In the week when Argentina and Netherlands set a course correction and the Irish are in the streets about Algerians murdering children - this won't make the news. But a government has been formed in NZ - finally.
Highlights of the coalition agreement are (my words):
- sport to be based on sport and not tranny bullshit
- race-based preferential treatment to be removed from all legislation
- racist Maori Health Authority to be disestablished
- Firearms legislation to be repealed (gun registers, silly restrictions etc to be gutted)
- Environment and Climate Change nonsense is relegated outside of Cabinet (ie in the wilderness)
- planning laws changed to restore the right to enjoy property rights
- tenancy laws repealed to return rights to landlords
- all existing Covid mandates to end immediately
- reinstate 3 strikes legislation
- all government communications to be in English (not Maori)
- all publicly funded education establishments must support free speech or be de-funded
- end the ban on oil mining and lots lots more.
The announcement itself was pure comedy gold, with the 78 year old Deputy PM Winston Peters continuously scolding the far-left commie press gallery about their bias - best one was in response to the dumbass question "Do you all trust each other" - his response was something along the lines of "Stop with the stupid games, we all shook hands and we all signed an agreement - I understand that you are all disappointed but YOU LOST"
From Hobson's Pledge via Don Brash
https://www.hobsonspledge.nz
We've spent the past few hours going through the agreements between Act, NZ First, and National, as well as the ministerial appointments, with a fine-tooth comb so we can provide you with the highlights.
First of all, I’m sure I speak for all those who have supported Hobson’s Pledge since our formation in 2016 when I say how absolutely delighted we are that Casey Costello has not only been elected to Parliament but has stepped right into a ministerial role inside Cabinet.
Casey will be Minister for Seniors, Minister of Customs, and Associate Minister for Health, Immigration, and Police.
We can be confident that there will be at least one minister at the Cabinet table speaking up for what we stand for!
The three parties have agreed to 'On-going Decision-Making Principles' to underpin their work together. I want to draw your attention to the principle they are calling 'Pro-democracy':
"upholding the principles of liberal democracy, including equal citizenship, parliamentary sovereignty, the rule of law and property rights, especially with respect to interpreting the Treaty of Waitangi."
Reading this in the list of 8 principles, I couldn't help but feel hopeful about the rest of the document. And that hope wasn't misplaced. Both the Act/National and the NZ First/National coalition agreements have significant policies for Hobson's Pledge supporters.
NZ First/National:
Act/National (we won't repeat the policies already mentioned above):
MAGA
MNZGA
WWG1WGA
NCSWIC
thanks for that.
Hobson's Pledge is a well-supported constitutionalist movement that wants to restore the Treaty of Waitangi to its original intent, which is a document that is treated as a Constitutional document. The fragile original is not very long, as treaties weren't in those days. Furthermore it appeared in two languages, which is rather novel for the time. Not all tribes signed it, and that caused some kerfuffles later on. Furthermore, it recognized certain tribal leaders as 'King' so it created a weird hierarchy in the collective tribes. Nevertheless, it was very radical for the time, as it recognized the 'natives' as British subjects under the Crown. With equal rights, especially in regards to property.
The reason we see many anti-racisms policy points, is that successive governments have attempted to subvert and change the meaning. Some of the final blows was the UNDRIP declaration (not to be recognized now due to sovereignty issues), which Radical Maori decided meant that they were 'indigenous', when their own oral history suggests they arrived from Hawaiki (Is it Hawaii? We do not now for sure).
Hobson was the first Governor of New Zealand.
What were the NZ First policy contributions?