NZ journalist, Paul Holmes has died after a long illness
In coming days the media will be full of fulsome praise for Sir Paul, and what a 'fine fellow' he was.
In coming days the media will be full of fulsome praise for Sir Paul, and what a 'fine fellow' he was.
For
me, he was the man that did the most to bring the media down to the
Lowest Common Denominator.
I
will leave the last word to him – you can see what a fine, tolerant
sort of chap he was.
RIP
Paul Holmes
11
February, 2012
It's
time to cancel our repugnant national holiday
Waitangi
Day produced its usual hatred, rudeness, and violence against a
clearly elected Prime Minister from a group of hateful, hate-fuelled
weirdos who seem to exist in a perfect world of benefit provision.
This enables them to blissfully continue to believe that New Zealand
is the centre of the world, no one has to have a job and the Treaty
is all that matters.
I'm
over Waitangi Day. It is repugnant. It's a ghastly affair. As I lie
in bed on Waitangi morning, I know that later that evening, the news
will show us irrational Maori ghastliness with spitting, smugness,
self-righteousness and the usual neurotic Maori politics, in which
some bizarre new wrong we've never thought about will be lying on the
table.
This,
we will have to address and somehow apply these never-defined
principles of the Treaty of Waitangi because it is, apparently, the
next big resentment. There'll be lengthy discussion, we'll end up
paying the usual millions into the hands of the Maori aristocracy and
God knows where it'll go from there.
Well,
it's a bullshit day, Waitangi. It's a day of lies. It is loony Maori
fringe self-denial day. It's a day when everything is addressed,
except the real stuff.
Never
mind the child stats, never mind the national truancy stats, never
mind the hopeless failure of Maori to educate their children and stop
them bashing their babies. No, it's all the Pakeha's fault. It's all
about hating whitey. Believe me, that's what it looked like the other
day.
John
Key speaks bravely about going there again. He should not go there
again. It's over. Forget it. It is too awful and nasty and common. It
is no more New Zealand day than Halloween.
Our
national day is now Anzac Day. Anzac Day is a day of honour, and
struggle, bravery and sacrifice. A day on which we celebrate the
periods when our country embraced great efforts for international
freedom and on which we weep for those who served and for those who
died.
I
wouldn't take my three great uncles who died at Gallipoli and in
France - Reuben, Mathew and Leonard - to Waitangi Day and expect them
to believe this was our national day. I wouldn't take my father,
veteran of El Alamein and Cassino, there. Nor would I take my Uncle
Ken who died in a Wellington bomber, then try and tell him Waitangi
Day was anything but filth.
No,
if Maori want Waitangi Day for themselves, let them have it. Let them
go and raid a bit more kai moana than they need for the big, and feed
themselves silly, speak of the injustices heaped upon them by the
greedy Pakeha and work out new ways of bamboozling the Pakeha to come
up with a few more millions.
When
you start doing talkback or any kind of opinion broadcasting in New
Zealand you learn that certain groups are loony, highly vocal, highly
organised and they never rest. The second looniest are the
anti-fluoride crowd. But leave them aside for today.
The
looniest crowd in this country, the most irrational and bullying are
La Leche, the breast feeding fascists who've become involved in the
most bizarre controversy I can remember. Breast feeding is all they
think about.
The
row actually started with Piri Weepu filming a public health
commercial in which he's seen bottle-feeding his daughter who has an
allergy to dairy and the message is that she will grow up in a
non-smoking house. That was the message, for God's sake. And it's a
nice image. Dad, an All Black hero, Maori of the Year, bottle-feeding
his little girl.
Many
mothers would have appreciated seeing a baby being bottle-fed. Others
appreciated that it showed a man involved in an intense part of
nurturing baby. One or two mothers came forward this week and spoke
about how they've been monstered by bullying women in supermarkets
who berated them for buying formula.
Most
mothers want to breast feed, I'm sure. No one disputes this. Some
simply can't. And in the case of Piri's little girl, she can't handle
dairy. But the hysterics saw a man, a bottle and a baby and were
about to erupt. Never mind the positives, the non-smoking household,
the All Black tenderly feeding his little girl. There was man and a
baby and a bottle and it was the crime of the century.
Take
it off, screamed La Leche, obviously. And suddenly the segment
disappeared. The chief executive of the Health Sponsorship Council,
which made the ad, is Iain Potter. Mr Potter says the council
received overwhelming opposition to the bottle-feeding clip.
I
bet it did. And I bet I know who from. Iain Potter should show some
common sense, grow some balls, and learn to stand up to a highly
organised band of intolerant people.
Overseas,
just to change the subject and keep an elegant internationalism in
the column, can you believe Russia's and China's intransigence at the
United Nations Security Council on the matter of Syria?
So
now Syria will grind on in broken, abject misery for the rest of the
year until they shoot the despot.
I
can't figure old rat-face Bashir. He must know that he's going the
way of Gaddafi, with a refuge in a filthy sewer pipe for a while
before the bullet in the head, being towed backwards through the
streets to public display in a meat locker.
He's
married to a very beautiful British woman, Bashir, a real English
rose. One report suggested she and her family had tried to leave
Syria last week but the convoy had been seen and turned back.
She
must know what's coming. Armageddon is what's coming. One dreads to
imagine what they'll do to her pretty face.
Note:
This column is subject to a Press Council ruling which can be found
at www.presscouncil.org.nz
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