View Full Version : I'm voting for the Maroi Party
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 11:17
I saw on the debate last night - there was a question asking "Yes or No -... some question here"
They went to Winnie "Let me Just tell you this *click brain off*"
Nation, Labour etc all went on for a number of minutes, each moving the conversation back to promote their core ideology and ignoring what was asked... UNTIL the guy from the Maori Party was asking.
He simply said - and I quote his answer in it's entirety - "No".
A STRAIGHT ANSWER - I bloody near died. What would happen if they all gave straight answers - good God we'd be able to make an informed choice!
duckman
2nd September 2005, 11:20
Was the question .. "Do you really have any idea what you'll do if you actually got voted in .... " OR
"Have you ever done a days work in your life" .... :motu:
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 11:25
Was the question .. "Do you really have any idea what you'll do if you actually got voted in .... " OR
"Have you ever done a days work in your life" .... :motu:\
:rofl: No but you nearly had to get your arse downstairs and clean my desk... I just about sprayed my coffee on the keyboard when I read the comeback...
bastard
Quasievil
2nd September 2005, 11:26
I saw on the debate last night - there was a question asking "Yes or No -... some question here"
They went to Winnie "Let me Just tell you this *click brain off*"
Nation, Labour etc all went on for a number of minutes, each moving the conversation back to promote their core ideology and ignoring what was asked... UNTIL the guy from the Maori Party was asking.
He simply said - and I quote his answer in it's entirety - "No".
A STRAIGHT ANSWER - I bloody near died. What would happen if they all gave straight answers - good God we'd be able to make an informed choice!
please dont mate please could you imagine it, maoris greens and labour the country would be beyond fucked it would be destroyed
Jonty
2nd September 2005, 11:27
Was the question .. "Do you really have any idea what you'll do if you actually got voted in .... " OR
"Have you ever done a days work in your life" .... :motu:
You could certainly fill a thread guessing that question!! Probably a bit like that emial that has been circulating that allows you to create a National billboard - it had me amused for hours. Maybe we should geta thread going with Kb'r billboards!!
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 11:29
please dont mate please could you imagine it, maoris greens and labour the country would be beyond fucked it would be destroyed
Yeah but at least I KNOW it will be - I mean the guy was direct and possibly honest!
Lias
2nd September 2005, 11:30
Yeah but at least I KNOW it will be - I mean the guy was direct and possibly honest!
He's a politician.. Honest and politician arnt not words normally associated with each other.
Quasievil
2nd September 2005, 11:36
Yeah but at least I KNOW it will be - I mean the guy was direct and possibly honest!
how do you think he would answer the rights to foreshore, fishing quota allowances, acces to land as well as resource management policy issues
just to name a few let alone things like Moari television, moari language in schools sovereignty issues and perhaps even special moari organisations for this that and the other thing as well
And whats this about Moari getting access to super before anyone else because they on average die 8 years before other NZrs I mean men die before women on average so by that rational men should get the super before women
the party is a joke
kerryg
2nd September 2005, 11:36
[QUOTE=ManDownUnder]
He simply said - and I quote his answer in it's entirety - "No".
QUOTE]
I saw that ...and to be brutally honest I thought it because he didn't really have a clue (he seemed startled by the question and then momentarily puzzled and then just blurted out "no"). Seemed like it could just as easily have been "yes". Maybe I'm doing the guy a disservice because the other things he said generally seemed to have a bit more thought behind them, even if there was not a lot of obvious detail or substance...but I suspect if he had been asked to explain the reason for not lowering tax petrol there would have a long and embarrassing silence...... :scratch:
Lame-arse of the night has to be Rodney Hide though. Like a bloody cracked record. Cullen and Keys were bloody good, all credit to both of them. Well informed, credible...damn hard to pick between the two of 'em IMHO
MikeL
2nd September 2005, 11:48
please dont mate please could you imagine it, maoris greens and labour the country would be beyond fucked it would be destroyed
hah! try thinking outside the square... I know it takes an effort of the imagination... Maoris, Green, Labour...push button, get knee-jerk reaction...
O.K., the country would be different, but what exactly would be destroyed?
The environment? Social justice? A pleasant, healthy lifestyle?
Or just your opportunities for exploitation and self-enrichment?
Lou Girardin
2nd September 2005, 11:55
hah! try thinking outside the square... I know it takes an effort of the imagination... Maoris, Green, Labour...push button, get knee-jerk reaction...
O.K., the country would be different, but what exactly would be destroyed?
The environment? Social justice? A pleasant, healthy lifestyle?
Or just your opportunities for exploitation and self-enrichment?
Self-determination? Initiative?
Beemer
2nd September 2005, 11:57
Considering how many of the Maori Party candidates have come out in support of Donna Awatere-Huata and her theft of at least $80,000 of funds from Maori children, I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole, not that I ever intended to before anyway. If their attitude is that most Maoris are in jail/unemployed/ill/grossly overweight/unintelligent/insert whatever you want because they are Maori and it's a white man's world, they can piss off back to the grass huts and moas they had when we arrived and stop sticking their bloody hands out.
duckman
2nd September 2005, 11:58
Considering how many of the Maori Party candidates have come out in support of Donna Awatere-Huata and her theft of at least $80,000 of funds from Maori children, I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole, not that I ever intended to before anyway. If their attitude is that most Maoris are in jail/unemployed/ill/grossly overweight/unintelligent/insert whatever you want because they are Maori and it's a white man's world, they can piss off back to the grass huts and moas they had when we arrived and stop sticking their bloody hands out.
Mmmmmm.... Moa's ....is it nearly lunch time?? :rofl:
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 11:59
hah! try thinking outside the square... I know it takes an effort of the imagination... Maoris, Green, Labour...push button, get knee-jerk reaction...
O.K., the country would be different, but what exactly would be destroyed?
The environment? Social justice? A pleasant, healthy lifestyle?
Or just your opportunities for exploitation and self-enrichment?
I'd start the answer to this question with something like "Racially selected ownership and control of all coast assets"
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 12:00
the party is a joke
as was this thread... and the election specials and... aaaa you get the idea...
Lias
2nd September 2005, 12:00
O.K., the country would be different, but what exactly would be destroyed?
The environment? Social justice? A pleasant, healthy lifestyle?
Or just your opportunities for exploitation and self-enrichment?
A few of the things labour has fucked up whilst in power so far:
The sanctity of marriage
The RNZAF
The legal system (privy council/supreme court)
Public confidence in the police
ANZUS Treaty & NZ-Australian relations
Massive non english speaking immigration
Attempted hate speech laws
I could go on for pages I'm sure, but those are some of the big ones. Any unholy trinity coalition of labour, maori and greens would probably see us outlawing all sorts of things.. Like being white, male and middle class!
Quasievil
2nd September 2005, 12:32
as was this thread... and the election specials and... aaaa you get the idea...
Of course mate, I have to protect the weak minded from agreeing with you though
Hitcher
2nd September 2005, 12:42
A few of the things labour has fucked up whilst in power so far:
The sanctity of marriage
The RNZAF
The legal system (privy council/supreme court)
Public confidence in the police
ANZUS Treaty & NZ-Australian relations
Massive non english speaking immigration
Attempted hate speech laws
The only thing on this list that I would agree with is the RNZAF. The rest is Redneck Party raving -- no problem identified, no solution offered.
Vote for change. Vote BDOTGNZA!
Wolf
2nd September 2005, 12:45
A few of the things labour has fucked up whilst in power so far:
The sanctity of marriage
...
Thank you, George Dubilya...
Dude, that "Sanctity of Marriage" shit is fallacious and you know it. Unless, of course, angry bullies smashing the shit out of co-dependant women who lack the self-respect to kick the fucker in the nuts and find a good divorce lawyer is somehow "sanctified".
There is no atrocity that has not been perpetrated within the bounds of supposed "holy" wedlock and you're saying that the ability of people - both homosexuals and heterosexuals - to have a "Civil Union" in some way undermines that?
Admittedly the distinction between a legal "marriage" (especially when a Civil Celebrant is all that is required to perform a legal marriage of two people) and a "Civil Union" is little more than legal semantics, but one could argue that the amendments to Matrimonial Property law that came in ages ago rendered the distinction between a legally "married" couple and a "de facto" couple (whether hetero- or homosexual) null and void anyway. The Matrimonial Property Act amendment effectively put "living in sin" on a par with a church marriage.
Honestly, if anyone should complain about the Civil Union bill it's those who make use of it because it is little more than a way for the government to get revenue from a large chunk of people who were previously unable to get fleeced by marriage licence fees.
I attended a couple of friends' Civil Union and enjoyed it immensely. I do not feel that my marriage has been undermined or made less sacred (we had a civil celebrant, a priest and a priestess conducting our wedding in front of our friends, family and deities) by the ability of people to make a choice between "marriage", living "de facto" and "Civil Union"; nor by the fact that the last two options are open to homosexuals.
Don't worry, dude, "marriage" is still protected and only available to heterosexuals thanks to sexually-bigotted people who kicked up a fuss about the possibility of opening it to gays. Bad enough we disgusting pagans and all those filthy atheists out there can get a marriage licence and even choose to get married in a church if we/they wish, without those gays getting in on the act, eh? Best create a separate officially recognised union to appease the bigots but not even that works because "Civil Union = Sanctity of Marriage Compromised" ... that "towering intellect" GW Bush said so!
MikeL
2nd September 2005, 12:51
The only thing on this list that I would agree with is the RNZAF. The rest is Redneck Party raving -- no problem identified, no solution offered.
Vote for change. Vote BDOTGNZA!
See? Thinking outside the square is possible...
MikeL
2nd September 2005, 12:59
And thank you, Wolf, for that convincing demolition job on the "sanctity of marriage" nonsense. The idea that giving something to someone equates to taking something away from someone else shows how deeply we have been indoctrinated by the thinking of economists and bean-counters.
Generosity of spirit is not like money in the bank: the more you spread it around, the richer you become...
duckman
2nd September 2005, 13:08
Generosity of spirit is not like money in the bank: the more you spread it around, the richer you become...
Quote 'o the day .... nice.
gamgee
2nd September 2005, 13:20
A few of the things labour has fucked up whilst in power so far:
The legal system (privy council/supreme court)
so you'd rather travel to london or where ever it was to have your case heard in NZ's highest court which just so happens to be in another country? :clap: i don't support labour but that is one thing they did which i actually think was a good idea, i could rant on about why for a while but i'm not going to :hitcher:
MSTRS
2nd September 2005, 13:24
...... filthy atheists.......
OI! I shower every day. AND I use soap.
MSTRS
2nd September 2005, 13:33
Cullen and Keys were bloody good, all credit to both of them. Well informed, credible...damn hard to pick between the two of 'em IMHO
That prick Cullen should be put against a wall and rotten-tomatoed. He could not stop himself running off at the mouth and drowning out what Keys had to say (wonder if it was because Keys actually had something sensible to say? Dunno cos I never got to hear it) BUT when that Anderton git was pontificating & Hyde started in over the top, Cullen had a sudden attack of the WavyArmToShutHimUp. Arrogant dickhead. I often see him in our local supermarket & let me tell you - I would not give that man my money to look after. Dirty, unkempt clothing, unshaven and you should see what he eats :puke: Why anyone would want this prat & his cronies 'looking after' the country I can't understand.
MikeL
2nd September 2005, 13:35
i don't support labour but that is one thing they did which i actually think was a good idea,
Funny how often you hear people start a sentence with "I'm not a Labour supporter, but..."
And what's funnier, they all say different things...
And what's funniest, is that we all know that Labour has fucked up this country good and proper...
Jonty
2nd September 2005, 13:42
so you'd rather travel to london or where ever it was to have your case heard in NZ's highest court which just so happens to be in another country? :clap: i don't support labour but that is one thing they did which i actually think was a good idea, i could rant on about why for a while but i'm not going to :hitcher:
Have to disagree there gamgee. The Supreme Court in thoery is a good idea and one day I am sure it will be adept at serving the purpose for which it was designed. However, the only reason it is here now is because of Margret Wilson's on political agenda. Now she can sit back when she is retired and say I did that, rather than laying the foundation for a new court and taking to step back to invite serious discussion. Unfortunatley, it was done in far to much of a hurry, we now lack the judical depth (and quality) that England can offer and with the issue of land claims, we cannot get an impartial view.
I can go on for days, but the overiding thing is that the Supreme Court is a creature of political policy at the time.
T.I.E
2nd September 2005, 13:45
what am i.
part maori nga Puhi. racial slander as it is i'm worried.
i do my job, i have never been on the benifit and never will.
i have paid my way through life. never had a hand out being education or medical or anything.
i have never wanted nor have i taken anyones help.
i don't need it nor do i want it.
and with the bashing that maoridom gets, do i want to be a maori now?
i have always been a kiwi, not a new zealander, not a maori nor a pakeha.
just a kiwi.
someone screws up we blame them for their looks. its always superficial. asian islander moari.
stuff this i'm a kiwi. who do i vote for. where is the kiwi party?
Lou Girardin
2nd September 2005, 13:47
What is truly scary about some of these posts is the absence of any knowledge of history. Labour is being blamed for problems initiated by National.
Wolf
2nd September 2005, 13:55
What is truly scary about some of these posts is the absence of any knowledge of history. Labour is being blamed for problems initiated by National.
Which ones specifically? (Says Wolf, advertising his absence of historical knowledge. Recent historical knowledge, anyway)
madboy
2nd September 2005, 14:01
where is the kiwi party?Kiwi party? You're hopeful.
It's not your race that's the problem, it's the 3% of them who are friggin useless bastards. Just like the 3% of my ethnic cousins that are friggin useless. Unfortunately, though, my taxes don't pay for the ministry of white buggers affairs. Although WINZ does take an active role in looking after many of the 3%... and justice... and police...
Lowest common demonimator - all asians are useless drivers, all young males are dangerous drivers, all maoris are bludgers, all PIs are wife beaters... can't beat stereotyping.
Most "white" folks are shit scared of the Maori party, cos they think the 3% mentioned above will be running it and doling out everyone else's hard earned taxes for them to buy a new Lexus.
But then I'm not big on geneology nor cultural identity. I don't care about my irish ancestry, and especially don't care that they came via Australia long after some white folks and some brown folks penned a few signatures back in 1840. I don't see what some dodgy land deal has to do with me, and I really can't understand why some people are still whining about it 165 years later.
It's a bit like getting pissed that your parents remarried (to other people) after a divorce because it dilutes your inheritance... jeez, take responsibility for your own actions, don't dwell on the past.
My rant for the day. Back to writing my CV. T.I.E., you have my sympathy mate, being a decent "normal" human being with your ethnic background can't be easy in todays environment.
Lou Girardin
2nd September 2005, 14:26
The Nats ran the defence forces into the ground for years.
The Nats started the Treaty gravy train.
The Nats allowed barely restricted immigration.
The Nats started the 'traffic enforcement as a revenue tool' strategy.
The Nats certainly didn't attempt to restore ANZUS when they had a chance.
Lias
2nd September 2005, 14:33
Thank you, George Dubilya...
Dude, that "Sanctity of Marriage" shit is fallacious and you know it. Unless, of course, angry bullies smashing the shit out of co-dependant women who lack the self-respect to kick the fucker in the nuts and find a good divorce lawyer is somehow "sanctified".
There is no atrocity that has not been perpetrated within the bounds of supposed "holy" wedlock and you're saying that the ability of people - both homosexuals and heterosexuals - to have a "Civil Union" in some way undermines that?
Admittedly the distinction between a legal "marriage" (especially when a Civil Celebrant is all that is required to perform a legal marriage of two people) and a "Civil Union" is little more than legal semantics, but one could argue that the amendments to Matrimonial Property law that came in ages ago rendered the distinction between a legally "married" couple and a "de facto" couple (whether hetero- or homosexual) null and void anyway. The Matrimonial Property Act amendment effectively put "living in sin" on a par with a church marriage.
Honestly, if anyone should complain about the Civil Union bill it's those who make use of it because it is little more than a way for the government to get revenue from a large chunk of people who were previously unable to get fleeced by marriage licence fees.
I attended a couple of friends' Civil Union and enjoyed it immensely. I do not feel that my marriage has been undermined or made less sacred (we had a civil celebrant, a priest and a priestess conducting our wedding in front of our friends, family and deities) by the ability of people to make a choice between "marriage", living "de facto" and "Civil Union"; nor by the fact that the last two options are open to homosexuals.
Don't worry, dude, "marriage" is still protected and only available to heterosexuals thanks to sexually-bigotted people who kicked up a fuss about the possibility of opening it to gays. Bad enough we disgusting pagans and all those filthy atheists out there can get a marriage licence and even choose to get married in a church if we/they wish, without those gays getting in on the act, eh? Best create a separate officially recognised union to appease the bigots but not even that works because "Civil Union = Sanctity of Marriage Compromised" ... that "towering intellect" GW Bush said so!I'm not a christian, nor do I have any love of dubya (as you well know) so dont try throwing that in my face. I do however very firmly believe that Marriage is a sacred commitment between a man and a woman before the god(s) of their choice. It's not a "christian" thing, marriage has been around for thousands of years, across pretty much every major religion and to the best of my knowledge has always been exclusively between a man and a woman, and involves declaring their commitment to each other, and making oaths to said gods.
For labour to legislate saying that "marriage" can be between a man and a man, a woman and a woman, or a man and woman who are not declaring their beliefs to their gods is offensive to me, and to many other new zealanders. If labour had held a referendum on this issue we all know it would have gone down in flames, and enver been passed. But Labour instead chose to force the legislation through, ignoring the widespread public outcry, and that is nothing less than massive social engiineering, trying to alter the fabric of NZ's society to what labour wants.
As for the beaten woman situation, the Relationships (Statutory References) Bill would have been sufficient to cover a defacto relationship like that. The "legal" protection for partners in any relationship is covered by that bill, the actual Civil Union Bill wasn't needed for those legal protections, and its the CUB that is what I object too.
so you'd rather travel to london or where ever it was to have your case heard in NZ's highest court which just so happens to be in another country? I'm a fairly ardent nationalist, but I do support the privy council. The privy council is a facility of the commonwealth, its judges are made up not just of british judges but other nationalities as well. They are expoed to case law from many parts of the world, and many countries with british based legal systems. They make an excellent independent court, that understands NZ law , whilst being indendent of NZ and unable to be influenced by partisan politicking within NZ. I genuinely believe that we should stick with the Privy Council to maintain a genuinely neutral appeal platform for the NZ legal system.
Ixion
2nd September 2005, 14:40
And thank you, Wolf, for that convincing demolition job on the "sanctity of marriage" nonsense. The idea that giving something to someone equates to taking something away from someone else shows how deeply we have been indoctrinated by the thinking of economists and bean-counters.
Generosity of spirit is not like money in the bank: the more you spread it around, the richer you become...
Have to disagree. Don't have any problem with gays, or anyone else, getting MARRIED, m'self. But the Civil Unions Bill does undermine marriage. Admittedly, it's by way of the (semi) last nail in the coffin, most of the damage was done when divorce became a fashionable thing. Was a time when marriage was SPECIAL. Two people who vowed to commit themselves totally to each other, for life, come what may. Can't get much more special than that.
Civil Unions Bill says , in effect, "marriage is nothing special, you can have exactly the same thing by just signing this bit of paper. When you're sick of it, just walk away". 'Tis like an Olypmics where everybody gets a gold medal - not much point to the gold medal then, is there? In fact, it's actually more like an Olympics where everyone in the stadium gets a gold medal. So it is indeed true that giving something to someone (gold medals to everyone) does indeed equate to taking something (the specialness of the medal ) away from ( the person who actually came first)
Not much left now of "until death us do part" , or "for better, for worse"
Fact is the -people who promoted the Civil Unions Bill **HATED** the whole concept of marriage and made it very plain that they did.
Wouldn't have minded if they just let gays marry under the same deal as others.Fact that they didn't take that simple option suggests that the real objective was indeed to undermine marriage.
Religion doesn't come into it, because for donkey's years you've been able to be married in a Registry Office, which is totally non religious. And there are plenty of marriage celebrants out there who will conduct a completely secular marriage ceremony. So the whole chuck off at "religion' and "churches" is just a smoke screen.
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 14:42
The Nats ran the defence forces into the ground for years.
The Nats started the Treaty gravy train.
The Nats allowed barely restricted immigration.
The Nats started the 'traffic enforcement as a revenue tool' strategy.
The Nats certainly didn't attempt to restore ANZUS when they had a chance.
You're sounding angly - not sad...
Is it fair to say you're seeing red - not feeling blue?
MikeL
2nd September 2005, 14:44
For labour to legislate saying that "marriage" can be between a man and a man, a woman and a woman, or a man and woman who are not declaring their beliefs to their gods is offensive to me, and to many other new zealanders.
I'm sorry, but your attitude that insists on equating marriage with an ideal supposedly instituted by the Judaeo-Christian god is culturally offensive to me and many other New Zealanders.
Lou Girardin
2nd September 2005, 14:54
You're sounding angly - not sad...
Is it fair to say you're seeing red - not feeling blue?
Seeing red fairly accurately describes my feeelings toward Labour.
Lias
2nd September 2005, 14:59
I'm sorry, but your attitude that insists on equating marriage with an ideal supposedly instituted by the Judaeo-Christian god is culturally offensive to me and many other New Zealanders.
Read what I said above. I'M NOT A CHRISTIAN, I guess if I had to pinhole I'd call myself a semi-agnostic odinist.
It's not a "christian" thing, marriage has been around for thousands of years, across pretty much every major religion and to the best of my knowledge has always been exclusively between a man and a woman, and involves declaring their commitment to each other, and making oaths to said gods.
Religion doesn't come into it, because for donkey's years you've been able to be married in a Registry Office, which is totally non religious. And there are plenty of marriage celebrants out there who will conduct a completely secular marriage ceremony. So the whole chuck off at "religion' and "churches" is just a smoke screen.
I'll be the first to admit that the sanctity of marriage has been declining in recent decades, with divorce rates and registry office weddings, but as you said the CUB is the last (and IMO largest) nail in the coffin. I dont think registry office weddings are a good thing either, nor is the rampant divorce rates we have. Until say 30-40 years ago, marriage was a sacred lifelong commitment between a man and a woman before their god(s), something that had been unchanged for 1000's of years across many religions, and modern society has managed to almost totally destroy its meaning in a few decades. I think its a bloody tragedy to be honest.
Lias
2nd September 2005, 15:08
Civil Unions Bill says , in effect, "marriage is nothing special, you can have exactly the same thing by just signing this bit of paper. When you're sick of it, just walk away". 'Tis like an Olypmics where everybody gets a gold medal - not much point to the gold medal then, is there? In fact, it's actually more like an Olympics where everyone in the stadium gets a gold medal. So it is indeed true that giving something to someone (gold medals to everyone) does indeed equate to taking something (the specialness of the medal ) away from ( the person who actually came first)
Interesting point you raise here, because its a viewpoint I've expressed about many other things in society that have changed in recent times. Take for example our school system, where no longer is there grades (A+, D-) etc, but simply "acheived" or "yet to acheive". Certain factions (who I shall lump as "the left"), have enshrined a system in our schools that says there are no winners and no loosers, that everyone is equal, and no-one is better than anyone else. This is done in the name of ensuring that noone feels "put down" by getting poor grades, yet in doing so takes away the rights of those at the top of the scale to be recognised for their skills and talents. There is no such thing as a "straight A" student, or an honours student now, gone are the days of bell curves.. We just have "those who pass and those who dont". Apart from being a utopian leftwing ideal pretty much straight out of the communist manifesto, the simple fact is this idealism leaves our youth sorely underequipped to deal with the cold harsh reality that is adult life. In life their are winners and loosers, not everyone gets to be a winner and people will always compete against each other.
MikeL
2nd September 2005, 15:10
In fact, it's actually more like an Olympics where everyone in the stadium gets a gold medal. So it is indeed true that giving something to someone (gold medals to everyone) does indeed equate to taking something (the specialness of the medal ) away from ( the person who actually came first)
Your analogy is attractive at first sight. However I could imagine exactly the same argument being put forward over the emancipation of slaves ("Freedom? Give it to all and sundry and those of us born free will feel devalued"), votes for women, etc. In fact it is an understandable human characteristic to jealously guard privilege, and arguments like this are just a rationalization for that instinctive behaviour.
Do you think you deserve a medal for being married? What sort of competition is it? Would the citation mention bravery above and beyond the call of duty, praiseworthy self-sacrifice, outstanding endurance...?
Fact is, society has changed. Your concept of marriage, admirable as an ideal, has not been a reality for a long time. Before you blithely assume the change has been for the worse, think back to the good old days when divorce was difficult or impossible, when people stayed in unhappy marriages for the sake of appearances (or the children), when hypocrisy and deception were the hidden face of conventional morality.
Nothing the law ever does will prevent a man and a woman pledging themselves to each other for life, and if they feel that their relationship or the validity and sincerity of their commitment is diminished or threatened by the existence of alternative ways of living one's life, or the extension of the legal and social rights which they enjoy to people who have been denied those rights, then it brings into question the solidity of that commitment or relationship.
Turbo Bong
2nd September 2005, 15:29
Considering how many of the Maori Party candidates have come out in support of Donna Awatere-Huata and her theft of at least $80,000 of funds from Maori children, I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole, not that I ever intended to before anyway. If their attitude is that most Maoris are in jail/unemployed/ill/grossly overweight/unintelligent/insert whatever you want because they are Maori and it's a white man's world, they can piss off back to the grass huts and moas they had when we arrived and stop sticking their bloody hands out.
Try putting on some balls and bomb them then all.
The people of this country are doomed too fight each other soon anyway.
Most maori are good for nothing. But not all.
They need to break away from tradition and explore the possible.
Yes its sad to hear about failers. But at least their trying.
Theirs one thing they dont care about right now. Quality life.
Opposing their rights to unconditional self-determination is only going to hold everyone in this great country of ours back.
We will never, never move from the past into the future.
Ahh but who gives a shit anyway. I dont.
ManDownUnder
2nd September 2005, 15:59
Try putting on some balls and bomb them then all.
The people of this country are doomed too fight each other soon anyway.
Most maori are good for nothing. But not all.
They need to break away from tradition and explore the possible.
Yes its sad to hear about failers. But at least their trying.
Theirs one thing they dont care about right now. Quality life.
Opposing their rights to unconditional self-determination is only going to hold everyone in this great country of ours back.
We will never, never move from the past into the future.
Ahh but who gives a shit anyway. I dont.
Jees dude - be good if you could bottle that. I hear they can extract anti venom and ship it to where it's needed...
Wolf
2nd September 2005, 16:10
I do however very firmly believe that Marriage is a sacred commitment between a man and a woman before the god(s) of their choice.
What is your view on what a "de facto" relationship conveys/infers about commitment between two people?
For labour to legislate saying that "marriage" can be between a man and a man, a woman and a woman, or a man and woman who are not declaring their beliefs to their gods is offensive to me, and to many other new zealanders.
Colour-coded reply:
Labour is saying nothing of the sort - Civil Union is not Marriage by legal definition, it is a separate state-recognised union. "Labour" said a Civil Union can be between any couple of consenting adults. A "Marriage" licence may only be issued to a male-female pairing. But don't let the truth get in the way of a good rant...
Non-believers\atheists have been able to apply for, and get, a marriage licence for a large number of years and that has nothing to do with Labour or the CUB. In fact, the CUB gives non-believers the option of having a Civil Union instead of actively "undermining the sanctity of marriage" by getting married. Great news for all the religious bigots out there! All those pesky atheists can have one of those secular Civil Unions.
A lot of people feel "offended" by mixed racial marriages, and mixed religion marriages, as well - there are names for those sorts of people. Invariably they attempt to disguise their bigotry as piety.
What about marriages conducted by a Civil Celebrant rather than a member of some form of clergy? Are they invalid or "offensive" in some way?
NZ law already is slanted in a pro-Christian fashion - the fact that only male-female pairs can get a marriage licence and that there are different requirements for marriages performed by Civil Celebrants than for those performed by Christian clergy - and just you try to swear on any Holy text other than the Christian bible in any court of law in this country. Atheists, Moslems, Jews and Pagans alike must "Affirm" rather than have the option to swear by the deities of our choice.
To say that "marriage" is being devalued in any way by the CUB is bollox in extremis - it is being further segregated to appease a predominently "Christian" subset of our community who kicked up a fuss at the idea of same-sex marriages.
Creating a "Civil Union" - a seperate "State-recognised" union - further panders to the "pseudo-piety" to which our laws are prey. I see no reason that same-sex couples should not apply for, and get, marriage licences and end the State's tacit acceptance of bigotry. Hey but, fuck, I'm just a pinko hippy pagan.
If you were a Christian and Labour said "gays can now apply for a marriage licence and your minister is not allowed to prevent them getting married in your church", you might have genuine cause for alarm and I would finally think the government had grown some cohones.
(Legal) Marriage = may be secular or religious, man+woman only.
Civil Union = secular, any pair of consenting adults not disqualified under incest laws
What difficulty are you having with the distinction?
Wolf
2nd September 2005, 16:44
Have to disagree. Don't have any problem with gays, or anyone else, getting MARRIED, m'self. But the Civil Unions Bill does undermine marriage. Admittedly, it's by way of the (semi) last nail in the coffin, most of the damage was done when divorce became a fashionable thing. Was a time when marriage was SPECIAL. Two people who vowed to commit themselves totally to each other, for life, come what may. Can't get much more special than that.
Civil Unions Bill says , in effect, "marriage is nothing special, you can have exactly the same thing by just signing this bit of paper. When you're sick of it, just walk away".
You and I see polar opposites in the same event. I hadn't thought of it the way that you mention.
I don't thing the CUB says you can walk away any time you like - and you can be sure it is governed by the Matrimonial Property Act.
Divorce stopped being popular with the advent of Christianity, so far as the Europeans amongst us go - under Celtic Culture (that covered a large chunk of Europe and the Isles) they had equality in marriage and divorce was a matter of repeating your intent to dissolve the marriage three times before witnesses...
'twas the Cat-licks that were agin divorce and for a while the Proddies only allowed it on the grounds of adultery - being beaten black and blue or raped by your partner didn't count as sufficient grounds under Christendom - but those evil pagans allowed women to ditch an abusive husband (or men to ditch shrewish wives) some 2.000 years or so before Christ.
I'm of the opinion that the ability to get divorce easily strengthens marriage - the old "if you love something, set it free" idea. The fact that I am free to just walk out of my relationship and get a divorce says more for the fact that I am still married to Juliet than if divorce were forbidden. I'm still married to Juliet because I want to be - not because I have to be.
Divorce is choice, and choice is strength. Forbidding divorce as the Catholic Church does, cheapens the marriage owing to all the married couples who hate each other but can't get divorced.
Beemer
2nd September 2005, 16:52
It's not a "christian" thing, marriage has been around for thousands of years, across pretty much every major religion and to the best of my knowledge has always been exclusively between a man and a woman, and involves declaring their commitment to each other, and making oaths to said gods.
I don't agree with all of this - I do agree that marriage is a sacred commitment between two people who want to be together for life, but when we married earlier this year, god or gods didn't come into it anywhere. Neither of us is into religion and our service was conducted by a marriage celebrant in the grounds of our reception venue. We wrote the service ourselves and vowed to be faithful and honest, to respect, trust, help and care for each other and to share our lives through the best and the worst of what is to come, as long as we live. Think that covers it all for us!
And Turbo Bong, what are you talking about? "Try putting on some balls and bomb them then all. The people of this country are doomed too fight each other soon anyway. Most maori are good for nothing. But not all. They need to break away from tradition and explore the possible. Yes its sad to hear about failers. But at least their trying. Theirs one thing they dont care about right now. Quality life. Opposing their rights to unconditional self-determination is only going to hold everyone in this great country of ours back. We will never, never move from the past into the future. Ahh but who gives a shit anyway. I dont."
Did I say all Maori were useless or anything in that vein? I was talking about the Maori Party candidates and THEIR attitudes, not those of the general Maori population.
Ixion
2nd September 2005, 17:18
Your analogy is attractive at first sight. However I could imagine exactly the same argument being put forward over the emancipation of slaves ("Freedom? Give it to all and sundry and those of us born free will feel devalued"), votes for women, etc. In fact it is an understandable human characteristic to jealously guard privilege, and arguments like this are just a rationalization for that instinctive behaviour.
Do you think you deserve a medal for being married? What sort of competition is it? Would the citation mention bravery above and beyond the call of duty, praiseworthy self-sacrifice, outstanding endurance...?
Fact is, society has changed. Your concept of marriage, admirable as an ideal, has not been a reality for a long time. Before you blithely assume the change has been for the worse, think back to the good old days when divorce was difficult or impossible, when people stayed in unhappy marriages for the sake of appearances (or the children), when hypocrisy and deception were the hidden face of conventional morality.
Nothing the law ever does will prevent a man and a woman pledging themselves to each other for life, and if they feel that their relationship or the validity and sincerity of their commitment is diminished or threatened by the existence of alternative ways of living one's life, or the extension of the legal and social rights which they enjoy to people who have been denied those rights, then it brings into question the solidity of that commitment or relationship.
But I neither wish to "jealously guard privilege" nor deny the extension of the legal and social rights which they enjoy to people who have been denied those rights"
I have no objection to anyone having the legal or social right to marry whomever they choose, providing they are willing to accept marriage as marriage. What I object to is people saying "we don't like the idea of marriage, so we want to create a 'watered down' thing and try to make society accept it as being as good as marriage"
Noone has ever suggested that anyone or anything was PREVENTING a man and woman "pledging themselves to each other for life". But, obviously, they could do that if the status of marriage did not exist at all. Which seems to bewhat you are saying - that you think that marriage as an institution should not exist, because people can still "pledge themselves to each other", even if there is no such thing as marriage. And, that is what the Civil Unions Bill attempts to do
The problem with that , is that marriage was (is) a PUBLIC pledge, AND a recognition by society as a whole of that pledge. A hypothetical man could pledge himself to his dog. But that is a purely private arrangement. Marriage was more than that (the fact that I feel constrained to say "was" indicates the depth to which we have fallen). Marriage was not just a private arrangement. It was a commitment, not just to the partner, but to society as a whole. To look after each other, to care for each other , and their children (if any) . And in turn an acceptance and recognition by the whole of society of that commitment. That is why a marriage cerermony was, by law, required to be held in an open church/office etc, which , in theory anyway, any memeber of the public could attend.
Reducing marriage to a purely private arangement, devoid of societal recognition does indeed degrade marriage.
There may have been marriages that just stayed together "for the sake of the children". That doesn't seem such a bad reason to me. Seems to me, that those people were indeed recognising their responsibility to each other, to their children, and to society, and placing that above purely selfish hedonism. 'Twas called duty. Now no-one is interested in doing anything "for the sake of the children", self interest is all.
So much for the arguments that Civil Union does not degrade marriage, and that marriage is an outmoded or bad thing. Now to the argument that it is somehow due to the rights of gay people, which we will see is also false.
This has NOTHING whatsoever to do with gays. For my part I see no reason why gays should not marry. The established churches might not to wish to conduct such a ceremony, but they could have married using a registry office or a marriage celebrant. The established churches will not recognise civil unions between gays either, so that argument is quite irrelevant.
If society felt that gay people should be able to marry , then it would have been perfectly simple to remove whatever restriction it was in the Marriage Act that prevented them doing so. The fact that the proponents on the Civil Unions Bill were not interested in doing this suggests to me that their intent was to attack marriage as an institrution, rather than any concern for gay couples.
If marriage, as you suggest, was a privilege, and some people felt excluded from that privilege, then it would have been better to extend the privilege to those who felt excluded , rather than abolish the privilege altogether.
You make the analogy of slavery. But your analogy is false. You have not emancipated gays. Rather you have abolished freedom altogether. As if to say "Some men are slaves and do not enjoy the freedom that free men have, so we must make all men slaves. Then none will be free and thus all will be equal"
Nor is this anything to do with "the existence of alternative ways of living one's life". This is another smokescreen. It has been centuries since anyone suggested that those who did NOT want to be married should be forced to do so. Anyone who wanted to live with a partner of any sex without being married could always do so. Rather, it is the proponents of Civil Union who object to the "existence of alternative ways of living one's life". They hate marriage and do not want to be married, so they wish to prevent other people being married. They cannot abolish marriage in one hit, but they seek to undermine it by stealth.
idb
2nd September 2005, 17:31
Redneck Party
Have they got a candidate down this way?
Sniper
2nd September 2005, 19:04
The reason he proberbly just said no was his mind was somewhere else too. So when it was his turn to answer he thought they asked if he stole that TV
Skyryder
2nd September 2005, 22:51
What is truly scary about some of these posts is the absence of any knowledge of history. Labour is being blamed for problems initiated by National.
The rot started when Labour dismanteled the infrastructure of this country.
Rail; Telecome; Post Office; Ministry of Works; the Health sector. Take roading for example. As a result of insufficent 'ongoing' roading construction we are now paying a levy to make up for this shortfall. The whole ideology behind Rodgernomics was efficiency.
National will continue with this failed ideology if elected with the help of ACT. Bulk funding of the Education system will be the first. This I believe was one of ACT's founding polycies.
Skyryder
SPman
3rd September 2005, 07:05
Mmmmmm.... Moa's ....is it nearly lunch time?? :rofl:
Just get on dpwn to KFC - you know you want to.....
NC
3rd September 2005, 07:11
I'm still voting for the Greens...
:D
avgas
3rd September 2005, 07:22
The reason he proberbly just said no was his mind was somewhere else too. So when it was his turn to answer he thought they asked if he stole that TV
Did he answer all defense? like "NO eh, i didnt theif dat bloody tv eh!"
I was looking at who to vote for recently - previously i have voted for greens, but i find their policies lacking this time around. In my conclusion i found that all the parties were full of shit. Only Liberterians had a nice one "Less politaticians".
At the end of the day im not gonna vote - cos i dont believe in the system in NZ anymore. Soon as i have enough prospects elsewhere im bloody gone.
On the other side of things, should the system try and fuck up the average hardworking joe - you'll see me in there picking a fight.
Pixie
3rd September 2005, 08:55
hah! try thinking outside the square... I know it takes an effort of the imagination... Maoris, Green, Labour...push button, get knee-jerk reaction...
O.K., the country would be different, but what exactly would be destroyed?
The environment? Social justice? A pleasant, healthy lifestyle?
Or just your opportunities for exploitation and self-enrichment?
Just the man I been looking for....I have a property for sale,it's overseas,the main attraction is a bridge built in the 19th century,connects Brooklyn to Manhatten Is....Interested?only $5000
Pixie
3rd September 2005, 09:19
You're sounding angly - not sad...
Is it fair to say you're seeing red - not feeling blue?
Angly? your not asian are you?
Don,t get Lou started on asians :devil2:
MikeL
3rd September 2005, 09:49
Just the man I been looking for....I have a property for sale,it's overseas,the main attraction is a bridge built in the 19th century,connects Brooklyn to Manhatten Is....Interested?only $5000
Droll.
Yes, I may very well be naive.
On the other hand who's to judge whether sincere if misplaced idealism is worse than cynical pragmatism?
Lasciate ogni speranza, indeed...
And here's another phrase that you may well ponder on: cui bono? Who benefits?
Ixion
3rd September 2005, 11:21
Droll.
Yes, I may very well be naive.
On the other hand who's to judge whether sincere if misplaced idealism is worse than cynical pragmatism?
Lasciate ogni speranza, indeed...
And here's another phrase that you may well ponder on: cui bono? Who benefits?
Mr Pixie benefits when you buy his bridge. Bargain at the price I reckon. And Mr WINJA will benefit when you paint his roof.
Another good phrase is quis custodiet ipsos custodes - who guards those who guard.
Then again, I grow old and the old ever disapprove of the new. Antiquis temporibus, nati in rupibus ventosissimis exponebantur ad necem. Once, we left children to die on windswept mountains , and thought it good.
(et, Si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis habes. If you can piss higher than this, I admit defeat :rofl: )
MSTRS
3rd September 2005, 12:28
Angly? your not asian are you?
Don,t get Lou started on asians :devil2:
......or Winston. :nono:
I'm still voting for the Greens...
:D
Nasty cold you got......need to blow your nose?
:rofl:
Turbo Bong
3rd September 2005, 13:34
Jees dude - be good if you could bottle that. I hear they can extract anti venom and ship it to where it's needed...
Hmmm. I suppose thats a fair comment. I'll have too give it more thought. :sherlock:
Hitcher
3rd September 2005, 18:05
Have they got a candidate down this way?
I guarantee it...
Hitcher
3rd September 2005, 18:08
(et, Si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis habes. If you can piss higher than this, I admit defeat)
Paululum sursum et dextrorsum.
750Y
3rd September 2005, 18:20
Stop ya fucking whinging, you lot sound fucking pathetic. wake the fuck up & look around, switch the TV off the propaganda channel and get your ass out there & do it. That is what NZ is really about & it is beautiful & the people are awesome so shut up & enjoy it or fuck off to somewhere better... :violin: :whistle: :clap:
You can send the bad rep points to my fan club address at
pullyohead@outyoass.co.nz
Ixion
4th September 2005, 00:04
Paululum sursum et dextrorsum.
What if you're left handed ?
Wolf
4th September 2005, 12:01
Paululum sursum et dextrorsum.
Oh, you're pissing - thought for a moment there he was scratching your back...
or something.
Lou Girardin
5th September 2005, 15:28
I'm still voting for the Greens...
:D
Cool! Remove the engine from your bike and fit pedals. And get used to composting your shit. I hear it will become compulsory.
Hitcher
5th September 2005, 15:39
What if you're left handed ?
Should make it easier...
Jamezo
30th September 2005, 16:22
Interesting point you raise here, because its a viewpoint I've expressed about many other things in society that have changed in recent times. Take for example our school system, where no longer is there grades (A+, D-) etc, but simply "acheived" or "yet to acheive". Certain factions (who I shall lump as "the left"), have enshrined a system in our schools that says there are no winners and no loosers, that everyone is equal, and no-one is better than anyone else. This is done in the name of ensuring that noone feels "put down" by getting poor grades, yet in doing so takes away the rights of those at the top of the scale to be recognised for their skills and talents. There is no such thing as a "straight A" student, or an honours student now, gone are the days of bell curves.. We just have "those who pass and those who dont". Apart from being a utopian leftwing ideal pretty much straight out of the communist manifesto, the simple fact is this idealism leaves our youth sorely underequipped to deal with the cold harsh reality that is adult life. In life their are winners and loosers, not everyone gets to be a winner and people will always compete against each other.
it's painfully obvious that you haven't been to school in the past 4 years. please stop digging now.
ManDownUnder
30th September 2005, 16:26
it's painfully obvious that you haven't been to school in the past 4 years. please stop digging now.
*pssst* - he did stop - about a month ago...
Jamezo
30th September 2005, 16:36
*pssst* - he did stop - about a month ago...
the People's Revolution cares little for your mortal concepts of 'time' and 'indecent exposure'!!!!!!!!!!
Off, workers, to fellate that statue of Trotsky!
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