Werewolf Edition 27 Now Available! - Pre-Election Edition No. 2
From Werewolf Editor Gordon Campbell
http://werewolf.co.nz/
Hi and welcome to the latest edition of Werewolf, in which we analyse the various options for November’s referendum on the voting system. Newsflash : the Royal Commission on the Electoral System did the necessary spade work 25 years
ago, and they chose MMP as being the most fair, most democratic system available. They were right then, and they’re
still right now. But somehow, a few National Party diehards and disgruntled business leaders successfully leaned on John
Key and got him to waste millions and millions of dollars on making the public repeat the exercise all over again. We
suggest you choose MMP, and spoil their Christmas.
While deciding to waste money on the voting referendum, the Key government has been steadily under funding Radio New
Zealand – and the Department of Conservation which, as Josh Gale reports in this issue, has therefore been forced to engage with the private sector in joint ventures to do some of its basic work. In the
process, DOC is – potentially – losing its environmental mojo, and putting its conservation role at risk. In his movie
feature this month, Philip Matthews praises the quietly devastating science fiction horror film Never Let Me Go. Rosalea Barker reports from California (in her Left Coasting column) about the conditions inside US Supermax prisons, and the hunger strike by some inmates to
try and gain more humane treatment.
Talking of basic human rights, in this issue we also interview Salil Shetty, the director-general of Amnesty International about the pressures that have faced the organisation as it has shifted
its focus to combat human rights abuses by Western governments during the war against terrorism, post 9/11.
For the last few years, the late David Foster Wallace has been the dominant literary voice of his generation – and this
month, we examine the curious backlash being waged against him this year even and especially by his alleged friends, such as Jonathan Franzen. Madeline is our featured children’s book this month. In our Complicatist music column we survey the line-ups for this summer’s music festivals, and suggest you should go to Laneways, and to the Kurt Vile and Tuneyards gigs.
In this issue, Werewolf also salutes the opening of Evil Genius, a brave new music store/café in Wellington that’s in the vanguard of the vinyl revival. In his satirical column In the
Hood, satirist Lyndon Hood features Baron Munchausen’s exclusive account of the Rena grounding.
Thanks again to David McLellan for helping me post this issue online. Werewolf is a thank you to Scoop readers and is
intended as an outlet for local writers and artists. If you want to be involved, contact me at gordon@scoop.co.nz and let's talk story ideas. However, Werewolf will be taking a month’s break next month, so that I can be involved on a
daily basis with Scoop’s election coverage. Werewolf will be back with a scaled down Christmas edition, before returning
full force in the New Year.
Cheers,
Gordon Campbell
Werewolf/Scoop
The contents of this edition are:
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FEATURES:
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MMP has flaws, but the alternatives to the current voting system are much worse
by Gordon Campbell
AI’s director Salil Shetty, and the threats to human rights posed by Western governments…
by Gordon Campbell
Is DOC’s zeal for commercial ventures with the private sector an environmental hazard ?
by Josh Gale
The understated horror of Never Let Me Go
by Philip Matthews
Dealing in the tics of sincerity…
by Gordon Campbell
And lo, a new record shop is born
by Gordon Campbell
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COLUMNS:
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California’s prison inmates go on hunger strike for better conditions
by Rosalea Barker
Ludwig Bemelmans had a few childhood scars of his own
by Gordon Campbell
An extraordinary tale of marine vicissitude
by Lyndon Hood
Laneways beats the Big Day Out, hands down
by Gordon Campbell
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