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Top 10 biggest NZ debates over the past 10 years

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Author Topic: Top 10 biggest NZ debates over the past 10 years  (Read 172 times)
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Newtown-Fella
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« on: February 04, 2009, 09:39:34 am »

let the fun begin .....  Wink



1. Seabed and foreshore
Early in 2004, Maori, as equal citizens under the Treaty of Waitangi and English common law, asked the courts to examine the continuing existence of their pre-colonial customary ownership of the seabed and foreshore.

A rattled Labour Government moved quickly to block this by passing the Seabed and Foreshore Act.

The foreshore legislation was the end of a long-running row over ownership.

The Government legislated for Crown ownership and said it had put into written law all that Maori could have achieved under common law through the courts.

Many Maori saw it differently and said their land was being confiscated.

2. Genetically engineered food
In 2001 the Royal Commission on Genetic Modification stated that New Zealand should adopt a "proceed with caution" approach to genetic science.

But the term "caution" didn't go far enough for thousands of New Zealanders, who wanted genetic modification (GM) banned.

The public's distrust of genetic science was partly due to a number of scare stories, covering anything from experiments gone wrong to potatoes spliced with toad genes.

Later, following the Labour Government's re-election in 2002, Prime Minister Helen Clark said the Government was not going to change its genetic engineering policy despite protests against the lifting of the moratorium for releasing GE organisms.

3. What went wrong at the Rugby World Cup (1999, 2007, 2003)
Victory in the Rugby World Cup is the only acceptable result to Kiwis who, together with the New Zealand Rugby Union, have an obsession about winning the event.

Any result other than claiming the trophy seems to impact drastically on the mood of the nation.

However the past 10 years have brought nothing but pain in the event, following a semifinal loss against France in 1999 and against Australia in 2003. However, perhaps the most soul destroying to All Black fans was the quarter final exit in 2007 following a loss against France at Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.

The loss was keenly felt by NZHerald readers where our online Your Views debate about why the All Blacks failed in their 2007 World Cup rugby bid featured over 5000 email submissions. It remains the biggest forum thread ever in NZ's online history.

4. Civil Union Bill
A bill giving legal recognition to same-sex couples was passed by Parliament in 2004 following a closely followed conscience vote by MPs.

MPs were deluged with messages from the public - most opposed to the bill - on how to exercise their conscience vote.

However, the Campaign for Civil Unions doubted mainstream New Zealand was against the bill, and believed the opposition was orchestrated by a small and extreme minority.

Opponents of the bill say it is an immoral "gay marriage" law, and pinned their hopes on an amendment put up by New Zealand First that would force a referendum on the issue. However the proposal was defeated and then Parliament voted 65-55 to pass the controversial legislation.

5. Anti-smacking legislation
Green MP Sue Bradford's so-called "anti-smacking" bill proved to be a public relations nightmare for Labour, which found itself inextricably linked with the proposal and suffered a political backlash as a consequence.

Labour strongly supported the bill, but was daunted by polling numbers that showed wide public opposition to a measure many felt would intrude on parents' ability to discipline a child as they see fit.

In the end, the controversial child discipline bill was passed by Parliament, with only seven MPs voting against it.

The bill removed from the Crimes Act the statutory defence of "reasonable force" to correct a child, meaning there was justification for the use of force for that purpose.

6. Smoking ban in restaurants and bars
In a report released in 2003, Parliament's health select committee recommended a complete ban on smoking inside pubs, bars, cafes, restaurants, casinos and RSAs.

Smoking would only be allowed in outdoor areas, such as beer gardens or decks.

Just one year later, in December 2004, the committee's recommendations became law following amendments to smoke-free legislation.

Many bar patrons reacted angrily to the changes, saying a smoke went hand-in-hand with a drink. The legislation previously allowed for specially ventilated rooms in pubs and clubs so that smokers could indulge without affecting the health of others.

But the committee did not support that idea because ventilation systems were expensive and not proven to adequately remove carcinogens.

7. NCEA introduction
Earlier this decade, the terms School Certificate and Bursary joined their long-lost cousin University Entrance in becoming education museum pieces.

They were replaced by the National Certificate of Educational Achievement - a national qualification for senior high school pupils.

Critics of School Certificate had long argued that the qualification was good for ranking students but did not detail individual strengths and weaknesses. Also, over 40 per cent of students failed, leaving them with no qualification whatsoever.

NCEA is based on achievement standards which have been set nationally. Each standard is typically worth two or three credits.

Opponents of the move claimed NCEA - based on a mixture of internal assessment and external exams - is educationally unsound, created more work for teachers, reduced teaching and learning time and produced a huge amount of unreliable information.

8. Auckland's Waterfront Stadium proposal
Architects of an Auckland waterfront stadium promoted it as a people-friendly and energy self-sufficient building fit to grace the postcards of every visitor to New Zealand.

Going all out to woo detractors of Rugby World Cup Minister Trevor Mallard's $500 million-plus waterfront dream, principals of Warren and Mahoney said Stadium New Zealand would probably be the world's first fully-glazed and "carbon-neutral" sports centre.

Auckland City Council voted for the stadium, but the project was virtually sunk following a "No" vote by the Auckland Regional Council.

Shortly afterwards cabinet abandoned the idea and voted a redeveloped Eden Park as its preferred site for the 2011 Rugby World Cup final.

9. Ahmed Zaoui incarceration
Asylum seeker Algerian Ahmed Zaoui arrived at Auckland Airport from Malaysia on December 4, 2002 with false South African documents, some destroyed on the flight.

He was declined refugee status and detained under the Immigration Act at Auckland Prison at Paremoremo while immigration officials assessed his background.

Zaoui was one of 188 Islamic Salvation Front candidates democratically elected to Parliament in Algeria's first free elections in 1991, but then the military seized power in a coup.

Some alleged he was a member of the Armed Islamic Group (GIA) accused of atrocities against Algerian civilians and acts of terrorism in Europe.

The Refugee Status Branch declined his application, but he was eventually freed in December 2004 following two years of imprisonment without charge.

10. Urewera Terror Raids 2007
In late October 2007, the first of many protest marches made their presence known around the country following a series of police raids.

Seventeen people were arrested under the Firearms Act and the Terrorism Suppression Act on October 15 following raids in Auckland, Wellington, Palmerston North, Hamilton, Christchurch, Whakatane and Ruatoki, 20km south of Whakatane.

The raids were the culmination of a year-long investigation into weapons training camps alleged to have been held in the Urewera country, and netted a haul of weapons.

Protestors claimed the arrests represented a breach of civil rights. A depositions hearing on a series of charges laid in the wake of the raids started in September 2008.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nzheraldconzs-10th-birthday/news/article.cfm?c_id=1502800&objectid=10553098
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Calliope
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If music be the food of love, play on


« Reply #1 on: February 04, 2009, 09:53:36 am »

I sincerely hope that the list is not in any particular order considering that #3 is:
3. What went wrong at the Rugby World Cup (1999, 2007, 2003)

Surely it shouldn't rank that high
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bump head benny
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« Reply #2 on: February 04, 2009, 10:57:13 am »

Dont forget that 911 thing aye?....I sure wont.
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Lets kill all the warmongers.
nitpicker1
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« Reply #3 on: October 04, 2012, 08:26:57 am »

No 2 on the  LIST is Genetic engineering



Lobby group lambasts GE research
ALI TOCKER Last updated 08:20 03/10/2012      
    
A genetically modified cow hailed as a breakthrough in the quest to produce allergen-free milk has come under fire from anti-GE campaigners.

Hamilton-based AgResearch announced yesterday it had bred Daisy, a friesian capable of producing milk with a reduced amount of BLG, a protein believed to be the leading cause of milk allergies in children.

The announcement has sparked national and international interest, among world-leading scientists and international media including CNN in the US and The Guardian in the UK.

But horrified GE protesters have criticised the research as "macabre".

Green Party GE spokesman Steffan Browning said scientists producing GE milk would damage New Zealand's $10 billion dairy export brand

“This is just another GE mirage; another announcement from GE proponents about a potential product which we do not need and has no market," Mr Browning said.

“We see this over and over again with GE scientists; this new product or that new product that will have apparent amazing results but it never actually meets our real needs for a safe, healthy food supply.”

Mr Browning called for GE field trials in New Zealand to be closed down and GE research to be “kept in the lab”.

President of the lobby group GE Free New Zealand, Claire Bleakley, said the AgResearch project was a “depraved, macabre experiment that is the worst type of animal cruelty”.

“Researchers that stoop so low as to manipulate the mauri [spirit or life force] of an animal causing suffering, then pretend that this is a significant breakthrough when we already have business using technology to remove BLG, are inhumane,” she said.

AgResearch's experiments also raised many questions including how many other calf embryos had been involved in the research and what had happened to them, she said.

“Were they born deformed, euthanised at birth or aborted by the surrogate mothers? Did the mothers die in pregnancy or birthing?

Daisy was born without a tail, prompting more concern from protesters.

“Why do they have no tail? This calf is deformed and will possibly suffer from long-term skeletal deformities, as BLG is an essential part of the cow's make up,” Ms Bleakley said.

AgResearch said it expected to know the reason for the missing tail in a couple of weeks, but did not believe it was because of genetic modification.

But a range of scientists, farmers, businesspeople and parents of children with allergies say the work must go on, and that people should not stand in the way of progress.

The Crown Research Institute said it was early days in the project, and a lot of work needed to be done before the milk reached supermarket shelves.

Research director Warren McNabb said New Zealand's restrictive genetic modification policies would have to change before the milk could be tasted by humans, tested in clinical trials on humans or produced commercially.

AgResearch said it had years of work ahead before it was known if the milk was commercially viable.

Next steps include further experiments to confirm whether Daisy's milk was hypoallergenic and could eventually be produced and marketed as such.

That would include producing more animals like Daisy.

- © Fairfax NZ News

http://www.stuff.co.nz/waikato-times/farming/7761575/Lobby-group-lambasts-GE-research

remember Monty Python's Galaxy Song? here's the lyrics of Phil Alexandra's parody "The Genome Song"

http://www.amiright.com/parody/80s/montypythonthemeaningoflife0.shtml


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robman
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« Reply #4 on: October 04, 2012, 08:46:03 am »

That list may be relevant to the Herald staffers but I don't think it holds much water in the real world.
Here are a couple that they missed out, David Bain's acquittal, the whole AGW scene.
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Crusader
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« Reply #5 on: October 04, 2012, 10:23:27 am »

Actually I'm surprised the condensed ITM cup format of this year didn't make that list. 
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Lovelee
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« Reply #6 on: October 04, 2012, 01:55:40 pm »

Yep looks like Granny Herald BS .. be interesting to see what the people of the country think about that list and what their choices would be.

They still havent grown up in regard to the repeal of sec 59 .. I see they are still using their misnomer for it.
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