Famous surfer dog Bosco makes a splash at Waitangi

Source: Radio New Zealand

The man behind surfer dog Bosco, Dylan Bacher, and his “equally spirited” companion Treasure. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Bosco the French bulldog, known for ripping it up on his surfboard, returned to the moana in Paihia this Waitangi Day, flying the He Whakaputanga flag before the annual waka celebrations.

Now five years old, Bosco the French bulldog was joined by younger companion Treasure, an 18-month-old French bulldog, who is also learning to ride the waves.

Owner Dylan Bacher said being part of the day was about showing up and supporting the kaupapa.

“Mainly for the youth, mainly just keeping it simple and actually being a part of everything,” he told RNZ. “Seeing the culture and supporting it – keeping that culture real.”

Bosco and Treasure paddled out, as crowds lined the shoreline and kaihoe prepared to launch, with treaty grounds officials telling RNZ about 35,000 people that descended on Waitangi on Friday.

Bacher said the atmosphere on the water was something special.

“Going through with Bosco was amazing, like it always is, and hearing everyone’s supportiveness,” he said.

“Watching the waka come out, that’s just something special to be a part of and actually see from out on the water.”

After coming ashore, the dogs were met with cheers from tamariki and whānau.

“It’s unbelievable how much love these two dogs get,” Bacher said. “The kids especially, we could hear them from the shoreline calling out to us.”

Surfer dogs Bosco and Treasure, and owner Dylan are famous on social media, with more than 930k likes and counting on TikTok. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

The whānau, known as the ‘Pirate Crew’ or ‘Bosco’s Pirate Life’ on social media, have more than 52,000 followers on TikTok and more than 93,000 likes. Some of their most popular videos of Bosco riding the waves have reached millions of views.

Online, some have jokingly referred to Bosco as ‘Ngāti Kuri’ – a playful nod to the Māori word for dog, and Far North iwi Ngāti Kurī.

“He’s in there supporting everything and little Treasure too,” Bacher said. “She’s learning by watching Bosco and just hopping on the board herself.”

Bacher said he pays close attention to the dogs’ behaviour and only takes them out on the surfboard when they are comfortable.

“You can’t make them do that,” he said. “Bosco just hops on the board himself and now Treasure does too.”

Dylan Bacher said he loves bringing joy to peoples faces – especially rangatahi. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

He said the message behind their presence at Waitangi remained the same as in previous years.

“Keep it real, keep supporting each other,” he said. “Waitangi Day is a beautiful day, when everyone is supportive of each other.”

Bacher said coming together under values of aroha (love) and kotahitanga (unity) was especially important for rangatahi.

“The world’s a hard place at the moment and we’ve got to keep making it better for the youth,” he said. “We need to learn to be together, look after the world and respect what we’ve got.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/08/famous-surfer-dog-bosco-makes-a-splash-at-waitangi/

Winter Olympics live updates: Kiwis Lyon Farrell, Rocco Jamieson, Dane Menzie in Big Air snowboad final

Source: Radio New Zealand

[lIveblog] https://rnz.liveblog.pro/lb-rnz/blogs/6986ba0c70efc265ee8d3bfb/index.html

New Zealand will have three athletes in the men’s Big Air snowboard final, as it chases its first medals at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics in Italy this morning.

Lyon Farrell, Rocco Jamieson and Dane Menzie all qualified inside the top 12 on Thursday (NZT), with Farrell the highest-placed in seventh. He edged teammate Jamieson (eighth), with Menzies sneaking through as the 11th qualifier.

Japanese Hiroto Ogiwara was top qualifier, followed by Italian Ian Matteoli and Japan’s Kira Kimura.

Join us at 7.30am Saturday for our live coverage.

Lyon Farrell qualifies seventh for the Winter Olympics big air snowboard final. AFP

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/08/winter-olympics-live-updates-kiwis-lyon-farrell-rocco-jamieson-dane-menzie-in-big-air-snowboad-final/

Government examines seismic risks at schools, starting in Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prefab classrooms at Wellington Girls’ College, used because of its old and earthquake-prone buildings. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

A big government project has begun to improve understanding of seismic risks at schools, starting with the Welllington region.

Seismic risk assessments for buildings generally undergo regular shifts in what is required, key in particular was research into the 2016 Kaikōura quake and, more recently, government policy aimed at lightening the costs on owners of quake strengthening.

A Treasury report suggested two tranches of the new school seismic projects were approved in December by the Cabinet, with each worth more than $100 million and each at the stage of a detailed business case.

The Education Ministry confirmed to RNZ it was “undertaking preliminary work to better understand seismic risk across parts of the school property portfolio”.

“This work is focused on improving information and informing future options, and is being considered in stages,” said chief executive for school property Jerome Sheppard.

The two tranches were on a list of 23 big projects from roads to hospital wards to defence housing that totalled more than $25 billion in forecast spending over the next four years.

The two were categorised as medium-to-high-risk investments.

“We are looking first at Greater Wellington, where seismic risk is generally better understood, and where assessment and planning work is more progressed,” said Sheppard.

Several Wellington schools, such as Wellington Girls and Onslow College, have gone through years of angst and disruption for students over earthquake assessments and upgrade projects.

“This work is at an early stage,” Sheppard said. “Wellington schools continue to operate as normal and are aware of the seismic status of their buildings.

“Any future decisions about next steps would be subject to Cabinet consideration.”

Five months ago, the government introduced a new “risk-based” approach to earthquake strengthening to supercede rules brought in after 2016, which it said would save building owners nationwide more than $8.2b.

In 2022, the Building Research Association and the ministry did structural testing into the seismic capacity of buildings commonly used in schools nationwide. This showed that “the buildings are inherently resilient”.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/08/government-examines-seismic-risks-at-schools-starting-in-wellington/

Lessons in decolonisation – Minto draws parallels between NZ and Gaza injustices

Asia Pacific Report

Speakers contrasted and condemned settler colonialism strategies in Aotearoa New Zealand and Israel’s illegal occupation and genocide in Palestine at a feisty solidarity rally in Auckland Tāmaki Makaurau today — a day after Waitangi Day, the national holiday marking the 1840 signing of Te Tititi o Waitangi between 46 chiefs and the British crown.

Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) co-chair John Minto was one of the speakers after attending an earlier rally at Kerikeri and then driving 240 km with four fellow activists to join the Auckland protest.

“Colonisation in the present resonates with every Māori family. So here we are in that process of decolonisation, a slow process — it’s happening within Māoridom, and it’s happening in the Pākehā world,” Minto told the crowd.

“I was so delighted that when the Treaty Principles Bill came in we had that huge hikoī in Wellington,” he said.

“For those of you who know Wellington, we were in Manners Street towards the end of the march.

“And we got word that the rally had started in Parliament. We still had a kilometre to go. The streets were jammed with people, Pākehā, Māori, migrant people — Indigenous people from all over the world, all saying ‘no’.

“New Zealand is not a European country. We have an Indigenous people here and we want to work in partnership through the Treaty of Waitangi.

‘Weak prime minister’
“And what we have now, again, we’ve got a government that is — we have a weak prime minister, and we have got leaders of strong rightwing parties, that’s Winston Peters from New Zealand First, and that other guy from ACT . . .

“You know, whatever his name is . . .” Minto said jokingly. The crowd reeled of David Seymour’s name with a mocking tone and cries of “one term government” with a general election due on November 7.

Janfrie Wakim at today’s pro-Palestine rally . . . “All settler-colonial states seek more territory and fewer Indigenous people by ‘ethnic-cleansing’.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

Among other speakers was Janfrie Wakim, a longtime advocate for Palestine and one of the founders of the Auckland-based Palestine Human Rights Campaign founded in the 1970s, which later evolved into the PSNA in 2013.

She gave a “high fives” message of praise for protesters supporting the cause of Palestine justice and self-determination in this 122th week of demonstrations since October 2023.

Wakim also lauded the “kaimahi” — the workers who turned up each week to set up and pack up.

She said the colonisation of Aotearoa and Palestine had similarities — “but also some differences and decolonising is our task here in Aotearoa and in Palestine.”

Wakim paid tribute to Annette Sykes — “a wahine toa and heroic lawyer” advocate for Māori iwi — who wrote recently “decolonising is not erasing history but rewriting who controls the narrative”.

Protester Craig Tynan holds up his “The beast must be stopped” placard at today’s pro-Palestinian rally in Auckland. Image: Asia Pacific Report

‘Enriching empires’
“Classic colonialists set out to exploit resources and enrich their empires,” Wakim said.

“European imperial powers dominated the past 500 years and they exited when their empires collapsed,” she said, naming Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Portugal and Spain.

However, she added, “settler colonialism is different — it remains and is ongoing. All settler-colonial states seek more territory and fewer Indigenous people by ‘ethnic-cleansing’.”

“Settler colonialists sought to recreate Europe in the lands they invaded and they needed to eliminate the local native populations living there — think Australia.

“That is the story of Palestine.

“Settler colonialism is a structure not an event. And Zionists built their structure on that platform.”

Wakim said early Zionists knew well that Palestine was populated. They knew that the land had to be “emptied” to allow European Jews to establish their settler-colonial project.

Nakba refugees
She referred to the 1948 Nakba — “the catastrophe” — when 750,000 Palestinians were expelled by Israeli militias. They became refugees in Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria but with a UN-backed right to return.

More than 500 Palestinian villages were destroyed and their land stolen by the Israelis.

Wakim also told of the Zionists’ racist narrative dehumanising the Palestinians and their relationship to the land”.

“But nothing compares with what Israel is doing today — the brutal, ongoing genocide and ethnic cleansing we have been witnessing and continue to witness.”

Wakim said the Zionist structure was built on a weak foundation that was crumbling — “not fast enough but the cracks are widening as is Israel’s reliance on one superpower which itself is in decline”.

She said Palestine and Palestinians remained steadfast and resisting the injustices.

“As here in Aotearoa, they are actively working across the world in solidarity with others to expose the lies and change the narrative and unite people of all nations, ethnicities and religions.

BDS movement growing
“BDS — [the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement] is growing slowly but surely.”

She said Israel was imploding and she called on New Zealand to renew its “lead on social justice issues”.

“We may be small, but we can be powerful,” she added.

Another speaker, kaiāwhina Kerry Sorensen-Tyrer, spoke of her encounter that day at Te Komititanga Square with three IDF soldiers from Israel “holidaying” in New Zealand. After a brief exchange, she photographed them and reminded the crowd to be vigilant and to report information to the PSNA’s IDF hotline.

“We do not want you in Aotearoa,” she said of the soldiers and their role in a genocidal war on Gaza to loud cheers from the crowd.

A “NZ government – your silence is complicity with Israeli genocide” placard at today’s protest in Auckland. Image: Asia Pacific Report

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/08/lessons-in-decolonisation-minto-draws-parallels-between-nz-and-gaza-injustices/

George Saunders: Animosity on social media is ‘not entirely genuine’

Source: Radio New Zealand

In general, people who read and write books work actively to increase their respect for and confidence in one another’s basic goodness, says American writer George Saunders.

Reading social media posts, on the other hand, through which big media programmes people for partisan discussion, kind of does the opposite.

“[It’s our] systems of communication that are making this animosity… I think that people are in some ways much more open and affectionate than the public discourse would lead us to believe,” Saunders tells Saturday Morning.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/08/george-saunders-animosity-on-social-media-is-not-entirely-genuine/

Isaac Herzog is accused of inciting genocide in Gaza. He shouldn’t be welcomed to Australia

Writing in The Guardian on Thursday, UN Commissioner Chris Sidoti laid out the reasons Israeli President Isaac Herzog should not be welcome in Australia, and urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to correct his terrible mistake in inviting him.

COMMENTARY: By Chris Sidoti

It’s not too late for Anthony Albanese to withdraw the invitation to the Israeli President, Isaac Herzog. It should be withdrawn for three reasons.

The first is institutional: The President of Israel is a constitutional role that is head of state but not part of the political or military chain of command. The office is similar to that of Australia’s Governor-General, though with somewhat more power.

As head of state, the president embodies and represents the state of Israel.

Commissioner Chris Sidoti . . . “It could be the most divisive state visit to Australia since that of US president Lyndon B Johnson in October 1966 when the Vietnam war was at its height and Australian soldiers were being killed.” Image: johnmenadue.com

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has found that Israel unlawfully occupies the Palestinian territories, has unlawfully purported to annex parts of the Palestinian territories and unlawfully plants, encourages and maintains unlawful settlements in Palestinian territories. The court is also trying a case in which Israel is accused of genocide.

The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants against the Israeli Prime Minister and former Defence Minister, citing allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The same court is investigating other senior Israeli military and political leaders on similar charges.

The UN Commission of Inquiry on the occupied Palestinian territory has found evidence of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocidal intent by Israeli leaders and recommended their prosecution. Israel is a rogue state whose head of state, its supreme representative, should not be permitted to visit Australia.

The second reason is about Herzog himself: The Commission of Inquiry has found that Herzog has incited genocide. Herzog made the statement that all Palestinians, “an entire nation”, are responsible for the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023.

The commission found that, because as president he is not part of the political or military chain of command, he was not responsible for war crimes or crimes against humanity. But the crime of incitement to genocide stands outside the chain of command. It can be committed by any individual. The commission recommended that he be investigated and prosecuted by the International Criminal Court.

For reasons of law, ethics and social cohesion, this divisive political visit by the Israeli President Isaac Herzog to Australia should be stopped. Image: johnmenadue.com

Herzog denies this and has qualified his statement, saying “there are many, many innocent Palestinians who don’t agree” with the actions of Hamas. But the UN commission said it viewed that as an effort “to deflect responsibility for the initial statement”.

He has been a vocal head of state and his words have been taken and repeated by Israeli soldiers. Someone who incites genocide does not satisfy the good character test for entering Australia. On the contrary, a person who incites genocide should be arrested on arrival and tried under Australian law and international law for the crime.

Traditionally, a head of state has a special immunity when visiting another country. However, there is now strong legal argument that this immunity does not apply in relation to atrocity crimes, namely war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. Australia should not apply immunity in relation to these crimes.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry has previously rejected the commission’s report as “distorted and false”, and Herzog has said his comments have been taken out of context, noting he also said Israeli soldiers would follow international law.

The third reason for withdrawing the invitation relates to us, Australia, and our current situation: The Hanukah massacre on 14 December 2025 has shaken us all. It was an atrocity. Immediately political leaders across the spectrum expressed concerns for “social cohesion”. They said steps were needed to restore social cohesion and called for national unity at a time of crisis.

Eventually a royal commission was appointed for this purpose. And yet it’s hard to imagine a single event at this point in time more likely to harden national division and undermine social cohesion than a visit by the Israeli president. It could be the most divisive state visit to Australia since that of US president Lyndon B Johnson in October 1966 when the Vietnam war was at its height and Australian soldiers were being killed.

What was the Prime Minister thinking when he invited Herzog? In the days after the massacre, he no doubt thought inviting Herzog was a good way to express support for the traumatised Jewish community.

But Herzog is a political leader, not a religious leader. He is divisive in Israel and his visit could be divisive in Australia. If the Prime Minister wanted to support the Jewish community, he would have done better to invite a respected Jewish religious leader.

For reasons of law, ethics and social cohesion, this divisive political visit should be stopped.

The prime minister is widely acclaimed for his willingness to recognise mistakes and change course before it’s too late. He should recognise that he made a terrible mistake, in the emotional, traumatic days after the massacre, in inviting Herzog to visit.

It’s not too late to correct the mistake.

Chris Sidoti is Australian and a Commissioner on the UN Human Rights Council’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including East Jerusalem, and Israel. Republished from The Guardian on 5 February 2026 and from Pearls and Irritations today with permission from the editor.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/07/isaac-herzog-is-accused-of-inciting-genocide-in-gaza-he-shouldnt-be-welcomed-to-australia/

Auckland FC hold on for defiant win over Sydney FC

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sam Cosgrove of Auckland FC celebrates his goal with team-mates Francis de Vries and Louis Verstraete in their 1-0 win over Sydney FC at Mount Smart Stadium in Auckland, on Saturday. Photosport

Auckland FC have regained the men’s A-League competition with a gutsy 1-0 win over Sydney FC on Saturday.

It was a game of drama, with Auckland bouncing back after going three matches without a win.

Coach Steve Corica had demanded more focus at the back end of their matches after they surrendered early leads in their last couple, and they showed plenty of defiance to hold on after Englishman Sam Cosgrove put them in front in the 20th minute.

It was his seventh goal of the season, and came from a melee in the Sydney goal area with Cosgrove’s left foot stab doing just enough to put his side on the scoreboard.

Cosgrove had a much better shot at goal in the 60th minute when he headed what looked likely to be a brilliant goal from a pinpoint Marlee François cross only to be denied by a flying save from Sydney goalkeeper Harrison Devenish-Meares.

The goalie produced some other great saves against a fired-up Auckland attack, but he had to bow to redeemed Auckland keeper Michael Woud who didn’t let any of Sydney’s numerous attempts through.

Woud had made costly errors in his previous two outings and only got to play after Oli Sail’s knee injury ended Sail’s season last weekend.

“We’ve been going 1-0 up a lot lately and then been conceding goals late on, so I am really pleased to get a clean sheet,” Corica told Sky Sport.

“Sometimes you have to do it the hard way, but I think that was a really good performance from our boys.”

While Auckland FC sit top of the points ladder with the win, Newcastle Jets can quickly regain it if they beat Adelaide on Sunday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/auckland-fc-hold-on-for-defiant-win-over-sydney-fc/

Gutsy solo attack wins George Bennett the national road cycling title

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nelson cyclist George Bennett salutes as he wins the New Zealand Elite Road Cycling Championship near Cambridge, on Saturday. Russell Jones

Veteran George Bennett has won his second men’s national road cycling championship near Cambridge, with a strong attacking ride.

The 35-year-old Nelson cyclist with an impressive international CV was in tears after his victory.

“This win means a lot. I have had a really rough 18 months so this means the world. To finally win a race again – with my friends, my family, my team-mates and Bewls all here.”

Bewls is former pro cyclist Sam Bewley, director of Bennett’s NSN Cycling World Tour team, which has sprung from the controversy involving the former Israel Premier Tech team. It was the subject of pro-Palestinian protests which disrupted some major races last year. These championships were the first victory for the new team.

It was Bewley who encouraged Bennett to attack strongly. Part of a small lead group, he pushed hard with three of the 20 laps remaining and was never in danger from that point.

“I think I rode a really smart race. I picked the initial move and we rode well. It was a strong group with some really under-rated guys. We just stayed really smart,” Bennett said.

“I got the call from Bewls to open up the race early and went with 30kms to go. It is always a race within a race when you go early like that and I just had really good legs.

“Most of the time that move doesn’t work, but at least next time it doesn’t work out I can remember this one.”

Bennett won the elite men title by 41 seconds from recent Tour of Southland winner Josh Burnett, with Matthew Wilson four seconds back in third, and James Gardner close up and easily taking the under-23 crown.

It was Bennett’s second national title after he won in Cambridge five years ago.

“I am really proud to win this and take the jersey back to wear on the World Tour,” he said.

“My big target is the Tour de France this year so to be able to wear the jersey in something like that would be special. It hasn’t sunk in yet. It’s awesome.”

It was a tough race with 28 of the 71 starters failing to finish.

Ally Wollaston won the women’s road race on Friday.

Results:

Elite men, 188kms: George Bennett (NSN Cycling, Nelson) 4:09.45, 1; Josh Burnett (Burgos Burpellet BH, Invercargill) at 41s, 2; Matthew Wilson (Advanced Personnel Cycling, Auckland) at 45s, 3.

Under-23: 188kms: James Gardner (Whoosh-NZ Cycling Project, Dunedin) 4:10.43, 1; Josh Heissenbuttel (Counties Manukau) at 3:27, 2; Lewis Bower (Groupama FDJ, Auckland) at 3:40, 3.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/gutsy-solo-attack-wins-george-bennett-the-national-road-cycling-title/

SH2 closed near Kaitoke after three-vehicle crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pretoria Gordon / RNZ

SH2 is closed in both directions near Kaitoke, north of Wellington, following a three-vehicle crash this afternoon.

Police said they were notified of the crash at about 4pm. It occurred at the intersection of SH2 and Waterworks Road, between Upper Hutt and the Wairarapa.

Emergency services are at the scene, and the road remains blocked while they respond to the incident.

NZTA Waka Kotahi said people travelling between Upper Hutt and the Wairarapa should delay their journeys, as no local road detours are available.

Motorists are being advised to avoid the area if possible and to check the Journey Planner for the latest travel information.

There was no immediate word on injuries or when the road is expected to reopen.

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Emergency responses, traffic jams for two sections of SH1 in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

(File photo) RNZ / REECE BAKER

Disruptions are creating disruptions and backlogs on two sections of major Auckland motorways – SH1 near Takanini and the northern motorway.

SH1 near Takanini

A crash creating a road hazard and the emergency services response blocked two southbound lanes on State Highway 1, before the Takanini off-ramp, the Transport Agency said.

There was no indication of how long the lanes would be closed for and drivers were advised to allow extra time for delays.

Northern motorway

Further north, all but one lane in both directions of the northern motorway section of State Highway 1 were blocked, due to a vehicle on fire, police said on Saturday afternoon.

The motorway was blocked near Moir Hill Road, as emergency services responded, but one northbound lane was still open.

Motorists were asked to take alternative routes.

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Isn’t there a better way to combat inflation than hiking interest rates? Ask Susan

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ money correspondent Susan Edmunds. RNZ

Got questions? RNZ has a podcast, Got questions? RNZ has a podcast, [www.rnz.co.nz/podcast/no-stupid-questions No Stupid Questions], with Susan Edmunds.

We’d love to hear more of your questions about money and the economy. You can send through written questions, like these ones, but – even better – you can drop us a voice memo to our email questions@rnz.co.nz

I have often wondered why the Reserve Bank’s primary weapon to combat inflation is mortgage rates.

Firstly, not everyone has a mortgage and, secondly, the well-off and the young are less likely to have mortgages. In general terms, would it not be better to increase KiwiSaver contributions in the short term, then relax them when inflation falls?

Making KiwiSaver compulsory would be necessary, but have a wider effect generally. Putting up mortgage rates simply recycles money back into the banking system.

During the latest increase/decrease cycle the banks’ profits rose significantly. A temporary KiwiSaver increase means people’s savings increase and the money is not simply lost in the current system.

This has been suggested a few times, including by former Revenue Minister David Parker, when he was Labour’s finance spokesperson, but so far, it’s never progressed any further.

I totally understand the reasoning. It would be great to think that my KiwiSaver balance was going up during times when we needed to get inflation under control, rather than that I was just paying more money to the bank in interest.

There are a few reasons why people don’t back the idea though.

One is that it would hit lower-income people hardest. Many are renting, so they are not currently affected by rising home loan interest rates.

Many of them aren’t contributing to KiwiSaver as it is. If we made it compulsory and increased the contribution rate, they could suffer.

People who owned a home with a mortgage would stand to gain the most.

There are also concerns that, if we ended up moving contributions according to what is needed for the economy, it could be harder to get them back to the level required to give people the optimum savings outcome.

Ideally, you want people to save an amount that gets them to the sort of lump sum they want to save in retirement – not the amount that inflation dictates.

Those are some of the arguments. I do think the idea has merit and it may be discussed again, if we move towards compulsion in the future.

I reached retirement age a few years back and stopped my KiwiSaver contributions, but continued to work and therefore my employer stopped their contributions.

I suggested that he should increase my wages by 3 percent, as the company no longer needed to pay contributions to my KiwiSaver. Years earlier, we did not get a wage rise, as the company’s 3 percent contribution was our wage increase, so I suggested it was only fair that the company increases my wage now by 3 percent, as I was no longer getting the contribution to my KiwiSaver.

Of course I did not get the 3 percent, which was my expected outcome. I thought this was just an interesting thing for you to note.

That’s right, at the moment, employers do not have to keep contributing to the accounts of people who are over 65.

It does seem unfair. Someone doing the same job can end up effectively paid less.

The government contribution also stops, but that makes more sense to me. If you are getting NZ Super, it is reasonable to not also receive the $261 a year from the government into KiwiSaver.

I would like to know how to make some modest inheritance money grow (not mine) and safely (again, as it’s not mine), even in government-guaranteed investments (if this is still a thing or how to tell).

Rather than get into the details as to whose money it is, I am a signatory to their NZ bank account. I have no clue about investing, but want to make their money grow, rather than let it sit there, and to make up for the occasional withdrawals, as it is moderately dwindling.

We try not to use the money in their savings account, but make occasional transfers to their everyday account, if they are short on funds. Additionally, what happens when they die?

Our lawyer created a will some time ago, but didn’t get back to me last year, when I emailed and asked them to remind me of the process when they die. I don’t have final say of their assets – that goes to my sisters.

The will was created by a major Wellington law firm.

If you have the money in a savings account at the moment, there are a few ways you could get a better return on it.

You could look at term deposits. They are very low risk, which it sounds like you are looking for.

You might consider a cash or conservative managed fund. You might get some balance movement in a conservative fund, but it should deliver better returns than a savings account over time.

You mention government guarantees. If you are looking for government-backed investments, you can buy Kiwi Bonds, which are basically lending money to the government.

At the moment, a Kiwi Bond with a one-year maturity pays 2.5 percent.

We also now have a Depositor Compensation Scheme, which gives you up to $100,000, if your money is in a savings account, transaction account or term deposit with an organisation like a bank or finance company that fails.

I would really recommend getting some advice on the best thing to do with the money though.

In terms of what happens when the person dies, Public Trust principal trustee Michelle Pope says the account will pass to any joint accountholders and won’t be part of the person’s estate.

If there is no joint accountholder and only authorised signatories, this ends when the account holder dies.

“The bank account then forms part of the deceased person’s estate and will be administered accordingly.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/isnt-there-a-better-way-to-combat-inflation-than-hiking-interest-rates-ask-susan/

Road blocked, State Highway 2, Kaitoke

Source: New Zealand Police

State Highway 2, at the intersection with Waterworks Road, is blocked in both directions after a crash.

Police were notified of the three-vehicle crash about 4pm.

The road is blocked while emergency services work at the scene.

There are no diversions in place.

Motorists are asked to delay travel if possible and consult Journey Planner for route advice.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/road-blocked-state-highway-2-kaitoke/

Environment Canterbury on site at wastewater discharge into Diamond Harbour Te Waipapa

Source: Environment Canterbury Regional Council

Environment Canterbury on site at wastewater discharge into Diamond Harbour Te Waipapa | Environment Canterbury

Environment Canterbury © 2026
Retrieved: 4:20pm, Sat 07 Feb 2026
ecan.govt.nz/get-involved/news-and-events/2026/environment-canterbury-on-site-at-wastewater-discharge-into-diamond-harbour-te-waipapa

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/environment-canterbury-on-site-at-wastewater-discharge-into-diamond-harbour-te-waipapa/

DOC calls to report entangled whale

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Date:  07 February 2026

DOC staff searched for the whale – most likely a humpback – to disentangle it but have not yet found it. It could have swum as far north along the coast as Picton or as far south as Christchurch.

DOC Operations Manager South Marlborough Stacey Wrenn is asking the public to contact DOC 0800 HOT (0800 362 468) if they see the whale. If anyone in Kaikōura has lost a craypot, please report it anonymously to DOC by the same phone number.

No one should attempt to cut the whale free themselves as this is very dangerous. Boaties spotting the whale should stay clear of it and avoid doing anything to disturb or harass the whale.

“Disentangling marine mammals is highly specialised and dangerous work,” Stacey says. “Under no circumstances should members of the public attempt to disentangle the whale or interact with it at all.

“Please provide as much location detail as you can (ideally GPS coordinates, time) and photos if you have them.”

Attempts to cut free entangled whales are only carried out when it is safe to do so. It requires sea conditions not being too rough and sufficient daylight hours, as the procedures can take several hours and it’s not safe to disentangle whales in darkness.

DOC appreciates the support of Ngāti Kuri and the local whale watching operators as it attempts to locate the whale.

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/doc-calls-to-report-entangled-whale/

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for February 7, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on February 7, 2026.

Jonathan Cook: The criminal elite exposed in the Epstein files are burying the truth
Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – COMMENTARY: By Jonathan Cook If you struggle to cope with the endless pressure to communicate in an ever-more connected world, spare a thought for the late serial paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The flood of three million documents released by the US Department of Justice last weekend confirm

View from The Hill: Angus Taylor circles Ley, as Liberals watch polling and negotiations with Nats
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Sunday’s Newspoll is being keenly awaited by federal Liberals as leadership aspirant Angus Taylor contemplates the timing of a challenge to Sussan Ley. With talks to try to get the federal Coalition together looking near collapse, Taylor danced around the

Whooping cough cases are at their highest level in 35 years – so why the surge?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Archana Koirala, Paediatrician and Infectious Diseases Specialist; Clinical Researcher, University of Sydney LSO Photo/Getty Images Australia is battling its biggest rise in whooping cough cases in 35 years. During 2024 and 2025 Australia recorded 82,513 whooping cough cases – the highest number since monitoring began in 1991.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/07/er-report-a-roundup-of-significant-articles-on-eveningreport-nz-for-february-7-2026/

Northland councils team up on local government reform

Source: Radio New Zealand

Far North Mayor Moko Tepania also chairs the Northland Maoyral Forum. Peter de Graaf/RNZ

Northland’s four councils are presenting a shared vision, following the proposal for local government reform.

Submissions on the Bills to replace the Resource Management Act close on Parliament’s website on 13 February. A consultation on the plan to replace regional councils with ‘combined territories boards’ is open until 20 February, through the Department of Internal Affairs website.

Consultation on whether the government should force them to cap rates increases to within a range of 2-4 percent a year will also end soon.

Local Democracy Reporting said the proposed changes could affect councils’ ability to increase rates above a defined threshold, local authorities’ planning remit, and the structure and function of all the regional councils.

Kaipara, Far North and Whangārei, along with the Northland Regional Council, are backing a ‘by Northland, for Northland’ approach.

They said the local government minister heard Northland councils were eager to engage early with the government and held a meeting with Simon Watts on Thursday, before Waitangi Day.

They aimed to demonstrate that, as local leaders, they could be trusted to deliver solutions that work on the ground.

“We support change, but we believe this must reflect Northland’s geography, our unique communities and iwi relationships,” Northland Mayoral Forum chair Moko Tepania said. “The focus must be on outcomes, rather than structure.”

Far North Mayor Tepania said Northland wanted to avoid a “one-size-fits-all” approach to local government reform.

“We are keen to start working with the government now on a collective response that works for our communities.”

Whangārei Mayor Ken Couper said Watts was encouraged by a united Northland.

“We believe that we have a moment in time now where, if we act with a common goal, we can make a real difference,” he said.

Watts said the meeting provided him with valuable insights and context on the challenges facing the region.

“I am encouraged by their recognition that we need to work differently to meet today’s challenges and their commitment to work together with the government on finding solutions that work.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/northland-councils-team-up-on-local-government-reform/

House Minority Leader Jefferies unleashes furious response to Trump ‘racist’ post

Source: Radio New Zealand

US House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images / AFP

US House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries has ripped into the US president, saying “f***k Donald Trump” in a social media clip, responding to a racist video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes that was shared on Trump’s Truth Social account.

Jeffries said the post, which sparked bipartisan outrage for its racist messaging, was intentional and launched a blistering personal attack on the president.

“This disgusting video posted by the so-called president was done intentionally,” Jeffries said. “F**k Donald Trump, and his vile, racist and malignant behaviour.

“This guy is an unhinged bottom feeder.”

The video Trump’s account shared late Thursday night – before it was removed hours later – briefly showed former president Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama with their faces superimposed on the bodies of apes, at the end of a longer clip promoting false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

Jeffries praised the Obamas as “brilliant, caring and patriotic Americans”, and said they “represent the best of this country”.

He also called on senior Republicans to publicly break with Trump, naming Senate Republican leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson, and urging them to denounce what he described as Trump’s repeated racist conduct.

“It’s time for John Thune, Mike Johnson and Republicans to denounce this serial fraudster who’s sitting at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave pretending to be the president of the United States,” Jeffries said.

The White House initially defended the post, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissing criticism as “fake outrage”, before later blaming a staffer for sharing the video and confirming it had been removed. Trump has not apologised.

The post prompted swift backlash from across the political spectrum. Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina called the video racist and urged Trump to remove it.

At the same time, New York Republicans Mike Lawler and Nick LaLota also publicly condemned the post and called for an apology.

Jeffries’ outburst comes against the backdrop of previous incidents in which Trump or members of his administration shared racially offensive or digitally altered content targeting Democrats, including imagery of Jeffries himself wearing a fake moustache and sombrero, which Jeffries has previously described as racist.

While Trump has a long history of reposting conspiratorial or inflammatory material online, he really deletes a post or acknowledges responsibility for it.

The Obamas have not commented publicly on the video. CNN has contacted their office for comment.

– CNN/RNZ

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/house-minority-leader-jefferies-unleashes-furious-response-to-trump-racist-post/

Navy vessel Canterbury stops in Tokelau to mark centenary

Source: Radio New Zealand

HMNZS Canterbury. Chris Weissenborn

The navy vessel Canterbury will stop off in Tokelau to mark the centenary of New Zealand administration of the territory on 11 February.

The multi-role ship is currently on a fuel stop in Samoa, as it begins ‘Operation Calypso’, focused on illegal fishing in the southwest Pacific.

Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro, staff from various government agencies and an officer from the Tokelauan National Disaster Management Office are on board, and will visit the atolls of Atafu, Nukunonu and Fakaofo.

Weather agency MetService received a request from Tokelau government agencies for observer training and will conduct a needs assessment, as well as servicing the Automatic Weather Station on Nukunonu.

A New Zealand police officer on board will take the opportunity to meet with their Tokelau counterparts during the trip.

After visiting the atolls, HMNZS Canterbury will return to Apia, where some passengers will disembark.

It will then sail to Raoul Island, where Air Force NH90 helicopters and flight crew and army personnel will help MetService and Earth Sciences New Zealand staff with upgrade and maintenance work on critical weather, tsunami and volcano monitoring equipment and facilities.

“Tokelau and Raoul Island are two examples of hard-to-reach places in our region, where carrying out tasks can be very logistically challenging” said Commander Joint Forces New Zealand Major General Rob Krushk.

“We’re pleased to be able to support the visit of Her Excellency the Rt Hon Dame Cindy Kiro and New Zealand Government agencies to deliver services and equipment to these areas through one of our regular South West Pacific deployments.”

The Canterbury will then return to New Zealand.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/navy-vessel-canterbury-stops-in-tokelau-to-mark-centenary/

New Zealand Governor-General’s visit to Tokelau

Source: Government House

The Governor-General of New Zealand, Rt Hon Dame Cindy Kiro, and Dr Richard Davies will travel to Tokelau from Samoa aboard HMNZS Canterbury on 10 February 2026, to mark the centenary of New Zealand administration of Tokelau on 11 February 2026.
Their Excellencies will visit each of Tokelau’s three atolls – Fakaofo, Nukunonu, and Atafu – and their programme on each atoll will include a welcome ceremony, meetings with Taupulega (councils of elders) and Fatupaepae (women’s groups), as well as visits to major infrastructure projects, including schools, hospitals, and renewable energy sites.
The Governor-General’s visit seeks to reaffirm the special bonds between New Zealand and Tokelau – a non-self-governing territory within the Realm of New Zealand. Please note that this advisory is accurate as of 7 February and may be subject to change.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/new-zealand-governor-generals-visit-to-tokelau/

Jonathan Cook: The criminal elite exposed in the Epstein files are burying the truth

Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific.

COMMENTARY: By Jonathan Cook

If you struggle to cope with the endless pressure to communicate in an ever-more connected world, spare a thought for the late serial paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The flood of three million documents released by the US Department of Justice last weekend confirm that Epstein spent an inordinate amount of time corresponding with the huge network of powerful acquaintances he had developed.

Emailing alone looks to have been almost a full-time job for him — and in a real sense, it was.

The personal attention he devoted to billionaires, royalty, political leaders, statesmen, celebrities, academics and media elites was how he kept himself at the heart of this vast network of power.

His address book was a who’s who of those who shape our sense of how the world ought to be run. But it was also critical to how he drew some of these same powerful figures deeper into his orbit, and into a world of debauched and exploitative private parties in New York and on his Caribbean island.

Apparently there are another three million documents still being withheld. Their contents, we must presume, are even more damning to the global elite cultivated by Epstein.

The more documents that come to light, the more a picture emerges of how Epstein was shielded from the consequences of his own depravity by this network of allies who either indulged his crimes, or actively participated in them.

Epstein’s modus operandi looked suspiciously like that of a gangland boss, who requires initiates to take part in a hit before they become fully fledged members of the mob. Complicity is the safest way to guarantee a conspiracy of silence.

Network of power
It is not just that the late paedophile financier was for decades hiding in plain sight. His network of friends and acquaintances were hiding with him, all assuming they were untouchable.

His abuse of young women and girls was not just a personal crime. After all, for whom were he and his procurer-in-chief, Ghislaine Maxwell, doing all this sex trafficking?

This is precisely why so many of the millions of documents released have been carefully redacted — not chiefly to protect his victims, who are apparently too often identified, but to protect the predatory circles he serviced.

What is notable about the latest tranche of Epstein files is how suggestive they are of a worldview associated with “conspiracy theorists”. Epstein was at the centre of a global network of powerful figures from both sides of a supposed — but in reality, largely performative — political divide between the left and right.

The same elite that once prized Epstein as its ringmaster is now trying to draw our attention away from its complicity in his crimes

The glue that appears to have bound many of these figures together was their abusive treatment of vulnerable young women and girls.

Similarly, the photos of rich men with young women suggest that Epstein accumulated, either formally or informally, kompromat — incriminating evidence — that presumably served as potential leverage over them.

In true Masonic style, his circle of peers appear to have protected each other. Epstein himself certainly benefited from a “sweetheart deal” in Florida in 2008. He ended up being jailed on only two charges of soliciting prostitution — the least serious among a raft of sex trafficking charges — and served a short term, much of it on work release.

And the mystery of how Epstein, a glorified accountant, financed his fantastically lavish lifestyle — when his schedule seems to have been dominated by emailing chores and hosting sex parties — grows a little less mysterious with every fresh disclosure.

His cultivation of the super-wealthy and their hangers-on, and the invitations to come to his island to spend time with young women, all smack of the traditional honeytrap famously employed by spy agencies.

Most likely, Epstein wasn’t financing all of this himself.

Israel’s fingerprints
That should be no surprise. Once again, the fingerprints of intelligence services — particularly Israel’s — are to be found in the latest dump of files. But the clues were there long before.

There was, of course, his intimate, preternatural bond with Maxwell, whose media tycoon father was exposed after his death as an Israeli agent. And Epstein’s long-standing best buddy, Ehud Barak, a former head of Israeli military intelligence who later served as prime minister, should have been another red flag.

That partnership featured prominently in a flurry of stories published by Drop Site News last autumn, from an earlier release of the Epstein files. They showed Epstein helping Israel to broker security deals with countries such as Mongolia, Cote d’Ivoire and Russia.

An active Israeli military intelligence officer, Yoni Koren, was a repeated houseguest at Epstein’s Manhattan apartment between 2013 and 2015. An email also shows Barak asking Epstein to wire funds to Koren’s account.

But the latest release offers additional clues. A declassified FBI document quotes a confidential source as saying Epstein was “close” to Barak and “trained as a spy under him”.

In an email exchange between the pair in 2018, ahead of a meeting with a Qatari investment fund, Epstein asks Barak to allay potential concerns about their relationship: “you should make clear that i dont work for mossad (sic).”

And in newly released, undated audio, Epstein advises Barak to find out more about US data analysis firm Palantir and meet its founder, Peter Thiel. In 2024, Israel signed a deal with Palantir for AI services to help the Israeli military select targets in Gaza.

Predictably, these revelations are gaining almost no traction in the establishment media — the very same media whose billionaire owners and career-minded editors once courted Epstein.

Instead, the media seem much more engrossed by weaker leads that suggest Epstein might have also had connections with Russian security services.

Faustian pact
There is a reason why the demand for the Epstein files has been so clamorous that even US President Donald Trump had to give in, despite embarrassing revelations for him too. Much of what we see happening in our ever-more debased, corrupt politics appears to defy rational, let alone moral, explanation.

Western elites have spent two years actively colluding in mass slaughter in Gaza — widely identified by experts as a genocide — and then labelling any opposition to it as antisemitism or terrorism.

Those same elites twiddle their thumbs as the planet burns, refusing to give up their enriching addiction to fossil fuels, even as survey after survey shows global temperatures relentlessly climbing to the point where climate breakdown is inevitable.

A series of reckless, illegal Western wars of aggression in the Middle East, as well as Nato’s long-term goading of Russia into invading Ukraine, have not only destabilised the world, but risk provoking nuclear conflagration.

And despite expert warnings, artificial intelligence is being rushed out with apparently barely a thought given to the unpredictable and likely massive costs to our societies, from eviscerating much of the job market to upending our ability to assess truth.

The Epstein files proffer an answer. What feels like a conspiracy, they suggest, is indeed a conspiracy — one driven by greed.

What was always staring us in the face might actually be correct: there is a steep entry price for being accepted into the West’s tiny power elite, and it involves putting to one side any sense of morality. It requires discarding empathy for anyone outside the in-group.

Maybe a soulless, flesh-eating elite in charge of our societies is less of a caricature than it appears. Maybe the Epstein files have such purchase on our imaginations because they teach us a lesson we already knew, confirming a cautionary tale that predates even the West’s literary canon.

More than 400 years ago, English writer Christopher Marlowe — a contemporary of William Shakespeare — drew on German folk stories to write his play Doctor Faustus, about a scholar who, through the intermediary Mephistopheles, agrees to sell his soul to the devil in return for magical powers.

Thus was born the Faustian pact, mediated by the Epstein-like figure of Mephistopheles. The great German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe would revisit this tale 200 years later in his two-part masterwork Faust.

Degenerate logic
Perhaps not surprisingly, however, the media noise over the Epstein files is serving chiefly to drown out a more truthful story struggling to emerge.

The same elite that once prized Epstein as its ringmaster is now trying to draw our attention away from its complicity in his crimes, to direct it to a few select individuals — notably in the UK, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson.

The pair hardly count as sacrificial lambs. Nonetheless, they serve the same purpose: to satiate the growing public appetite for retribution.

Meanwhile, the rest of his circle either deny the well-established evidence of their friendships with Epstein or, if cornered, hastily apologise for a brief lapse in judgment — before scurrying for cover.

Seen in this larger frame, what does it matter if children suffer, either in Gaza or in the mansions of a billionaire?

This is a false reckoning. The Epstein files don’t just show us the dark choices of a few powerful individuals. More significantly, they highlight the degenerate logic of the power structures behind these individuals.

The powerful figures who took Epstein’s Lolita Express to his island; who got “massages” from young, trafficked women and girls; and who casually joked about the abuse these youngsters suffered, are the very same people who quietly helped Israel commit mass slaughter in Gaza — and in some cases, noisily defended its right to do so.

Are we surprised that those who raised not a whisper of opposition to the murder and maiming of tens of thousands of Palestinian children, and the starvation of hundreds of thousands more, were also those who connived in rituals of abuse against children — or condoned such rituals — far closer to home?

These are the people who required anyone hoping to raise their voice in defence of Gaza’s children to spend their time instead condemning Hamas. These are the people who sought at every turn to discredit the mounting death toll of children by attributing it to Gaza’s “Hamas-run Health Ministry”.

These are the people who denied Israel’s targeting of hospitals needed to treat Gaza’s wounded and sick children — and ignored Israel’s mass starvation of the entire population. And these are the people now pretending that Israel’s continuing murder and torture of Gaza’s children amounts to a “peace plan”.

Neoliberalism and Zionism
Set aside his paedophilia for a moment. Epstein was the ultimate personification of the twin corrupting ideologies of neoliberalism and Zionism, which dominate Western societies. That is reason enough why he excelled for so long in their upper reaches.

The ultimate destinations of those ideologies were always going to lead to a genocide in Gaza, and in the years or decades ahead — unless stopped — to a planet-wide nuclear holocaust or climate collapse.

Ordinary men, women and children must be left on the sinking ship, while the billionaires requisition the lifeboats

Epstein could serve as a salutary warning of what is so deeply amiss with the West’s political and financial culture. But the wake-up call he represents is now being smothered in his absence as much as it was in his lifetime.

Neoliberalism is the pursuit of money and power for its own sake, divorced from any higher purpose or social good. Over the last half century, Western societies have been encouraged to venerate the billionaire — soon to be trillionaire — class as the ultimate signifier of economic growth and progress, rather than the ultimate marker of a system that has rotted from within.

Predictably, the super-rich and their hangers-on have been drawn to the advocates of “longtermism”, a movement that justifies the world’s current gross inequalities and injustices — and is resigned to a coming climate and environmental apocalypse as the world’s resources are used up.

Longtermism argues that humanity’s salvation lies not with reorganising our societies politically and economically in the here and now, but with intensifying those inequalities to achieve longer-term success via a class of Nietzschean Ubermensch, or superior beings.

A tiny financial elite needs absolute freedom to amass more wealth in search of the solutions — via tech innovations, of course — to overcome the difficulties of surviving on our fragile planet. The rest of us are an impediment to the super-rich’s ability to steer a course to safety.

Ordinary men, women and children must be left on the sinking ship, while the billionaires requisition the lifeboats. In the words of one of longtermism’s gurus, Nick Bostrom, an Oxford University philosopher, what lies ahead is “a giant massacre for man, a small misstep for mankind”.

To borrow a term from video-gaming, members of the neoliberal elite view the rest of us as non-player characters, or NPCs — the filler characters generated in a game to serve as the background for the actual players. Seen in this larger frame, what does it matter if children suffer, either in Gaza or in the mansions of a billionaire?

No moral outlier
If this sounds a lot like traditional, “white man’s burden” colonialism, updated for a supposedly post-colonial era, that’s because it is. This helps to explain why neoliberalism pairs so comfortably with another depraved colonial ideology, Zionism.

Zionism gained ever-more legitimacy in the aftermath of the Second World War, even as it brashly preserved through the postwar era the depraved logic of the very European ethnic nationalisms that had earlier culminated in Nazism.

Israel, Zionism’s bastard child, not only mirrored Aryan supremacy, but made its own version — Jewish supremacy — respectable. Zionism, like other ugly ethnic nationalisms, demands tribal unity against the Other, values militarism above all else, and constantly seeks territorial expansion, or Lebensraum.

Is it any surprise that it was Israel that, over many decades, reversed the advances of an international legal system set up precisely to prevent a return to the horrors of the Second World War?

Is it any surprise that it was Israel that carried out a genocide in full view of the world — and that the West not only failed to stop it, but actively colluded in the mass slaughter?

Is it any surprise that, as Israel has found it harder to conceal the criminal nature of its enterprise, the West has grown more repressive, more authoritarian in crushing opposition to its project?

Is it any surprise that the weapons systems, surveillance innovations and population-control mechanisms that Israel developed and refined for use against Palestinians make it such a prized ally for a Western billionaire class looking to use the same technological innovations at home?

That is why the Home Secretary of a UK government that threw its weight behind the genocide in Gaza, and defined opposition to it as terrorism, now wants to revive the 18th-century idea of the Panopticon prison, an all-seeing form of incarceration, but in an AI version.

In Shabana Mahmood’s words, her Panopticon would ensure that “the eyes of the state can be on you at all times”.

Nearly two decades ago, it became clear that Jeffrey Epstein was a predator. In recent years, it has become impossible to maintain the idea that he was a moral outlier. He distilled and channelled — through depraved forms of sexual gratification — a wider corrupt culture that believes rules don’t apply to special people, to the chosen, to the Ubermensch.

A handful of his most disposable allies will now be sacrificed to satisfy our hunger for accountability. But don’t be fooled: the Epstein culture is still going strong.

Jonathan Cook is a writer, journalist and self-appointed media critic and author of many books about Palestine. Winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. Republished from the Middle East Eye with the author’s permission.

This article was first published on Café Pacific.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/07/jonathan-cook-the-criminal-elite-exposed-in-the-epstein-files-are-burying-the-truth/