Yesterday's Top Three Rating Stories and Political Press Releases
STORIES
ONE: Soapbox: Writes Of Passage
Sunday, 25 July 1999, 9:30 am
Article: Matthew Thomas
It often happens that fame goes to the people
or things which deserve it the least. Take Rene Descartes,
for example. Now he was an interesting guy. His most useful
contribution to human civilization was undoubtedly his work
on geometry and algebra, in that it provided a foundation
for much of modern mathematics. But that's not what he is
most famous for; no, Descartes is most famous for something
which doesn't really deserve to be so well-known at all.
This thing is the philosophical axiom which he proposed in
1641: `cogito ergo sum', or in English, `I think, therefore
I am'.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL9907/S00102.htm
TWO:
PM Annoyed By Spending Allegations
Monday, 26 July 1999,
11:23 am
Article: Jonathan Hill
Prime Minister
Jenny Shipley told National Radio she was “very annoyed” by
the allegations of excessive expenditure from government
departments this morning and that she was looking forward to
an explanation later this week. Having just returned from a
tour of Asia Mrs Shipley told Kim Hill that whoever was
responsible for any excessive expenditure should be held to
account. She said there was no justification for chartering
aircraft unless there was an explanation that she had not
yet heard. “It doesn’t look good on the surface, I have to
say,” she said.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL9907/S00106.htm
THREE:
NZ Story Has Mirror Image In Britain
Sunday, 25 July
1999, 5:28 pm
Article: Ian Llewellyn
An eagle
eyed reader of the Scoop last Thursday saw amazing
similarities between 'Tetraplegic Jailed For Medicinal
Cannabis' and a story running along the same lines on the
BBC website (bbc.co.uk). In New Zealand, tetraplegic Danuiel
Clark came to the notice of the media after he complained
about his treatment in prison. He had been sentenced to
three weeks in prison after refusing to pay a fine or some
sort of periodic detention following his conviction for
cultivation of cannabis for personal supply. Mr Clark said
he uses cannabis as a pain killer and to combat the negative
side effects of his prescription drugs that he must take
every day. In 1994, his application to grow small amounts of
cannabis, under supervision, for medicinal purposes was
rejected. Under the law such an application is possible,
but no permit has ever been granted and the Ministry of
Health has made it clear an application would only be
seriously considered as part of a clinical
trial.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL9907/S00104.htm
TOP THREE PRESS-RELEASES
ONE: The con
deconstructed
Sunday, 25 July 1999, 2:34 pm
Press
Release: New Zealand Labour Party
"Bill English's
acknowledgement today that his dollar for dollar pledge is
unsustainable beyond the next Parliamentary term shows what
a shallow piece of politics it is," Labour finance
spokesperson Michael Cullen said today. The admission came
on National Radio's Crosstalk programme this afternoon . "Mr
English and his colleagues know about the cost pressures
associated with the ageing population and know tax cuts now
will be paid for in higher taxes by the generations
following the large baby boom generation. The information is
contained in Treasury tables at the back of this year's
budget.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA9907/S00465.htm
TWO:
SIS Bill - Govt To Shaft Us In Time For APEC
Monday, 26
July 1999, 10:48 am
Press Release:
SIS Bill:
Government & Pals About To Do a “No. 2” On Us In Time For
APEC
The victim of an illegal Security Intelligence
Service breakin, whose legal case has sparked two amendments
to the Security Intelligence Service Act is throughly
unimpressed by the latest version of the SIS Amendment (no
2) Bill expected to be debated and passed in Parliament this
week. “Having read the latest version of the bill, it’s
clear the SIS has not been reined in by any of the recent
legislative amendments. Quite the opposite - these law
changes are designed to expand, not limit, the powers of the
SIS. Try as she might to reassure people that critics of
APEC will not be subject to SIS snooping, Jenny Shipley
cannot hide the fact that both amendment bills have been
rushed through explicitly in order to legitimate further SIS
break-ins before September’s Leaders Summit. And it was the
Prime Minister herself, and various National, Labour, and
ACT MPs who first linked the perceived need to legalise SIS
break-ins to APEC in parliamentary debates and in the media,
not me, GATT Watchdog, the APEC Monitoring Group or our
allies. When the APEC circus ends, the law will remain –
with the SIS above the law,” said Aziz Choudry.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO9907/S00059.htm
THREE:
PM called on to investigate department
Sunday, 25 July
1999, 4:15 pm
Press Release: Green Party
Green
Party Co Leader Rod Donald is calling on Prime Minister
Jenny Shipley to instigate a wide-ranging investigation into
government department expenditure on team-building
conferences, training workshops, corporate videos and
advertising. Following controversy over lavish spending by
Work and Income New Zealand (WINZ), three other government
departments have recently cancelled conferences at exclusive
North Island resorts. Mr Donald wants Mrs Shipley to have
the State Services Commission look into spending on travel,
venues, catering and all other associated spending on
conferences and workshops by government
departments.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA9907/S00466.htm