Intergenerational Fairness
Free Press
ACT’s regular bulletin
Intergenerational
Fairness
The Retirement Commissioner has said
what ACT’s been saying for a long time, Super at 65 is not
sustainable as the number of working aged taxpayers per
retiree goes from 4.4 to 2.4 over the next 20 years. Last
time the age was adjusted the average life expectancy was
76, now it is 81. Amazingly, ACT is the only party that
agrees with the Commissioner while every other party runs
for the hills. David Seymour’s latest SundayStar-Times
column on the topic is
here.
Contempt
Putting numbers
aside, the other political parties are basically saying to
young New Zealanders: “You know and we know there will be
an adjustment, we’re just going to deny you any kind of
certainty by refusing to talk about it for the next
decade.” Next year ACT will be the only party saying to
young New Zealanders that we need to confront this long term
issue with honesty and certainty.
Airbnb Values
Statement
The self-appointed gatekeepers of
righteousness in the media had conniptions when ACT
suggested immigrants and refugees sign a Values Statement,
committing them to tolerance, freedom of speech, religious
freedom, and equality before the law regardless of
ethnicity, sexuality, or gender, among other things. Now an
interesting development from Airbnb, the Community
Commitment: “You commit to treat everyone—regardless of
race, religion, national origin, ethnicity, disability, sex,
gender identity, sexual orientation or age—with respect,
and without judgment or bias.”
And if You
Don’t
The peer-to-peer accommodation site
pulls no punches: “If you decline the commitment, you
won’t be able to host or book using Airbnb, and you have
the option to cancel your account.” Free Press
works on the basis that governments will always be a few
years (decades?) behind Silicon Valley. The New Zealand
Government will eventually require people coming here to
sign up to our liberal values of freedom, tolerance, and
equality before the law.
Un-Kiwi Values from the
Police
What in the hell were the police thinking
when they set up a breath-testing checkpoint, allowed under
the Land Transport Safety Act for countering drink driving,
to find the identities of people who attended an Exit
International meeting? Free Press does not condone
illegal euthanasia—ACT wants to make it legal so that
assisted dying occurs with appropriate safeguards under the
rule of law—but there is now a much bigger issue at stake:
freedom of assembly and proper process from the
police.
Radio Silence from Assisted Dying
Opponents
The usually outspoken opponents of
assisted dying have been deafeningly silent since the
checkpoint story broke. Do they quietly condone the
police’s actions, or have they realised that much of the
case for legalised assisted dying rests on the fact that the
awful position faced by some people at the end of their
lives gives them what the Supreme Court of Canada called the
‘cruel choice’ between ‘violent amateur suicide’ on
the one hand and intolerable suffering on the
other?
A New Housing Fix
Leonie
Freeman has been a General Manager of Housing New Zealand
and is a Director of Goodman Property Trust, one of the
Country’s largest property investors with a market cap of
$1.7b. She has taken the initiative to seed a peak body
that would act as a clearing house for all the problems
besetting New Zealand’s property market. Her website www.thehomepage.nz is worth a look. If
you like her ideas, Freeman will be speaking at ACT’s
election year conference on February 25th next year,
registration opening this coming month.
ends