Posts Tagged ‘economics’

Some Things I Meant To Say Re: Occupy & The Riots

In Rory MacKinnon on January 3, 2012 at 1:57 pm

Kiwi Summer on Radio New Zealand National

[A ridiculously long postscript to my interview with Radio New Zealand's Kiwi Summer (listen here)]

I love radio, but every time I do a spot I always come away kicking myself because there’s a million more points or stats or clarifications overlooked without which I’m convinced I’ll sound like a blithering idiot. Luckily Charlotte and Sonia of Radio New Zealand’s Kiwi Summer have kindly offered to repost this on their Facebook page so I can completely undermine the point of a radio interview with a massive wall of text. So let’s get cracking.

Occupy & The August Riots Are Rooted In Dispossession
While Occupy and other protest groups have been frequently portrayed in media as a public menace, even the most right-wing media outlets have been wary of associating them with the ‘feral youth’ narrative that immediately sprang up in the wake of the summer’s week-long riots. Many Occupy activists I’ve spoken to have outright rejected any notion of common ground: we are Peaceful Protesters with Placards; they were just Violent Looters. Certainly there’s almost no demographic overlap — and there is an ethnic component to this which is delicate but vital — but it seems blindingly clear to me as an outsider at least that both Occupy and the riots could only have burst upon the country in the way they did because of a backdrop of political disenfranchisement and massive social deprivation. Read the rest of this entry »

What Would Jesus Donate?: The Big Money Behind St Paul’s

In Rory MacKinnon on October 29, 2011 at 10:44 pm

http://onthefencewithjesus.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/jesus-money-changers-temple6.jpg

[First published in The Morning Star, 29/10/11. This piece was filed on Thursday, the day before the Cathedral announced it would take legal action to evict the protesters.]

The public furore around London’s occupation movement hit a new peak on Thursday when the Canon Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral quit, reportedly over internal pressure to take legal action against the social activists of Occupy London Stock Exchange who have sought sanctuary on the cathedral’s steps for the last fortnight.

The Revd Giles Fraser, who the campers regard as an ally within the church, issued a statement just days before his resignation insisting that rumours the cathedral had closed its doors for commercial reasons were “complete nonsense.”

But in light of his sudden exit and the cathedral’s loss of income – an estimated £20,000 a day – it’s worth taking a look at who does control the cathedral’s purse strings. Read the rest of this entry »

This Sceptic Isle: Why Noone’s Stealing Your Job

In Rory MacKinnon on March 6, 2011 at 9:38 am


[Excerpted from a piece for this weekend's Morning Star]

This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle…This happy breed of men, this little world, /This precious stone set in the silver sea, /Which serves it in the office of a wall /Or as a moat defensive to a house, /Against the envy of less happier lands,– /This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.
- Richard II, Act II Scene I

The ideological battle over immigration raged on this week, with big-business think tank CentreForum’s spirited defence of the admission of international students.

The group put out a report on Monday which criticised the government’s plans to halve immigration levels over the next four years through a combination of tougher English-language tests, fewer entitlements and possibly repealing graduates’ right to work for up to two years here after completing their studies.

Read the rest of this entry »

False Economy: The Case For Private Prisons

In Rory MacKinnon on October 27, 2010 at 9:00 am

[Originally published in Werewolf magazine, October 2010]

When National won the 2008 general election by a landslide, the pundits were quick to attribute their popularity to two things: a promise to get tough on crime and an equally fervent promise to cut taxes by reducing government expenditure. But nearly two years on, the contradictory nature of these goals is increasingly obvious: it costs a lot to keep someone captive in a first-world nation, and the ideological commitment of recent governments to prison-as-punishment is doing more to create a Nanny State than any number of banned lightbulbs.

Corrections spending has more than doubled over the last ten years, with custodial services alone now costing taxpayers over $890 million  a year – more than the entire budget for Youth Affairs, Maori Affairs, Pacific Island Affairs, foreign aid and senior citizens combined. Read the rest of this entry »

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