Hard News: Dirty Politics
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Sub rosa?
Hager’s legal team
Either The Herald is relying too much on their Spellcheckers, or this was a Freudian slip...
...she said the judge pushed the police to fined a way of resolving the issue without compelling the media to disclose the source.
;- )
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Katharine Moody, in reply to
Tom Scott nails it …. more than once
Someone should do a study of how Key's nose in caricature lengthens over the period of his time in office :-).
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Tom Scott nails it …. more than once
Thanks, but surely that first link's Sharon Murdoch's work?
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Paul Campbell, in reply to
Oh you're right, my apology - it was tagged "Tom Scott and others" with no additional credit
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John Key faced more questioning on 'Dirty Politics' in parliament today. Luckily we can all sleep easily because Key assures us that "he has seen no evidence his staff behaved unprofessionally."
The operative phrase there is "seen no evidence". Eyes closed, eyes closed, can't see nuffin... moving right along.
When Winnie asked about "Jason Ede's services to the National Party while employed at the public's expense", Key replied:
"Where questions are appropriately asked they'll be appropriately answered".
WTF? Can our dear leader really get away with flat-out refusing to answer straight questions... again? What a farce.
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Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
WTF?
As I said days ago, Parliament has been rendered useless. Key may as well have a press release in the morning and tell everyone what law he is creating or changing and then at least the Taxpayer can save some money by pointless travel to the House for MPs to sit and be ignored, lied to or outright suppressed. It’s now an absolute farce. The only perc for being in Wellington is that their breaks have not been taken away, unlike the rest of NZ.
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John Roughan has updated his Key hagiography with some startling news.
The Prime Minister believes he knows who hacked Whale Oil blogger Cameron Slater's computer and produced the source material for Nicky Hager's Dirty Politics, according to a new edition of a recently published biography of John Key.
In a new chapter in John Key: Portrait of a Prime Minister devoted to this year's election campaign, Mr Key is quoted as saying: "Someone phoned and told me who the hacker was, but other than having a look at this person, I thought, 'Oh well ... nothing will come of it. Life goes on'."
Mr Key did not divulge the name of the person to the biography's author, senior Herald editorial writer John Roughan. Asked yesterday whether the PM had referred the name to the police investigation into the stolen emails, a spokeswoman for Mr Key said that though he believed he knew who the hacker was, "he cannot be certain".
Is this just big noting? The Police and security services are all searching in vain for Rawshark who appears to have concealed his digital tracks well. Nobody has been arrested so who could possibly have this info and let it slip to Key. Was it a credible source or just a gut feeling from his good mate Cam Slater?
No doubt the Police will be raiding Key's house in the near future.
As an aside, the Where's Wally game continues.
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John Roughan has updated his Key hagiography with some startling news.
It really is quite bizarre. "Yeah I know who it is. Can't say because I'm not hundy percent sure, but y'know... at the end of the day..."
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Obviously Key is now a witness in this case, I look forward to the police raid of his office where they take away all his phones and computers
Of course it's possible that that someone called the PM and not John Key ....
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Russel Norman is thinking along exactly the same lines.
"The police spent 10 hours going through Nicky Hager's house because Nicky Hager supposedly knows who Rawshark is, well the Prime Minister is now on the public record saying he knows who Rawshark is. I would expect the police to be consistent and even handed and to raid the Prime Minister's house and his office to find out who Mr Key thinks Rawshark is."
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Marc C, in reply to
So, so, so, there we have it then.
If it was worth editing and amending the text of the biography of our Honourable Leader Kim John Key, then there must be sufficient merit to the validity of the comments by Key, made towards Roughan. Key appears to have confirmed that comment, that he believes he knows who the hacker Rawshark is. But his comment that he could not bother telling the police, because he is not absolutely certain, that is BS of the highest order.
All that raises yet more questions. Such as, why does Key not tell the police? Could it be, that the person Key suspects to be the hacker who hacked his buddys computer (C. Slater), is likely to know stuff about Key’s involvement in “Dirty Politics”, that could cause serious harm to the reputation or more of our Beloved Leader? That seems to be the only logical conclusion. Key would usually rather have sound interest in informing the police about the suspect, one would think, if he had nothing to worry about his own past actions and involvements.
The fact he does not inform the police can only lead to the suspicion that Key has much to hide, and an interest in the hacker not being revealed, as he may reveal stuff about Key that could cost him his job, or worse.
So the mainstream media should actually be pressuring Key for answers, but are they? I again see little evidence of this. They do not have so much restraint with other persons. Perhaps also some in the media do not really want Rawshark to be exposed, as it may reveal more about the involvement of some in the media in "dirty politics". All this raises endless more questions, and justified suspicions, about Key and his own Office.
Is it not so that people who know a person being searched for having committed a crime, or who know of illegal actions, and who may have committed them, have some duty to report this? Mr Key will though not be having the police visit him I am sure, as those that may believe in the police being that “independent” would in my view be extremely naive.
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NSA, in reply to
Rather than running hypotheticals I’d prefer Dr Norman and any other elected official intent on stamping out corruption and protecting New Zealander’s privacy look more closely at what Key is saying and focus on the means of Key’s own inquiry(?):
“Someone phoned and told me who the hacker was, but other than having a look at this person, I thought, ‘Oh well … nothing will come of it. Life goes on’.”
what exactly would “having a look at someone” involve exactly? Would Minister of the SIS/GCSB/ National Security and Intelligence be equipped to take a better look at someone than another minister? Would a warrant be required? Basically what if any personal privacy is still protected by New Zealand law on these occasions when the Prime Minister of New Zealand opts for “having a look”?
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New Zealand politics really are a bad novel at the moment.
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Dismal Soyanz, in reply to
what exactly would “having a look at someone” involve
That's the first thought I had when I read that.
Maybe the office of not-the-PM googled the alleged Rawshark?
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NSA, in reply to
Who knows, nothing surprises any longer. It’s not entirely in keeping with the expectations one would have of a minister who has gone to lengths to stress a desire to protect New Zealanders’ cyber security at all costs.
There are threats our Government needs to protect New Zealanders from. Those threats are real and ever-present and we under-estimate them at our peril.
New Zealanders are entitled to expect that their security is something that the Government takes seriously. And we do. We take it very seriously.
But we can’t say we take it seriously, and then not make the tools available to allow our security services to do their job.
That is the opposite of taking security seriously.
And that is something I will never do.
No paucity of balls is required to simultaneously occupy both these positions.
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Alfie, in reply to
But his comment that he could not bother telling the police, because he is not absolutely certain, that is BS of the highest order.
Agreed. Key is aware that the Police are wasting a lot of man hours trying to track down the illusive rawshark. Surely he should try to convince his "source" that passing on the name to the cops would be appropriate for a good citizen?
In reality, if it's not total BS, it's probably 'Cam reckons it was Dotcom' or something equally pathetic and unbelievable.
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Sacha, in reply to
he could not bother telling the police, because he is not absolutely certain
He didn't say that was the reason - just that he couldn't be bovvered.
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Jack Harrison, in reply to
"Having a look", how big brother is that.
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Marc C, in reply to
That makes it even worse. It shows though is casual, yet cunning manner of doing things. The Smiling Assassin is still very much what he was like when he was the merchant banker and speculator.
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Jack Harrison, in reply to
It's the National Party. What a lovely bunch.
The National Party, desperately clutching the pearls, waiting for us all to become decent Nat folk. Oh, if only all white people were like that nice Mike Hoskings.
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Sacha, in reply to
a professional liar for his whole working life
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"i know sumfink you don't ... i'm not telling you wot coz it's a secret but i deffo know it honest i do .... can you keep a secret so can i tee hee ... i don't care anyway see if i care coz i don't ... i said i really don't ... but i do know sumfink you don't and i'm not telling you so there."
A 7 year old, yesterday. Also, a Prime Minister.
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Who gets to abridge their own biography so soon. Textor-Crosby rock. Every month we’ll have a new chapter , Uncle Johns views on the opposition, chapters awaiting.
Biographer is now a dirty word.
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Sacha, in reply to
Roughan has long been a dirty word.
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