Zitat des Tages von Helen Clark:
I've been round Japan, Hong Kong, Korea, and China in the last few months and the message that I've been taking is that New Zealand is building an up market dynamic into a connected economy. And that we are not the old-fashioned, ship mutton kind of product the people associate their export in work.
I don't know that you're ever going to persuade New Zealanders that they're not going to own their own homes and I'm not going to try.
Well, there have been periods in the past when prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand were at each others' throats publicly and frequently. That's not productive at all.
Well in the end the world can crank itself up to sanctions, as it has with Zimbabwe, another sad case.
Well, we don't think for a moment that either the U.S. or Australia are out to damage the New Zealand economy, but if there were a sustained period in which they had a free-trade agreement and New Zealand didn't have that same arrangement with the States, that could be both trade- and investment-distorting.
I think it's inevitable that New Zealand will become a republic and that would reflect the reality that New Zealand is a totally sovereign-independent 21st century nation 12,000 miles from the United Kingdom.
If the market is left to sort matters out, social injustice will be heightened and suffering in the community will grow with the neglect the market fosters.
We're a nation in search of an identity, but it's quite exciting. I don't regard it as a problem. It's a challenge.
As New Zealanders, we've been in on the United Nations from the very beginning, played a role in the drafting of the charter - it means a lot to us that those processes are followed.
Well of course New Zealand isn't anti-American.
Business can talk itself into a blue funk.
We just sent our condolences to the President of the United States and the American people on what is a terrible, terrible tragedy.
Although biodiversity loss continues globally, many countries are significantly slowing the rate of loss by shoring up protected natural areas and the services they provide, and in expanding national park systems with tighter management and more secure funding.
Of course I have an opinion on many things but I don't micromanage.
There is also a marked global trend towards sustainable agriculture, building on traditional methods which use fewer chemical inputs, carefully manage soil and water resources, and work hand-in-hand with nature.
I have no beliefs of a religious kind.
It's fair to say that, for much of my lifetime, New Zealand certainly was a property-owning democracy and working people, ordinary people, had assets.
I deeply detest social distinction and snobbery, and in that lies my strong aversion to titular honours.
Marine protected areas, and particularly no-take zones, are very effective in allowing regeneration of fish stocks.