Sunday 29 May 2005

Top ten best things about Winston Peters

Winston's latest immigration grandstanding gives him headlines, hatred and polling increases, showing you can never underestimate the market for bare-faced, scaremongering xenophobia. But there are good things about Winston Peters

Here's the top ten best things about Winston Peters:

  1. He's a perfect litmus test. You know immediately that when you meet someone wearing a NZ First rosette that you won't want them as a dinner companion. This immediately rules out 13% of the population, making the organization of dinner engagements so much easier.
  2. Sartorial elegance. As David Lange famously observed when Winston was late for a meeting, “I expect he’s been detained by a full-length mirror.” His focus on sartorial elegance over political substance at once raises the dress-sense of parliament, and ensures little of substance is discussed there.

  3. Unemployment. Winston has over the years offered benevolent assistance with unemployment for the otherwise unemployable. Who else for example would offer employment to the dozens of tailors’ dummies that occupy the other seats in the NZ First caucus?
  4. The Perfect Politician. Winston is incurably lazy, possibly the laziest man in Parliament. In a politician, this is a good thing – a very, very good thing. The lazier they are, the less trouble they pose to us. As Winston showed when he was Treasurer, he doesn't want to work like a cabinet minister; he just wants a big office with his name on the door. This isn't entirely a bad thing: As Mark Twain observed, "No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session" -- with more politicians in the legislature with Winston's work ethic, parliamentary activity would soon slow to a satisfactorily safe stupor.
  5. Shamelessness. Winston offers willing students a master-class in grandstanding, something Rodney for example still needs help with. Winston doesn't care whether the mud he's throwing is based on fact (as it was with Peron) or on fiction (remember the grounding of the Cook Strait ferry?), but just by pure chance some of the mud that needs to be thrown and wouldn't otherwise be chucked gets an airing that it wouldn't otherwise get – such as the disgraceful corruption surrounding the Berryman affair.

  6. Winston keeps the country safer. The moonbat bigot constituency on which Winston has a stranglehold has been captured in other countries by thugs that are serious about the hatred they’re whipping up. The likes of Ian Paisley, Le Pen and Slobodan Milosevic believe in the hatred themselves; they take the xenophobic bigotry seriously and do serious damage with it. Winston doesn't believe a word of it; he whips it up only so that he can be kept in a nice office and new Italian suits. As long as Winston is there, there’s no future for the National Front, and no likelihood of civil war.

  7. He’s not a professional Maori. Unlike countless others of rich beige hue who make a career out of that one attribute, Winston has eschewed that easy road to sucking off the state tit … and found another.

  8. Entertainment value. In a sea of grey, bland parliamentary conformity Winston stands out – and that’s just in the NZ First caucus room. When Winston wakes up every three years, whatever else you might think he does at least makes the news worth watching again.

  9. He likes a drink. That’s a good thing in and of itself in my book. As long as he’s buying.

  10. No government. Having Winston as a cabinet minister is certainly like having no government, but there’s even more to excite a libertarian! Remember the extended negotiations of 1996 when for several exciting weeks the country didn’t have a government (prompting The Independent to write: "The Libertarianz were right all along” as people noticed the sky wasn’t falling in.) As long as Winston is still in with a shout, we have the exciting prospect every three years of an extended period in which we actually no government at all. If only that happy state of affairs could be replicated more often.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

A few weeks ago I was campaigning for Libz in Tauranga with Mr Russell Watkins, you had some photos up a while back of the event.

The support for Win-chung Peters is visible, but dim. One guy announced that he was a Winston supporter, and wasn't going to change his vote. I asked: "who is Winston Peters anyway? Isn't he one of the National Party?" The response... "Uh... Yeah, I think so."

Anonymous said...

Dear God has it come to this...? Libz backing the ultimate scumbag...? What happened to "Envys envoy"?, or is it because Winnie ran with Perigos sleaze against Peron that Libz see him as great guy? Sick making....

Peter Cresswell said...

Irony is clearly not your strong point, James. I'm not sure I'd be wanting you as a dinnner comapnion either. ;-P

Anonymous said...

Honesty and respect for truth and reason are clearly not yours either PC....Lying for Liberty...sigh!

Peter Cresswell said...

James, I'm afraid you've lost me again, and I suspect everyone else here.

Berend de Boer said...

#6 is a good point. Hadn't thought about that one.

Anonymous said...

Whatever anyone says about Winston - there is one thing for sure.

The Nats made the mother of all mistakes when they kicked him out. If they had him in their tent, they would have been in power for the last 3 years

Anonymous said...

Are there other forums/blogs that are more specific for this topic? I have not found one.