marsden_online: (write)
In brief, the Term of Parliament (Enabling 4-year Term) Legislation Amendment Bill attempts to establish a 4-year term between national government elections, in exchange for giving non-government MPs a greater presence on select committees. This would come into effect should it pass a referendum to be held at one of the next two national elections.

And the official online submission form. Submissions close 1.00pm Thursday, 17 April 2025

If you want to draw on mine as inspiration for your own personalised submission go right ahead, but please write something unique, don't cut and paste from this without making it clear that you are quoting from another submission :)

ExpandSubmission )
marsden_online: (write)
Before we get to my submission, here are some guides to writing your own.

* Emily Writes: How to make a submission against the Treaty Principles Bill
* No Right Turn: Submit to defend te Tiriti!
* Green Party:
Make a submission - Treaty Principles Bill

* NZCTU: How to make a submission on the Treaty Principles Bill
* PPTA: How to make a submission on the Treaty Principles Bill
* Greenpeace: Treaty principles bill submission guide
* Honour The Treaty: Submissions

And the official online submission form.

If you want to draw on mine as inspiration for your own personalised submission go right ahead, but please write something unique, don't cut and paste from this without making it clear that you are quoting from another submission :)

ExpandSubmission )
marsden_online: (Kea)
Protest gathering in Ōtautahi/Christchurch to protest the bullshit Treaty Principles Bill and support Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
Crowd and flags with the Bridge of Remembrance in the background
marsden_online: (write)
Early voting has started, so I'm running out of time to make my triennial pre-election post.

Expandcut for those who are not interested )
marsden_online: (write)
It's the first New Zealand observance of King's Birthday Weekend since 1952, following the ... transition from Queen Elizabeth II to King Charles III.

A poster on mastodon whom I will credit if I ever manage to find the post again, made mention of tripping over the change in name of the public holiday, and I agree that it should henceforth be called simply "Quing's birthday weekend" until such time as we manage to strike it from the calendar and replace it with something more appropriate to modern Aotearoa / New Zealand. Perhaps a memorial day for the past, freeing up more of Waitangi Day for celebrating the present / future.

Anyway that post put this image in my head, and now I put it in yours.

Jonathan Groff portraying King George in the musical Hamilton, captioned “It's my Birthday!”, “Hooray for me!“

Historical note: the regular observance of Quing's Birthday in New Zealand was set during the reign of a later George than the one portrayed above, George VI.

~~~

People have been pointing out that now is a good time to make the move away from Commonwealth state to Republic, but there is still not the /political/ will do so. Unfortunately our politicians are still for the most part either part of or beholden to the class of people who fear that making that necessary step away from our colonial past will mean having to

* admit to and maybe even [horror] /give up/ some of the social and economic privilege bestowed upon them by the historic and ongoing wrongdoings of the "Crown" and
* take on the challenges of becoming something new, properly recognising the principles in Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

While I am definitely keen on us making the move as soon as practical, there are national conversations we need to have first, and one of those is around what we do about having "head of state" (a.k.a. king, queen or president). I question what we actually need a separate head of state - particularly an elected one - for at all.

The most common suggestion is simply to transfer the duties to the "Governor General" - a title which is already a misnomer as it has had no relevance to the actual governing of the country in decades. The responsibilities as they stand are purely ceremonial/diplomatic/social and actually I would be fine with the idea of codifying that as a (suitably titled) position for conveying and upholding the mana all peoples of Aotearoa on the public stage, as long as it doesn't become just another plum political appointment for MPs who are past their use by date.
marsden_online: (loved)
As we observe ANZAC Day here in New Zealand I am thinking of all the "freedoms" allied soldiers are lauded for dying to protect which are now blatantly under attack by facists in the "Allied" countries.

I am also thinking of Україна 🇺🇦 , defending itself against a war of conquest by one of those allies and where Kiwis are also voluntarily fighting and have died to protect those freedoms.

https://nzhistory.govt.nz/war/anzac-day/introduction

2019 - in the shadow of the Christchurch Mosque attacks

2017 - long post

Road trip

Apr. 10th, 2023 09:11 pm
marsden_online: (write)
Some months ago we were given notice of my brother (B) and his fiancé's (R) wedding, to be held beach-side in the the Coromandel. After looking at the costs and logistics of flights, rental cars etc just for a weekend trip versus the cost of the ferry, and discovering that there was a quilt show on that we could feasibly visit en-route, the decision was made that we could afford for me to take a week and a half off work, E would be taken out of school (which she could mostly keep up with remotely) and we would make an overdue family holiday of it, visiting places that D hadn't been in years and completely new territory for the other two of us.

Expandlong post is long )
marsden_online: (BlueDragon)
It is the last few hours of 2022. There is no KAOS party this year, and as D has come down with something flu-like we are also not venturing out to either of the drinkies we have been invited to.

I am not feeling positive going into the New Year, even less so than going into this year. Hanging over me or settled in my gut is something like generalised anxiety, but not exactly. I suspect it may be some type of self loathing, born of having given more than I intended or wanted to over this year physically, emotionally, financially with nothing to show for it myself and precious little to show for anyone else.

Let's take a look back in bullet points
Expandsnip )
marsden_online: (write)
If you are on the electoral role in NZ you probably received a letter from the National Party this week, or are about to. If you are like me your first instinct on seeing "Leader's Office National Party" on the front of the envelope was to drop it straight in the recycling. Believe it or not I am asking you not to do that.

Inside is a party statement which is not worth reading[1], but on the back of this is a survey (pictured) which I urge you to fill out and return by Freepost, especially of you are not a National supporter. It's a little thing, but someone will see the results and there is a slim chance enough of them might have a trickle-up effect on policy. Also if I understand how Freepost works NZ Post get like a buck for every survey returned (from parliamentary services or some such not the National party coffers unfortunately), which is a better use of our tax dollars than much of National/Act policy.

Photo of an 11-question multiple-choice survey shaded in blue and titled Taking New Zealand Forward Survey

[1] Basically repetition of the lines that Labour are poor stewards of the economy and have an addiction to spending, in the hope that if they say it enough people will believe it. Sadly this form of political attack in place of coherent, costed policy has a history of working :( If you want more reading on /why/ it is completely untrue, Gordon Campbell at Werewolf writes about it quite often.

~~~

I may blog about my answers later, but for now I want to switch tack and talk about the Labour Party for a bit.
Expandsnip )
marsden_online: (Blueknight)
This weekendish DreamWidth is changing one of it's service providers because [DW have] ethics. You can read the details in the DW Maintenance post and comments if you want to know more.

The comments took a left turn into free-speech, censorship and content-moderation (which are, to be clear, completely unaffected by this move) and several very good analogies were brought up which I want to preserve for my own future reference/use :)

Content warning: references to potentially triggering topics.


For a tamer example, it would be entirely possible to make a bot that responds to everything a particular person posts on Twitter with pictures of human poop. If you use public-domain images, like Wikimedia's, it's even legal. But no one wants to use a website that's plagued by Poop-Bot and its ilk. A site that allowed Poop-Bot to run rampant would lose all its users in short order.

I somehow think, even though it's just gross and not actually dangerous, Poop-Bot would get kicked off the vast majority of "free speech" sites.
[personal profile] raininshadows


Everyone always says they want to use a website that doesn't "censor" content. ("Censor" in scarequotes there because people treat it like it's a magical word even when they're not treating it like the greatest possible offense... If you actually look at how people behave, though, the vast majority avoid unmoderated or undermoderated spaces, and the people who don't avoid them are the ones who've been kicked off every other service -- usually for cause -- and are shitty fucking neighbors. People do not actually want to hang out on a website that is nothing but spam and neo-Nazis! They just have no idea how much careful effort it takes to keep a website from becoming wall-to-wall spam and neo-Nazis, because good content moderation is invisible; they never see the amount of stuff that gets removed or the sheer volume of shit-tier spam and garbage that would cover 95% of every even mildly active site in 24 unmoderated hours.
[staff profile] denise


...banning content that actively harms human beings isn't censorship, it's basic safety and human rights.
...
This isn't about free speech, it's about protecting users from actively harmful content like human trafficking and doxxing. As in, things that happen to real human beings and should not be happening to real human beings.
[personal profile] sarajayechan


"Free speech" is the wrong framing! "Free speech" is about the government suppressing or punishing you for what you say, and we aren't the government. Any online site that accepts user-generated content (which is the fancy term for "the stuff y'all post" as opposed to "the stuff the site itself posts") has to set forth content policies that govern what their users can post, because without those policies (and active enforcement of them) a site will be unusable in days, if not hours, because it will be overrun with spam, child sex abuse material, and a thousand other categories of things that make a service impossible to use and create legal liability. Like every other site out there, we have content policies that govern what people are and aren't allowed to post, and we will (and do) remove content that's reported to us that violates those policies.
[staff profile] denise



Actual free speech actively requires deplatforming those whose only "side of the story" is trying to harm and/or silence others.
[personal profile] onewhitecrow


There's an immense difference between fictional content and conduct that has concrete, tangible, offline harm. (Not trying to police your use of the term at all, but I personally try to avoid "real-world", because dammit, after 20+ years of us all living, working, and socializing online, and *especially* after the pandemic and associated virtual event shift, "online" *is* also the real world.) But there's also a huge difference between "someone posted a link to my Twitter account" and "someone posted a link to the GPS coordinates of my house", and the potential consequences of both are wildly different. Smart policy needs to recognize that!
[staff profile] denise
marsden_online: (write)
From the interviews I have read in the mainstream media my feeling is that many of the actual anti-mandate protesters are struggling with a shift in world view. Small business owners, nurses, teachers, .. professionals who up to now have been used to feeling that they are in control of their lives and secure in the knowledge that the system operates to their benefit. Suddenly that control has been rudely taken away, because of something which probably doesn't feel particularly real to them.[1]

At a personal level, that has to feel really unfair and hurtful. And it is, in the way life often is. I sympathise in that I really don't know how I would cope if my job or ability to work was suddenly taken away. It's not comfortable to think about. But it is always a possibility at the back of my mind, so I like to think I am as prepared as I can be, because I know our social support systems while not perhaps currently actively hostile to those who need or want to change or withdraw from employed life for whatever reason are not actually particularly supportive.

Expandcontinues )

Around the world the pandemic has highlighted inequity. Inequity is fuel to the fire of those feeling disenfranchised and angry, and to professional shit-stirrers. In New Zealand we're actually in a good position to address that, especially right now with a somehow well-performing economy while so many of the politically vital middle class / small business actually have to look at the uncomfortable reality that "that could be me". The solutions lie not in how we treat and respect /workers/ but in how we treat and respect those who /for whatever reason/ are not currently able to work.

Expandfootnotes )

Expand Cut Tags

Expand All Cut TagsCollapse All Cut Tags

Most Popular Tags

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios