New Zealand’s foreign policy debate is asking the wrong question. The issue is not whether it is time to “break up” with America, but whether we have noticed that the relationship, in its old form, ended long ago. For decades, we have mistaken rhetoric for strategy and independence for capability. The result is a country that speaks loudly but carries little weight — and is increasingly treated accordingly by those who matter most.
When Renovations Become Revolutions (Only in Chris Trotter’s Mind)
(A response to Christ Trotter’s “Ruins of the White House’s East Wing symbolise the passing of an old order and the arrival of a new one“) Chris, this is some world-class melodrama. We’re talking about replacing a set of bland 1940s office spaces with a privately funded ballroom, not detonating the Constitution. Presidents have been knocking […]

