Wednesday, 27 December 2023

HIPKINS DOESN'T KNOW WHY HE LOST, DO YOU?


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Apparently it was the wealthy and the powerful who were responsible for the 'No' vote in Australia's recent referendum. Who sez? The new Chris Hipkins, NZ Herald, that's who.

And there were we, thinking it was the commonsensical, the intuitive and the fair-minded wot got rid of indigenisation. Speaking of Hipkins (although we'd rather not), the man who doesn't know what a woman is doesn't know why Labour lost the election, either. 

Ah, let's think ... Maybe the Abortion Law Act and subsequent slaughter of the unborn on the altar of convenience. Maybe awarding all sorts of privileges to the brown-skinned (not Indians, though, just Maori, so maybe racism). Maybe forcing the entire nation to take an experimental gene serum and getting the Catholic Church in behind on it, thereby crippling, maiming and killing Kiwis left, right and centre (although not so many as are killed by abortion). 




All of which is by way of a lead-in to the hopeful comments of the unlikely-named pundit Lushington D Brady of the BFD: 


As I’ve previously observed, New Zealanders are fast learning the truth of Paul Keating’s claim that “when you change the government, you change the country”. For once, the changes seem to be trending in the right direction.

The new government is repealing Three Waters, promising to bin the Auckland Light Rail white elephant, the ute tax and more. It’s being dragged, however reluctantly and slowly, into a likely referendum on co-governance and clawing back the ‘interpretations’ of the Treaty of Waitangi.

Luxon, no doubt prodded by Winston Peters, is also re-orienting New Zealand’s foreign policy back to the West, rather than pandering to Chinese communism. Notwithstanding, of course, his gutless signing of an anti-Israel “joint statement”.

So why wasn't Winston prodding Luxon into refusing to sign that disgusting document?  Was it a trade-off? 

If Matthew Hooton is to be believed, Luxon will also be New Zealand’s “most pro-Australian PM ever”. Which seems like a pretty strong call – though it’s not hard to at least better the sneering condescension of Jacinda Ardern. But “pro-Australian” is, if nothing else, just part of a general re-orientation, ‘back to Canberra, Washington, NATO, Tokyo and Seoul’.

New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s emphasis on Australia was underlined by his visiting Anthony Albanese in Sydney the same day his Finance Minister, Nicola Willis, was revealing the financial debacle left by Jacinda Ardern and Chris Hipkins.

That prioritisation reflects Luxon’s view New Zealand has become too inward-looking and it needs to “hustle” globally.

It’s hard not to suspect that much of it is being driven by New Zealand’s new foreign minister.

His Foreign Minister, Winston Peters, has already dropped New Zealand’s childish insistence since 1984 that it runs an “independent” foreign policy. Peters points out the slogan was smug, implying other countries don’t, and meaningless, since every country does.

 



 

“Smug” and “meaningless” seems a pretty apt description of NZ foreign policy under Ardern and Nanaia Mahuta, after all.

 


There, there, dear reader - it was just a nightmare and it's over

 

It will be interesting to see how Peters, if not Luxon, reacts to the inevitable diplomatic bullying from Beijing.

The message to Beijing is that Wellington backing democracy over dictatorship is its independent choice, despite China menacingly warning New Zealand of the “risks” of seeking closer economic ties with India.

Somehow, I suspect that Peters will be easily a match for anything Beijing’s “wolf warriors” have to throw around. The bigger question will be whether the PM will have the backbone to resist, not just the pressure from China but the panic from business interests terrified at the prospect of having all that sweet, sweet Yuan yanked from their sweaty hands.

So far, though, Luxon is making all the right noises about the AUKUS (Australia, UK, USA) alliance.

 Australian officials surely noticed that Luxon didn’t demur when Albanese said the two countries didn’t just share common values but “a common strategic outlook”. Luxon was the first to refer to the military alliance, promising Wellington would do its share of the “heavy lifting” in what he called “a more challenging and complex world” and emphasising greater military interoperability.

Given the AUKUS defence pact, which Luxon called “a very important element in ensuring peace” in the region, greater interoperability implicitly extends to the US and UK. Albanese denies pushing for New Zealand to join Pillar Two of AUKUS, but he doesn’t need to. Luxon confirmed New Zealand is interested and will decide over the next year. It’s unthinkable his government would choose no.

 

Dare we hope this uni has closed? Probably not

 

There remains, of course, the legacy of Lange.

New Zealand’s anti-nuclear policy will stay. The baby boomers will need to pass before it can reconsider that matter rationally. Albanese astutely emphasised Australia’s new submarines will be nuclear-powered but not nuclear-armed. Some New Zealand voters make that distinction.

Both sides’ message was clear: New Zealand and Australia do better the more they co-operate.

Australia’s prodigal cousin continues its journey home.

The Australian

 The best Luxon could do in the short term is show up, by contrast, the lily- livered Albanese government.

 

The Vision of St John Evangelist (Alonso Carno)
 

St John, Evangelist, pray for us

14 comments:

  1. Oh dont we dont want bubba cry baby Hipkins being upset by the truth.!

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  2. The evil rich and powerful z scum now own everything worldwide and control our polician Check out who. Uber pharmaceutical companies phone companies insurance companies banks food companies health services. Cadbury Nestle. Etc etc etc.

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  3. HIPSCUM IS A MEMBER WEF Member and will be prosecuted for crimes against humanity and Treason when the time comes

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  4. Yet it was around 65% no vote by citizens

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  5. Lots of aborigines voted no in Northern Territory saying they didn’t trust the abos pushing for the yes vote

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  6. If anyone wants to waste their money and health on smokes well more fool them

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  7. YES LABOUR SPENT BILLIONS ON NO DECENT RAIL ON NEGLECTING THE ROADS CREATING UNEMPLOYMENT POISONING CITIZENS WITH FAKE TOXIC JABS SCREWING UP THE HEALTH SYSTEM DESTROYING MORALITY IN OUR SCHOOLS; BUT THEY DID GIVE THEMSELVES REGULAR SALARY AND PERK INCREASES AS THEY DESTROYED PRIVATE BUSINESSES πŸ‘ΏπŸ˜‘

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  8. Chris who???? Why should he be given any credence for anything, least of all intelligence, honesty, morality, credibility ...the list is as long as you want to make it!!
    Hipkins is irrelevant.

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  9. Hippins would be good at snooker as he would always be sinking the brown and not worrying about the pink.

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  10. One lot is looking as stupid as the other
    How about they stick to the basics like having a population that can read write and do math
    And all the social bs engineering and aspirational crap replaced with people of life experience telling us where it's at rather than career politicians and making the country complient to ridiculous directives from the UN WEF and any other non elected control freaks who create wars treason and financial hardship and steal our resources which is all we've seen since 2008

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  11. 2 years from now he'll still be wondering πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

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  12. Rachelle McKenzie27 December 2023 at 23:31

    Chippie, for your information only a woman has a WOMB, in all my years as an FD, I never once saw a man with a WOMB, worm πŸ€” but not a WOMB. πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

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  13. There’s 27 million people in Australia are they saying more than half are wealthy and powerful

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  14. Then the great majority in Australia are filthy rich and powerful

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