PUBLIC ADDRESS 27/09/05: Back the Future?
PUBLIC ADDRESS 27/09/05: Back the Future?
Back to the Future? | Sep
27, 2005 10:07
Russell Brown's Hard News
NATFORT -
Nationals for the Treaty - might just turn out to be a naïve
venture from the fringes of its party, or it might be the
tip of a broad-based attempt to get National back on track.
Either way it's an implicit challenge to the present
leadership.
http://publicaddress.net/default,2567.sm
Where
everyone gets a bourbon. | Sep 27, 2005 09:36
David
Slack on his own account
A long time ago, longer ago,
even, than the day New Zealand's first FM radio station got
to air, I had a job in a bottle store. Every day was a
party. We had low, low prices. People would drive across
five suburbs for our special on a half gallon bottle of gin.
Whenever we ran our Jim Beam special, you could stack them
high and watch them fly. Only God knows just how many
households in the Aro Valley would tote home the bourbon and
coke and load Free Bird or Bad to the Bone onto the
turntable.
http://publicaddress.net/default,2565.sm
Maori
Seats Bad | Sep 26, 2005 15:15
Keith Ng on the
election trail
I'm going to go out on a bit of a limb here
and say [deep breath] that the Maori seats are distortionary
FPP-hangovers that munt proportional representation and
encourage a style of politics that is antithetical to the
liberal foundations of our political system, and are,
therefore, bad.
http://publicaddress.net/default,2564.sm
Meme
moratorium | Sep 26, 2005 11:02
Russell Brown's Hard
News
I'm calling a moratorium. On, that is, the
making-ourselves-feel-better meme coursing through
centre-right circles that, in fact, the centre-right
actually won more votes on the 17th, and it was only rotten
old MMP that snatched away the victory.
http://publicaddress.net/default,2563.sm
Be
nice to your cats | Sep 26, 2005 09:31
David Slack on
his own account
In a moment, a few political farewells, but first a quick rant or two to set the tone for Monday morning.
There are a great many right wing bloggers who
love to declare whenever they come upon an example of
government behaviour or language that smacks of
authoritarianism or thought-control that "Orwell would have
been proud".
http://publicaddress.net/default,2562.sm
ENDS