald O’Brien died this month. He was aged 93.

He was the MP for Island Bay from 1969 to 1978, making him my local MP.

He was deselected from Labour after allegedly asking a couple of boys back to his room for a drink. He remained an Independent MP but lost the 1978 election to Frank O’Flynn. But he got 3,700 votes, which almost led National to win the seat coming just 650 votes behind Labour.

He was a Vice-President of Labour and if it were not for the scandal, he may well have become a Minister in the 4th Labour Government.

As Press Council expands, is it time up for BSA?

The Press Council released:

Members of the NZ Press Council have decided to launch a new classification system and independent consumer complaints process for video-on-demand (VOD) programmes in New Zealand.

To reflect its growing multi-media role, the Press Council will also undergo a name change next year to New Zealand Media Council.

The new VOD system was developed in conjunction with local and international media organisations including TVNZ, Sky Television, Lightbox, Netflix, RNZ, Google YouTube Originals, Maori Television, MediaWorks, Stuff/Fairfax and NZME.

This is highly significant. The broadcasters a year ago wound up OMSA which dealt with their website content, and move it to the Press Council. Now the broadcasters and major Internet players are giving the Press Council coverage of VOD content complaints.

This means that almost all media content complaints are going to the Press Council except complaints about broadcast programmes. By law these go to the BSA. The BSA do a good job but they are appointed by the Government and I prefer media content regulation to be self-regulation not government regulators.

So with everything else having gone to the Press Council (now the Media Council) is it time to wind up the BSA (which would require a law change) and have all media complaints go to the Media Council? I prefer a single regulator model.

MBIE miscalculated benefits from America’s Cup

The Herald reports:

Hosting the America’s Cup in Auckland would be “barely worth it”, says the New Zealand Initiative after the Government was forced to drastically reduce its cost-benefit analysis.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) today admitted errors in its report on the economic benefits of the hosting the cup.

Its initial cost-to-benefit ratio estimate was between 1.8 and 1.2, meaning benefits would outweigh cost by between 80 and 20 per cent. However, it today revised this to a high of 1.14 and a low of 0.997, the latter scenario would mean the cost would outweigh the benefits.

“In simple terms, the cost benefit ratio is normally the total benefits divided by the total costs,” MBIE said in a statement.

 

“However, Market Economics had erroneously divided net benefits (new spending less the costs to deliver the goods and services) by total construction costs.”

The error was brought to the Government’s attention by policy think tank the New Zealand Initiative.

Great work by the NZ Initiative in finding the error. The Government may have spent tens of millions of dollars on the basis of this error. Now we know that there isn’t really much of a case for taxpayers subsidising the America’s Cup being held in New Zealand.

Research Fellow Sam Warburton, who reviewed MBIE’s numbers, welcomed the ministry’s correction to the optimistic figures that were widely reported in media.

“The alleged net benefit of the Cup was relied on by key decision makers including Economic Development Minister David Parker and Auckland Mayor Phil Goff,” he said.

“As in every public project, cost blow-outs and optimism biases are a possibility when hosting the America’s Cup. A benefit-cost ratio of just around 1 is not a sufficient basis for committing taxpayer’s money to this event.”

If the BCR at the moment is 1, you can be sure it would end up as less than 1 eventually.

The US tax cuts package

The final package has been passed in the House and signed by the President. It is a big victory for Trump and the GOP. It is just a pity they are not cutting spending also, as the US deficit will get even worse now.

The main details are:

  • Corporate tax rate drops from 35% to 21% (note Canada is 15%)
  • 15% personal tax rate drops to 12%
  • 25% rate drops to 22%
  • 28% rate drops to 24%
  • 33% rate to 32%
  • 39.6% rate to 37%

The NZ corporate tax rate of 28% is now looking quite high.

Supreme Court rules against Wellington Airport

The Herald reports:

Wellington Airport’s plans to extend its runway have suffered a blow after pilots have won a Supreme Court case over safety areas required.

The action followed a series of court cases over the airport’s proposal to extend its runway.

Earlier this year, the Court of Appeal determined that international civil aviation law, as applied in New Zealand law, required a 240m long safety area, or such shorter distance as is practicable, and not less than 90 metres.

Basically the Court of Appeal said that costs should not really come into the decision making. If 240 metres is practical, then it should be 240 metres. The Supreme Court has been a bit more nuanced saying cost is part of assessing whether it is practical, but shouldn’t be the main factor.

It is possible that the CAA could reconsider the Wellington Airport extension and find that 90 metres (the status quo) is acceptable. This is unlikely though – but possible.

So it is likely the Wellington Airport extension has become (even more) unaffordable and will not happen. The ruling also has implications on all other airports. Basically if they ever want to expand, then they are likely to need a RESA of 240 metres rather than 90 metres.

The nasty BDS crowd target Lorde

Stuff reports:

Lorde says she is “considering all options” after backlash against her decision to perform in Israel.

Activists against Israel’s control of Palestine have been trying to stop musicians from touring Israel.

Lorde announced on Tuesday that she would perform in Tel Aviv mid-2018. She was immediately met with a backlash online. …

New Zealand’s own Palestinian Solidarity Network has called the move by Kiwi singer “unwise”.

“We as a Palestinian support group feel it’s entirely inappropriate for Lorde to be supporting the breaking of the boycott,” Palestinian Solidarity Network spokesperson Janfrie Wakim said.

The pro-Palestinian movement, called Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS), has launched many campaigns to stop famous musicians from playing in Israel. The group calls for the “freedom, justice and equality” of Palestinians under Israeli control.

One can have a view that Israel should not be building settlements in the West Bank but also that the BDS movement is a nasty campaign with anti-semitic overtones.

Is there any other country in the world that faces such a movement? No. And there are scores of countries that have far worst human rights issues.

If Lorde was to play in China no-one would demand she doesn’t because of their control of Tibet.

If Lorde was to play in Moscow, no-one would demand she doesn’t because of Russian’s annexation of The Crimea.

If Lorde was to play in the US, no-one would say that doing so means she supports President Trump.

If Lorde was to play in France, no-one would demand she boycotts Paris because of the Rainbow Warrior.

It is only Israel which faces this nasty campaign. The campaign is motivated more by people who want Israel to no longer exist as a country than it being about a peace deal for Palestine.

Stopping Jewish kids in Tel Aviv from being able to attend a Lorde concert is not going to bring peace to the Middle East.

16 injured in Melbourne

News.com.au reports:

AT least 16 people have been struck by a four-wheel-drive in the centre of Melbourne.

The car hit and injured a number of pedestrians outside Melbourne’s Flinders Street station, then crashed into a bollard.

Ambulance Victoria said paramedics were assessing people at the scene of the incident.

Police have confirmed that the driver of the vehicle and a second man have been arrested. …

A preschool-aged child with head injuries is among the injured and has been transported to Royal Children’s Hospital in a serious condition.

It seems this was a deliberate act. Trying to kill pre-schoolers – just despicable. Makes me want to return to the era of an eye for an eye and have the punishment being getting run over for several hours by various cars to see how they like it. Then I calm down.

This is the 2nd attack by vehicle in Melbourne in 2017. Sadly this will spread to New Zealand at some stage.