"Hello everyone, unfortunately I have to announce today that I will not be able to take part in the Olympic Games in Paris. I suffer from a so-called post-infectious syndrome caused by a viral infection… the cause of this syndrome is unclear… in February of this year I… pic.twitter.com/5swyG7zbbQ
(note, it’s not just people with pre-existing illness that get Long Covid, everyone is at risk, including high performance athletes)
It’s not news, people having been getting Long Covid since 2020. Before the pandemic, post-viral syndromes were known about and understood to varying degrees: M.E. (not caused by a single virus) and post-polio syndrome being two obvious ones. What’s remarkable about Long Covid is the extent of the denial that it’s a major issues for humans.
There’s a fair amount of evidence to suggest that there are still many things to learn about the covid infection itself, but it’s been clear for some time now that it can and does wreak ongoing havoc in the bodies of a significant portion of the population.
Important to understand here is that repeat infections appear to increase the risk of Long Covid in an individual. It’s not rocket engineering to realise that over time an exponential number of people will have Long Covid. Apparently less easy to take on board is how that will impact on human society and its ability to function. What % of people with brain fog, fatigue, immune dysregulation, auto-immune conditions, and ongoing medical needs, will it take for critical aspects of society to be disrupted? Myself, I think we are already seeing obvious lower level signs in the number of workplaces are are now perpetually understaffed. I’m not imagining it,
Every government, every business, every organisation, every person needs to grasp this simple truth:
That’s loss of productivity, but also increasing health and welfare costs, as well as an increase in household debt and poverty.
Covid and Long Covid are part of the polycrisis, the great convergence of the climate and ecological crises, the rise of authoritarianism, and the fracturing of the global economy. LC reminds me of climate consciousness in a lot of ways, particularly how we ignore it at our peril even as we acknowledge its existence.
It didn’t have to be this way. In the same way we could have used the global economy to drop GHGs any time in the past 4 decades, we could have transitioned in the past five years from the acute phase of the pandemic to one that treated infection seriously by adapting how we run society. For instance we have the technology to monitor and ventilate/filter/purify air in shared spaces like schools, hospitals, event centres, cafes and so on. Why was this not done on a war footing type level?
Beyond that, adapting our expectations and behaviour is key to solving the polycrisis. We want the climate solution to be BAU green replacement, but we are well beyond that working. Now we can change how we live now and create different societies with distinct limits but still living good lives, or we can carry on, business as usual and ignoring the impending tidal wave, and wait for the climate to collapse and being forced to change in the most terrible of ways.
Mostly I think the polycrisis is too large for humans to get their brains around. We can know something is real but still not be able to cognitively cope with that reality. We are currently clinging to the leaky life raft instead of swimming for the shore. The longer we leave it, the harder it gets.
In case this is all too depressing, I still have hope in human ingenuity, and the large networks across the whole planet who have been working on transition for a long time. Every community in New Zealand now has multiple people and organisations working on reducing GHGs, and increasing resiliency. Those groups need to get on board with Long Covid and integrate mitigation processes into their work, or they too will find themselves in the losing end of the battle.
Ending on a proactive note, all the solutions to the polycrisis I see that make sense are based in systems thinking and working with the relationships between the things in systems. As an example, in 2021 I wrote about pairing covid response and climate action. Wellington City Council were trying to address issues of covid restrictions affecting the hospitality sector.
On the debate about Delta Level Two and ongoing restrictions affecting the hospitality sector. Eighteen months into our covid repsonse, it’s time we started adapting for the long haul. We need to create sectors that can not only survive this pandemic, but the next and the other synchronous crisis, instead of hanging on for some mythical return to normal. One of the keys to that is positive adaptation.
…
Here it’s pairing covid response with the much needed climate action shift away from personal car use. Add tree planting to that vision and the multiple benefits include increased biodiversity, micro climate cooling, and increased well-being from having nature in our immediate environment. Now is also the time to be planning a lot more outside green spaces, everywhere, and rethinking cities as infilled and crowded.
an outside cafe in Spain
So, Wellington City Council, have the meeting with hospo people about covid, but make sure that the rewilding, permaculture, and car-free movement bods are in the same room.
Maybe public health should take a leaf out of the playbook used by the NZ Olympic Team.
👀 The New Zealand Olympic team is using air purifiers to protect against COVID-19 and “to ensure indoor spaces remain clean and safe throughout their time in Paris”. #CovidIsAirborne
…
Nigel Avery, Chef de Mission New Zealand Olympic Team: "A key part of competition at this level is ensuring that you show up healthy and well… a critical layer of protection for our Kiwi athletes and their support crew so they can perform to their highest potential."
…
The Olympic team has had clean indoor air for 4 years – but it’s still not implemented in hospitals, schools and workplaces.
Air purifiers were used at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Beijing Winter Olympics, as well as the Brimingham Commonwealth Games.
I have had ( looks up http://identity.health.nz ) a total of six covid-19 immunisations, the last one in March. Never had covid-19 as far as I am aware. Certainly none of the numerous tests has shown it. My partner is the same, but I think that she has had four immunisations.
Turns out that being as anti-social as I am, has some significiant health benefits. 🙂 I’m always grateful when the recent exposure of or infection of someone to covid-19 gives me a good excuse to not go to party or other social event. I also lean heavily on the vaccines because I hate wearing a mask.
On the other hand, every other member of my immediate family appears to have now had it. Most have had it multiple times.
It put my aged father into hospital with breathing problems. The two teachers and their two tween daughters seem to have a rotational fascination with catching it.
A colleague in the UK who caught it in early 2020 dropped out of the project we were working on because of long covid and was still off-work when I left the company two years later. And I know of a couple of other who I have known in the past who have had similar long term post-covid issues. Most have been robustly healthy
Getting long covid issues just seems to be matter of probabilities and luck. It is simpler and more effective to just not get covid-19 in the first place. Which fits the profile of the disease in the bat populations that appear to have been its source population.
Reminds me – http://identity.health.nz shows that I forgot my this years flu immunisation. I went into get the combined one in March, but the influenza one hadn't been released then.
not getting colds and flu is also awesome. So awesome it seems like good ventilation and other systems would be a no brainer for many places where lots of people are together in an enclosed space.
China has reasserted its dominance over Australia’s export markets, taking a record of almost 1 billion tonnes of mineral resources and agricultural commodities last year, and displacing the trading partners that helped Australia out during ...
Sea state Defence Minister Richard Marles visited the Maldives in early June and announced a present of one Guardian-class patrol boat and hydrographic equipment. They are expected to be delivered in 2026. Australia has an ...
The StrategistBy Linus Cohen, Astrid Young and Alice Wai
Australia's national broadcaster is called Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). It's regularly attacked by Rupert Murdoch's Sky News & Australian broadsheet - as well as Atlas Network think tanks such as IPA - as "wasting taxpayers money" The last Liberal (conservative) leader Peter Dutton also labelled ABC (and the Guardian) as ...
Seymour says there is no need for the unit - and he wouldn’t trust what the officials said anyway. Photo: Lynn Grieveson / The KākāBriefly in the news from Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, poverty and climate on Thursday, July 3:Deputy PM David Seymour has forced Finance Minister Nicola Willis ...
The United Nations’ Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda suffers from an ongoing burden: the need for less talk and more action. Invariably, several speakers raise this issue at the Security Council’s annual Open Debate ...
Politicians do like being tough on crime. Flexing law and order muscle is a feature of the patriarchal Daddy State, and is beloved by the very same conservatives who deplore the workings of the Nanny State. But tough on which crimes – and even more to the point – tough ...
How did a small Shenzhen-based manufacturer of telephone switches defy tough domestic and international competition to become a world leader in telecoms technology? And how did it manage to start producing its own 5G processors ...
Dr Robert Howell UN Secretary General: We are sleepwalking to climate catastrophe. In facing this wake up call, Dr Howell will describe the lessons to be learned from Wesfamers; the work of the External Reporting Board; the National Climate Change Risk Assessment for New Zealanders; and the Dasgupta Review.Dr Robert Howell ...
FFS, did you see this? I didn’t think he could do worse this year than host Morning Report, but Lord, Paddy Gower is a trier.Stuffed if I’m linking to it. It’s just another contemplation-free, insight-starved Tall Poppy Syndrome is Stopping Us From Being Rich diatribe.Here’s the thing:Prosperity isn't created by ...
Hello. My house burnt down on my birthday. Well not down, but it burnt. And I’m currently living in a motel. Forgive me for phoning this one in; a better article is coming. And probably also a poetry substack, whenever I finally get around to it. From: Stephanie Cullen <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, ...
Australia and its partners must move towards frameworks that manage, rather than merely lament, the negative side-effects of critical mineral extraction. As the world scrambles to meet the demands of a clean energy transition, it’s ...
The war between Israel and Iran has brought only short-term gains for Russia. Looking to the longer term, we see much bigger negatives. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky complained that the war had resulted in a sharp ...
In a development that epitomises authoritarian overreach masquerading as administrative procedure, the Coalition of Chaos government has decided to censor Youth MPs during the 11th Youth Parliament, an event that was meant to amplify the free voices of our young people. The revelation that youth representatives, invited to Parliament to ...
Amid worsening strategic surprise and security fragility, Australia’s national resilience responses are just as important as its defence capabilities. While the original strategic logic for the Department of Home Affairs—the idea of peace, order and ...
..2 July 2025The editorKapi Mana News [email protected] ora,Your story in 'Kapi Mana News' on 1 July, headed "Porirua East social housing developments axed in review" revealed how this government is cutting back on social housing.76 proposed new homes in the Porirua region would have housed around 153 people. These are ...
When it comes to innovation, Australia has a strategy problem as much as a delivery problem. The first is about purpose. The second is about execution. I recently argued that Australia’s innovation system lacks the ...
The PSA says potential plans to privatise New Zealand’s meat inspection service could put food quality and safety at risk. Industrial action at Napier Port has concluded after one week, with a pay deal being reached in principle for about 185 workers. Academic staff and TEU members at the Western ...
Briefly in the news from Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, poverty and climate on Wednesday, July 2:The NZIER’sQSBOsurvey published yesterday showed businesses remain stubbornly confident about the wider economy and their own businesses, despite their own ‘experienced activity’ in the June quarter being much, much worse than they ...
On the Indo-Pacific geopolitics gameboard, Indonesia stands as a potentially pivotal piece—a country whose strategic choices could reshape regional dynamics for decades. Yet, as revealed during a recent panel discussion hosted by ASPI USA, Indonesia ...
Hi,I got a lot of very intense feedback on social media this week about milk — and I want to talk about it.But first, some quick updates on some other Webworm things.1. The Telepathy TapesYou may recall my story about how the chart-topping podcast The Telepathy Tapes was nothing more ...
Learn to love meAnd assemble the waysNow, today, tomorrow and alwaysMy only weakness is a listed crimeBut last night, the plans for a future warWas all I saw on Channel FourShoplifters of the worldUnite and take overShoplifters of the worldHand it over, hand it over, hand it overSongwriters: Johnny Marr ...
A new and sophisticated phase of aerial warfare has emerged from the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East over the past month, defined by the systematic use of massed drone saturation attacks. This evolving ...
Skeptical Science is partnering with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. You can submit claims you think need checking via the tipline. Are human CO2 emissions driving current global warming? While many natural factors influence Earth’s climate, human emissions of heat-trapping carbon dioxide are driving ...
I often make the mistake of reading what other people online have written. This is how I know that I live among many people who violently object to Socialism. Or Communism.Or The Left. These are all terms they throw around so loosely it can seem almost as though they don't ...
Back in February, the "Independent" Police Conduct Authority issued a radical, out-of-the-blue proposal to ban protests. The core of their proposal was a requirement for protesters to notify police well in advance of any protest action, and to obey whatever conditions police subsequently set or directions they made, with failure ...
What a week. Swiftly and decisively, and in uniquely Trumpian style, US President Donald Trump has restored US military credibility and deterrence with global repercussions. The always mercurial president is often viewed as non-ideological and ...
Myanmar’s rare earth sector has become a geopolitical flashpoint where critical minerals, armed conflict and strategic competition intersect. In 2024, the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) suspended mining operations in northern Myanmar’s Kachin State, sharply curtailing ...
Leaked documents from Te Whatu Ora showed National planned to pay telehealth providers - including ‘reluctant PHO' Tend Health - between 367% and 433% what it funds struggling GPs for casual patients.The telehealth service is targeted at those not enrolled with a local GP. But as GenPro Chairman Dr Angus ...
As the government - or one of its Ministers, anyway - keeps reminding us, Parliament is meant to be a place of free speech, where MPs (but not apparently select committee witnesses) need to be able to robustly criticise government policy and hold Ministers to account. But Youth MPs at ...
In a speech kicking off his ‘10 Talks on the Country’ series on 22 June, Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te declared that Taiwan ‘is of course a country’, citing its democratic system and separate history, and ...
Hi,So I am about to head to to Denver and Chicago for some live Flightless Bird shows (I am so happy with our live guests, you’ll see).(Note, yes, I do want to get to New Zealand with our podcast — and some other places — it just all depends on ...
Jim Chalmers is enforcing national sovereignty and defying risk of economic intimidation. The treasurer has taken court action to force a China-linked entity to divest from a key rare-earths miner. This is a matter of ...
Last year in August, I wrote Why More Economic & Social Pain Is Coming For Us All. The short of it was Nicola Willis’s budget approach was inevitably going to cut us off, and force many into economic and social pain. And worse, I kept thinking, “Do they not realise ...
The Australian Defence Force’s cyber capacity falls short of what would be needed in a scenario where Australia found itself in combat against an adversary with modern military and technological capabilities. The ADF’s establishment of ...
This is a re-post from the Climate BrinkThe WMO recently published their WMO Global Annual to Decadal Climate Update that covers the period from 2025 to 2029. This is a regular assessment of near-term dynamic model projections that assess both the forced climate response and short-term natural variability (e.g. ENSO and AMV). This new update ...
Briefly in the news from Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, poverty and climate on Tuesday, July 1:Extreme floods hit the top of the South Island over the weekend, unleashing a wall of media coverage on the ‘unprecedented’ scale of the disaster, but there was no coverage of modelling showing each ...
Completed reads for June: Eclogues, by Virgil Georgics, by Virgil The Love-Talker (poem), by Ethna Carbery The Amores, by Ovid The Art of Love, by Ovid Love’s Remedy, by Ovid The Art of Beauty, by Ovid The Heroides (I – XV), by Ovid The Double Heriodes (XVI – XXI), ...
Heaven forbid that an abrasive punk duo that calls itself Bob Vylan should lead a hostile chant at the Glastonbury music festival against a military organisation – not a state, not an ethnic group – that has killed tens of thousands of unarmed civilians, and which is enforcing a famine ...
Never mind that the Quad partners have their differences. The meeting of their foreign ministers in Washington on 1 July should be an occasion for the grouping of Australia, India, Japan and the United States ...
The StrategistBy Justin Bassi and Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan
The Australian government has listed Terrorgram—a network of violent extremist chatroom-like channels on Telegram—as an official terrorist organisation. Australians found to be part of Terrorgram now face up to 25 years in prison. As an ...
Source: Guardian, Photographer: Johan Lolos/RexACT’s “dangerous” Regulatory Standards Bill could cost taxpayers up to $60 million a year upfront, according to Treasury advice released to The Post, under OIA.Even at the most conservative estimate, $18 million a year, Treasury acknowledges there are significant ongoing costs that are still unaccounted for.In ...
Australia’s 2024 national defence strategy describes Japan as an ‘indispensable partner’ for achieving regional peace and security. But the prominence of the growing defence relationship between Japan and Australia, while vital, risks obscuring opportunities to ...
Professor Kendall Clements of the University of Auckland argues that attempts to conflate traditional Māori knowledge with science debases both. This is a video of a great discussion between Professor Kendall Clements of the University of Auckland and Dr Iona Italia, managing editor and a podcast host at ...
The spectre of authoritarianism rarely announces itself with jackboots and torchlight parades. More often, it arrives draped in the rhetoric of economic necessity, promising prosperity whilst systematically dismantling the institutions that protect democratic accountability. Such is the case with Shane Jones, New Zealand First's Resources Minister, whose latest tirade against regional ...
E tū mill union delegate Ian Farall has spoken about the disappointment felt by workers that Kinleith pulp and paper mill in Tokoroa has closed. The government wants to electronically monitor some asylum seekers and migrants, is preparing for mass arrivals of asylum seekers by plane, and is hoping to ...
Silicon Valley’s ‘move fast and break things’ mantra might work in software. But when it comes to lithium, rare earths and other critical minerals, where development times average 10 to 15 years, breaking things isn’t ...
Since 2018 the Australian government has made serious strides in countering espionage and foreign interference, including introducing policy and legislative reforms aimed at protecting the research and university sector. That was necessary. But seven years on, ...
Got trust issues, bad paparazziHalf of the news that act fugaziFamine, but there's snacks at the partyElon Musk and that pack of NazisSome are fighting boredom 'round their houseOthers fight for borders ’round their houseThe fallout's getting sort of scary nowThis New World Order? Tear it downSong: Hilltop Hoods.You’ve probably ...
A listing of 28 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Sun, June 22, 2025 thru Sat, June 28, 2025. Stories we promoted this week, by category: Climate Change Impacts (10 articles)Heatwave in England to bring temperatures above 32°C ...
New Zealand’s weather is turning rogue, and the National-led government seems content to sit on its hands. The recent flooding in the Tasman District, which claimed one life and left homes, businesses, and livelihoods underwater, is yet another stark reminder of the escalating climate crisis.This deluge, described by locals as ...
Budapest Pride Event - A Success100,000 defy Atlas Network’s Hungarian dictator Viktor OrbanOrganisers face a 1 year prison sentence. Orban warned police would use facial recognition to penalise attendeesOrban’s right wing populist party outlawed public events by LGBTQ+ communities in March 2025Photograph: Rudolf Karancsi (Source: NPR)The law was “Fast-Tracked”.Photograph: János ...
The ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza has exposed the profound moral bankruptcy of Western diplomacy, revealing how economic interests and geopolitical calculations have trumped basic human decency. With over 70,000 Palestinians officially dead, 59.1% of them women, children and elderly, NATO nations have demonstrated a stunning inability to deploy the ...
Thanks to this newsletter I have a connection with all kinds of excellent people who send me all kinds of excellent messages that I appreciate very much indeed.And the more moved I am by them, the longer it can take me to respond. You want to do it justice, you ...
Make no mistake: the United States is constructing the most comprehensive civilian surveillance apparatus in human history. And they're not even trying to hide it anymore. Under the Trump administration's enthusiastic blessing, tech behemoth Palantir Technologies is weaving together the digital breadcrumbs of every American citizen into a single, all-seeing artificial ...
And isn't it ironic?Don't you think?Songwriters: Alanis Morissette, Glen Ballard.Last week, parliament saw the tragic loss of Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp, whose untimely death caused grief across the house. Less shocking, although still surprising, was the announcement that Tanya Unkovich, a NZ First MP, had resigned to ...
The dairy industry's spin machine has been working overtime lately, desperately trying to convince New Zealanders that paying through the nose for butter is somehow good for us.Media personalities like Ryan Bridge and industry apologists such as Dr Jacqueline Rowarth have been peddling this economic fairy tale with all the ...
Why Government borrowing is limitedThis column started out to explain how the proposed structural outsourcing of public surgery was partly a consequence of the peculiarities of our fiscal borrowing practices. In summary, the restriction on the government’s debt level means seeking indirect ways to provide the required capital. One way ...
AUKUS is reshaping Australia’s strategic future, but its vision is incomplete. While the partnership’s first two pillars focus on submarines and advanced technologies, they rely on an often overlooked domain: space. If AUKUS is to ...
Far from being a prospect for the distant future, the era of autonomous systems on (and off) the battlefield is here. Mass is back in warfare, not through much larger armies, but through growing numbers ...
1. Who said this, and of whom? Occasionally he stumbled over the truth, but hastily picked himself up and hurried on as if nothing had happened.a. Jacinda Ardern, of David Seymourb. Winston Peters, of David Seymourc. Winston Churchill, of Stanley Baldwind. Chris Topher Luxon, of David Seymour2. How old would ...
Another day, another crony appointment - this time, of former National candidate (and general racist arsehole) Paul Henry to the board of TVNZ. Coming in the wake of revelations that a member of the PM's science and technology advisory council got their job by sending the prime minister a text ...
From grey zone coercion to regional surveillance competition, the Indo-Pacific is now in live contest. Yet our national innovation posture is not structured to mitigate emerging risks or leverage strategic possibilities. Innovation is now a ...
While Christopher Luxon's National-led government has been busy patting themselves on the back for delivering a whopping 25 state houses in Rotorua that apparently employed 300 people, they've quietly gone and axed another 70 desperately needed state house builds in Porirua East. Because nothing says "caring about ordinary Kiwis" like ...
Fostering people-to-people links between northern Australia and Indonesia could improve agricultural output in both countries. They share agri-environmental conditions, providing opportunities for enhanced partnership. Such an approach would also progress Australia’s underdeveloped economic ties with ...
The podcast above of the weekly ‘Hoon’ webinar for paying subscribers on Thursday night features co-host Peter Bale talking with regular guests Robert Patman and Cathrine Dyer about the week’s news in geopolitics and climate.This week’s Hoon featured special guests:author, historian and a former colleague from Reuters, former Tehran bureau ...
In an era of escalating strategic competition, the effectiveness of Australia’s government and national security apparatus hinges on its ability to use information with precision and agility. Yet, the very systems designed to protect sensitive ...
Hi,Last time I sent you a Webworm, I was on my way to Manchester airport to fly back to the US, as Trump sidestepped Congress to send a barrage of missiles towards Iran. The US Defense Intelligence Agency says Iran’s mission to build a nuclear weapon has only been set ...
Japan’s digital rise hinges on adopting hyperscale cloud computing without ceding strategic autonomy—a balance it has yet to strike. Japan’s hyperscale strategy must walk a tightrope—balancing the immense benefits of cloud infrastructure with the imperative ...
In 1992, Paul Keating said, ‘Asia is where our future substantially lies’. Decades later, the rhetoric remains, but the follow-through is still lacking. Despite Australia’s pivot to the Indo-Pacific, our cultural competency is inhibiting our ...
New Zealand’s National-led government has once again proven its reckless disregard for our planet and our international reputation by abandoning the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance (BOGA), a commitment made in 2021 to phase out fossil fuel production.This incredibly dumb decision, coupled with a $200 million fund to subsidise oil ...
Donald Trump could be having his Mission Accomplished moment. He said in a nationally televised address Saturday night, ‘Tonight, I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success. Iran’s key ...
Donald Trump’s recent insistence that NATO countries increase military spending to 5% of their GDP is a reckless and self-serving manoeuvre that prioritises warmongering over humanity’s pressing needs. This demand, rooted in Trump’s cosy ties with American weapons manufacturers, threatens to divert trillions from critical global challenges like starvation and ...
In the words of Billie Eilish, ‘I’m in love with my future… can’t wait to meet her.’ But for Mount Isa and Australia, that future is being quietly dismantled. The closure of Glencore’s copper mine ...
As New Zealand has positively responded to the crack down on gang patches there has been a growing recognition of the influence of organized crime on our communities. New Zealand First continues to be focused on all aspects that undermine the safety and security in our neighbourhoods, businesses, and ...
New Zealand First has today introduced a member's bill which would make it law that government buildings can only display the official flag of New Zealand. “Government buildings are for all New Zealanders and should not be hijacked to force cultural, woke, or divisive political ideology down the throats of ...
Te Pāti Māori stands in solidarity with Te Whānau-ā-Apanui after revelations the Government is looking to derail their almost completed Treaty settlement. Minister Goldsmith has stated that the Government will not budge on its position that the Crown is sovereign. They are seeking to remove the ‘sovereignty clause’ agreed to ...
Christopher Luxon’s Government pulling out of the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance is just the latest sign they care little for the climate crisis or cost of living it’ll exacerbate, says the Green Party. ...
Legal advice commissioned by the Green Party shows the coalition Government’s $200 million “investment” in new gas fields is a clear breach of the Agreement on Climate Change, Trade and Sustainability (ACCTS). ...
The Green Party is calling on the Government to condemn the United States for its illegal bombing of Iran and inflaming tensions across the Middle East. ...
Te Pāti Māori stands firmly against the rising tide of global military aggression. While the Luxon scrambles to appease Trump and Israel, we choose peace, sovereignty, and an independent foreign policy grounded in justice and truth. More than 56,000 Palestinians have been murdered by Israel over the past 20 months. ...
The Government’s review of Early Childhood Education funding, announced today, is a clear and appalling reflection of its priorities, with a ministerial group being directed to balance “quality and affordability for services”. ...
The Green Party says proposed changes to the Employment Relations Act announced today by the Government will further undermine workers’ rights while pandering to big business. ...
The Government’s directive to give private hospitals 10-year outsourcing contracts to perform elective surgeries is yet another step down the path of privatisation in our healthcare system. ...
Te Pāti Māori is calling out the Government’s proposed changes to sick leave entitlements as a cruel step backwards that punishes low-income, part-time, single parents and essential workers. We staunchly support the concerns raised by PSA National Secretary, Fleur Fitzsimons, that this move will disproportionately harm wāhine, who are most ...
The Green Party has released its fiscal strategy, demonstrating how we can and must invest in the real-world needs of our country, planet and people. ...
Good Morning. It is a pleasure to be in Jakarta again today. Indonesia is an absolute priority for the New Zealand government, which is why we have now visited here four times since re-taking office as New Zealand Foreign Minister in late 2023. Indonesia is one of New Zealand’s oldest friends ...
Foreign Minister Winston Peters’ visit to Indonesia today has secured tangible progress in New Zealand’s relationship with Southeast Asia’s most populous nation. “Indonesia is an indispensable partner for New Zealand,” Mr Peters says. “Demonstrating our commitment to the relationship, this is our fourth visit to Indonesia in the past 18 ...
His Excellency Sugiono, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia, and Rt Hon Winston Peters, Minister of Foreign Affairs of New Zealand, convened the 12th meeting of the Joint Ministerial Commission (JMC) on 13th June 2025 in Jakarta, Indonesia. The Ministers welcomed meeting in person, underscoring the importance ...
At least four new rapidly deployable relocatable inpatient units will be rolled out across the country to ensure hospitals can continue delivering care to patients while major infrastructure projects are underway, Health Minister Simeon Brown says. “These new inpatient units – part of the Government’s $1 billion Budget 2025 investment ...
The Government is tackling talent shortages in manufacturing and boosting New Zealand’s economic recovery by fast-tracking residency for skilled tradespeople. “We know how important skilled workers are to the resilience of the manufacturing sector. When we don’t have enough people to fill these roles, productivity slows, business growth stalls and the ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elizabeth Leane, Professor of Antarctic Studies, School of Humanities, University of Tasmania Oleksandr Matsibura/Shutterstock Ice loss in Antarctica and its impact on the planet – sea level rise, changes to ocean currents and disturbance of wildlife and food webs – has ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Giles Gunesekera, PhD Researcher, University of Technology Sydney Australia is experiencing a housing crisis. But for many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, the challenge runs deeper than high rents and limited supply. A major problem is that housing in Australia is ...
A cohort of kids willing to challenge democracy prove they’re more than ready to replace the adults.Echo Chamber is The Spinoff’s dispatch from the press gallery, recapping sessions in the House. Columns are written by politics reporter Lyric Waiwiri-Smith and Wellington editor Joel MacManus.A walkout in the House, ...
Pacific Media Watch In July 1985, Australia’s Pacific territory of Norfolk Island (pop. 2188) became the centre of a real life international spy thriller. Four French agents sailed there on board the Ouvéa, a yacht from Kanaky New Caledonia, after bombing the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland, killing Greenpeace photographer Fernando ...
Writers nominate novels that include what they consider to be well-written sex scenes.Writing sex is difficult: there’s quite the spectrum of effects that a writer might be trying to achieve – from sex for sex’s sake (spicy romance novels) to attempting to convey the most intimate of character developments ...
The memorials to controversial figures like William and Edward Wakefield play an important role in understanding the city’s complex origins. Each morning, on my way to work, I stroll through Bolton Street Cemetery. It’s an idyllic setting, in the green cocoon of the Botanical Gardens, with a soundtrack of shrieking ...
The settlement follows an 8-month dispute. The employer banned Kaitaataki and Poutaaki (residential whare leaders) from working additional hours before Christmas and threatened a six-week suspension in response to low level strike action. ...
Explainer - Have you ever wanted to stand for local office? Now's your chance, as the nomination period for this year's local body elections opens Friday. ...
A long time ago we almost hooked up. Why am I still so hurt? Want Hera’s help? Email your problem to [email protected]Dear Hera,I think I need to break up with my best friend. It’s a long story.Some time ago we almost got together. I made myself decline ...
The Legal expert argues that creating an independent review entity would enhance public understanding, facilitate evidence-based policymaking and augment existing legal and political avenues of scrutiny and oversight. ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Darla Hatton MacDonald, Professor of Environmental Economics, University of Tasmania VCG via Getty Images The number of tourists heading to Antarctica has been skyrocketing. From fewer than 8,000 a year about three decades ago, nearly 125,000 tourists flocked to the icy ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brittany Ferdinands, Lecturer in Digital Content Creation, Discipline of Media and Communications, University of Sydney The Conversation, CC BY Emojis, as well as memes and other forms of short-form content, have become central to how we express ourselves and connect online. ...
The Government not only cut jobs, but there remains a continued threat to the security of employment in Wellington. Insecure employment undermines the ability of people to make important life decisions like buying a house and starting a family. ...
While electricity companies rake in profits, pensioners and low-income households are rationing heat just to get through winter, writes Catherine McGregor in today’s extract from The Bulletin. To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here.Bills bite deep as power prices soar For thousands of New Zealanders, the ...
The state should spend more on pharmaceuticals like Wegovy because of the benefits to society as a whole, says the deputy prime minister. So why does he refuse to apply the same logic to other forms of spending? On Tuesday, as the weight-loss drug Wegovy finally became available on prescription, ...
In the online world, Wegovy and Ozempic are tied to extreme weight loss – particularly among newly gaunt celebrities. So how are they being prescribed and used in New Zealand? Injection pens of Wegovy are now available at pharmacies to those with weight loss prescriptions and deep pockets. Medsafe made ...
Loading…(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){var ql=document.querySelectorAll('A[data-quiz],DIV[data-quiz]'); if(ql){if(ql.length){for(var k=0;k<ql.length;k++){ql[k].id='quiz-embed-'+k;ql[k].href="javascript:var i=document.getElementById('quiz-embed-"+k+"');try{qz.startQuiz(i)}catch(e){i.start=1;i.style.cursor='wait';i.style.opacity='0.5'};void(0);"}}};i['QP']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){(i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o),m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m)})(window,document,'script','https://take.quiz-maker.com/3012/CDN/quiz-embed-v1.js','qp'); Got a good quiz question?Send Newsroom your questions. The post Newsroom daily quiz, Thursday 3 July appeared first on Newsroom. ...
It started as a fringe movement in the United States – a group of self-described “Western chauvinists” known as the Proud Boys. A bunch of them were jailed after the January 6 US election riots, and they’ve now been pardoned by President Donald Trump. Their legacy of far-right extremism, violent ...
Opinion: Do people who smoke truly make informed decisions when they start? Our research, using a framework developed by Australian researchers and refined in Aotearoa, suggests very few people who smoke make considered decisions, understand addiction, fully appreciate the risks they face, or can quit when they choose. These findings ...
Erik Olssen’s new study The Origins of an Experimental Society, New Zealand, 1769-1860 is the first leg of a long haul flight through New Zealand’s history, volume one of a planned three. Its title signals it will not be a history viewed through a chosen lens, whether of post-colonialism, decolonisation ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rich Mallett, Research Associate and Independent Researcher, ODI Global Motorcycle-taxis are one of the fastest and most convenient ways to get around Uganda’s congested capital, Kampala. But they are also the most dangerous. Though they account for one-third of public transport trips ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Andrew Merdith, DECRA Fellow, School of Earth Sciences, University of Adelaide Some 252 million years ago, almost all life on Earth disappeared. Known as the Permian–Triassic mass extinction – or the Great Dying – this was the most catastrophic of the ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra From this Sunday, Australians will be celebrating NAIDOC Week, which marks its 50th anniversary this year. The week highlights the achievements, history and culture of Australia’s First Peoples. It’s also a time to ...
Oh look
https://x.com/covidsafenz/status/1812717926920880299?s=46
Timely conversation to have.
I have had ( looks up http://identity.health.nz ) a total of six covid-19 immunisations, the last one in March. Never had covid-19 as far as I am aware. Certainly none of the numerous tests has shown it. My partner is the same, but I think that she has had four immunisations.
Turns out that being as anti-social as I am, has some significiant health benefits. 🙂 I’m always grateful when the recent exposure of or infection of someone to covid-19 gives me a good excuse to not go to party or other social event. I also lean heavily on the vaccines because I hate wearing a mask.
On the other hand, every other member of my immediate family appears to have now had it. Most have had it multiple times.
It put my aged father into hospital with breathing problems. The two teachers and their two tween daughters seem to have a rotational fascination with catching it.
A colleague in the UK who caught it in early 2020 dropped out of the project we were working on because of long covid and was still off-work when I left the company two years later. And I know of a couple of other who I have known in the past who have had similar long term post-covid issues. Most have been robustly healthy
Getting long covid issues just seems to be matter of probabilities and luck. It is simpler and more effective to just not get covid-19 in the first place. Which fits the profile of the disease in the bat populations that appear to have been its source population.
Reminds me – http://identity.health.nz shows that I forgot my this years flu immunisation. I went into get the combined one in March, but the influenza one hadn't been released then.
not getting colds and flu is also awesome. So awesome it seems like good ventilation and other systems would be a no brainer for many places where lots of people are together in an enclosed space.
There are no 'solutions' to the polycrisis; only responses.
good reframing, thanks.