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Graham Hill's avatar

In times past Courts may have responsibly declined jurisdiction. It is not for SCONZ to alienate sovereignty and supplanted the sovereign role of parliament. But given our Woke PM and an activist Clerisey there is a vacuum. The palpable and obvious difficulty with rights law is that it is cast in wide generalised language leaving the details to be worked out. Common law is the inverse and aims at proble solving details. Burke and Carlyle justifiably criticised the "rights of man" doctrine in the 18thC. Richardson J criticised the judges of towering intellectual for being judicial isolates. The intellectual may tower in law but seems to have no grasp of the history of ideas or even history itself and are obivious to 2nd and 3rd order consequences.

What is not apprehended is that right law, while well intentioned have become a new form of power and sovereignty ursupation and a hellish road to tyranny: see Professor Chantal Delsol, Unjust Law. David Starkey observes a similar pattern in the UK where law, statute law under Starmer, lacks a conscionable underpinning which natural law provided as a moral ethos of society. Technocratic law is tyranny. It's Soviet idol is the displacement of democracy for Stalin's "administrovanie." The elite ethos thinks it knows best. Shame on SCONZ and Mr Kos should know better.

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Noel Reid's avatar

Back in the day, I was impressed with "Shonky" John Key as Prime Minister.

Did he introduce MACA in 2011, to gain the support of the Maori party?

I realised quite a while back that the said "Shonky" didn't seem to consider (or care about) the longer term consequences of quite a few of his decisions...

I don't think shifty Chris Finlayson should be allowed to represent Maori interests. Do you need a job after retiring, given the extremely generous politician pensions? Maybe he works pro bono for them...

What is the answer to the question you raised about who is paying the legal fees to extend the gravy train? I think I know what the answer might be. Maybe I should take a double shot, like William...

Did we save money when we dropped the Privy Council and created the Supreme Court, or was it done for political reasons? At the time, I saw the palace constructed in Wgtn for them, and was pretty gob-smacked....

I really don't understand how/must have been asleep while, the judiciary went SOO pro-Maori. As Graham notes, the most intellectual seem to have lost touch with the real world, and the principle that all people should have equal rights....; let alone that their role is to interpret, NOT create law.

Do we have to disband the Supreme Court given how badly it's been infected? But it seems reverting to the Privy Council might be no better. I guess not enough of our people would support substituting a sensible/practical country like Singapore as the source of our ultimate justice decisions.....

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