Yes, that's what Kate Sutton says about the female quota Labour plans to impose on electorate committees. The Labour Vice President says that international research shows that "...when you create space for women they will capably and ablably fill it."
Quite.
Still at least she has stopped swearing in her speeches.
I've chaired an electorate committee and am just trying to envisage turning away willing and able male members because I didn't have a female counterpart - of any calibre. How utterly absurd.
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Friday, November 16, 2012
No European parents named and shamed?
From yesterday's post about the ethnicity of child killers Joe asks this question:
It reviews family violence child deaths from 2004-2011.
Some cut and paste facts:
33 children were killed by 34 suspects
79% of children were aged three years or under at the time of death
Cause of Death
Head trauma 16
Newborn baby killed by Mother 5
Injuries to body 5
Drowning 3
Suffocation 3
Stab wounds 1
Total 33
Mothers killed 15 (45%) of the 33 child victims, comprising 10 daughters and 5 sons.
In five cases the mother concealed her pregnancy from family, friends and/or
workmates. When the baby was born the mother, through act or omission, killed
the baby and disposed of the body. Three of the mothers were European, one Pacific Island and one Indian.
Murder/suicide. Six children died as a result of (four) mothers who killed their child(ren) and then killed themselves. Three mothers were European and one was Maori.
In three cases children aged between one and two years of age were drowned
by their mothers; in two of the cases the children drowned in the bath after being left unattended. The mothers were Maori, European and Fijian.
In the remaining two cases of mothers killing children, both victims died as result
of physical assaults to their head and body. Both mothers were Maori.
Stepfathers killed five stepsons and two stepdaughters. In all cases the injuries involved physical assaults resulting in trauma to the head or body. Five stepfathers were Maori, one was European and one was Cook Island.
Fathers killed two daughters and one son. Two babies were five weeks and 11 weeks old and died from head trauma. One child was three years old and died from injuries to her head and body. Two Maori fathers were aged 18 and 21, while the Tongan father was aged 27.
My guess is that just as suicides aren't necessarily reported, neither are child murder/ suicides. There is no trial. Killing a newborn at birth is more commonly reported but treated (rightly or wrongly) sympathetically. Equally, drowning through neglect might also not make the news. The one case I found from 2010 had name suppression so no clue to ethnicity.
The high profile stories are where children are killed via wilful physical abuse and a trial ensues. Hence, over this period anyway, the predominance of media reporting Maori/Pacific child deaths is because they fall into this category.
"Lindsay from your figures why have no european parents ever been named and shamed -as a society is European infanticide acceptable but not for Pacific islanders like Luffely or other brown New Zealanders."The report I kinked to does not break down the reasons for death but another does.
It reviews family violence child deaths from 2004-2011.
Some cut and paste facts:
33 children were killed by 34 suspects
79% of children were aged three years or under at the time of death
Cause of Death
Head trauma 16
Newborn baby killed by Mother 5
Injuries to body 5
Drowning 3
Suffocation 3
Stab wounds 1
Total 33
Mothers killed 15 (45%) of the 33 child victims, comprising 10 daughters and 5 sons.
In five cases the mother concealed her pregnancy from family, friends and/or
workmates. When the baby was born the mother, through act or omission, killed
the baby and disposed of the body. Three of the mothers were European, one Pacific Island and one Indian.
Murder/suicide. Six children died as a result of (four) mothers who killed their child(ren) and then killed themselves. Three mothers were European and one was Maori.
In three cases children aged between one and two years of age were drowned
by their mothers; in two of the cases the children drowned in the bath after being left unattended. The mothers were Maori, European and Fijian.
In the remaining two cases of mothers killing children, both victims died as result
of physical assaults to their head and body. Both mothers were Maori.
Stepfathers killed five stepsons and two stepdaughters. In all cases the injuries involved physical assaults resulting in trauma to the head or body. Five stepfathers were Maori, one was European and one was Cook Island.
Fathers killed two daughters and one son. Two babies were five weeks and 11 weeks old and died from head trauma. One child was three years old and died from injuries to her head and body. Two Maori fathers were aged 18 and 21, while the Tongan father was aged 27.
My guess is that just as suicides aren't necessarily reported, neither are child murder/ suicides. There is no trial. Killing a newborn at birth is more commonly reported but treated (rightly or wrongly) sympathetically. Equally, drowning through neglect might also not make the news. The one case I found from 2010 had name suppression so no clue to ethnicity.
The high profile stories are where children are killed via wilful physical abuse and a trial ensues. Hence, over this period anyway, the predominance of media reporting Maori/Pacific child deaths is because they fall into this category.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Family violence deaths and ethnicity
As per usual the discussion about the death of J J Lawrence features arguments about child abuse being a Maori problem. It isn't solely, but it is disproportionately. But let's put the actual statistics on the line:
But what do you notice about the preamble to this table?
But what do you notice about the preamble to this table?
Truth column November 8
The Truth on-line is now up and running.
(For those who don't know Josie Pagani has replaced Bomber Bradbury and now writes the column 'from the left'.)
"Housing affordability will be a major election issue in 2014. There’s a difference though between mortgage affordability and the affordability of rent. Both problems affect large numbers but the second group is less likely to vote. That’s why the National Government has focused its reforms on home ownership first, if not only.
Houses are expensive because there aren’t enough. Finance Minister Bill English promises to cut waiting times for (some) consents to build to six months tops – still two seasons during which would-be home owners twiddle their thumbs. "
More
Other Truth columns here
(For those who don't know Josie Pagani has replaced Bomber Bradbury and now writes the column 'from the left'.)
"Housing affordability will be a major election issue in 2014. There’s a difference though between mortgage affordability and the affordability of rent. Both problems affect large numbers but the second group is less likely to vote. That’s why the National Government has focused its reforms on home ownership first, if not only.
Houses are expensive because there aren’t enough. Finance Minister Bill English promises to cut waiting times for (some) consents to build to six months tops – still two seasons during which would-be home owners twiddle their thumbs. "
More
Other Truth columns here
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
An e-mail from John Ansell
"I hope to see you at my talk - either tonight Wednesday at Lindale Auditorium, Paraparaumu at 7pm, or tomorrow Thursday at the Museum Art Hotel at 6.30pm.
On Monday night in Tauranga, I saw what can happen when a local newspaper allows discussion on racial equality.
As
a result of the Weekend Sun running many letters and articles from both
sides of the Treaty debate, 200+ people filled the Hotel Armitage
conference room to hear my talk 'From Treatygate to a Colourblind State - Let's Be Worldbeaters TOGETHER!'
The
150 local Maori who had planned to protest outside - and whom I was
determined to meet - turned out to be only 15, so I invited them in to
hear my evidence of the twisting of New Zealand history. We agreed to
disagree, but respectfully I'm pleased to say.
The Tauranga audience was 90+% in favour of my proposed poll: 'Do
you want a New Zealand where all citizens have equal rights, live under
the one law, vote on the one roll, and have their taxes spent according
to need, not race?'
They
were much relieved and appreciative that the pushback has started. It
is now my goal to turn this snowball into an unstoppable avalanche.
I
hope Wellingtonians will show just as much willingness to hear my
evidence and solutions - and join the discussion at the end - even
though our local newspaper is unlikely to give the meeting any coverage.
(You
may remember that the DomPost banned my ACT ad asking the perfectly
reasonable question: "Fed up with pandering to Maori radicals?")
Joel Loffley - another 'killer on bail'?
The jury is deliberating about whether Joel Loffley is guilty of the manslaughter or murder of his partner's child J J Lawrence.
If the verdict is guilty either way, one aspect of the story hasn't been highlighted.
Joel Loffley was "on probation" after a previous assault charge. The ability to put him on probation was afforded by J J Lawrence's mother who provided a "bail address".
Only the Otago Daily Times has reported this detail:
Loffley had also been to prison earlier because he talked about not wanting to "go back to prison". In the main, only hardened types end up in prison in this country. Even J J 's real father James Ruhe, also in prison, knew of Loffley, knew he was "not to be trusted" because he was trying to get in touch with the mother about him. Judging by Loffley's admitted behaviour while on probation, he should have stayed there.
The number of murders in this country due to bad court decisions is deplorable. This may be another.
If the verdict is guilty either way, one aspect of the story hasn't been highlighted.
Joel Loffley was "on probation" after a previous assault charge. The ability to put him on probation was afforded by J J Lawrence's mother who provided a "bail address".
Only the Otago Daily Times has reported this detail:
Earlier, Loffley told police he met JJ's mother Josephine on a social networking website. He said she let him move in because he needed a bail address while he faced a charge of male assaults female. The charge related to an alleged assault on his ex-girlfriend.
Loffley had also been to prison earlier because he talked about not wanting to "go back to prison". In the main, only hardened types end up in prison in this country. Even J J 's real father James Ruhe, also in prison, knew of Loffley, knew he was "not to be trusted" because he was trying to get in touch with the mother about him. Judging by Loffley's admitted behaviour while on probation, he should have stayed there.
The number of murders in this country due to bad court decisions is deplorable. This may be another.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Truth column October 26 - Tamihere vs Bennett
Recent Truth columns haven't been posted here because the relevant website section isn't updated yet. Here's my column from October 26, John Tamihere versus Paula Bennett, newly topical because this weekend Tamihere (and company) will be at the Labour Party conference trying to stake a claim:
Rodney Hide isn't returning to parliament. There's something a bit tired and sad about returned MPs like Winston Peters and John Banks. He advises, "Move on" and make way for new blood. But will John Tamihere listen? Labour's lukewarm reaction to his publicly-announced ambition to take Waitakere for them hasn't put him off yet.
Tamihere's musings may be motivated by his unresolved court battle with the Ministry of Social Development. It's convenient that the Minister, Paula 'Benefit' as JT calls her, is the MP for Waitakere. Is this plan some sort of utu should the court find against his organisation, the Waipareira Trust? He's a smart operator and will have considered all outcomes.
Even if Tamihere won Waitakere, but National retained power; if Bennett returned as Minister via the list and JT was appointed shadow welfare minister (easily out-qualifying the current amateur) it would be game on. Undoubtedly they are both scrappers and while Bennett might have looked the feebler party a couple of years back, the interim experience can only have toughened her markedly.
It's the points of difference I can't envisage because Tamihere is actually a better fit with National. Paula Bennett has been implementing the kind of reforms JT has pushed for years. Whanau ora, devolving WINZ money to mentoring organisations, free contraception, etc. Unlike most on the left, he isn't sympathetic to bigger state handouts and is dead-set against encouraging more dependency.
Which brings me back to why? Is he simply slightly jealous of Bennett's achievements? For instance, the law change that kicked-in on October 15. Women who add a child to their benefit will only get one years reprieve from work-testing. Labour couldn't even admit this was a real problem, let alone try and sort it.
Paula's tough. Tough as in 'tough love'. And a tough love Mum is amongst the most disciplined, formidable, fierce types. Too tough for Tamihere I think.
Rodney Hide isn't returning to parliament. There's something a bit tired and sad about returned MPs like Winston Peters and John Banks. He advises, "Move on" and make way for new blood. But will John Tamihere listen? Labour's lukewarm reaction to his publicly-announced ambition to take Waitakere for them hasn't put him off yet.
Tamihere's musings may be motivated by his unresolved court battle with the Ministry of Social Development. It's convenient that the Minister, Paula 'Benefit' as JT calls her, is the MP for Waitakere. Is this plan some sort of utu should the court find against his organisation, the Waipareira Trust? He's a smart operator and will have considered all outcomes.
Even if Tamihere won Waitakere, but National retained power; if Bennett returned as Minister via the list and JT was appointed shadow welfare minister (easily out-qualifying the current amateur) it would be game on. Undoubtedly they are both scrappers and while Bennett might have looked the feebler party a couple of years back, the interim experience can only have toughened her markedly.
It's the points of difference I can't envisage because Tamihere is actually a better fit with National. Paula Bennett has been implementing the kind of reforms JT has pushed for years. Whanau ora, devolving WINZ money to mentoring organisations, free contraception, etc. Unlike most on the left, he isn't sympathetic to bigger state handouts and is dead-set against encouraging more dependency.
Which brings me back to why? Is he simply slightly jealous of Bennett's achievements? For instance, the law change that kicked-in on October 15. Women who add a child to their benefit will only get one years reprieve from work-testing. Labour couldn't even admit this was a real problem, let alone try and sort it.
Paula's tough. Tough as in 'tough love'. And a tough love Mum is amongst the most disciplined, formidable, fierce types. Too tough for Tamihere I think.
Gender pay gap - big yawn...or small yawn?
The only reason I am blogging on this subject is because two headlines - one in the NZ Herald and the second in the DomPost - totally contradict each other.
According to the NZ Herald yesterday:
But according to the DomPost today it's at an "all time low":
Biggest or smallest?
Who knows and who cares.
According to the NZ Herald yesterday:
Gender pay gap widens in New Zealand
The gender pay gap is the biggest it has been in 10 years, according to new data from Statistic New Zealand. The quarterly employment survey shows the gender gap has increased in the year to September by 1.3 per cent, from 12.85 per cent to 14.18 per cent.
But according to the DomPost today it's at an "all time low":
Biggest or smallest?
Who knows and who cares.
Monday, November 12, 2012
MSD cover-up
The front page story in this morning's DomPost has left me very angry. It concerns an employer who took $5,000 wage subsidies from Work and Income and then failed to pass them on to beneficiaries sent to him.
I'd heard complaints from other employees of Washworks/Shop n Shine back in May this year and started asking the Ministry of Social Development questions. According to my source employees had complained to Work and Income after being short paid or not paid at all, then sacked.
So on 25 May, 2012 I asked under the Official Information Act:
The Ministry responded on 25 June, 2012:
But people had been complaining. That was my understanding and now the DomPost confirms this:
Not satisfied with the first response from MSD, on June 28, 2012 I asked more specifically under the Official Information Act:
Has a company called Shop n Shine received Work and Income subsidies and is it under investigation for abuse of those subsidies?
The Ministry responded on 26 July 2012:
So in July MSD denied Shop n Shine (I notice they changed the name in the last sentence but surely that wouldn't have been deliberate?) was under investigation. Yet go back to their earlier response and they state that any complaints about wage subsidy fraud "will be investigated by Work and Income and referred to NZ Police where evidence of fraud exists."
Shop n Shine must have been under investigation for it to have been "blacklisted".
Was I being misled by semantics regarding 'fraud'? Wilbourne was clearly repeatedly abusing the subsidies.
Additionally, while WINZ claim placements to Washworks ceased in March I believe placements to Shop n Shine did not. I am still trying to confirm that.
According to Work and Income Wellington regional commissioner Louise Waaka, concerns raised about employers were taken very seriously.
As a matter for cover-up maybe.
Now I am wondering how many other investigations-that-aren't-investigations may be occurring, and the integrity of MSD's responses to my questions.
I'd heard complaints from other employees of Washworks/Shop n Shine back in May this year and started asking the Ministry of Social Development questions. According to my source employees had complained to Work and Income after being short paid or not paid at all, then sacked.
So on 25 May, 2012 I asked under the Official Information Act:
The Ministry responded on 25 June, 2012:
But people had been complaining. That was my understanding and now the DomPost confirms this:
This week Work and Income Wellington regional commissioner Louise Waaka confirmed $39,807 was paid to Mr Willbourne as wage subsidies for 13 beneficiaries.So MSD was telling me they weren't investigating Shop n Shine or any other employer when quite clearly they had received complaints.
Nine of the subsidies were for employees at Mr Willbourne's Wellington car washes, and four were for his New Plymouth business.
The money was paid under the now-defunct Job Ops With Training programme, which provided incentives to businesses for employing beneficiaries under 25.
One complaint was received in December regarding holiday pay, and placements at Wash Works were stopped in March after four more complaints were received, Ms Waaka said.
Not satisfied with the first response from MSD, on June 28, 2012 I asked more specifically under the Official Information Act:
Has a company called Shop n Shine received Work and Income subsidies and is it under investigation for abuse of those subsidies?
The Ministry responded on 26 July 2012:
So in July MSD denied Shop n Shine (I notice they changed the name in the last sentence but surely that wouldn't have been deliberate?) was under investigation. Yet go back to their earlier response and they state that any complaints about wage subsidy fraud "will be investigated by Work and Income and referred to NZ Police where evidence of fraud exists."
Shop n Shine must have been under investigation for it to have been "blacklisted".
Was I being misled by semantics regarding 'fraud'? Wilbourne was clearly repeatedly abusing the subsidies.
Additionally, while WINZ claim placements to Washworks ceased in March I believe placements to Shop n Shine did not. I am still trying to confirm that.
According to Work and Income Wellington regional commissioner Louise Waaka, concerns raised about employers were taken very seriously.
As a matter for cover-up maybe.
Now I am wondering how many other investigations-that-aren't-investigations may be occurring, and the integrity of MSD's responses to my questions.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
More adoptive parents needed
The UK is leading a trend back to adoption:
Michael Gove has called on more people to adopt children. The call comes as it has emerged that more than 4200 children are ready for adoption but have not yet been able to move in with a family – a figure that has grown by 650 in each of the last two years.
The Secretary of State [for Education], who was adopted when he was four months old, said he wants other children to have the same early settled experience of a secure and loving home. It still takes on average two and a half years from a child going into care to being adopted. For that reason the Government has undertaken a series of reforms to make the adoption process swifter, and encourage more people to come forward.
Hear, hear.
Hear, hear.
We'd have 4,200 babies and children in this country, if not ready for adoption, ripe for adoption.
Michael Gove has called on more people to adopt children. The call comes as it has emerged that more than 4200 children are ready for adoption but have not yet been able to move in with a family – a figure that has grown by 650 in each of the last two years.
The Secretary of State [for Education], who was adopted when he was four months old, said he wants other children to have the same early settled experience of a secure and loving home. It still takes on average two and a half years from a child going into care to being adopted. For that reason the Government has undertaken a series of reforms to make the adoption process swifter, and encourage more people to come forward.
"There are thousands of children around the country waiting for adoption. I was adopted when I was four months old and it changed my life. These children should have the same opportunities as I did and reap all the benefits of being in a loving supportive home."
Hear, hear.
Hear, hear.
We'd have 4,200 babies and children in this country, if not ready for adoption, ripe for adoption.
Two thirds of youth 'unemployed' are 'in education'
Each time the news comes on I hear Labour's Megan Woods talking about how one in four young people is unemployed. The "crisis". The "tragedy".
Yes. Officially they are 'unemployed'. But when you look a little closer two thirds of them are 'in education'. Only 9 percent of all 15-19 year-olds are not in employment, education or training.
That's a picture a little less bleak.
(This tends to also give weight to my earlier suggestion that more young people are being supported by a student allowance instead of the dole hence the low numbers on unemployment benefit.)
Part of my problem with Woods' remonstrations is that young people (and others) begin to believe there are no jobs for them. That they have an excuse not to look. Even I found myself saying to job-seeking son, "It's tough out there right now", trying to be realistic and ward off a sense of personal failure if he couldn't find work. At the same time I was telling him that prospective employers would appreciate him asking for a job, being proactive and they did.
Yes. Officially they are 'unemployed'. But when you look a little closer two thirds of them are 'in education'. Only 9 percent of all 15-19 year-olds are not in employment, education or training.
That's a picture a little less bleak.
(This tends to also give weight to my earlier suggestion that more young people are being supported by a student allowance instead of the dole hence the low numbers on unemployment benefit.)
Part of my problem with Woods' remonstrations is that young people (and others) begin to believe there are no jobs for them. That they have an excuse not to look. Even I found myself saying to job-seeking son, "It's tough out there right now", trying to be realistic and ward off a sense of personal failure if he couldn't find work. At the same time I was telling him that prospective employers would appreciate him asking for a job, being proactive and they did.
Megan Woods, Labour MP, on youth unemployment
Megan Woods, Labour MP, is all over radio and TV today talking about the burden on the state of young people on benefits:
This graph charts numbers on the unemployment benefit and the associated unemployment rates. Now I'm scratching my head as to the implications of it.
In September 2000 there were 38,500 unemployed 18-24 year-olds and 38,510 on the dole. An almost exact match. At that point under Labour everyone unemployed was on a benefit. But by the end of their term fewer people were getting the dole than were unemployed. This has continued to be the case.
By September 2012 there were 65,200 unemployed 18-24 year-olds but only 13,454 of them on the unemployment benefit.
There are a number of angles one could put on this. More unemployed young people are staying at home and relying on their parents? More are relying on friends?
Or perhaps more are relying on other benefits? In 2000 there were 31,932 on benefits other than the dole; by 2012 there were 41,427. That's what I'd expect given the overall rise in the size of that age group. So no answer there.
Is it possible that a number are supporting themselves via student allowances which had been trending up steeply between 2005 and 2010 (latest available) but have dropped out and are describing themselves as 'unemployed'?
Whatever the reasons are it's a bit silly for Labour to be complaining about the burden to the state of the unemployed when National has been successfully keeping large numbers out of the benefit system.
(My 18 year-old took his CV out to a large retail centre and went around asking for work. Got an interview later in the week as a result and accepted the job on Friday. Hope he hates it and returns to his studies next year:-)).
The Labour Party is labelling New Zealand's youth unemployment situation a "crisis" and warns the social and financial cost will be felt for years to come. Latest numbers from Statistics New Zealand show the overall unemployment rate's risen to 7.3 percent - a 13 year high - but youth unemployment is much higher, at 25 percent. Labour's Youth Affairs spokesperson, Megan Woods, says the flow-on effects are felt in youth health and welfare pay-outs. “There is the financial burden on our welfare system when we have that many young people who are dependent on the state,” she says.Labour is very fond of highlighting New Zealand's situation, and by implication National's failing, in isolation to the international recession. In any case, the burden on the state in respect of the unemployment benefit at least, has been reducing (see below).
This graph charts numbers on the unemployment benefit and the associated unemployment rates. Now I'm scratching my head as to the implications of it.
In September 2000 there were 38,500 unemployed 18-24 year-olds and 38,510 on the dole. An almost exact match. At that point under Labour everyone unemployed was on a benefit. But by the end of their term fewer people were getting the dole than were unemployed. This has continued to be the case.
By September 2012 there were 65,200 unemployed 18-24 year-olds but only 13,454 of them on the unemployment benefit.
There are a number of angles one could put on this. More unemployed young people are staying at home and relying on their parents? More are relying on friends?
Or perhaps more are relying on other benefits? In 2000 there were 31,932 on benefits other than the dole; by 2012 there were 41,427. That's what I'd expect given the overall rise in the size of that age group. So no answer there.
Is it possible that a number are supporting themselves via student allowances which had been trending up steeply between 2005 and 2010 (latest available) but have dropped out and are describing themselves as 'unemployed'?
Whatever the reasons are it's a bit silly for Labour to be complaining about the burden to the state of the unemployed when National has been successfully keeping large numbers out of the benefit system.
(My 18 year-old took his CV out to a large retail centre and went around asking for work. Got an interview later in the week as a result and accepted the job on Friday. Hope he hates it and returns to his studies next year:-)).
Friday, November 09, 2012
Why the unemployment rate rose
John Key is very surprised that the unemployment rate jumped to 7.3 percent yesterday because he says other economic indicators are looking more positive.
Here's a possible explanation but I don't have time right now to thoroughly test it.
Well-publicised welfare reforms cause what I call an anticipatory effect. Many current beneficiaries know that they are going to be work-tested in the near future eg people on the DPB had their requirements tightened in October when those with a youngest child aged 5 were brought into the equation. Many know that next year they will be moved onto the new Jobseeker benefit.
People aren't helpless. They think about what having to take any job offered by WINZ might mean and they start looking for themselves. Hence, if they're part of the HLFS survey - the source for the official unemployment rate - they begin to describe themselves differently.
Two groups who have experienced significant increases are Maori and single parents, both disproportionately beneficiaries, so that supports my theory.
There were only 8,000 fewer jobs between the June and September quarters.
So the higher rate is not so much about people losing jobs but more about people becoming available for and seeking work.
Here's a possible explanation but I don't have time right now to thoroughly test it.
Well-publicised welfare reforms cause what I call an anticipatory effect. Many current beneficiaries know that they are going to be work-tested in the near future eg people on the DPB had their requirements tightened in October when those with a youngest child aged 5 were brought into the equation. Many know that next year they will be moved onto the new Jobseeker benefit.
People aren't helpless. They think about what having to take any job offered by WINZ might mean and they start looking for themselves. Hence, if they're part of the HLFS survey - the source for the official unemployment rate - they begin to describe themselves differently.
Two groups who have experienced significant increases are Maori and single parents, both disproportionately beneficiaries, so that supports my theory.
There were only 8,000 fewer jobs between the June and September quarters.
So the higher rate is not so much about people losing jobs but more about people becoming available for and seeking work.
Thursday, November 08, 2012
Blacklisting 'nutters' and 'menaces' - me
According to Karl du Fresne writing in the Nelson Mail:
To get beyond "amateur" status would require, I suppose, an expensive university education in the social sciences, saturated in doctrinaire leftist thinking. No thanks.
Kudos to Karl for defending the right to be heard of those who don't dance to the beat of the dominant drum.
I recently had what might be termed a difference of professional opinion with some of my fellow journalists. It was touched off by a newspaper editorial that took a whack at "enthusiastic amateurs" sounding off on such issues as climate change and fluoridation.It makes me cringe when people describe me as an expert. But it makes me cringe even more when they suggest I am a nutter. I cringe on their behalf. Because ostracising is the lazy resort of the blinkered mind. There is nothing I like more than a debate over what a set of statistics might mean; the clear or cloudy distinction between cause and correlation. It's embarrassing and humbling when I get it wrong but error and correction is one pathway to understanding.
Everyone was entitled to their opinion, the editorial writer loftily pronounced, but not all views should be accorded equal weight. The views of people with years of study and experience behind them were worth more than those of non-experts.
"Everyone is free to disagree but ignorance does not have an equal right to be heard," the editorial concluded.
A member of an internet journalism discussion group to which I belong applauded the editorial, saying she couldn't agree more. "These amateur know-it-alls are a menace," she declared.
I thought this a peculiar position for a journalist for take. I mean, aren't we supposed to believe in freedom of speech?
Another member chimed in that the Sensible Sentencing Trust's Garth McVicar should be added to the "list of nutters". Then someone else suggested a couple of other names for what was shaping up as a blacklist: David Round and Lindsay Mitchell.
To get beyond "amateur" status would require, I suppose, an expensive university education in the social sciences, saturated in doctrinaire leftist thinking. No thanks.
Kudos to Karl for defending the right to be heard of those who don't dance to the beat of the dominant drum.
Major defeat for Greens
Yesterday the Greens were desperately seeking Peter Dunne's support:
The Greens and United Future are at odds over moves to change in-work tax credit entitlements. Parliament will debate tonight the Member's Bill of Green co-leader Metiria Turei that would extend the credit to beneficiaries.
United Future MP Peter Dunne says the bill destroys the incentive of Working for Families to get beneficiary families into work.
"I don't really see there's much to be gained from having a discussion at a select committee, when there's such a fundamental difference of view."
But Metiria Turei says she's offered major compromises to Mr Dunne to get his support and he's turned them all down.
"Peter Dunne committed himself at the last election to a campaign to reduce inequality. Now is the chance for him to have the discussion on how we can do that and he's refusing to."
Dunne hung tough against this stupid idea to reverse what was originally a Labour- implemented policy to build a margin between benefits and earned income.
Looks like it died a death.
The first reading of the Income Tax (Universalisation of In-work Tax Credit) Amendment Bill was not agreed to.
Tuesday, November 06, 2012
Someone is knowingly lying here. Is it Red Alert?
This is from the last published NZ Yearbook - 2010. Not fully up-to-date but it'll suffice.
Between 2004 and 2009 there was an average of 8.5 construction-related deaths (investigated by OSH).
In a post about "unsafe building practices", Red Alert says:
The NZ Herald reported on November 2nd that since July, more than 400 actions have been taken against 760 construction sites for not complying with guidelines on safe working at height. Inspectors shut down 215 of the sites, and issued more than 160 written warnings requiring immediate remedial action.Better check out what the NZ Herald said:
While Construction Minister Maurice Williamson finally admits there is a problem, this Government has had four years in office, and in the meantime, we’ve had an average of 100 deaths a year, with workplace injuries and fatalities reportedly costing New Zealand about $3.5 billion annually.
Workplace injuries and fatalities cost New Zealand about $3.5 billion annually and 100 people on average die each year.
100 workplace fatalities. That means 'construction' and every and any other industry. This is a classic case of conflation.
Each of these deaths represents untold grief and it's unpleasant to discuss them in the context of controversial statistics. But I cannot believe that in 2010 and 2011 deaths due to building accidents increased twelve-fold.
I heard a caller to talkback pushing this so-called building fatality rate. His position was that if they all happened at once it would be a national disaster but because they happened in a staggered fashion they went under the radar. He said he was a building safety officer so no excuse for getting it so wrong. Perhaps he was a Labour propagandist.
Monday, November 05, 2012
Seven years for encouraging a pitbull-puppy attack
A seven year prison sentence for setting a pitbull on another person seems steep. Not because it's a trivial crime. I'm not uncomfortable with the sentence per se but how other sentences for arguably worse crimes compare. The judge is certainly making a statement.
Contrast:
And just for good measure:
Contrast:
A man who rammed an ambulance, used a car as a weapon, drove recklessly, and assaulted people was jailed for three years with a non-parole term of 18 months, in the Christchurch District Court today.And:
A teen, described in court as "a law unto himself", who used his car to ram a man sitting in a car in Greymouth has been jailed.Nineteen-year-old Jed Wilson-Calver was appearing in Christchurch District Court for sentence after pleading guilty to the charge of assault using a car as a weapon. Judge Erber said he could not consider home detention because of Wilson-Calver's attitude to community sentences.He jailed him for a total of eight months.
And just for good measure:
Attacks using dogs on Asian people walking in the streets of Christchurch have brought eight month jail terms for the owners and death for the dogs.Those jailed were 18-year-old Phillipa Ann Parker and her ex-boyfriend Steven Brian Donaldson, 25, who both admitted the attacks had racial overtones. Donaldson had admitted two charges of assault, and Parker admitted one charge of assault, and two charges of assault using dogs as weapons.
Saturday, November 03, 2012
For animals needing homes
We got our gorgeous Beagle Lexie from HUHA earlier this year. They do fantastic work pledging to keep any animal needing a sanctuary until it can be re-homed. One of the integral people Lisa Rawlins has set a goal to fund raise $1,500 through running the Taupo Half Ironman. Have a look at the site and pitch in if you can. I can't praise the work they do enough.
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