January 11, 2025 - The History of New Zealand through a Libertarian Anarchist lens. Please enjoy the ideas and let me know what you think.

1932: Tai Tapu Library

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Tai Tapu Library, South Canterbury. Without government who would build the libraries? This one was opened on 12 August 1932 and paid for with the proceeds of prize-winning daffodils grown on the property¹. And, the subscriptions of those desiring to be members. The public library itself is even older than this building. However, it was […]

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April 11, 2024

“Māori” or “Maoris?”

By AHNZ

“Māori” or “Maoris?” This page is written for English-speaking New Zealanders. We have our own spelling, own pronunciation, own points of view just like Maoris do. So the plural of Maori is “Maoris,” just as it was written in almost all of the history books ever written. In the Maori language plural or singular is […]

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August 21, 2019

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1973: The Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival

By AHNZ

Tonight in New Zealand history, 8 January, 1973, Black Sabbath wrapped up the Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival. This was our version of Woodstock, New Zealand’s first significant outdoor music event, attracting 18,000 people. Mainstream Boomers were into their Hippy or Country music. Festival organisers Barry Coburn and Robert Raymond were offering an alternative. Ngaruawahia would be […]

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January 8, 2025

1836: Pukaki’s Gateway

By AHNZ

Little did we know that our 20c coin these last 20 years featured a cannibal chief in the midst of a necrophilic sex act! Pukaki, a Te Arawa warlord from 1700s Rotorua lived a violent life. Maoris at this time lived in a Hobbsean war of all against all. Constant strife was either simmering or […]

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January 6, 2025

1977: Bastion Point

By AHNZ

The Bastion Point occupation got underway today in New Zealand history, 5 January 1977. After many warnings and deadlines ignored, The State finally put a stop to this major protest after 506 days; it ended on 25 May 1978. Representatives of the Ngati Whatua were not happy about their ancestral leaders selling the land to […]

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January 5, 2025

2005: Bo-Gyung Ko

By AHNZ

Asian women have long dominated the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) where competition is fierce and prize-money huge. Even the barriers to entry into the competition circuit itself is greatly prohibitive. A novel way to differentiate a player and open some doors apparently occurred to one Republic of Korea couple, Mr and Mrs Ko. By […]

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January 3, 2025

1888: Reefton’s Electric Christmas

By AHNZ

The year 1870 marked a new phase in New Zealand gold mining with the discovery of deposits in the Inangahua Valley; Reefton. If not for the new stimulus of Reefton quartz and Kumara alluvial the West Coast’s Golden days would have been done. Many who had come to the Coast for gold had already moved […]

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December 31, 2024

1996: Fly Buys

By AHNZ

Fly Buys, est. 1996, was once huge but ended at the stroke of midnight on 1 January, 2025. “The Flybuys catalogue became legendary, filled with an endless array of items that could be “purchased” with points. At its peak, Flybuys had over 20 contributing partners, close to 3 million members, and featured in 80% of […]

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December 30, 2024

1902: Waimarino County

By AHNZ

Waimarino County came into existence by its own Act of Parliament on 2 October, 1902. The Waimarino block, located at the foot of Mount Ruapehu, had enough settlers to have transitioned from Settler frontier, to Road Board, to County. By 1918 they had their own County Offices at the County Seat of Raetihi but it was destroyed […]

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December 24, 2024

1642: New Zealand’s First Christmas

By AHNZ

On the night before Christmas, 1642, the danger of losing it troubled more than a few.  The Twelve Days of Christmas were due to begin, but in Protestant nations the future looked thin. Now Scotland, now England, now German and Swiss! The Christmas tradition faced the abyss! The Wokesters of their day, the Puritans, the […]

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December 20, 2024

1993: Wellington’s City to Sea Bridge

By AHNZ

Wellington’s City to Sea Bridge (est.1993) was a creation of Paratene Matchitt from Napier (why can’t locals produce their own culture?) It cost $2,300,000 at the time. Matchitt indifferent to what the customer would think of it. Rather than relating to New Zealand, the expensive decorations look more like some heathen Aztec totem pole keeled […]

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December 19, 2024