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Open Mike 21/09/25

Written By: - Date published: 6:00 am, September 21st, 2025 - 48 comments
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48 comments on “Open Mike 21/09/25 ”

  1. Todays Posts 1

    Today's Posts (updated through the day):

    Joseph Mooney cosplays as alt-right hypocrite

  2. Drowsy M. Kram 2

    A 'good' (i.e. apt, and food for thought) cartoon on how to speed-wreck an economy.


    Keep calm and carry on – the sorted will be OK – thanks NAct and Nicky No-Boats.

  3. PsyclingLeft.Always 3

    trump. Small hands, small mind, just…small.

    Top prosecutor Erik Siebert overseeing Letitia James case departs after Trump threat

    Siebert has previously expressed doubts about the strength of the case, according to two people familiar with the matter. Before Trump's public comments, administration officials privately informed Siebert that the White House might fire him, the two sources added.

    Trump has attempted to purge the Justice Department of officials viewed as disloyal, as he leverages US government agencies to target political rivals.

    Small man syndrome embiggened with big power….

    Trump has repeatedly complained about James, who pursued a civil fraud case against him that resulted in a half-billion-dollar penalty. A New York judge in the case found that Trump and his family business fraudulently inflated the value of his assets, although a New York appeals court last month threw that penalty out, while preserving the fraud case against him.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/573643/top-prosecutor-erik-siebert-overseeing-letitia-james-case-departs-after-trump-threat

  4. Drowsy M. Kram 4

    Watching Willis I was reminded of one of those 1940s Disney cartoons, where Donald Duck is driving a slowly falling apart Model T Ford, until all that is left is Donald Duck "sitting" in thin air holding the steering wheel and honking the horn.

    We are now waiting for the bit where Donald Duck has a panic stricken moment when he notices reality just before crashing into a tree.

    https://thekaka.substack.com/p/polls-turn-harder-against-govt-as/comments
    [19 Sept 2025]


    NAct1 – CoC govt by the sorted, for the sorted – they are creating so many opportunities.

  5. PsyclingLeft.Always 5

    Solar Power. So many reasons why.

    Solar power cuts electricity bills and carbon emissions – NZ needs to scale up faster

    The Climate Change Commission estimates solar combined with battery storage could cut 3.9 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions between 2031 and 2035.

    The solar energy reaching Earth each hour is roughly equivalent to a year of humankind's global energy consumption

    A frequent argument against solar electricity generation is that it is intermittent. But solar panels can use hot water cylinders or batteries to store energy for later use.

    And while New Zealand may not get quite as much sunshine as other countries, our existing renewable generation and hydro-lake storage mean we don't have to invest as much in batteries to buffer intermittent generation.

    Also, the flip side of intermittent power sources is that they turn back on – fossil fuels can only be used once.

    Article also on Solar Recycling..which was one of my concerns

    Ultimately, we need to reach a system where solar panels are recycled to avoid the need for indefinite mining, and to keep panels out of landfills.

    This goal looks promising. Solar panel recycling is an active area of research and already possible, although not yet profitable.

    As the uptake of solar accelerates, New Zealand should make sure suitable policies are in place. In terms of materials, we should require recycling of solar panels. On the social side, we should ensure support for low-income households and consider incentives for solar installations on rental properties.

    Science and Kiwi Tech…this sounds very interesting/promising.

    Paul Hume is senior research fellow in Materials Science at Te Herenga Waka – Victoria University of Wellington

    Researchers are also exploring next-generation solar power with lower energy and material demands in their manufacture. In most commercial solar panels, the dominant contribution to manufacturing emissions is the silicon "active layer". There are multiple alternatives to silicon and new technologies use different materials for the active layer.

    For example, my research focuses on solution-printable organic semiconductors. These materials absorb light very strongly, which means the active layer is about a thousand times thinner than in a silicon solar panel. A kilogram of material can cover more than 5000 square metres.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/on-the-inside/573446/solar-power-cuts-electricity-bills-and-carbon-emissions-nz-needs-to-scale-up-faster

    And I link this for Shame Jones and fellow NACT1 dummies, knowing they will neither read…or be interested. As to much loot in Fossil.

    How Solar Power Works for Dummies

    https://ecotricity.co.nz/news/solar-power-for-dummies

    And final words of, IMO, great sense….

    A much better option, we suggest, would be to prioritise the expansion of rooftop solar throughout New Zealand. This could not only add significantly to the overall electricity supply, but also help bring down prices.

    New Zealand’s huge hydro storage advantage means photovoltaics, particularly rooftop systems, can unlock real benefits for customers.

    This could mean shifting the management of the legacy hydro assets to provide a high-value product – stored energy – rather than the gentailers simply using hydro generation to maximise profits.

    There may even be an argument for revisiting the current market framework and returning those hydro assets to public ownership.

    https://theconversation.com/nzs-electricity-market-is-a-mess-rolling-out-rooftop-solar-would-change-the-game-236943

    • Bearded Git 5.1

      +10 Billion Psych.

      AI tells me "In the first half of 2024, rooftop solar systems generated 11.3% of Australia's total electricity" whereas in NZ it is bugger all.

      Having said that AI also says "rooftop solar is growing rapidly in New Zealand, with installations doubling in recent years. While the adoption rate is still low compared to other countries, the sector is experiencing significant growth driven by the economic benefits, dropping panel prices".

      A large solar power station was granted consent for Helios OTA by the Central Otago District Council last week near Naseby "consisting of approximately 550,810 solar panels." (That is copied from the decision-I like the approximately).

      So things are starting to happen

  6. gsays 6

    It would be encouraging to hear a couple of euphemisms used by opposition MPs when describing this government and their actions. Just a couple but repeated at every opportunity.

    Words like extremist. The lack of a position they have taken in the horrors in Gaza is kowtowing to extremism. Looking at you Gordon Brittas.

    Denying, retrospectively, Pat Equity settlements is extremist.

    The fabrication of a financial disaster to justify Willis steering the economy onto the rocks is extremist.

    Extra tax-cuts for the already well-off (landlords) is extremist. In fact Willis's austerity economics is extremist. A Year 10 accounting student could tell you that putting money into the hands of the poorest will stimulate the economy better than giving a further subsidy to rentiers.

    The riding rough shod over the environment in favour of 19th century extraction economics is extremist.

    Come to think of it, incompetence could replace extremist and still do the job.

    A chocolate fish every week to the MP that uses extremist or incompetent to describe this flailing and failing regime.

    Don't have to release a policy but you can create a narrative.

    • weka 6.1

      I think a short sentence is better. Extremist is already a highly weaponised word, and can be used against the left as well. Let's not give that more fuel. I like incompetent, and think it would be better used with a short explainer (because again, it can be used against the left and the right are better at this than us).

      Something like this,

      A Year 10 accounting student could tell you that putting money into the hands of the poorest will stimulate the economy better than giving a further subsidy to rentiers.

      or a bit shorter. Not sure if Labour are going to say that. But the rest of us can.

      • gsays 6.1.1

        Yep, down with the sentence idea. Repeating it is what matters. Then the essence – incompetence or extreme is stays in the mind of voters.

        Surely there are staffers that are qualified in this sort of thing…

        • Incognito 6.1.1.1

          I think there’s a fine line between extreme incompetence and incompetent extremism. Both are dangerous and inflict harm and such people & actions cannot and must not be trusted. The question to ask is if they were becoming more competent suddenly, e.g., by using AI or taking onboard specialist advice based on evidence, would the outcome be better or more (or less) of the same (or worse)? If so, then they were extremely incompetent, if not, they were incompetently extreme. I’d like to think we/you can work it out without the help of staffers 😉

          • gsays 6.1.1.1.1

            Sadly there is evidence of both extreme incompetence (the ferry cancellation when it's obvious to everyone it was the landbased development that needed pulling back) and incompetent extremism (the prevarication on meaningful response regards Israel).

            According to our Foreign Minister on Seymour "A statement was made by someone who's got no authority to make it and that's why we're putting the record straight now."

            followed by "The Minister's office has since clarified his use of loco juventus referred to the "general inexperience of youth"."

    • Drowsy M. Kram 6.2

      yes Was wishin' & hopin' & thinkin' & prayin' that CoC MPs would grow a spine and take responsibility for the messes they've made of the economy, society and public services.

      But hoping for that was plain foolish of me. Anyone with half a big brain could see the big money behind the CoC wanted to drive NZ onto the rocks the moment Nicky No-Boats ('We're saving so much money!') pulled the plug on the iReX ferry project.

      Wrecks create opportunities for the sorted – NAct1 is govt by the sorted, for the sorted.

    • Obtrectator 6.3

      Another approach could be relentless repetition of an absurdly inappropriate word or phrase of commendation – " …. and Brutus is an honourable man!" kind of stuff. But maybe no. The sheeple seldom appreciate irony, and are most likely to think the speakers are playing it straight.

    • mikesh 6.4

      The word "extremist" has pejorative overtones so it could hardly be called a euphemism.

      euphemism: from Greek, eu (good) + phema (something said or spoken)

      • gsays 6.4.1

        Yr right.

        I kinda meant euphemism as 'another word for'. The pejorative rules it out.

        Epithet would have been a better word.

        Edit. Full disclosure, I thought the word was epiphet. My brain must be starting to calcify…

  7. joe90 7

    Sunday reading.

    Claims of pure bloodlines? Ancestral homelands? DNA science says no.

    Geneticist explains analyses made possible by tech advances show human history to be one of mixing, movement, displacement

    […]

    “The big perspective change from ancient DNA study is that people living today are almost never the descendants of the people in the same place thousands of years before,” Reich said.

    https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2025/09/claims-of-pure-bloodlines-ancestral-homelands-dna-science-says-no/

    • AB 7.1

      Interesting, thanks. The fact of all that mixing and mingling helps to evaporate the idea that there is some biological basis to the concept of 'race'. It suggests that 'race' is a social invention that pops up at certain times and in certain places to serve particular political or economic agendas. All that the idea of 'race' now has to hang its hat on is skin colour differences, which are most likely a recent evolutionary adaptation to latitude and the need to balance UV radiation absorption – but with no deeper significance.

    • SPC 7.2

      Oversold.

      It is really a story of conquest/migration.

      The introduction of a new dominant male group. That bred with those there before them. The part that undermines the concept of race purity (as does inter-marriage and new population inflow since).

      c60,000 years ago a male line left Africa and became dominant (in the male line) settlers outside of Africa.

      The rest is subplot – regional reprise. The out of the steppes waves across Europe supplanting the hunter gatherers and Anatolian farmers there etc.

      Thus the Yamnaya R Y chromosome dominates Europe.

      But some areas such as Han Chinese have a longer settlement – more so in the case of the indigenous in the Americas.

      That said "ethnic" peoples is a thing. It is cultural, continuing identity or area based.

      Often based on descent (such as Maori iwi).

      Not so relevant to nations based on immigration (Americas/Australasia) though.

      It is a current live political issue in Europe (and in the immigration nations – when right wingers talk about their Christian white race identity nation heritage).

  8. joe90 8

    Every statistic about how bad the US economy is getting is being buried or cooked.

    /

    Paul Atkins, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, said his agency will propose a rule change following President Donald Trump’s call to switch quarterly earnings reports to a semiannual schedule

    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/09/19/sec-to-propose-rule-change-on-trumps-call-to-end-quarterly-earnings-reporting-says-chair-atkins.html

    The Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday postponed the release of a key annual report central to future inflation data.

    https://archive.li/l25SR (axios)

    The Trump administration announced Saturday that it was canceling an annual US food insecurity survey, claiming it had become "overly politicized," its latest attack on government data gathering.

    https://www.barrons.com/news/trump-administration-cancels-us-hunger-survey-77e86fd8

    • SPC 8.1

      The reduction to food stamps (SNAP) increasing food insecurity.

    • joe90 8.2

      Dear leader has set the tone.

      .

      In an undercover operation last year, the FBI recorded Tom Homan, now the White House border czar, accepting $50,000 in cash after indicating he could help the agents — who were posing as business executives — win government contracts in a second Trump administration, according to multiple people familiar with the probe and internal documents reviewed by MSNBC.

      […]

      Undercover FBI agents posing as contractors communicated and met several times last summer with a business colleague who introduced them to Homan, and with Homan himself, who indicated he would facilitate securing contracts for them in exchange for money once he was in office, according to documents and the people familiar with the case.

      On Sept. 20, 2024, with hidden cameras recording the scene at a meeting spot in Texas, Homan accepted $50,000 in bills, according to an internal summary of the case and sources.

      FBI agents and Justice Department prosecutors took no further investigative steps in the final months of 2024, the people said, and expected to keep monitoring Homan to determine if he landed an official role and would make good on steering contracts in a future Trump administration.

      https://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/news/tom-homan-cash-contracts-trump-doj-investigation-rcna232568

  9. SPC 9

    The week ahead at the UN when western nations fall into line on the recognition of Palestine.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cp9848kxp2go

    Starmer is to get ahead of the issue with a statement on their Sunday.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ce800enrglzo

  10. weka 10

    I'm struggling to see the connection between job losses (due to people choosing not to get vaccinated during the pandemic?),

    No, nothing to do with the handling of the pandemic, although that matters too in what I am about to say. I was talking about people who have been cancelled by the liberal left. The most obvious example is people who have taken gender critical views, including progressive gender critical views, and been sacked for it. Literally lost their jobs because people who call themselves left think it's appropriate to take away people's means of making a living.

    I will give UK examples, in part because I don't want NZ GC lefties to have another target painted on their back. Liberals have run No Debate and cancel culture against sex realists for a decade, and many people have been harrassed, lost their jobs or careers, been arrested or 'visited' by the police for non crime hate incidents for saying things like trans women are men (albeit rudely or offensively). I've been naming this on TS for probably 6 years.

    Now populist and proto-fascist Reform is polling higher than either the Tories or Labour, and there is a sea change against liberals. Hence 100,000 people at the far right rally headed by Tommy Robinson. That happened in the same week that Kirk was murdered, and one of the scariest things I've seen politically is the number of otherwise progressive women take the side of the right over how Kirk is being memorialised. Women disgusted at see the glee from liberals over a political assassination.

    The UK now has an entrenched problem with two tier policing, actual and perceived, and more and more people are turning away from liberal values because the policing is tied into liberal cancel culture.

    Meanwhile the left this week is falling out over the new Your Party, with Zarah Sultana trying to wrest power from Corbyn and basically fucking the newly forming party.

    I cannot emphasise how much the right are making currency from all of that. In the US there's a massive open goal whereby every mindless and often abhorrent thing a liberal says on tiktok or IG is being amplified across social media and blamed on the left and used to undermine the left while the US presidency is literally advancing the fascism playbook.

    And the left here seems largely oblivious, or still thinks we can force people to think like us by ostracising people who don't think like us, or seems to think it's got nothing to do with us even while the same dynamics are unfolding.

    I'm not writing posts about all of that because I don't want a target on my back atm. But I have to say I'm disappointed in TS, of all places, that even in comments we can't have this conversation (but apologies to MT for going off topic, although obviously it's related).

    [TheStandard: A moderator moved this comment to Open Mike as being off topic or irrelevant in the post it was made in. Be more careful in future.]

    • weka 10.1

      there are academics in NZ not able to speak freely, because of the liberal left. That’s why some of us in this conversations are pissed.

    • Drowsy M. Kram 10.2

      I was talking about people who have been cancelled by the liberal left. The most obvious example is people who have taken gender critical views, including progressive gender critical views, and been sacked for it.

      Ah, my bad. The liberal left hushing up Kiwis being sacked for their GC views, and the sackings themselves, is scandlous – not to mention no debate. GC views seem to get a semi-regular airing in comments on TS – maybe the NZ mainstream media is to too short-staffed to do their job?

      I remember you writing that you're classed as a bigot because you believe in women's sex-based rights, so I understand where you're coming from.

      The Centrist seems to have a smattering of articles related to GC views, although they won't all be everyone's cuppa tea.

      Law firm under fire for warning doctors on gender treatments

      Is gender identity ‘contagious’? A new study raises questions

      Renowned US trans doctor sued for negligence in teen gender transition case

      NZ Herald features a twerking 7-year-old in gender ideology push aimed at children

      Rodney Hide calls for return to Judeo-Christian beliefs, calls climate, gender and vaccination policies “tyrannical and evil

      Debate over designated gender bathrooms heats up as New Zealand First’s introduces “Bathroom Bill’ – NZ Herald 11 May 2024

      Cass Review findings challenges drumbeat messaging around youth gender treatments

      A tale of two (apparently conflicting) surveys regarding public support for gender identity services

      One thing is certain – it's a(nother) polarising (no-)debate.

      And the left here seems largely oblivious, or still thinks we can force people to think like us by ostracising people who don’t think like us, or seems to think it’s got nothing to do with us even while the same dynamics are unfolding.

      I don’t want to force people to think like me – how would I even do that? But it’s nice when they do (think like me) – I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t. And I am a lefty, it’s true, so maybe I don’t see and/or understand the force I’m applying.

      • weka 10.2.1

        I moved our comments to OM, because we're getting well off topic.

          • Drowsy M. Kram 10.2.2.1.1

            If you want left wing or progressive sex realist/GC views…

            Thanks weka. I wasn't after GC views as such – rather, it would help me to understand the nature (if not the magnitude) of the problem in NZ if I could see a couple of (anonymised) examples of the many Kiwis who "have been harrassed, lost their jobs or careers, been arrested or 'visited' by the police for non crime hate incidents for saying things like trans women are men…"

            Because if that sort of anti-GC activity is widespread (and even one person losing their job because of their GC views is unacceptable), then this needs to be brought to light – there are too many unemployed Kiwis as is. Tbh, I'm surprised NZF isn't all over it – even one example of a GC-related sacking would surely bolster its political fortunes.

            Is NZ First’s gender definition bill a solution looking for a problem?

            I did a cursory search of the four websites you kindly provided links for, and found a possible example, although I'm not sure what issue the apparently problematic comment was addressing – perhaps a waste of resources?

            “This is awesome but a shame it took so long coming. And interesting, that now men can menstruate, free period products are available in all IR bathrooms.”
            https://womensrightsparty.nz/inland-revenues-message-to-employees-put-up-and-shut-up/

            If it's rare in NZ, then perhaps there are examples among the GC Kiwi diaspora?

            Google's AI answer is not much help:

            There is no public record of anyone in New Zealand losing their job specifically for espousing "gender-critical views" in the way that term is often used in public discourse. Instead, the available information focuses on cases of discrimination against transgender people based on their gender identity, which is protected by law in New Zealand.

            • weka 10.2.2.1.1.1

              as I said, I'm not willing to talk about NZ gender critical people, because I don't want to put more of a target on their back. I can give you many examples from the UK, which is what my comment focussed on.

              (I can tell you about the time I watched NZ twitter organise to try and prevent a well known GC woman from getting a rental in the new city she was moving too. That one played out in public. Very liberal /sarc)

              Non hate crime incidents are a particular reference to the UK. You can look up Helen Joyce's recent post on this if you want. The concern for NZ is if we are heading in the same direction the UK went. Looking at the Law Commission's review of the HRA re gender for example, which if taken up by parliament would fundamentally alter women's rights and freedom of expression in NZ.

              This is why I gave you the reference list. Those people are talking about these issues all the time. But also I felt the need to redress the balance with the Centrist links. We get accused of being RW enough as it is.

              • Drowsy M. Kram

                as I said, I'm not willing to talk about NZ gender critical people, because I don't want to put more of a target on their back. I can give you many examples from the UK, which is what my comment focussed on.

                Thanks weka. If NZ & UK cases of GC Kiwis getting sacked for expressing GC views are qualitatively similar, then I will look to the UK examples.

                It could also be helpful to put the magnitude of the problem in NZ into perspective. Might it be a fairly small problem, as a percentage of total unfair dismissals – 1%; 0.1%; 0.01%? That can probably be discussed without putting a target on anyone's back, and perhaps information about the scale of the problem is available in the US/UK, since people are talking about these issues all the time? However big or small the problem is, it's likely bigger than the problem of sacking transgender people for being trans, because in NZ that constitutes unfair dismissal for this small group.

                It's good to have positive dialogue between gender critical and gender inclusive folk here – it gives me hope for the future of my trans relatives. Maybe self-ID-related gender issues will come to matter as much in NZ as they (seem to) matter in the US/UK. For now, however, imho they are niche issues – relatively or completely unimportant to most Kiwis, in spite of the efforts of several political parties and organisations for or against self-ID.

                • weka

                  I think your last sentence is both incorrect and a tactical mistake that’s made by the liberal left. And the wider left actually. We’re at the point in New Zealand with the deputy prime minister can use the gender sex wars to advance his populist agenda. If we don’t stop and deal with this now by the time it hits the mainstream the damage will have been done. That damage is to trans rights, you can see how that works in the US. And it’s also to women, you can see that in the law commission report. It’s to children because we don’t get to have an open discussion about medical ethics. And it’s to the wider society because most people are sex realist and when push comes to shove the evidence shows that they move to the right. In the case of the UK they actually side with fascists. The left’s response to that is to say oh well they were never left in the first place. And thus our numbers shrink because that’s obviously a completely nuts position to take.

                  • weka

                    Another way to understand this is that NZ is some years behind the UK. This is why I have such strong concerns, because I’ve seen what’s played out in the UK and I fear what would happen if we go down that track further than we already have. I understand that people who haven’t been following their issues internationally may see this is niche issue that doesn’t really have any relevance. But that’s a consequence of no debate not of there being no issue.

                    Regarding quantifying the impacts on people, of cancelled culture and no debate in this particular area, consider this. If somebody got sacked for saying things like I’d like female only toilets, or even something like people can’t change sex, do you think that they are more likely to a) go public with what’s happened to them, or b) stay silent find another job and keep their head down because they need the income?

                    Even in the UK where there is a now a very strong movement of support for people that have been badly affected, I doubt that we have a true sense of how many people have been affected. The people that have stood up and gone public have done so at great cost. But they did so within the context of a movement that was building. In New Zealand we don’t have that to anywhere near the same extent, and what we do have is a public debate that is currently being driven by the right, simply because left-wing and progressive voices have been so successfully suppressed. Consider that we nearly lost the Standard over this.

                    • weka

                      I’m also reluctant to frame this and a quantitative way of trans versus gender critical people. I strongly believe that trans people need protections and society so that they don’t get fired for being trans. It doesn’t matter how few there are. It’s a basic principle that the left should be upholding for all people. You don’t get fired for who you are and you don’t get fired for your beliefs. We actually have this in law.

                      It’s also my genuine belief that trans people will be served better by allowing progressive gender critical voices. We can look to the US for the example of what happens when the right gets to determine the narrative. Progressive gender critical people want trans people to have their human rights upheld as well as those of women and children. Unfortunately, what is happening in both the US and the UK is a backlash against trans people because of the excesses of the identitarian left.

                    • Drowsy M. Kram

                      I think you've missed my point.

                      I got your point. Kiwis will vote for NZF for any number of reasons, e.g. being "sick of the identitarian left", and Peters is a wily politician. So, voters who are "sick of the identitarian left" may swell NZF's vote, but imho they're unlikely to be crucial to Peters (Winston First) getting in again – we can agree to disagree.

                      Most Kiwis don't understand the issues around GI vs sex, because No Debate means we've never had a public debate.

                      Might explain why it's a niche issue in NZ politics – groups such as the NZ Women's Rights and New Conservative parties, who understand the issues and are "sick of the identitarian left", are passionate about highlighting and broadening the appeal of GC views – maybe they will get what they wish for.

                      I feel that I understand at least some of the issues, and that's without being "sick of the identitarian left". The principles embodied in BDMRR appeal to me, and debate outcomes seldom please everyone.

                      Thanks Google (hitting the ‘maximum number of links’ limit):

                      Inquiry Focus: “Bathroom Debate [NZQA PDF]

                      Gender identity trans debate in NZ after UK’s woman ‘biological sex’ ruling – The Front Page [28 April 2025]

                      Hundreds gather in Dunedin for protest against proposed gender legislation [3 May 2025]

                      It’s not a debate, it’s a disinformation campaign
                      [16 July 2025]

                      Gender vs Sex – the debate around the definition of a woman raging around the world [Te Ao, 22 July 2025]

                      The 'No Debate' rages wink

                      Debate over inclusion of transgender Kiwis in community sport [24 July 2025]

                      Protect debate on sex and gender [Free Speech Union]

                      Resign or Die’: A Student Candidate Faces the Threats Women in Politics Know Too Well [22 Sept 2025]

                      btw, I'm not debating your personal choices with your family, that's something for you.

                      I'm not debating them either, at least not any more – they are something for me – happy to share in the interests of understanding.

                      Because you're unconcerned about detransitioners, or because you don't believe detransitioning is such a big deal?

                      Not sure how you got that from my comment – perhaps re-read?

                      I am surprised to see you arguing your personal view without regard to the wider social good though.

                      smiley Low blow! I think the principles embodied in BDMRR are for the wider social good – Kiwis who consider those principles to be too high a price to pay will vote accordingly. That's democracy – the contest of ideas, principles and money.

                  • Drowsy M. Kram

                    I think your last sentence is both incorrect and a tactical mistake that’s made by the liberal left. And the wider left actually. We’re at the point in New Zealand with the deputy prime minister can use the gender sex wars to advance his populist agenda. If we don’t stop and deal with this now by the time it hits the mainstream the damage will have been done.

                    I'm a lefty, and I've made many, many mistakes (who hasn't), but surely the (political?) damage was done when the 'self-ID bill' was passed by unanimous vote of Parliament on 9 Dec 2021 – perhaps even earlier.

                    Our current PM and two deputy PMs all voted 'aye'. Imho, self-ID has been mainstream in NZ for years now – the last general election was contested by multiple niche political parties (Women's Rights Party, New Conservatives Party, Vision New Zealand) who oppose self-ID.

                    Populist NZF and other (political) actors will continue to bang on about the risks of self-ID, and that may garner political parties a few votes, but my concerns have ebbed as I've seen trans relatives become healthy, well-adjusted young adults. They don't see themselves as 'damaged', and believe me I did make repeated ham-fisted efforts to convince them otherwise. Still, we live and learn – everyone's different. And the damage I did to my relationship with them is nearly repaired – they may even come to trust me again, in time.

                    I’m also reluctant to frame this and a quantitative way of trans versus gender critical people.

                    Me to; I’d rather see it as gender critical people versus and gender inclusive people, with transgender people as a subset of ‘gender inclusive’. Both groups have recourse to legal protections in NZ law, and should ideally abide by those laws, even while they seek change.

                    • weka

                      consider that the votes needed to get Peters in again might be held by people who won't vote left over gender ideology.

                      I don't know what you mean by teh damage having been done by the BDMRR. Do you mean no more damage can be done? Or that the battle was lost then?

                      Have you looked at the law commission review? There are many more battles to be had and that's a major one if National tries to advance it.

                      That's great your trans rellies are doing well. Do you have any concerns about the lives of detrans people?

                  • Drowsy M. Kram

                    consider that the votes needed to get Peters in again might be held by people who won't vote left over gender ideology.

                    If Peters campaigns in the 2026 election, then imho it's likely NZF will get in. People who won't vote left over gender issues have several GC parties to choose from – that's NZ (MMP) democracy in action.

                    I don't know what you mean by teh damage having been done by the BDMRR.

                    Was thinking fewer votes for parties supporting BDMRR, particularly on the left, as illustrated by your Peters example. We face many risks, and some Kiwis perceive the risks of principles embodied in BDMRR as overriding, but I couldn't trust any party that routinely traded principles for votes.

                    Hadn't looked at the Law Commission's recommendations – thanks.

                    That's great your trans rellies are doing well. Do you have any concerns about the lives of detrans people?

                    Isn't it though, and a relief tbh. I'm aware of detransitioning (a potentially tough decision and process), and advanced detransitioning and other concerns in my initial dismay and subsequent remonstrations several years ago. Most of these are of less concern to me now.

                    • weka

                      If Peters campaigns in the 2026 election, then imho it's likely NZF willget in. People who won't vote left over gender issues have several GC parties to choose from – that's NZ (MMP) democracy in action.

                      I think you've missed my point. If NZF are marginal, swing voters sick of the identitarian left might choose Peters over Labour, thus bringing him back in. I mentioned that because you seemed to be saying that banging on about GI might get a few votes. Those 'few' votes might determine who forms government.

                      Was thinking fewer votes for parties supporting BDMRR, particularly on the left, as illustrated by your Peters example. We face many risks, and some Kiwis perceive the risks of principles embodied in BDMRR as overriding, but I couldn't trust any party that routinely traded principles for votes.

                      All parties currently in parliament voted for the BDMRR changes. NZF is the only party committed to opposing GII atm (I don't trust them on that though).

                      Most Kiwis don't understand the issues around GI vs sex, because No Debate means we've never had a public debate. This tracks very well with the UK, where initially it wasn't on the public agenda and politicians were doing what they wanted. GC people, esp women and grassroots orgs forced their hand, both Tories and Labour and smaller parties.

                      There's been a clear shift in UK opinion polls from 'sure, trans people have rights' to 'yes, trans people have rights, but draw the line at women's spaces and sports'. I would expect similiar-ish in NZ if we had a public debate. That's why No Debate exists, because open discussion changes people's minds. NZ is more liberal than the UK, but even so most people in NZ aren't going to accept men in women's toilets once they know what that means.

                      https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/explore/topic/Transgender

                      Isn't it though, and a relief tbh. I'm aware of detransitioning (a potentially tough decision and process), and advanced detransitioning and other concerns in my initial dismay and subsequent remonstrations several years ago. Most of these are of less concern to me now.

                      Because you're unconcerned about detransitioners, or because you don't believe detransitioning is such a big deal?

                    • weka

                      btw, I'm not debating your personal choices with your family, that's something for you. I am surprised to see you arguing your personal view without regard to the wider social good though.

            • weka 10.2.2.1.1.2

              Here's an example of attempted venue cancellation.

              https://www.franksogilvie.co.nz/news/case-brief-whitmore-v-palmerston-north-city-council

              I'm sure you already know about Albert Park.

              The LAVA case is about whether lesbians could be excluded from a Pride event because of their gender critical views that only women can be lesbians, and that trans-identified males aren't lesbian.

    • James Thrace 10.3

      Now we have a new language issue

      is a “trans man” a male who is a transsexual and is now a woman, or is it a woman who is now a man?

      same goes for “trans woman”. Is it a woman who is transsexual and is now a man, or is it a man who is now a woman?

      the prefix “trans” puts one in the “other” category. If you’ve transitioned, why the need to point out one is “trans”, particularly for transexuals noting transexuals are absolutely different from transgender people which usually arise from unresolved mental health issues.

      • weka 10.3.1

        I don't actually know how the term trans woman came about.

        I saw someone on twitter earlier calling a trans woman a trans man, and pretty sure it was not because he didn't know but because he refuses to obscure physical reality. It's why so many now use the term trans identified male, but it must still be confusing to many. Have to admit, when people start using trans masc etc I have to go look up what they mean.

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