Hard News: 2016: The arc of a year
25 Responses
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It’s 37 years now, and we’re still talking.
Ironically, I wrote this having only recently recovered the power of speech. The hideous throat infection doing the sounds left me literally speechless for most of last week. And I confess, the inability to converse may have led me to type more grumpily than usual on the internet.
I’d fortunately voiced the final episode of From Zero before the throat bug struck. But it did put paid to the plan to add in the Green Party’s late-breaking new drug policy. I had interviewed Julie Anne Genter, but there was no way of getting it into the episode without voicing some lines of script to set it in context – a thing I was completely unable to do.
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linger, in reply to
doing the sounds
Aptly put.
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You have had a very year, Russell, and I expect even more from you in 2017. I see that MediaTake is in repeats on Maori Television and it will be good to see it back next year.
Kind of happy that my contribution to the rather good 2016 Trees at the Meteor (its motto 'Compassion Not Consumption') has a Highly Commended award.. It was constructed from cardboard and 35mm film trailers. -
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Thanks for everything this year Russell and to all the other contributors too.
Merry xmas to all.
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
'Compassion Not Consumption')
Like.
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Misread that at first as the 'arse' of a year. :)
Onwards and upwards. -
…and of course there’s the announcement of the Public Address Word of the Year on Morning Report tomorrow.
Tomorrow??
We voted already?
I must have nodded off and missed a step… -
Sacha, in reply to
Vote now. Couple of hours left: http://publicaddress.net/hardnews/public-address-word-of-the-year-2016-now/
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Thoroughly enjoyed From Zero. I hope it gets a good airing and finds the ear of policy makers one way or another.
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Thank you Russell. I have really enjoyed From Zero, your music posts and many other articles on Public Address this year. You keep me in touch with a pulse I am interested in.
'A conversation' is a very beautiful way to frame a relationship. Thanks for bringing heart into journalism.
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mark taslov, in reply to
That was fitting end to the series, an apodictic argument for change Russell. Seconding Zach’s thoughts above. If they’re even up to the task, the polies need to get their heads around this pronto. Congratulations!
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Thanks guys :-)
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Why are "we" spending perfectly good public money measuring drug traces in wastewater in Auckland and Christchurch for 7 days every month for 12 months? That's just crazy. Isn't it? In 2017 and all...
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
What Pee problem?
measuring drug traces in wastewater in Auckland and Christchurch
Anyway it'll only register those who use toilets,
there's lotsa empty sections round Chchch... -
Russell Brown, in reply to
It’s called engaging in science, for pleasure. People who engage in science for pleasure are gifted with a trait that might save civilisation from collapse. Sifting through gray water and shit – searching for empirical facts isn’t crazy, it’s an enthusiasm.
I'm okay with it – in principle, it's public health data. Although they seem be doing it wrong by testing for a relatively limited number of chemicals.
And I gather a more consumer-oriented early-warning system missed out on funding, which is a bit of a shame.
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I have really been enjoying From Zero Russell, thanks!
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Apropos of From Zero, From West Virginia :
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Sacha, in reply to
Why are "we" spending perfectly good public money measuring drug traces in wastewater
to be able to compare it with similar monitoring results overseas, I heard. Piggy-back off their work, effectively.
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Bart Janssen, in reply to
It’s called engaging in science, for pleasure. People who engage in science for pleasure are gifted with a trait that might save civilisation from collapse.
To be fair there is a pretty wide continuum of scientists,
from those who do science to get rich - really there are some of those - they usually end up as managers or science advisors -
all the way to those who do science with the sole intention of saving the human race.Most of the tribe I belong to called scientists fall somewhere in the middle, yeah we do science because it's fun, because we want to know "WHY?" and nobody can tell us so we have to figure it out ourselves
But we also want some money - to pay for nice food
And we also think eventually science improves the human condition - sometimes slowly most times incrementally and almost always in a way nobody can predict.So asking why are "We wasting money on X or Y piece of research?" kind of utterly misses the point about science.
For all we know those data from those measurements may unlock the key to emmisions-free dairying or hangover-free beer or anything. It probably won't, but even if it doesn't the data will add incrementally to human knowledge and may tell us something we didn't expect about drug use. Something we couldn't have guessed would be in the data.
I know that's a leap of trust for taxpayers, myself included. But all the studies have shown the same thing - taxpayers who trust the tribe of scientists get rewarded.
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Quite an interesting paper here.
One finding which might arise from such measurement is that the true level of drug use is higher than that estimated from surveys, and consequently the incidence of problematic use is lower than estimated.
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good informative measured series thanks. And in a year when most things went tits up metaphorically speaking... mainly the old white males of the species.
All I thought was... about bloody time.
I just hope Trump et al become a laughing stock and do no lasting damage -
Rob S, in reply to
I just hope Trump et al become a laughing stock and do no lasting damage
Me too brother, me too.
What will be his first fuck up/scandal, other than his election?
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Russell Brown, in reply to
One finding which might arise from such measurement is that the true level of drug use is higher than that estimated from surveys, and consequently the incidence of problematic use is lower than estimated.
New Zealand's high level of reported drug use may in fact be related to our greater trust in society – and therefore, willingness to honestly report.
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Tuari Potiki’s quote has been bouncing around in my head since listening:
"There needs to be a catalyst for change it’s not just going to happen organically and it’s not going to happen because the politicians are suddenly gonna wake up and decide to change things. Unfortunately the way that significant change has occurred in New Zealand over the last 20 years, and I’m thinking about firstly the establishment of the mental health commission and all of the money that went into mental health – that was the back of a couple of tragedies."
One has to wonder how many dead police officers, how many suppliers, how many soldiers, how many Community Board members, how many s̶u̶i̶c̶i̶d̶e̶s̶ (sorry I know the topic is un-Kiwi), how many chronic pain sufferers and terminally ill, how many daughters and sons, how many fathers and mothers and how many children and infants might constitute a “tragedy” in New Zealand in 2017.
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