Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Here's the Prince of the Provinces of a self titled
now Martua of Mining Shane Jones. Drill, Baby, Drill. How
excited are you about Trump's election? Does this spell the
end of wokeism around the world? Change Oones.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
He's broken the back of all these fairy tales, social engineering,
woke excessiveness, and it had to happen. And the fact
that he's put together an extraordinary coalition of different ethnic
groups and he swept the board. And I have to
say I was wrong when I thought that he would
(00:36):
not win the popular vote. But on the matter of
vote today I'm down in mudy hicku heep's health is
about to speaking in the cargo now.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
It's good to see you going to war against pronouns.
I think they should be banned. If you've got a
name like Brian, you don't need a he or a
hymn behind your name.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Well that just shows how far the elite power culture
nestled in the bureaucracy in Wellington has moved away from
the garden variety challenges that Kiwi Household's face. I don't
want anyone communicating with me as a minister or a politician,
whether he or she or they are them. And more importantly,
(01:20):
I don't care if you're a Catholic in atheists, I
don't care what your background is. I want you to
do your job. And I just feel that the bureaucracy
has mandated these minority concerns and they've ended up alienating
the majority of kiwi's which is why New Zealand First
is the only party in politics that has some resemblance
to the voters who sent Trump to Washington.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
Well, Trump's all about America first. You and Winston are
about New Zealand First. Could you be the next Trump?
I mean whenst might be around forever? Seane Jones, No, no, no.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
We regard our leader as Ema Green and he's going
to be standing at the next election. But you know,
I think Baron Righte about New Zealand First. A New
Zealand First equals economic sovereignty, New Zealand First equals national
sovereign are resilience, New Zealand First, Hapoo second, New Zealand First.
Gang's last a distant, distant, faint echo at the bottom.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
Of the long drop talking about your man Trump. You
were on fire in the house yesterday. You were calling
the greens the cabbage patch kids. Great analogy there, But
you said Trump has put the tetrapod of wokeism to
the sword, And I had to look up Shane Jones
because I haven't got as good a grasp on the
English language as you. What a tetrapod is? Isn't it
(02:38):
like a four legged animal or beast?
Speaker 2 (02:41):
Yeah, it's a four legged critter, and let's place it
four legs at the greens and labor have popularized. Number
one is treachery they closed down the refinery. Number two
is duplicity, they closed down the oil and gas industry.
And number three is a un corn kisses because they
(03:01):
seem to believe that climatism is the new religion we
all have to adhere to. And number four is irrelevance
because they've made themselves so marginal that they'll never ever
enjoy power for as long as they extole pronouns. But
progress of an economic, social, and community nature.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Now I'm starting to feel sorry for you, know, your
garden variety random frog or multicolored skink, because their very
existence is under threat by you, because you're going to
bulldoze them, or drill them up or bury them somewhere
when you build a road.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
Well, the brend dorwins costs another told nigh on to
six million dollars because of frog policies. We don't have
six million dollars at a time when the frogs are
in the one hundreds, if not thousands. And quite frankly,
if you want to breed some frogs, just play a
cocky who breeds cows? Ostriches emuse they know they've give
(03:57):
them a bit of money. They'll said work out how
to breed some of these supposedly endangered species. We've ended
up weaponizing, deifying, and quite frankly, moving species protection to
a point it's holding the ability of us to deliver
infrastructure and a cost in a cost effective manner. And
I've got every right to pull that ideology out because
(04:20):
the people who hide behind weaponizing frogs and elevating skinks
as if there's some sort of religious icon are really
opposed to development. They want to thrust us back into
some sort of climate ideological riddle sort of I don't know,
pre colonial existence.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
Now I see your Fast Track Approvals Bill as getting
its second reading, and this is quoting you again, Shane Jones.
You say the genius of the spill. Very humble of
you to say that the genius of the spell is
it represents a one stop shop. You could do a
trump and say this is a beautiful bill, a beautiful bill.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
Ah.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Oh, well, I've got alf sort of honed there in
Saint Stephen's School in the nineteen seventies, where you needed
a quick tongue if you weren't a good rugby player.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
And we did do a bit of boxing, and the
coach always said to me, Shane, you've got a very
strong chin. But by the time you landed to punch
your opponents on the other side of the ring.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Were you a good rugby player at school? No?
Speaker 2 (05:23):
Very average, very average. We had some great rugby players.
We had Kyle Baker on the Mary or Blecks. To
know who you Clark got on the Mary or bless
I was a very average rugby player, but I toiled
away in the front row, but knew that I would
never grace the fields of rugby greatness such as Richie McCall.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
Okay, Shane, you and I are the same generation. We
both went to high school secondary school in the seventies.
Of course, in the seventies we also had Dame Fena
Cooper walking the length of the country or half the
length of the country, I can't quite remember, but they
in those days, I think they walked the whole way,
didn't they.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
Ah. Yes, this is not a ki khoi. This is
a Khara Khoi. And more importantly, it's a rallying, marshaling
event to try and expand the Maldi party. And it's
built upon Marxist principles of identity politics in trying to
bet little and undermine the right wing of politics. But
(06:24):
they've met their match in Mamtua because I know the language,
I know the culture, and I was there when Dame
Tinner actually came to Saint Stephen's school in nineteen seventy five,
and in fact, in nineteen seventy six, I was a
school orator who greeted her on the Marii known as Tepuaer,
named after the famous Maldi matriarch from the King movement.
So I don't need any whipper snappers, and I don't
(06:46):
need any latter day saints who've only discovered that they're
Maldi half a dozen years ago. I'm the true blue
Kiwi who's very proud of a Ewe Fuka Pappa and
is bilingual. And I'm not going to cow I'm not
going to be shouted down and to engaging with the
protesters when they come to light only, but I'll have
no tolerance for the gangs. Gangs should not use Draga,
(07:09):
tahifaro or protesters as human shields for their criminality.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
Are you concerned at the coverage the haikoy is getting
on our two network news channels television channels I'm talking
about We've got reporters marching along beside them, almost acting
as cheerleaders.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
Well, I think we've got too many reporters that are
hoping that there'll be a spirit of some sort of
lynch mob emerge in the progress of the march. I
think it's wrong that so much time and effort has
been dedicated by publicly funded media. For example, I'm in
christ I'm in the cargo today. This is a national
(07:50):
meeting of all the community trusts, and I'm seeing a
whole lot of events down here and engagements. And why
isn't the media covering the long suffering regions that generate
quite frankly the wealth of the country. But no, they're
looking for this sort of low blow instant dutcha sort
of politics that sadly is on display every day as
(08:15):
ordinary keys get hacked off with the inconvenience of the
organizers of the Hekoi March one to.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Quickly finish on. I'm surprised you're not in Azerbaijan for
cop out or cop twenty nine didn't get off to
a great start this conference. When the President said or
was a gift from God, he sounds a bit like you.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
While oil and gas fuels that part of the world,
that event in Azerbaijan, Baku, Baku was actually a city,
a major area that played a great role in the
Great Game when the British were active with their spies
and soldiers in that part of the world. Given that
it's close to Russia. My advice to Chloe who's over there,
(08:59):
is behave yourself and don't try spreading your misinformation and
hysteria that we have to sadly put up with on
a regular basis here in New Zealand. And perhaps you'll
find a job somewhere in those distant climbs and stop
bothering my good self.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Change Hones. Prince of the Province is self titled Marsua
of mining. Enjoy the rest of your day in the
Deep South with the good folk down there.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
Do you want to make