Wasted vote
I walked to the dairy to post my ballot but the postbox had gone so I threw my papers into the rubbish bin. Both systems - the post office and the council - have in common that we pay more and more for them and get less and less.
I'm not going to vote again. I'm not apathetic - I'm just not showing support for something that is broken.
By the way - a 3.5 per cent annual increase in rates compounds to 10.9 per cent, not 10.5 per cent as people have stated.
Tony Cooper, Mt Albert.
Wasted energy
I was reading a clipping from the letters page of the Herald of June 12, 2018, with the heading "Burn rubbish for power". It spoke of a plan, now 19 years ago, to build a rubbish-to-electricity plant in Meremere. It was shelved due to (spurious) resource consent issues.
The Chinese company which owns Waste Management is planning a massive landfill in Dome Valley for Auckland's rubbish while it currently operates 40 such waste-to-electricity plants in China.
The Meremere facility is currently standing idle with a railway line running alongside it. Need I say more?
Karl van de Water, Northland.
Sports minnows
Your correspondent Kent Millar (NZ Herald, October 14) draws a comparison between the minnows of the Rugby World Cup and the New Zealand Football team's inclusion as minnows at the Fifa World Cup.
In the 2010 World Cup, NZ was the Fifa World Cup four times, drew 0-0 against Paraguay who have been in the finals eight times, and drew 1-1 against Slovakia, another strong footballing nation.
I would hardly call their performance as that of minnows "making up the numbers". The All Whites were as competitive as their opposition on the day, as the results confirm, which can hardly be said of the lower-ranked teams in the Rugby World Cup.
L Braithwaite, Coatesville.
Vege doomsday
Chicken Little is hit on the head by an acorn and alarms the whole town that the sky is falling. Apparently, Deloitte (who were commission to do research) and Horticulture New Zealand's chief executive Mike Chapman have been hit on the head by a falling carrot – such is their alarm about vegetable growing and prices in the years to come. What absolute compost.
Following the lead of such groups as Extinction Rebellion and others who see the "end of days" in various cabbage leaves, Horticulture NZ also seems to feel the roots of calamity and has served up the fear and anxiety.
Of all people, Mark should be aware of the huge potential of "vertical farming" which uses 90 per cent less water, no soil, less energy, has a smaller footprint and can have over thrice the productivity of current horticultural practices.
New Zealand horticulture is threatened not by "competition for highly productive land, access to freshwater, climate change mitigation and increasing government and council regulation", but by a lack of imagination. The world is not going to starve, and the price of fresh vegetables is not going to skyrocket – particularly "rocket", which is easily grown in vertical farms.
In a world that seemingly awakes to a new crisis every day, we to need cultivate more measured responses to perceived issues.
Dr Mike Schmidt, Dunedin.
Medical insurance
This nonsense of "visitors" not having medical insurance before being allowed to enter our country should have been sorted out years ago. Furthermore, if they cancel said insurance (the government should be notified by the insurance company) then they are deported forthwith.
I waited five years and lost my job waiting for a hip operation because our hospital beds and theatres were being used by these "visitors" who don't pay. It's time to wake up, New Zealand.
Cliff Ginders Ōtāhuhu.
Sworn oath
Attending jury selection today and start of the court case I saw the swearing-in of jurors, most attesting with hand on bible and saying "so help me God".
I wondered why this quaint anachronism was still in use in a modern, secular New Zealand.
I would prefer to say "so help me Jacinda or Winston", "so help me wise ancestors", or "so help me inner sense of fairness".
Focusing on the "higher powers" is a lofty, noble ideology of law courts to ensure team honesty and transparency, in their dispensing of justice. But, after 70 years of earthly existence, I am sadly still not sure if God is up there, down there, everywhere, benevolent or simply playing endless mind games with us.
Rob Buchanan, Kerikeri.
Gender politics
Sue Rawson's letter (NZ Herald, October 14) needs support. Women have had to fight for their place at the table for centuries.
The Labour Government seem to recognise merit regardless of gender and as a result
we have had two worthy leaders in Helen Clark and now Jacinda Ardern.
Unfortunately a female manager, chief executive or prime minister doesn't sit well with many and, as a result, they are criticised even for the smallest of lapses or errors.
Ardern has a difficult job as a leader of a coalition but seems to have
the respect of her partners.
There is no doubt that the world economy has slowed and this will affect New Zealand. The government is aware of this and has monetary policies to soften any recession.
Ardern has built up strong relations with overseas leaders and she should be recognised for this.
Despite what many think, this government is making progress on many fronts.
Our prime minister is building a strong team and currently deserves respect regardless
of her gender.
Reg Dempster, Albany.
Avowed celibacy
Once again we read the popular misconception of priestly vows. A vow of celibacy means only a promise not to marry.
While the assumption is widespread that that means they will totally abstain from all sexual intercourse, in reality they would have had to take a vow of chastity for that to apply.
It is possible to argue that, in following the letter - rather than the spirit - of their vows, they have not broken them at all.
Jeanette Grant, Mt Eden.
Short & sweet
On coalition
I remain unconvinced that the Labour Party and its ever-reducing number of supporters want just a Labour Greens coalition as it is only NZ First that brings just a little bit of sanity, admittedly only a little. Mike Baker, Tauranga.
On diesel
Diesel cars are being phased out in many countries due to their proven health hazards, it would appear that New Zealand has become a dumping ground for them. Vince West, Milford.
On McLaughlin
Surely Scott McLaughlin, is a certainty for the Halberg sportsman of the year after what he has achieved in motor racing: Record race wins in a season, record number of pole positions in a season, untold lap records etc and now a Bathurst 1000 win. Jock MacVicar, Hauraki.
On Prime
Surely Prime TV can do better in the 5pm spot than showing the pathetic "3rd Rock From the Sun", made in 1995? Are they paid to show this rubbish? Bruce Tubb, Belmont.
On Hawkins
I wonder how many Papakura voters made the same mistake as the Herald reporter in thinking candidate "George Hawkins Jnr" was "Former Papakura mayor and government minister George Hawkins [who] came in third place". Denise Levien, Papakura.
On sources
If the bathtub is overflowing we don't keep looking for bigger buckets, we turn off the tap. We will never get on top of plastic waste unless we stop importing it. Nor will we stem the obesity and diabetes epidemic unless we heavily tax sugar and ban high-fructose corn syrup. J Leighton, Devonport.
On Syria
In 1948 the United Nations granted a much abused and displaced group of people their own state to call their own, Israel. When will the UN do the same for the Kurds? Andrew Tichbon, Greenbay.
On Air NZ
Let's trust Greg Foran will remember his provincial upbringing, in Hastings and Hamilton. The high Air NZ airfares severely discriminate against those who live in smaller centres and do much to inhibit growth outside the main centres. Danna Glendining, Taupō.