Good question. Is there a real answer?
I'm sure there are lots who have a vision of some sort, but that raises another question: Is their vision one that the majority can buy into, or is it one that just furthers an individual cause, set of values / beliefs, or whatever?
I'm concerned that for at least 25 years, the overarching 'vision' for the country seems to be one of striving to follow a particular economic philosophy. I dunno about you, but I'd rather have a gubmint that put 'quality of life' before 'appearing to be doing well enough from an economic perspective to ensure being voted in at the next election'.
See above. Depends how each person defines 'quality of life'.
For me, I wonder whether we didn't have a better quality of life when:
- You could forget to lock your house/car and there was no real risk.
- There was virtually zero unemployment, apart from those who deliberately chose not to work, or were physically incapable of working.
- If there was a murder, that was really big news.
- Most of the banks, utilities, big businesses were NZ-owned.
- All land was owned by resident NZers.
- There was no such thing as hospital waiting lists.
- There was no such thing as student debt.
- Research was not driven solely by economic necessity, but had room for curiosity.
- Political correctness was more a matter of being fair and reasonable, than desperately trying to suck up to every weird and wonderful minority group, to the extent one was almost expected to be apologetic for being a light-skinned, heterosexual male.
- The bureaucrats hadn't gone beserk trying to pass as many laws as possible to protect us from our own stupidity and keep us safe from the big, bad, dangerous world.
- etc. etc. etc.....
Obviously, this is unrealistic, but overall, I think we've lost the plot somewhere and started to equate 'quality of life' with 'number of bright, shiny things', when the bottom line has to be the quality of our relationships with one another.
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