During question time [says Julian], I upset quite a few busybodies and environmentalists by saying that an individual's property rights should be inviolable by the majority or by government. I used an example of the planned 7-storey building in the middle of Kerikeri, opposed by many in the area. I asked them whether, if they really objected so much to it, why don't they club together and buy the land?
They could then put an easement on it and re-sell it. Why do they feel the need to use the government as a gun to tell other people what they can do with their property? Didn't they realise that this makes it possible for the government to tell them what they can and can't do with their own property as well? At this stage I could see the eyes of a few farmers in the audience light up...
Wednesday, 7 September 2005
Grey Power meeting in Kerikeri
Julian has the news on yesterday's Keri Grey Power meeting here, including this 'soundbite':
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1 comment:
So wide of the mark, its bollocks.
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