Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Julian Castro--Mayor of San Antonio now----president one day!

Julian Castro---tell me I’m wrong, but I think he will be the USA’s first Hispanic President, in the not too distant future. Man, that guy can speak. He has charisma. Tell me I’m wrong if you must, but he has the ‘X’ factor. Please tell me that he has a ‘good’ past. I had this sense that he is ‘good’ and that just maybe; he can carry on from President Obama. Maybe, he will need to wait for one term after President Obama’s next term, but his day will come.
Come on my USA friends--- tell me I am right!
OMG--- I saw this all on FOX News---sorry for that.

'Talk To Me'=====out next week

Yes 'Talk To Me' will be out next week. Get it from my website www.authorneilcoleman.com or direct with a discount through my email        ---neilcolemanauthor@gmail.com  If you live in Auckland and pick it up, even cheaper.

Get Roskill, while you are at it.

'Talk To Me' is a take the piss giggle at the talk back industry. It's a bit 'dark' at times, but it will have you smiling heaps too.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Birthday--- I was tempted to take the day off!

When your birthday falls on a weekday, it can be tempting to take the day off. I thought about it but then, what the hell was I going to do? My friends and family were all at work, so apart from spending the day with Perdy, it didn’t seem like the right thing to do, so off to work I went. I brought some cakes from the bakery for my tutor group and I had also purchased a real flash ‘Mud Cake’ from the Cheese Cake Shop.
The word soon got around that it was my birthday so kids kept trying g to guess my age. They were way out, at both ends of the scale. It’s funny how bad they are at judging the age of oldies, eh. I fed my tutor group right at the end of the tutor time and they seemed happy enough.
Then, it was the turn of the workmates I hang out with in our kitchen and teaching area. The cake was huge. We cut it up and quickly realized that it was so rich that we could have halved the portions. There was still some over after our session, but I can tell you that no one wanted seconds.
It’s at times like this that you really appreciate the collegiality or your workmates. We laughed so much we didn’t even realize that the bell had rung. I’m sure if the students heard our comments they may have had quite a different picture of us.
I will head home, happy in the knowledge that my workplace is supportive and fun.
Now, what does the evening hold? I shall save going out to dinner until the weekend. I hate late nights now, except for the weekend. Age!
Thanks to all my Face book mates for their kind words.

I shall be watching RT (Russian TV) to see how----

I want to get a handle on what is happening in Russia re the position of The Russian Orthodox Church and Putin’s Government. Are we witnessing something that looks like an ‘unholy alliance’ between Church and State, or is it that I am watching Western sourced TV news reports that are not telling us the full story? Come on Russian readers--- tell us what is happening. ‘If you can’t, then I assume that you are frightened to express your opinion online. It is not a ‘brave new world’ after all. Tell me I am wrong.
We have seen other countries where the religious parties are basically in control. I would not have believed that possible in Russia. What a turnaround from the old Soviet Union.
MMM—it seems that power corrupts and that sometimes strange bedfellows are the order of the day in order to maintain power.
What say you my Russian friends?

Asset sales--- where to from here?

John Key looked decidedly uncomfortable as he fronted the cameras on TV last night. No amount of posturing could camouflage the fact THAT HIS Government has at least suffered a reversal in his plans to partially sell off State Assets.
There has been a good deal of opposition to his plans but it finally took the actions of the NZ Maori Council to slow down the process. JK says that he needs time to ‘consult’ with Iwi but the fact remains that now he is in a position whereby he may be trying to sell assets in election year.
All this means that the opposition to the sales process can now gather its forces and forge alliances between like-minded ‘end-result’ groups to stop the process altogether.
One way to go will be to acquire enough signatures to force a ‘non-binding’ referendum. That needs to get a move on because we want it before the 2014 election. If the result of the referendum clearly portrays a high level of opposition to the sales, then no government can comfortably proceed without ‘electoral fall-out.’
Now is the time to build momentum and to keep the pressure on. That is when the cracks will appear (read Peter Dunne) and the ship will sink.
Maybe there’s hope yet. Keep these State Assets. My Granddad would be turning in his grave.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Queen Street--two very different worlds.

Whether you are a tourist or a local, you need to treat Queen Street as two very different worlds. It is all about the timing as to when you decide to visit the ‘golden mile.’ During the day it is busy with workers and shoppers and it feels safe. The behaviours of the people are fine and the police hardly need to show more than a presence. Sure, the street is not quite the quality shopping experience we associated it with the past, but it is doing its best to reinvent itself with up-market shops scattered along its length. For a more ‘label-fuelled’ shopping excursion, maybe you should head to New Market or some of the better malls in the suburbs. Still, it has the advantage of ‘kissing the harbour’ and promises the outer Gulf just past Rangitoto Island.
After dark, most of the people on the street leave for the suburbs, but an increasing number head for the apartment belt that now inhabits the fringe (or even on the street) of the main district. Whether they hang around, way below their tiny apartments is anyone’s guess. Perhaps they don’t, for a very good reason.
As the shadows deepen and most of the shops close, a transformation occurs. Yes, some visitors eat their fill in the restaurants and movie-goers wander around before and after their chosen offerings. Gradually, and then with a growing momentum the nature of the crowd changes. The age of the newbies goes down and feeling changes as the alcohol partaking increases. After mid-night, there are less elderly faces, and those who remain move around cautiously with visages showing disapproval of what they are witnessing.
They dare not say anything because any respect that the imbibers had for old people rapidly retreats to another place in their minds. The said minds operate with less and less functionality until by the wee small hours, an entirely different world has taken hold on the street.
If anyone unlucky enough to be heading for an early start to their work day or someone wanting a kick-start to their day, having risen from one of the apartments, then they need to watch their step. They will need radar-like vision, because the street will be strewn with sleeping bodies, sometimes in bus shelters and in alcoves or on the very footpaths the ‘walkers’ are traversing. They will need to avoid the vomit, some of which is produced live, in front of their eyes and God knows what other substances.
Some of the revellers have not finished their ‘city-visit.’ Indeed they are intent on destroying one another, over some imagined or perhaps real insult, thrown casually from an inebriated mouth. Fights are common, most not too serious, because the low-lifes are incapable of anything of substance. The police may differ in their view about the fights. They have had to clean up the human wastage from the fights and vomiting and general flotsam that inhabits the street.
Even after the sun has made an appearance, the streets have to attempt another transformation. As workers and sober visitors arrive, for a while the two worlds coexist. The night people slink away and the street cleaners do their thing. Queen Street almost looks normal.
Is this what we want for what should be our premier shopping and entertainment area in Auckland?

Friday, August 31, 2012

Spooky billboard brings one complaint so down it comes!

PC bullshit--- What else can I say. Spookers is a ‘horror’ theme park in South Auckland. It is very popular and some even say there is ‘more there than meets the eye.’ I don’t know about that but what I do know is that the company has had a billboard in Parnell for a few months and it caused no problem. It is sort of graphic but how would it get the point across if it didn’t. It was even R16 but I don’t know if that was just a harmless ploy to get people to read it.
It seems that one [person found the billboard so offensive that they could not drive down the road and that it upset kids. If that was true, how is it that we have not had more complaints?
Let’s wrap our kids up in cotton wool. Hell, I’m not talking about stopping kids’ from climbing tress here, just a picture on a billboard. I am sure that comics and cartoons on Disney Channel are probably just as graphic.
Why is it that the Complaints Authority upheld the complaint? Why are we allowing such a wimpy response? I feel for the kids in the family of the complainant’s family. They must live a boring life, shielded from all potential harm, mollycoddled to the extreme. Of course I don’t know that. They may be just a normal family with values that they hold true.
 But come on--- give us a break. They will be banning KFC adverts soon because the chickens get eaten!