Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
He is the self proclaimed prince of the province's Martua.
Shane Jones, let's talk about mining wild dogs are Northland
and mad Dog Peters who won't support the Indian FTA.
Shane Jones, Where do you want to start?
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Well born and bred in the north. Sadly we do
have dangerous homicidal dogs, but I'll tell you what's really
feral is the personality, the character and the mindset of
these losers who own these dogs. Often they're covered in tattoos,
wandering around regarding these dogs as trophies. When dad brought
us up in arw Nui, as you know, born bred
(00:36):
on a farm, dog went bad, went down the road,
shot at problem, taking care of them.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Well, that's what we need to do. But I can't
say on radio we need to shoot the owners. But
they certainly have to face consequences. And I see in
instant Mad Dog Peters himself as saying, maybe the owners,
in the case of these tragic fatalities, our need to
face manslaughter charges.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Well, they are so riddled with drugs and all sorts
of other social problems they have no conception of the
seriousness of what they've done. So the sooner they're removed
from society. The better the sooner that we have the
ability for these dog rangers to immediately confiscate dogs and
(01:21):
basically summarily execute them because they have no real use
to man or, man or woman or the community. They've
come into New Zealand, they have been bred, They're dangerous.
They don't belong in our New Zealand culture. Look, there's
been some suggestion by a lady a bet I don't
know where I sought, that we should dissect the dogs.
We're not a New Zealand pairs. We're not into transgender pets.
(01:44):
Just shoot them.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
I'm with you on that one. Now, the government's ring
fencing eighty million dollars in the Regional Infrastructure Fund to
support the extraction and processing of minerals rare earth minerals. Now,
is this kind of the provincial growth fund and drag.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
You're talking about those Healthyon days before Jacinda lost the
plot and destroyed the economy and fled as a political
refugee to Harvard University, my old place of learning. You're
talking about twenty seventeen.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
Yeah, yeah, but you were going to plant New Zealand
and pine trees. You were going to plant a billion
of them.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
No, we had the credo right tree, right place, focused
on a few native plantings and working with some of
the big forestry companies. But look, that is so in
the past. We're going to focus on the future, and.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
The future is digging it up and damming it up.
How are you getting on, by the way, with your
debate over the gold mine in Central Otago with Saren Taylor.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
Well, I want the God of the South or the
voice of the South, other than your good self to
be the MC. I'm waiting my office to learn more
about the details of the location, the timing. There was
a suggestion that we have a debate without an audience. Well, look,
everything in my life is never Clayton's. Okay, I'm gladly
(03:04):
going to have the debate in the South Island. I
suggested they have it in Terras and then I've got
no compunction whatsoever with debating with anyone down there. But
we are not having a debate where there's no audience.
That suggests to me that although an event is being planned,
they want to kind of transmit it via technology to
the rest of the world. But this is something where
(03:24):
the local people have to have an opportunity, Jamie.
Speaker 1 (03:27):
I know you love an audience. Minds you Saren Taylor's
a former television presenter. He's afraid of performing in front
of an audience either. I are white with bated breath
to see this debate. I just want to finish on
the Indian FTA. When are you and Winston going to
pull your heads on?
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Look, I just had a meeting with a bunch of
chaps in the Minister's office Minister Todd to do with forestry.
Winston and I are not luddites. We realize that people
are already trading over there in that part of the
world for forestry, etc. But the deal did not cover
off agriculture, and the deal sadly does not leave enough
(04:05):
protections or safeguards in respect of immigration. We are going
to continue to remind Kiwis that unfetted immigration is going
to faithfully change the trajectory and the character of our
nation and we're not having it. And people are not campaigning.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
On no, no, you're just being racist. Well, Shane, some
of these Indians who might be migrants here will do
the work that some of the drug addled Northlanders won't do.
And I'm not just picking on Northland there you talk
about getting the nefts off the couch.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
I think that there's a case for ensuring that we
have migrants that we need, not ones that need us.
Dour Stephen Joyce opened up sadly the door a barn
door and all sorts of undesirables floated in under the
rubric of our international education. So we can't unwind that.
But no, there will not be unfetted immigration from India.
(04:57):
There will only be migrants that add to the value
our country. We are not going to be a dumping
ground for people trying to come to New Zealand and
set up New Delhi. We're New Zealand. That's just never
going to happen.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Yeah, but they do the work. It's like the Shane,
It's like the Filipino community. If we didn't have them,
there wouldn't be a cow milkt in Southland. Well, we're
a Catholic church remaining.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
I've got a great deal of affection for the community
of the Filipinos that are sustaining the Catholic community working,
and they are the people that the country needs. But
we don't need any more uber drivers.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Well that's very racist.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
Mate, just because I said that the people that are
plundering all the rock falls around Auckland happen to be
from the migrant community. And in a playful way, I
use the term the orient express doesn't mean that I'm racist.
This shows that I'm at earthy, humorous, but red blooded,
tough New Zealand first politician and.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
A very modest man to book, Shane Jones, thanks for your.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
Time, see her buddy. Bye.