Lives lost: Where are our values?
A student lies dead in his room undiscovered for eight weeks. A young woman is trampled to death by drunken party-goers. These incidents are a huge indictment of the society in which we live today, an uncaring, me-first society. When I was doing my degree at Victoria University in the 1970s, we also drank, smoked dope and danced topless at music festivals. But we always looked out for each other. We spoke face to face and we noticed what was happening around us.
We had been taught to care for our fellow human beings and to try to fix things that went wrong.
I don’t know what has happened today but many young people have not been taught these good values, instead just looking out for themselves.
Society is disintegrating faster than climate change.
Diane Anderson, Sunnynook.
Dog’s breakfast
Barney Irvine tells us Aucklanders support “the idea of expanding Auckland’s rapid transit network” (NZ Herald, October 11), but what does this mean?
The only thing to “expand” is the existing heavy electric rail. There’s no light rail to “expand”.
Is light rail “rapid”? Not likely, when it has to negotiate intersections and other traffic.
Part of the confusion Barney talks about comes from the loose use of the words “rapid transit” without actually defining what these words mean.
It seems to me we are being offered a “dog’s breakfast” of light rail, heavy rail and other things. I suspect this is because authorities simply don’t want to spend the money on one proper integrated system, running along dedicated corridors, as does the existing heavy electric rail.
Euan Macduff, Titirangi.
Low debt level
For months, people have been claiming the Coalition Government was incurring massive debts, but now the figures have been released which show the debt level is under 20 per cent, one of the lowest in the world.
The three countries with government debt levels in excess of 100 per cent are Greece, Italy and the United States where President Trump claims he has achieved an economic miracle.
David Mairs, Glendowie.
Clean sweep
Please, Mr Goff, can your council and CCOs now concentrate on getting back to basics and cleaning this city up?
Streets swept, drains cleared of leaf debris and rubbish so we don’t get “lakes” forming every time it rains, street gardens getting maintenance, and weed spraying. Berms are out of control around most of the city.
The council states it has a maintenance programme, but I don’t see that. There also needs to be an investigation into the contractors who supposedly do the work.
To the new council, yes, the big projects are important, but the basics still need to be addressed in a regular and timely manner.
Snarl-ups
Elizabeth Luyk, Greenlane.
When I first saw the Auckland Harbour Bridge getting its removable barriers installed, about 30 years ago, I wondered how long this could fix the problem for.
In Brett O’Reilly’s comments (NZ Herald, October 14), he stated traffic gridlock is Auckland businesses’ highest-ranked disappointment.
So, subsequent Auckland Councils did not have enough time, within these 30 years, to fix or soften this gridlock? Were it a privately owned business and you couldn’t fix it within that time frame, your business usually vanishes.
In my view, subsequent urban planners in Auckland have left many questions unanswered, when this basic diversion of traffic and/or closer work-to-business distances should be the only two considerations to have started with back then.
There is absolutely no excuse to not have fixed this debilitating dilemma, when suddenly billions of dollars can be found to shift one operation from the Auckland port to Whanga¯ rei, possibly putting more pressure on roading infrastructure as well as more CO 2 emissions than we already have.
Rene Blezer, Taupo¯ .
Stylish apartments
It seems whatever decision the Auckland Council makes about Auckland’s development it gets it wrong (NZ Herald, October 8).
I have been familiar with Mission Bay since about 1950. There are no buildings of much merit in the block where the apartments were proposed. The sort of intensive housing that was planned is exactly what Auckland needs to help solve its suffocating traffic crisis.
The stylish apartment block was just right for Mission Bay. It should have been approved. Russell O. Armitage, Hamilton.
Going potty?
After doing some planting I checked the bottom of the plant pots to see if they could be recycled. All the pots with the recycling triangle were placed in the recycle bin.
However, we received a note saying we had put plant pots in the bin — the wrong type of plastic. I called Auckland Council to question this and was told it was correct, I had put the wrong kind of plastic in the recycle bin even though the pots all had the recycle triangle.
Funnily enough, all the pots were collected. I’m confused.
Janet Boyle, Orewa.
Protest agenda
Steve Horne doesn’t understand (NZ Herald, October 10). The protesters he rails about do. They know all the measures they could take personally are minute in comparison to the measures huge polluting corporations urgently need to take but refuse to.
Only pressure on Governments to take polluting corporations to task has any chance of any real reduction of global warming.
Juliet Leigh, Pt Chevalier.
Sugar content
With so many processed foods loaded with sugar these days, there is no definite category in which to impose a sugar tax.
With the rise in diabetes and cost to the DHBs, food manufacturers must take some responsibility in selling best products. Sugar is an addictive substance and our children are suffering as a result.
Labelling in readable print using one standard measure such as a teaspoon would enable consumers to have greater choice. I know that I would not buy a bottle of drink or a package of food that was labelled as containing multiple teaspoons of sugar. I am also reluctant to buy poorly labelled packaged foods, the contents of which are rather a mystery.
Too often, food labels contain coded numbers and/or letters, minute print, chemical symbols which are confusing. Who has time to read all these labels?
A product plainly labelled with a picture as containing two, seven, 10 etc teaspoons of sugar would make shopping simply informative.
If the Government refuses to impose a sugar tax, it must urgently consider standardised labelling. It has legislated for this on cigarette packets, so why not on food?
Marie Kaire, Whanga¯ rei.
Northern origins
In the Cook Islands Library and Museum are objects and information about Rarotonga and its neighbouring islands that happened over time.
A section tells how the people of Tonga and Samoa sometimes did not always see eye to eye. On one such occasion, about 1000 years ago (+/- a few hundred), a fleet of war canoes from both communities were having a go at each other and a storm blew up. After the storm, the two fleets are said to have found themselves close to Rarotonga. In the interest of survival, the two joined and sailed to Rarotonga.
The information implies Tongans and Samoans forced themselves on the people of Rarotonga. It is noted some groups of Rarotongans managed to escape the invasion by sailing away. No ceremonial departure was noted.
Could this not have been the Rarotongans’ first venture to the land of the long white cloud — about 3000km to the south? The Rarotongans, with their navigational ability in following the patterns of the stars, and understanding the migratory habits of birds, whales and other sea creatures, would have known something must be down in the oceans to the south of them.
At the Cook Islands concerts to entertain holidaymakers, it is often asked, “Are there any New Zealand Ma¯ ori here?” With those acknowledging it, comes the comment, “Welcome home”.
Peter Johnson, Northcote.