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- National Standards and Neanderthals – “They will know what is required …” – Part II
- National Standards and Neanderthals – “They will know what is required …” – Part I
- Back to school in happy town
- And to the victors, the spoils – ‘business as usual’ in Christchurch
- John Key and the serious business of “mucking around”
- From the ‘Gomer Pyle’ files – Boys’ High Head Trevor McIntyre Resigns
- ‘Human capital depreciation’ and the Pike River Mining Disaster
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Tag Archives: markets
Underneath the ‘underclass’
Joe Bageant died on the 26th of March last year. Apparently, he was sometimes referred to as an American ‘leftneck’ – which is not a bad label for him. Bageant’s book (and, more generally, his literary life) has been devoted to laying … Continue reading
Posted in Democracy, Economics, Education, Free Market, Human Wellbeing, New Zealand Politics, Welfare
Tagged capitalism, community, economic history, John Key, markets, self-interest, unity, urbanisation, welfare, wellbeing
13 Comments
Water, Waitangi, ownership and power
There’s a reason why we talk about property rights. Owning property without having any rights to it makes as much sense as having rights to something without owning it in some way. ‘Water rights’ and ‘water ownership’ are, in all … Continue reading
Posted in Democracy, Economics, Free Market, Freedom, Maori, National Identity, New Zealand Politics
Tagged capitalism, Freedom, John Key, Maori, markets, New Zealand Identity, Treaty of Waitangi
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City in a box
It was meant to be the ‘City in a Park’. But, according to a Press editorial, a lot of people in Christchurch have taken a look at the future and they don’t like what they see: The artists’ impressions of … Continue reading
Posted in Democracy, Earthquakes, Free Market, Human Wellbeing
Tagged Christchurch, cities, community, disaster, human nature, Local Government, markets, private sector, wellbeing
5 Comments
California dreaming
If the future form of Christchurch’s central city now hangs in the balance, the outcome will depend upon the weightings given to two quite distinct sets of ‘instincts’ about how to create a vibrant, sustainable, thriving city centre. One set … Continue reading
Posted in Earthquakes, Economics, Free Market, Freedom, Human Wellbeing, New Zealand Politics
Tagged Brownlee, Christchurch, community, disaster, Freedom, Local Government, markets, private sector, wellbeing
2 Comments
Devils, details, dark arts and Trojan horses
Allow me a Cassandra moment. Like the Trojans in the midst of a decades long war, living in Christchurch is, for many people, an experience with precious little long-term hope. Many people have, however, invested a good deal of hope … Continue reading
Posted in Earthquakes, Economics, New Zealand Politics
Tagged Brownlee, Christchurch, community, disaster, Local Government, markets
12 Comments
Christchurch’s Second Coming
“And what rough beast, its hour come round at last Slouches toward [Christchurch] to be born?” The ground is now being prepared for the future incarnation of Christchurch. What comes our way will bear the marks and influences of the … Continue reading
Posted in Earthquakes, Economics, Fascism, Freedom, Human Wellbeing, New Zealand Politics
Tagged Brownlee, capitalism, Christchurch, cities, community, disaster, fascism, Freedom, Local Government, markets, National, private sector, unity
7 Comments
What ground is ‘left’ when it comes to land, assets – and nationalism?
It’s the issue that won’t go away [and here], so it’s probably a good time to ask “Where should the left stand on the land (and ‘our’ assets)?” “Stand in the place where you live” – so sang REM in what … Continue reading
Out of control
Sometimes, you just can’t keep things under control in politics. You know how it goes – somehow Treasury documents get accidentally posted on websites; somehow the government’s majority ‘control’ over partially privatised state assets just isn’t what you thought it … Continue reading
Posted in Economics, Free Market, New Zealand Politics
Tagged asset sales, ideology, John Key, markets, National, private sector, Voting
3 Comments
Working hard for the ‘unearned increment’
In the spirit of How Many Elephants in a Blue Whale?, I thought I’d do a quick calculation of how much hard work was in Bill Gates (variously estimated) fortune. At one point, Bill Gates was said to be worth … Continue reading
Posted in Economics, Free Market, Philosophy
Tagged capitalism, markets, private sector, wealth
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Earthquake Reflections and Connections
We care most about things that happen to us and affect our interests directly. Try as we might, it’s harder to care about things that happen to others, at a distance, and which have little impact on our interests (which, … Continue reading
Posted in Freedom, Human Nature, Human Wellbeing, New Zealand Politics, Philosophy
Tagged Christchurch, community, disaster, human nature, markets, self-interest, unity
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