23 July 2025
by Clive Bibby As a semi retired farmer used to long days and sleepless nights looking after the livestock and crops grown on the property, recent episodes of the Country Calendar TV programme show just why we keep coming back [...]
23 July 2025
by Peter Williams Stats NZ have laid it out in the clearest and simplest way possible. Payments required by your local authority have pushed annual inflation to its highest level in twelve months. “The largest upwards contributor to the annual [...]
22 July 2025
by Peter Williams The Taxpayers' Union has been alerting supporters about the "Te Mana o te Wai" (literally meaning the mana of the water) requirements, which are still applicable to local councils' environmental planning/consenting. It is becoming clear that the Coalition [...]
21 July 2025
by Eric Crampton The Regulatory Standards Bill before Parliament provides no enforceable legal right to compensation for the cost of regulation. It only suggests that compensation can be warranted when regulation takes or impairs property. A sovereign Parliament remains free [...]
20 July 2025
by Nick Clark After decades of planning gridlock, the government has promised to put property rights at the heart of New Zealand’s resource management system. But will its latest reforms deliver lasting change or just patch up the mess we [...]
19 July 2025
by Richard Prebble Mr. Albert K. Barume, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, based in Geneva, wrote to ministers alleging that the Regulatory Standards bill “fails to uphold the principles of partnership, active protection, and self‑determination [...]
18 July 2025
by Peter Dunne In 2013 then Prime Minister John Key raised the ire of Wellington’s community and business leaders when he told an Auckland audience that the capital city was “dying” and that “we don't know how to turn it [...]
18 July 2025
by Roger Partridge Revolutions conjure images of violent uprisings, the storming of institutions, and the forcible overthrow of existing orders. But constitutional foundations can be destroyed through more subtle means. When judges discard long-established constitutional principles and remake the law [...]
18 July 2025
It’s only words, and words are all I have to take your heart away. And the dramatic rise of NZ First in the polls and into the third most popular party spot, has all been done using words. But what [...]
12 July 2025
by Simon O'Connor My father’s side of the family is Irish and proudly so. I am actually an Irish citizen - and before anyone freaks out that my time in Parliament was illegitimate, I am also a New Zealand citizen. [...]
11 July 2025
by Zoran Rakovic If you wanted to invent a financial arrangement capable of mimicking the perils of subprime mortgages, municipal corruption, and Soviet-style mutual collapse—all in one—New Zealand has quietly succeeded. It’s called the Local Government Funding Agency (LGFA). Never [...]
11 July 2025
The Texas flash flood waters are receding and is slowly revealing some truly venomous snakes that it’s hard to even imagine were there before this happened. Unfortunately I know a bit about this. In 2004, my partner and I had [...]
10 July 2025
by Peter Williams Ah, the nonsense of corporate behaviour. I’ve been a subscriber to Sky TV pretty much since it started 35 years ago. Currently I have a package of Sky Starter, Sky Entertainment and Sky Sport which costs $100.99 [...]
10 July 2025
There was some riveting rugby at the weekend. The All Blacks, starring Barrett, Barrett and Barrett, co-starring Will Jordan and the TMO, beat France in Dunedin, 31 to 27. Not very convincing, you might say, even allowing for the TMO [...]
9 July 2025
by Peter Williams We should be thankful for small mercies. Chris Hipkins says he’s preparing a written response to the Covid Phase 2 inquiry. He seems decidedly unenthusiastic about appearing in person. Here’s the problem. We don’t know what questions [...]
9 July 2025
by Bonnie Flaws Newly released documents show expert advice was disregarded, and the admin-first approach to censuses, which ditches enumeration, was adopted for the next national census anyway. The Future Census Independent Evaluation Panel produced its report evaluating five possible [...]
7 July 2025
by Roger Partridge The New Zealand Law Society’s new report, Strengthening the Rule of Law in Aotearoa New Zealand, runs to more than eighty pages, includes seventy-eight recommendations, and reflects a considerable investment of time and goodwill. Its aims are [...]
6 July 2025
by William McGimpsey Introduction This White Paper offers an analysis and argument in favour of economic nationalism. It provides a brief theoretical sketch of what economic nationalism is, and how it differs from the economic policy approach currently dominant in [...]
5 July 2025
by Mary Hobbs From caring comes courage. — Laozi The Gene Tech Bill had its first Reading on 17 December 2024, the last day that Parliament sat before closing for the Christmas and summer holidays. School was out, the children were [...]
4 July 2025
by Mary Hobbs If people let the government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny. — President Jefferson [...]
4 July 2025
by Rachel Stewart There are things we never want to know about. I get it. But there are also things we need to know about. How can you fight if you don’t know what you’re fighting for? I know you’re [...]
3 July 2025
by Michael Bassett Are you, like me, getting sick and tired of the endless stories in the Mainstream Media about poverty, with self-appointed “experts” arguing for more money to be spent on the problems they describe? They show no signs [...]
3 July 2025
by Mary Hobbs Nature is Life — MH This is article is Part 2 of three (for now) on the Gene Technology Bill. In Part 1 the irreversible dangers of future intended DNA-altering mRNA injections — part of the Gene Tech Bill — were [...]
3 July 2025
I do love my daily RCR Bites. I find them most edifying and gratifying. If you're not signed up for RCR Bites, you're not living! If you're not signed up for RCR Bites, you may as well be a leftard [...]
2 July 2025
by Ani O'Brien Minister Karen Chhour has made the decision to rename Te Puna Aonui. The name translates to "spring of enlightenment" or a "source of wisdom and collective action" and the minister says it is not clear enough to New Zealanders what the venture is [...]
30 June 2025
by Bonnie Flaws One of the key points raised in my four part investigation into Stats NZ, was the legality of its Integrated Statistical Data System. Because no matter who I asked the answer was vague. So I will update readers with [...]
30 June 2025
by Bjorn Lomborg Madrid knew solar and wind power were unreliable but pressed ahead anyway. When a grid failure plunged 55 million people in Spain and Portugal into darkness at the end of April, it should have been a wake-up [...]
30 June 2025
by Nick Clark A peculiar economic paradox appears to govern infrastructure development in modern New Zealand: the more we spend on infrastructure, the less we seem to get for it. This uncomfortable reality was a key takeaway from last week’s [...]
29 June 2025
by John Porter American political economist Benjamin Friedman, author of Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, a basic reassessment of the underpinnings of today’s economics, once compared modern Western society to a bicycle whose forward momentum was kept going by continuing economic growth. He [...]
28 June 2025
by Peter Dunne In politics, things often turn full circle. National's current musings about the future of regional councils following New Zealand First’s call for their abolition is the latest example. Regional councils were established following major reforms instituted by [...]
28 June 2025
by Peter Williams The legislative relationship between New Zealand education and the Treaty of Waitangi is a recent one. Up till 1989 there was no reference to it at all in the prevailing Education Act. It was taught as part [...]
27 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart The news has been heavy lately. Like really heavy. So this week let’s have a change of pace. I don’t know about you but, if nothing else, I need it. Now, I’ve always believed that if you [...]
26 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo A wisp of Wordsworth to begin with this morning: "For oft, when on my couch I lie In vacant or in pensive mood They flash upon that inward eye Which is the bliss of solitude And then [...]
24 June 2025
by Bonnie Flaws The New York Times headline that had the internet going crazy over Palantir The big news this last week or two, at least in some circles, has been the news reported in the New York Times, that [...]
23 June 2025
by John Robertson New Zealand was supposed to be a secular democracy. But blink, and suddenly we’re living in a tax-funded theocracy built on ghost stories and cosmic real estate claims. Let’s say it flat-out: this country is being governed, [...]
21 June 2025
by Dr Muriel Newman Who’s running our country? It seems like a simple enough question. In New Zealand, our Parliament is sovereign. With National, ACT, and New Zealand First commanding a majority of votes in the House, the elected Coalition hold [...]
20 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart The world’s in a perilous place right now. But you know that. In a perfect world, there would be no nuclear weapons. Full stop. But we don’t live in that world. The reality is they do exist, [...]
19 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo It would be fair to say quite a bit has happened since the last Perspective. Calling as I did for the removal and banishment of the Chinese Communist Party from all facets of New Zealand life, I [...]
18 June 2025
by Simon O'Connor Many former leaders of New Zealand have made much of New Zealand’s independent foreign policy, our commitment to the international rules based order, and human rights, and yet appear to throw such principles to then wind when [...]
17 June 2025
by Roger Partridge Few ideas haunt economic debate as relentlessly as the “trickle-down” theory. Perhaps it’s the appeal of attacking something that no one has ever argued. The theory supposedly claims that making the rich richer benefits everyone as wealth [...]
16 June 2025
by Bruce Cotterill Last week, I managed to get myself caught up in a lively conversation with a couple of mates. It wasn’t heated. But it was one of those discussions that no one was going to win And then [...]
16 June 2025
by Don Brash Having listened to my discussion on foreign policy with Sean Plunket on 10 June, I feel the need to clarify my position. Let me start by saying that I have a high regard for Sean Plunket. He [...]
13 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart If you despise Trump, those LA riots are “peaceful protests.” The progressives – it’s such an oxymoronic word, isn’t it? - that run California, and the bulk of the media, are clinging to that framing. Just as [...]
13 June 2025
by Simon O'Connor Phil Goff, a former Labour MP, Minister, and High Commissioner to London, recently wrote an op-ed on the Israel-Gaza conflict, published by Stuff. Much was made of Mr Goff being a former Minister of Foreign Affairs. I decided, as [...]
12 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo I want to tie up a loose end from last week first, and before that, to comment on a frightening one-page ad in the Sunday Star-Slimes, propaganda organ of the Far Left, over the weekend, and before that [...]
12 June 2025
by David Lillis Variable Management across the Board Hearing of continual problems in New Zealand’s workplaces has prompted this article as a comment on management and leadership. Perhaps the environments where I have worked were not typical of New Zealand’s [...]
12 June 2025
By Zoran Rakovic In no other Western democracy does the ordinary citizen so enthusiastically offer themselves as a sacrificial vessel for the errors of their rulers. In no other civil society are people so eager to drape themselves in guilt [...]
11 June 2025
by Dr Muriel Newman As New Zealand stands at the halfway point towards the 2026 election, let’s do a quick stocktake on the state of play. The polls have remained tight throughout the entire period National, ACT, and New Zealand [...]
10 June 2025
By Roger Partridge Q: What is the Regulatory Standards Bill? A: It’s a modest proposal requiring governments to explain the rationale for new laws and regulations, test them against time-honoured principles like rule of law and property rights, and disclose [...]
9 June 2025
by Ani O'Brien The way media and the chattering classes are carrying on you would think Minister Chris Bishop had suggested Stan Walker was “bound to get slapped up” and declared the way to resolve their political differences would be through a [...]
9 June 2025
by Eric Crampton The United States has the world’s best universities. At least for now. Those universities have, in turn, attracted the world’s best researchers. According to the National Foundation for American Policy, immigrants earned 45 of the 112 Nobel prizes [...]
8 June 2025
By Bryce Wilkinson Governments have many roles, but some are of fundamental importance. A vital role is to secure citizens in their persons and possessions. I am amazed by the extent of public opposition to this long-standing principle. It has [...]
7 June 2025
by Ani O'Brien I am pro-choice. That means exactly what you think it does: I support women’s right to choose to terminate a pregnancy should she not want to go through with it. But it also means a whole lot more [...]
6 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart ‘Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.’ At this time and juncture, that legendary line has never felt more germane. We are in an era of turbocharged history modification; it is either [...]
6 June 2025
by Alwyn Poole The Whitehouse recently released a document titled: Make America Healthy Again. The health trends listed are stark – and the needed solutions are clear (even if is going to be like doing an Aircraft Carrier doing a u-turn [...]
5 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo So, we have a new deputy Prime Minister. But I'd like to start with some REALLY good news! And I don't mean, but easily could, the triumph of a Trumpian nationalist in the Polish presidential election, notwithstanding the [...]
5 June 2025
by Mike Butler The Pioneers – Makers of New Zealand, a new book by writer-publisher John McLean, reminds us of those who built New Zealand, tells how, and explains why their contribution should not be forgotten. McLean descends from an [...]
4 June 2025
by Simon O'Connor So, a government Minister has found himself in woke hot water because he dared to give his honest opinion at the recent Aotearoa Music Awards. Chris Bishop, a former colleague of mine and who would happily describe [...]
4 June 2025
By Don Brash Almost since I returned to New Zealand from nine years abroad in 1971, there has been a widespread assumption that house prices always go up, if not every single year then almost every single year. And that [...]
2 June 2025
By Zoran Rakovic There is much to celebrate in the Māori business renaissance. The recent announcement of the Investment Summit on Māori Business Success, hosted with fanfare and optimism by the New Zealand Government, marks yet another milestone in the [...]
1 June 2025
by Dr Muriel Newman The 2025 Budget is done and dusted. While the Government claims growth is their priority, there was little within the budget to suggest it will deliver what they hope. Finance Minister Nicola Willis would have us believe it [...]
31 May 2025
by Tim Donner It is an undeniable scandal of mammoth proportions, but one that is – surprise, surprise – still being ignored by major media. It all began in February of 2021, shortly after Joe Biden took the oath of [...]
30 May 2025
by Rachel Stewart I’ve come to value my role here with ‘Riding Shotgun’ as that of a harbinger. Yes, sometimes of doom. I’m drawn to bringing to light issues – often unpalatable - that I see as needing to be [...]
23 July 2025
by Clive Bibby As a semi retired farmer used to long days and sleepless nights looking after the livestock and crops grown on the property, recent episodes of the Country Calendar TV programme show just why we keep coming back [...]
23 July 2025
by Peter Williams Stats NZ have laid it out in the clearest and simplest way possible. Payments required by your local authority have pushed annual inflation to its highest level in twelve months. “The largest upwards contributor to the annual [...]
22 July 2025
by Peter Williams The Taxpayers' Union has been alerting supporters about the "Te Mana o te Wai" (literally meaning the mana of the water) requirements, which are still applicable to local councils' environmental planning/consenting. It is becoming clear that the Coalition [...]
21 July 2025
by Eric Crampton The Regulatory Standards Bill before Parliament provides no enforceable legal right to compensation for the cost of regulation. It only suggests that compensation can be warranted when regulation takes or impairs property. A sovereign Parliament remains free [...]
20 July 2025
by Nick Clark After decades of planning gridlock, the government has promised to put property rights at the heart of New Zealand’s resource management system. But will its latest reforms deliver lasting change or just patch up the mess we [...]
19 July 2025
by Richard Prebble Mr. Albert K. Barume, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, based in Geneva, wrote to ministers alleging that the Regulatory Standards bill “fails to uphold the principles of partnership, active protection, and self‑determination [...]
18 July 2025
by Peter Dunne In 2013 then Prime Minister John Key raised the ire of Wellington’s community and business leaders when he told an Auckland audience that the capital city was “dying” and that “we don't know how to turn it [...]
18 July 2025
by Roger Partridge Revolutions conjure images of violent uprisings, the storming of institutions, and the forcible overthrow of existing orders. But constitutional foundations can be destroyed through more subtle means. When judges discard long-established constitutional principles and remake the law [...]
18 July 2025
It’s only words, and words are all I have to take your heart away. And the dramatic rise of NZ First in the polls and into the third most popular party spot, has all been done using words. But what [...]
12 July 2025
by Simon O'Connor My father’s side of the family is Irish and proudly so. I am actually an Irish citizen - and before anyone freaks out that my time in Parliament was illegitimate, I am also a New Zealand citizen. [...]
11 July 2025
by Zoran Rakovic If you wanted to invent a financial arrangement capable of mimicking the perils of subprime mortgages, municipal corruption, and Soviet-style mutual collapse—all in one—New Zealand has quietly succeeded. It’s called the Local Government Funding Agency (LGFA). Never [...]
11 July 2025
The Texas flash flood waters are receding and is slowly revealing some truly venomous snakes that it’s hard to even imagine were there before this happened. Unfortunately I know a bit about this. In 2004, my partner and I had [...]
10 July 2025
by Peter Williams Ah, the nonsense of corporate behaviour. I’ve been a subscriber to Sky TV pretty much since it started 35 years ago. Currently I have a package of Sky Starter, Sky Entertainment and Sky Sport which costs $100.99 [...]
10 July 2025
There was some riveting rugby at the weekend. The All Blacks, starring Barrett, Barrett and Barrett, co-starring Will Jordan and the TMO, beat France in Dunedin, 31 to 27. Not very convincing, you might say, even allowing for the TMO [...]
9 July 2025
by Peter Williams We should be thankful for small mercies. Chris Hipkins says he’s preparing a written response to the Covid Phase 2 inquiry. He seems decidedly unenthusiastic about appearing in person. Here’s the problem. We don’t know what questions [...]
9 July 2025
by Bonnie Flaws Newly released documents show expert advice was disregarded, and the admin-first approach to censuses, which ditches enumeration, was adopted for the next national census anyway. The Future Census Independent Evaluation Panel produced its report evaluating five possible [...]
7 July 2025
by Roger Partridge The New Zealand Law Society’s new report, Strengthening the Rule of Law in Aotearoa New Zealand, runs to more than eighty pages, includes seventy-eight recommendations, and reflects a considerable investment of time and goodwill. Its aims are [...]
6 July 2025
by William McGimpsey Introduction This White Paper offers an analysis and argument in favour of economic nationalism. It provides a brief theoretical sketch of what economic nationalism is, and how it differs from the economic policy approach currently dominant in [...]
5 July 2025
by Mary Hobbs From caring comes courage. — Laozi The Gene Tech Bill had its first Reading on 17 December 2024, the last day that Parliament sat before closing for the Christmas and summer holidays. School was out, the children were [...]
4 July 2025
by Mary Hobbs If people let the government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny. — President Jefferson [...]
4 July 2025
by Rachel Stewart There are things we never want to know about. I get it. But there are also things we need to know about. How can you fight if you don’t know what you’re fighting for? I know you’re [...]
3 July 2025
by Michael Bassett Are you, like me, getting sick and tired of the endless stories in the Mainstream Media about poverty, with self-appointed “experts” arguing for more money to be spent on the problems they describe? They show no signs [...]
3 July 2025
by Mary Hobbs Nature is Life — MH This is article is Part 2 of three (for now) on the Gene Technology Bill. In Part 1 the irreversible dangers of future intended DNA-altering mRNA injections — part of the Gene Tech Bill — were [...]
3 July 2025
I do love my daily RCR Bites. I find them most edifying and gratifying. If you're not signed up for RCR Bites, you're not living! If you're not signed up for RCR Bites, you may as well be a leftard [...]
2 July 2025
by Ani O'Brien Minister Karen Chhour has made the decision to rename Te Puna Aonui. The name translates to "spring of enlightenment" or a "source of wisdom and collective action" and the minister says it is not clear enough to New Zealanders what the venture is [...]
30 June 2025
by Bonnie Flaws One of the key points raised in my four part investigation into Stats NZ, was the legality of its Integrated Statistical Data System. Because no matter who I asked the answer was vague. So I will update readers with [...]
30 June 2025
by Bjorn Lomborg Madrid knew solar and wind power were unreliable but pressed ahead anyway. When a grid failure plunged 55 million people in Spain and Portugal into darkness at the end of April, it should have been a wake-up [...]
30 June 2025
by Nick Clark A peculiar economic paradox appears to govern infrastructure development in modern New Zealand: the more we spend on infrastructure, the less we seem to get for it. This uncomfortable reality was a key takeaway from last week’s [...]
29 June 2025
by John Porter American political economist Benjamin Friedman, author of Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, a basic reassessment of the underpinnings of today’s economics, once compared modern Western society to a bicycle whose forward momentum was kept going by continuing economic growth. He [...]
28 June 2025
by Peter Dunne In politics, things often turn full circle. National's current musings about the future of regional councils following New Zealand First’s call for their abolition is the latest example. Regional councils were established following major reforms instituted by [...]
28 June 2025
by Peter Williams The legislative relationship between New Zealand education and the Treaty of Waitangi is a recent one. Up till 1989 there was no reference to it at all in the prevailing Education Act. It was taught as part [...]
27 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart The news has been heavy lately. Like really heavy. So this week let’s have a change of pace. I don’t know about you but, if nothing else, I need it. Now, I’ve always believed that if you [...]
26 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo A wisp of Wordsworth to begin with this morning: "For oft, when on my couch I lie In vacant or in pensive mood They flash upon that inward eye Which is the bliss of solitude And then [...]
24 June 2025
by Bonnie Flaws The New York Times headline that had the internet going crazy over Palantir The big news this last week or two, at least in some circles, has been the news reported in the New York Times, that [...]
23 June 2025
by John Robertson New Zealand was supposed to be a secular democracy. But blink, and suddenly we’re living in a tax-funded theocracy built on ghost stories and cosmic real estate claims. Let’s say it flat-out: this country is being governed, [...]
21 June 2025
by Dr Muriel Newman Who’s running our country? It seems like a simple enough question. In New Zealand, our Parliament is sovereign. With National, ACT, and New Zealand First commanding a majority of votes in the House, the elected Coalition hold [...]
20 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart The world’s in a perilous place right now. But you know that. In a perfect world, there would be no nuclear weapons. Full stop. But we don’t live in that world. The reality is they do exist, [...]
19 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo It would be fair to say quite a bit has happened since the last Perspective. Calling as I did for the removal and banishment of the Chinese Communist Party from all facets of New Zealand life, I [...]
18 June 2025
by Simon O'Connor Many former leaders of New Zealand have made much of New Zealand’s independent foreign policy, our commitment to the international rules based order, and human rights, and yet appear to throw such principles to then wind when [...]
17 June 2025
by Roger Partridge Few ideas haunt economic debate as relentlessly as the “trickle-down” theory. Perhaps it’s the appeal of attacking something that no one has ever argued. The theory supposedly claims that making the rich richer benefits everyone as wealth [...]
16 June 2025
by Bruce Cotterill Last week, I managed to get myself caught up in a lively conversation with a couple of mates. It wasn’t heated. But it was one of those discussions that no one was going to win And then [...]
16 June 2025
by Don Brash Having listened to my discussion on foreign policy with Sean Plunket on 10 June, I feel the need to clarify my position. Let me start by saying that I have a high regard for Sean Plunket. He [...]
13 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart If you despise Trump, those LA riots are “peaceful protests.” The progressives – it’s such an oxymoronic word, isn’t it? - that run California, and the bulk of the media, are clinging to that framing. Just as [...]
13 June 2025
by Simon O'Connor Phil Goff, a former Labour MP, Minister, and High Commissioner to London, recently wrote an op-ed on the Israel-Gaza conflict, published by Stuff. Much was made of Mr Goff being a former Minister of Foreign Affairs. I decided, as [...]
12 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo I want to tie up a loose end from last week first, and before that, to comment on a frightening one-page ad in the Sunday Star-Slimes, propaganda organ of the Far Left, over the weekend, and before that [...]
12 June 2025
by David Lillis Variable Management across the Board Hearing of continual problems in New Zealand’s workplaces has prompted this article as a comment on management and leadership. Perhaps the environments where I have worked were not typical of New Zealand’s [...]
12 June 2025
By Zoran Rakovic In no other Western democracy does the ordinary citizen so enthusiastically offer themselves as a sacrificial vessel for the errors of their rulers. In no other civil society are people so eager to drape themselves in guilt [...]
11 June 2025
by Dr Muriel Newman As New Zealand stands at the halfway point towards the 2026 election, let’s do a quick stocktake on the state of play. The polls have remained tight throughout the entire period National, ACT, and New Zealand [...]
10 June 2025
By Roger Partridge Q: What is the Regulatory Standards Bill? A: It’s a modest proposal requiring governments to explain the rationale for new laws and regulations, test them against time-honoured principles like rule of law and property rights, and disclose [...]
9 June 2025
by Ani O'Brien The way media and the chattering classes are carrying on you would think Minister Chris Bishop had suggested Stan Walker was “bound to get slapped up” and declared the way to resolve their political differences would be through a [...]
9 June 2025
by Eric Crampton The United States has the world’s best universities. At least for now. Those universities have, in turn, attracted the world’s best researchers. According to the National Foundation for American Policy, immigrants earned 45 of the 112 Nobel prizes [...]
8 June 2025
By Bryce Wilkinson Governments have many roles, but some are of fundamental importance. A vital role is to secure citizens in their persons and possessions. I am amazed by the extent of public opposition to this long-standing principle. It has [...]
7 June 2025
by Ani O'Brien I am pro-choice. That means exactly what you think it does: I support women’s right to choose to terminate a pregnancy should she not want to go through with it. But it also means a whole lot more [...]
6 June 2025
by Rachel Stewart ‘Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.’ At this time and juncture, that legendary line has never felt more germane. We are in an era of turbocharged history modification; it is either [...]
6 June 2025
by Alwyn Poole The Whitehouse recently released a document titled: Make America Healthy Again. The health trends listed are stark – and the needed solutions are clear (even if is going to be like doing an Aircraft Carrier doing a u-turn [...]
5 June 2025
by Lindsay Perigo So, we have a new deputy Prime Minister. But I'd like to start with some REALLY good news! And I don't mean, but easily could, the triumph of a Trumpian nationalist in the Polish presidential election, notwithstanding the [...]
5 June 2025
by Mike Butler The Pioneers – Makers of New Zealand, a new book by writer-publisher John McLean, reminds us of those who built New Zealand, tells how, and explains why their contribution should not be forgotten. McLean descends from an [...]
4 June 2025
by Simon O'Connor So, a government Minister has found himself in woke hot water because he dared to give his honest opinion at the recent Aotearoa Music Awards. Chris Bishop, a former colleague of mine and who would happily describe [...]
4 June 2025
By Don Brash Almost since I returned to New Zealand from nine years abroad in 1971, there has been a widespread assumption that house prices always go up, if not every single year then almost every single year. And that [...]
2 June 2025
By Zoran Rakovic There is much to celebrate in the Māori business renaissance. The recent announcement of the Investment Summit on Māori Business Success, hosted with fanfare and optimism by the New Zealand Government, marks yet another milestone in the [...]
1 June 2025
by Dr Muriel Newman The 2025 Budget is done and dusted. While the Government claims growth is their priority, there was little within the budget to suggest it will deliver what they hope. Finance Minister Nicola Willis would have us believe it [...]
31 May 2025
by Tim Donner It is an undeniable scandal of mammoth proportions, but one that is – surprise, surprise – still being ignored by major media. It all began in February of 2021, shortly after Joe Biden took the oath of [...]
30 May 2025
by Rachel Stewart I’ve come to value my role here with ‘Riding Shotgun’ as that of a harbinger. Yes, sometimes of doom. I’m drawn to bringing to light issues – often unpalatable - that I see as needing to be [...]