Michael Laws, Prizefighter

Man, been busy these past couple days. But, bonus: have successfully convinced the scanner function on my printer/scanner to work with my laptop (previous frustrations). The software I used to use is still refusing to function, and it does other weird stuff (e.g. I can scan to my laptop from the laptop, but I can’t scan to my laptop from the scanner), but it goes. Hurrah!
So anyway, instead of a long blog, I’m just going to do what all us Kiwi bloggers do when we’re just phoning it in: quote the supremely self-satisfied Mayor of W(h)anganui, Michael Laws.

it was obvious, even in 1981, a liberated South Africa would exchange one form of madness for another. Apartheid was evil. So too is the African disease that has enveloped that nation, and from which it is condemned to never recover. (Sunday Star Times column, yesterday)

Evil of Apartheid = Evil of “the African disease”
I have no words.
Which is fine, because I need to do more work. Hurrah! Thank you Michael Laws!

Testing MMP

Seems like there’s gonna be another referendum, this time on whether or not our wee nation should stick with its present electoral system. We currently use MMP, mixed-member proportional representation (a.k.a the Additional Member System (AMS) in the UK, says wiki). Basically, you vote for parties, not people. The seats in Parliament are divided up among the parties to match the percentage of vote they receive. There’s more to ie (e.g. you vote for people as well) but that’s the important bit.
So this referendum will ask whether we want a change. Idiot at NRT is not at all impressed with the process, BK Drinkwater is open to advice, and I’m sure all the other poli blogs will start in on it soon enough.
I have a lot of love for MMP. Under the proportional system we’ve seen the diversity of our representatives grow massively, and the rise of a tier of smaller parties to a status where they can genuinely influence policy and gain wins for their constituencies. It ain’t perfect; but it’s a darn sight better than the winner-takes-all system we used to have.
Naturally, there were entrenched interests that fought hard for the old system, when we debated the change to MMP back in the 90s. Lots of money was spent to argue that MMP would destroy democracy. Lots of carefully spun lines were added into the discourse. One of them that bothered me when I was a teenager and still bothers me now is how under MMP, MPs have no direct electoral responsibility. They weren’t elected by the people, and that means that they can do what they like because the voters can’t chuck them out at election time!
It’s an inane criticism, but that hasn’t stopped it from turning up in letters to the editor at least once a week for the last ten years. (This is probably not an exaggeration.) It’s inane because it misunderstands the very nature of representative democracy and that this ideal is better met by a proportional system than a electorate-based winner-takes-all one. Of course each MP still has a constituency – it’s the proportion of the entire nation who voted for that party! When I tick the Green box on my ballot paper it means that I want that slate of MPs in Parliament. Maybe I don’t agree with or even like all of them, but that doesn’t change the fact that my vote puts my weight behind them.
(Now, there is actually something important hiding inside this criticism. Under MMP, members are accountable not to an electorate directly, but to the party. It is the party that gets the vote; it is the party that determines the order in which people are added to the list. The party says who gets in and who gets out. There is some issue with accountability there, at least potentially. But when you look a little harder, it’s much less prevalent in practice. AFAIK the Greens, the Maori party and even Labour all have strong channels through which party membership can influence the representation they assemble. Even National has avenues through which this can play out. So accountability to the party can mean, and should mean in a healthy democracy, accountability to the party members. I can find little to get upset about there.)
This criticism is a piece of spin generated back in 1992 that has been circulating through the NZ political conversation ever since. It is based on a complete misunderstanding of democracy, as the doctors behind the spin were no doubt well aware. It has stuck around because it speaks directly to the paranoia of the reactionary – when new faces appear in politics and say things I don’t like, I want to get rid of them! The old way let me do this.The new way doesn’t!
New faces saying things I don’t like may not be representing my interests, but they’re representing someone, probably someone whose voice has not been heard in politics prior to that point. This is an improvement. It means that MMP is working.
And I don’t think that’s anything to complain about.

Maori Language Week

Yesterday I had about two sentences in my head to say and somehow I wrote a very long essay. This effort, I hope, will be shorter.
Basically, I am pleased by how Māori Language Week went this year. This week, set up to cultivate NZ’s other official language*, has been growing in stature and presence over the last decade. It is nice to see Māori continue to work its way into everyday conversation here, and for example to turn up on mainstream television with such high frequency.
One of the reasons it’s nice is that it continues to smack down the protests of those conservative forces who disapprove of teaching Māori in schools. I think Māori language should be core curriculum for NZ pupils, but a frequent objection is that the language wouldn’t be “useful”. (They should learn Chinese, say these forces, in an odd moment of honesty about where the world is headed.)
Well, newsflash – if speaking Māori wasn’t useful before, it certainly is now. With the Māori presence continuing to rise everywhere in civic life, and the bicultural aspirations of the Treaty of Waitangi gaining ever-greater purchase, knowing Māori is incredibly useful for anyone who wishes to work or do business in NZ.
Of course, the main reason for supporting Māori language is not utilitarian, despite these folk; it is about cultural access, about ensuring New Zealanders are able to understand and participate in both cultural streams in this country.
And I’m totally doing it again. The reason I wanted to post about this is because I am totally in love with the branding developed for this year’s week. It’s a fantastic piece of design. Here, check it out:
maorilanguageweek.jpg
Isn’t that just lovely? The classic typeface with a light-hearted contrast between vertical and horizontal weights, the hearts made out of koru, the jaunty and self-assured message. Whoever did this design deserves applause, because it’s marvellous and absolutely in keeping with where NZ is at right now. It makes me smile.
E noho rā!
* NZ sign language is NZ’s other other official language

The Smacking CIR-cus

Citizens-initiated referenda (CIR) sound like a cool idea: any citizens can get any question they like turned into a national referendum if they get a certain number of signatures.
It has turned out to be a problematic process, however. The questions that have made it to referendum have been phrased in unusual ways. They have also had no impact whatsoever on the actions of government, despite overwhelmingly clear results each time.
Wikipedia has four CIR listed:

  • 1995 – “Should the number of professional fire-fighters employed full-time in the New Zealand Fire Service be reduced below the number employed in 1 January 1995?” (27% of voters responded, 88% of those saying No)
  • 1999 – “Should the size of the House of Representatives be reduced from 120 members to 99 members?” (85% of voters responded, 82% of those saying Yes)
  • 1999 – “Should there be a reform of our Justice system placing greater emphasis on the needs of victims, providing restitution and compensation for them and imposing minimum sentences and hard labour for all serious violent offences?” (85% of voters responded, 92% of those saying Yes)
  • 2009 – “Should a smack as part of good parental correction be a criminal offence in New Zealand?” (56% of voters responded, 87% of those saying No).

What can we observe from this? First of all, that CIR results are so massively one-sided that they must be foregone conclusions. When 82% support is the lowest result out of four you’re dealing with some very clear outcomes. Furthermore, these are always tilted in the direction of those who initiated the CIR. The people who start it find themselves massively validated by the results.
And that right away should tip us off as to the limitations of the system. These CIR are not about deciding a question that divides the NZ public, clearly. In fact there are two prominent reasons why the results might tilt this way.
First, it might be because CIR are initiated to send a message to the govt. that they have the wrong end of the stick about some issue. This is certainly the narrative adopted by those who initiate a CIR – they believe they represent the majority of Kiwi battlers whose views are being ignored by the power elite. The % outcome, on the face of it, validates this view, at least to their own satisfaction.
However, there’s a second reason: it might be because CIR questions are drafted in a self-serving way by their authors.
This is unquestionably the case. The 2009 referendum question is the most egregious example; the question itself presupposes that the act in question is good. If you tick “yes” you seem to be saying that something good should be criminalised. Of course, there is much more to the issue than this, but other factors are excluded entirely from the question. Similarly, other referendum questions by what they choose to include and not include, and by their framing to promote “yes” or “no” outcomes, presuppose their answers.
In fact, I think that these referendum questions do not exist to be analysed. They are primarily symbolic in nature, and participating in a referendum based on questions like this is not an act of analysis and opinion expression, but rather a ritualistic act. The meaning of a “Yes” or a “No” vote doesn’t necessarily reflect the content of the question; in fact, for “Yes” voters, it would be almost impossible for it do so. And this is why CIR have never led to any political response.
The real problem here is that two worlds are colliding: the world of general public discourse; and the world of bureaucratic political action.
The first world is shallow and heavily-spun, framed through political messages in the media. It favours sound-bite complexity, and the application of simple and stereotypical models of reality and causality to create narratives which are then judged on a reflexive moral basis. It is immediately accessible to everyone in society and its turnaround is swift.
The second world is deep and burdened by a wealth of data and process. It is closed off and protective of itself. It is a realm of compromise and long-term effort for long-term solutions. It is the domain of technocrats who have mastered its complexities and evaluate everything in terms of its ability to sustain in the face of complex obstacles and political sacrifice. The second world is not easy to access, but higher education and working in government departments, for different reasons, give entry.
For all its many faults and blindnesses, the advantage of the second world is that it is deeply informed by practice. It is all too aware of the complex matrix of cause and effect in which all political action is embedded. It knows the reasons why things are done the way they are done, or at least it has the ability to explore them and is aware that things may not be as they seem.
The first world does not have access to or awareness of this kind of information. It is responsive and driven by emotion not information. It is a completely different model of reality.
CIR emerge as direct expressions of first-world logic; however, they are fundamentally incompatible with the second world. The second world can only ever talk to itself on its own terms using its own forms of logic and expression. The first world cannot produce anything that is comprehensible to the second world. This a clash of realities, and it is inevitable.
Moreover, those in the second world cannot help but perceive a first-world question as being nonsensical, leading, and uninformed. They understand the drive behind the question as a challenge to systems that exist for a number of complex reasons and that must be protected. Second world inhabitants cannot make sense of the question on its own terms, and tend to be opposed to the question’s hidden content because that hidden content is an attack on the entire second world.
The massive disparities in CIR responses are, perhaps, better understood as population counts: the people in the first world who support the CIR; the people in the second world who resist. There is no real moral content to a CIR; rather it is a war for control between the second world that has captured all policy power and the first world that must experience the exertion of that power without being given access to a rationale.
So what sense to make of this? That we should not be surprised by these outcomes; that the CIR act is useless to policy-making and law although it has revealed itself as a powerful symbolic tool; that the divide between those who make policy and those who do not is great and closing that gap might be a worthy long-term goal.
In this specific instance, with massive support for a statement that, in the most generous parsing possible, doesn’t actually describe anything real, the only possible response is for politicians to say “your views are noted; the police will be advised” and never to mention it again. It looks like this is what our Prime Ministerial John Key is about to do.
[I’m trying very hard not to be derogatory towards what I’ve called the ‘first world’ here. That would probably be impossible. I do, however, believe better policy comes from an understanding of complexity; and that complexity serves as a barrier to understanding in practice if not in principle (i.e. I certainly don’t think people in the ‘first world’ are ‘too stupid to understand’; far from it). Also, I certainly don’t think understanding complexity leads always to good policy!]
[typed all in a rush. Hope it makes some kinda sense.]

Call me Neo-Malthus

Greenpeace campaign fronted by noted Kiwi scientist Jim Salinger: “NZ needs to achieve 40% reduction in carbon emissions”
NZ govt, Monday 10 August: “Our target is between 10%-20%”
NZ govt, Tuesday 11 August: “but all you other countries better do 30%-40%”
Climate Action Network, Tuesday 11 August: “Will New Zealand name the countries it expects to do its share of the effort in its place?”
Don Nicolson, President of Federated Farmers, Tuesday 11 August: “Back in the early 19th century, Thomas Malthus published An Essay on the Principle of Population… The world was producing as much food as it ever could. The Greens would call it ‘Peak Food’… Neo-Malthusians can be seen in the anti-globalisation and green movements. Peak oil, peak food, peak carbon.”
Hot Topic, Weds 12 August: *cough*
Global climate system: “Taiwan suffers worst floods in 50 years”

Paula Bennett’s Privacy

Latest political drama convulsing its way through the NZ political commentariat: the new Social Development Minister, Paula Bennett, has responded to criticism by violating the privacy of the critics.
Bennett announced the end of the Training Incentive Allowance, a payment given to beneficiaries going into study, the premise of course being that if they complete their study they’ll get off unemployment and into work. Two women receiving the TIA protested. The response from the Ministerial office was to hand to the media the particular details of the welfare payments received by these two women.
It’s an obvious diversionary tactic. While Bennett claimed that she just wanted to get all the information out there, this move was obviously designed to discredit the complainants. Sure enough, the talkback masses have leapt to the attack, saying that they have every right to know all the details about these dole bludgers and the tax money they receive.
We’re a long way from Mickey Savage‘s welfare state here. Much of NZ has adopted a framing of society that asserts the individual is the only meaningful unit on analysis; therefore, tax is theft, and social welfare programmes are morally irresponsible. This body is the current government’s core constituency, and this framing of society is the one they promote. Producing with such fanfare the welfare records of these women is more or less throwing them to the wolves, and expecting that the baying of the hounds will drown out their protests.
(Sharing this information is also illegal. Bennett’s parliamentary office staff will be in for some serious bollocking, I’m sure.)
Mostly, though, I think Paula Bennett just hasn’t thought any of this through. I actually believe her most recent comments, that she hates how personalised and ugly the debate has become. She wanted it to be personalised, of course, but she’s surprised by the venom she has unleashed, by the dirty psychology that has been exposed on every talkback radio station. Perhaps she senses now what sits underneath her party rhetoric; perhaps she will realise the extent to which her own worldview has been sold…
“She certainly put her viewpoint forward on how hard it will be for her to study next year. She had a compelling argument actually,” Bennett said.
…but probably not. The ability to reconcile to our own satisfaction the inconsistencies in our positions, between our professed beliefs and our behaviour, is the most precious skill of the political class. Even if she did think an apology was appropriate, she has clearly been directed from above not to offer one. Paula Bennett will likely learn nothing more from this than that she should surround herself with less-foolish advisors.
See also: Kiwipolitico on Uncitizens, David Slack at Public Address and the ensuing discussion

There is no rescission in NZ

Rescission, in the insurance industry, is the practice of voiding the contract between the insurer and the policyholder when the policyholder would otherwise be due some money. I’ve been watching horrible tales of this practice in the US for a while and smugly telling people that we don’t have those problems here in NZ.
Well, our health insurers have learnt some lessons from the US apparently. Terminally ill Wayne Croft has had his policy cancelled because (the insurer alleges) he didn’t declare some pre-existing health conditions (all of which are minor, none of which relate to his cancer at all). Croft says he never tried to hide anything and did his best to be upfront. The icing on this sad cake is that Croft only recently switched insurers, because he was promised a better deal at Sovereign than he had at the other place where he had initially taken out insurance as an 18-year-old.
Crucial difference between here and the US: our public health system is still intact. That doesn’t make this any less reprehensible.
It’s clear to me that the insurer bears much more responsibility than they’re prepared to admit. They have all the power in the relationship, and that should properly impose responsibilities upon them. One form with a “declarations” box is simply not sufficient to claim due diligence has been performed, not when the stakes are this high for the policyholder. Forms are distinctly user-unfriendly, and lend themselves to distortion and omission even with goodwill and diligence. Sovereign has acted appallingly, and I hope the NZ public send a clear message to Sovereign and the health insurance industry that this is not acceptable behaviour in this country.
(It was satisfying to watch John Campbell go attack-dog on the Sovereign rep on his show last night. I watch Campbell about once a year, if that, and this was a good night to pick.)

Spin Profiles

Oh, I do like this.
Spin Profiles is an “encyclopedia of people, issues, and groups shaping the public agenda that is being written collaboratively”. It’s a wiki and anyone can add info to it – there are editors exercising some control. Info is divided into portals e.g. “Nuclear Spin“.
Best bit, and presumably the point of the project, is the individual profiles of people involved in “message control”. As an example, here’s the page on our old friend David Capitanchik, who I first wrote about in the wake of the July 2005 bombings in London. The page graphs his presence in the media, details his links to elements of the power structure, and details his publication record during his academic career (a rather light record of three peer-reviewed journal publications in 25+ years!).
The project’s editor (and, presumably, initiator) is one Claire Robinson* who seems to have first started walking in the world of govt lobbying and opinion shaping by fighting against genetically modified foods (which is an interesting issue to get started on because of sharp opinion divides within the leftosphere).
This is a great resource and I know I’m going to be coming back to this one in future. Decoding the identities and agendas of the people who turn up in TV, radio and newspapers is often tricky, and this will help a great deal with making sense of the noise. (We could definitely do with an NZ verion, but the task would be much smaller as our media commentariat at the moment seems to consist solely of Russell Brown, Finlay McDonald and Cameron Slater.)
* note: not the NZ political communications specialist Claire Robinson, who comes from an academic background; this is a UK Claire Robinson who comes from a freelance journo background. These Claire Robinsons get up to all sorts of trouble.