The Real Marc Spring

The Real Marc Spring

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I watched while others have acted, so we planned. When they finally rest we strike with the truth. There is no place for woke.

12/05/2026

THE END OF TEA PARTY TAMIHERE?

A six-figure bonus paid by Waipareira Trust to its chief executive John Tamihere was unwound after a long-running Charities Services investigation into charitable resources being used to fund Tamihere's political campaigns.

Just one of the many many many issues with Waipārera Trust

TPM still no accounts filed yet - multiple breaches.

Go back further to ROAST BUSTERS … remember that ? JT and Willie Jackson booted off their own radio show for vile r**e comments and ridicule of victims.

LETS HOPE THIS IS THE END

02/05/2026

Public service announcement

AHH ❤️ A LEFT WING MICRO BLOGGER 😂😂🥕🥕🥕

Samuel Hudson of thisquality: Why haven’t police prosecuted the alleged public ma*******or?

Story today ….
MATUA KAHURANGI
MAY 03, 2026

Allegations last year raised serious questions about the priorities of the New Zealand Police, it seems they are more focused on policing online speech than addressing severe criminal behaviour.

Samuel Hudson, the self-important founder of the fringe micro-blog thisquality and his “Quiet Pact Network,” keeps dragging more sleaze into the spotlight. Last year, broadcaster Sean Plunket blew the lid off Hudson allegedly running a Pornhub channel under the charming alias - where he filmed himself ma********ng in public places. Multiple people lodged complaints with police. Some of those videos are still floating around online and in Google search results. Some videos have background noise of people nearby. This guy was allegedly flogging his bishop in public, risking exposure to strangers, which is straight-up illegal in New Zealand.

The worst thing it involved Big Mac’s and carrots - I haven’t eaten a Big Mac since.

Anyways... crickets from the cops. No confirmed investigation. No charges. Nothing.

Making it even more rancid are the whispers about Hudson’s connections in policing circles. Both he and Jevon McSkimming - the former deputy police commissioner who resigned in disgrace after being caught with child s*x exploitation material and be******ty filth on his work devices - come from Kapiti. Funny how that works. These overlapping ties have people openly asking whether certain individuals get a special “Kapiti discount” when serious allegations land on their desk.

Meanwhile, New Zealand Police seem laser-focused on hunting down offensive tweets and wrongthink from regular citizens, especially if it offends the right ideological crowd. Actual predators, public perverts, and child exploitation cases? They’ll get to it... eventually. Maybe.

While cops chase keyboard warriors for mean words, an alleged public ma*******or with possible police connections gets a free pass. The public is rightly wondering whether our police force exists to protect community safety or to play ideological enforcement for the regime and its mates.

It is believed Samuel Hudson, is or was a student at Otago University. A formal email has been sent to the Proctor detailing his alleged illegal public ma********on activities.

01/05/2026

IS THIS THE END OF NATIONAL?

THE NEXT SET OF POLLS WILL FASCINATING….

What we are seeing play out before out eyes is historic is it not?

Are we witnessing the downfall of a major political party?

Day by day, National are disintegrating.

It's not just Luxon. If it was, they have had 2 years to roll him. They must all be in on the plan. And the plan must have been the India FTA.

Think back... since he has been the leader, all we have seen is him cosying up to the Indian community, attending all of their events. More than any other ethnic group.

Was he was installed to get this deal through at any cost? … including his own demise and that of the party?

It's the only way any of it makes sense.

It's so blatant, like they are wearing badges that say what they are, in plain sight.

Labour supports it, Act supports it.

27/04/2026

Another WTF is our tax payer $$$ expected to fund …

Serious questions need to be asked about the Green Party’s standards after selecting Michel Mulipola as their candidate for Māngere.

His social media is full of vile abuse: calling police “cunts” and “pigs” while laughing at them, labelling a minister “a piece of sh*t,” and sharing grotesque cartoons that depict one minister with faeces streaming from his eyes and an a**s for a mouth, while another is shown as a baboon with the minister’s face on its rear. He has incited outrage against a Samoan woman simply for volunteering with the IDF, celebrated Charlie Kirk’s assassination, issued threats, promoted his own “Death, death to the IDF” t-shirts, edited a video purporting to show Israel shooting a small child, and casually referred to Hamas as “armed resistance” and “a misnomer” — ignoring its designation as a terrorist organisation, its structured military wing, and its tactics and ideology.

He has even labelled democracy itself a “red flag” and dismissed peace in Gaza and a two-state solution as a “cop-out.”

The list goes on and on.

It simply beggars belief that the Greens consider this kind of violent, toxic behaviour suitable for a potential Member of Parliament. How can a party that claims to stand for compassion, justice, and democracy possibly endorse someone who so brazenly glorifies violence, dehumanises opponents, and rejects the very democratic values he would swear to uphold?

This is not political passion; it is poison.

22/04/2026

Just imagine the media firestorm if Luxon had offered to apologise to a female opposition MP, who had already called his remarks offensive three times — only “if she was genuinely offended”.

Asking a woman to justify how offended she feels, implying she’s overly sensitive, and making responsibility conditional on her proving her feelings are “genuine” is apparently fine if you’re the leader of the Labour Party.

Members of the press gallery just stood there smirking. That says everything.

Wonder when W***y Jackson will be held to account?!? - The Real Marc Spring 16/04/2026

Who will hold Willie yo account?

Wonder when W***y Jackson will be held to account?!? - The Real Marc Spring Marc Spring, Matthew Blomfield, Margie Thomson, Whale Oil, defamation, liars, Potton & Burton, Nicky Hager, Craig Mason, South Pacific Pictures, Cameron Slater

WASTED TAX PAYER $$$$ - The Real Marc Spring 16/04/2026

Willie, Willie, Willie...

WASTED TAX PAYER $$$$ - The Real Marc Spring Marc Spring, Matthew Blomfield, Margie Thomson, Whale Oil, defamation, liars, Potton & Burton, Nicky Hager, Craig Mason, South Pacific Pictures, Cameron Slater

Lawyer Who Lost Defamation Case Now Fined By CAANZ - The Real Marc Spring 13/04/2026

Lawyer Who Lost Defamation Case Now Fined By CAANZ

Lawyer Who Lost Defamation Case Now Fined By CAANZ - The Real Marc Spring Marc Spring, Matthew Blomfield, Margie Thomson, Whale Oil, defamation, liars, Potton & Burton, Nicky Hager, Craig Mason, South Pacific Pictures, Cameron Slater

12/04/2026

VIA The Good Oil News and Podcast

Winston Peters: From King Maker to King?

The press gallery can keep peddling the relic story if it wants. The numbers and the political reality tell a very different tale.

The Wellington press gallery continues calling Winston Peters a relic. They paint him as the ageing kingmaker who clings to relevance while the big boys run the show. The latest Taxpayers Union-Curia poll just delivered a brutal reality check. New Zealand First has surged to 13.6 per cent. That is a record high for the party in that poll series and a near-doubling of its support since the last election. National sits at 29.8 per cent, still stuck below 30. Labour leads on 33.4 per cent but the coalition bloc gains ground overall. The numbers do not lie. While the media obsesses over Christopher Luxon’s reprieve, NZ First is the story that matters.
Shane Jones made that crystal clear. During the first reading of the Fisheries Amendment Bill, the New Zealand First minister used the debate to issue a blunt reminder to his coalition partners. “Let me remind everyone in this House: this is a coalition agreement.” The bill passed its first reading with support from National, ACT and NZ First and now heads to select committee. It flows directly from the National-NZ First deal to remove regulations that impede the productivity and enormous potential of the seafood sector.
On the surface it looked like routine ministerial business. In truth it was a power play. Jones had already backed down from the most contentious part of the bill, the removal of most minimum size limits for commercial fishers, after National and ACT pushed back hard. Yet he still used the occasion to nail the commitment to the wall. He was not asking. He was telling. The message landed exactly as intended. NZ First will hold its partners to the letter of the agreement and it has the leverage to do so.
Do not let the junior partner label fool you. The press gallery still treats NZ First as a sideshow, a quirky add-on to the main National-ACT act. Winston Peters is quietly rewriting the terms of the coalition. The Fisheries Bill serves as proof of concept: it is not merely about seafood regulations. By forcing adherence on this specific issue, NZ First demonstrates it is the only party in the room capable of enforcing the contract. Jones is not begging for the bill to pass. He is reminding everyone that the agreement is binding. That is the language of a party that knows precisely where the power now sits.
Combine this tactical aggression with the polling surge and the picture sharpens. NZ First at 13.6 per cent and climbing changes the arithmetic. If the party keeps rising toward the 20 per cent mark, the dynamic flips entirely. National stops leading and starts following. NZ First ceases to be the partner National tolerates and becomes the indispensable pillar of the government. At that point the so-called junior partner does not merely win a few policy scraps. He dictates the agenda.
For decades the narrative cast Winston Peters as the kingmaker – the man who decides who gets to form government. The data now points to a new trajectory. The kingmaker is becoming the king. National and ACT may still hold the most seats, but NZ First holds the keys to the coalition’s survival. Shane Jones’ public reminder was a shot across the bow. The era of National setting the pace and NZ First tagging along is finished.
The table has been redesigned. Winston Peters is no longer asking for a seat at it. He is the one designing it and deciding who sits where. The press gallery can keep peddling the relic story if it wants. The numbers and the political reality tell a very different tale.

Winston Peters Destroys Halfwit Dunce - The Real Marc Spring 07/04/2026

Halfwit Destroyed by Winston...

Winston Peters Destroys Halfwit Dunce - The Real Marc Spring Marc Spring, Matthew Blomfield, Margie Thomson, Whale Oil, defamation, liars, Potton & Burton, Nicky Hager, Craig Mason, South Pacific Pictures, Cameron Slater

04/04/2026

Interesting…….

We have seen so many people say

"Winston / NZF is all talk, but achieves nothing."

So Grok was asked to do an impartial list of their achievements since the Coalition government was formed.

Grok asked not to be pro or against, but just to provide a list.

So here is what came back -

New Zealand First’s domestic achievements in the Coalition Government (since November 2023) represent a strong record of delivery on their coalition commitments, putting Kiwis first, restoring common sense, and reversing divisive or ineffective policies from the previous government.
Through targeted legislation, repeals, funding initiatives, and practical reforms, NZ First has driven progress on law and order, regional development, economic fairness, seniors’ support, education, health, immigration integrity, and equal citizenship. These changes have delivered tangible benefits for working families, rural communities, victims of crime, and taxpayers—creating a more secure, prosperous, and united New Zealand.
Below is a comprehensive, categorized list of their key achievements, drawn from official coalition outcomes in the first two-plus years.
Immigration & Employment: Skills-Focused System and Work IncentivesNZ First strengthened the immigration system to prioritise genuine workforce needs while getting beneficiaries back to work, reducing exploitation risks and supporting Kiwi jobs.
Improved the Accredited Employer Work Visa to attract the right skills and workers New Zealand actually needs.
Ensured Immigration New Zealand applies proper risk management and verification so migrants fill genuine shortages, not displace locals.
Investigated an “Essential Worker” workforce planning mechanism for long-term skill and labour shortages.
Strengthened obligations on Jobseeker work-ready beneficiaries (including sanctions and potential time limits for under-25s) to encourage workforce participation.
Impact: A fairer, more targeted immigration system that supports economic growth without undermining Kiwi workers or public services.2. Public Safety & Law and Order: Tougher Consequences for CrimeNZ First delivered a suite of reforms to back victims, deter offenders, and support frontline staff—restoring accountability and community safety.
Introduced measures to tackle youth crime, including consideration of a Youth Justice Demerit Point system.
Reformed Fleeing Driver laws to reduce dangerous incidents.
Amended the Sentencing Act to prioritise victims, treat gang membership as an aggravating factor, impose real consequences for low-level crimes like shoplifting, and remove concurrent sentences for offences committed on parole, bail, or in custody.
Equipped corrections officers with body cameras and protective gear.
Passed Protection for First Responders and Prison Officers legislation with minimum mandatory sentences for assaults.
Introduced Coward Punch legislation creating a specific offence with serious penalties.
Made it easier for New Zealanders (including prisoners) to obtain driver licences through supportive programmes.
Adequately resourced community policing, including Māori and Pasifika wardens.
Impact: Stronger deterrence, better support for victims and frontline workers, and a clear message that crime has consequences—contributing to safer streets and communities.3. Economy, Infrastructure & Primary Sector: Regional Growth and Practical ReformsNZ First secured major infrastructure funding and repealed burdensome laws, unlocking productivity, energy security, and primary sector potential.
Established a $1.2 billion Regional Infrastructure Fund and a National Infrastructure Agency.
Repealed the Natural and Built Environment Act 2023 and Spatial Planning Act 2023; amended the Resource Management Act 1991 to speed up consenting for infrastructure, housing, farming, and primary industries (including renewable energy, aquaculture, forestry, and mining).
Created a fast-track one-stop-shop consenting process for significant regional and national projects.
Cancelled Auckland Light Rail and Let’s Get Wellington Moving; reduced cycleway spending; committed to a four-lane Brynderwyns highway alternative (with private finance exploration).
Delivered fuel security measures: study into requirements, urgent review of Marsden Point Refinery reopening, railway connections to Northport, dry dock business case, transitional low-carbon fuels, natural gas exploration restart, geological hydrogen support, and mineral resource opportunities (e.g., vanadium).
In the primary sector: stopped the ETS review for market certainty; incentivised low-methane mitigations; preferred wool in government buildings; reversed the live animal export ban (with welfare standards); extended marine farming permits and removed productivity barriers.
Impact: Boosted regional economies, restored farmer and business confidence, enhanced energy and fuel resilience, and cut red tape—laying foundations for sustainable growth and infrastructure delivery.4. Education & Health: Back to Basics and Patient-FocusedNZ First refocused services on core outcomes, removed race-based structures, and improved access.
Emphasised reading, writing, and maths in schools; refocused curriculum on academic achievement (removing ideology-driven guidelines like gender/s*xuality/relationships education); shifted Fees Free to the final year of study; maintained the Apprenticeship Boost.
Abolished the Māori Health Authority; updated Pharmac’s model to better include patients’ voices with annual funding increases; required Medsafe to fast-track approvals (within 30 days of two recognised overseas agencies); recognised overseas medical qualifications; advanced digital tech and Nurse Practitioners in understaffed areas.
Repealed the Ther**eutic Products Act 2023; funded Gumboot Friday/I Am Hope to $6 million annually; repealed and reformed smokefree/vaping laws (removed denicotinisation, retail reductions, generation ban; banned disposable vapes; increased youth penalties).
Impact: Stronger literacy/numeracy foundations for kids, faster and fairer health access, and practical support for mental health and seniors’ wellbeing.5. Seniors: Protecting and Supporting Our EldersNZ First kept promises to older New Zealanders and improved aged-care options.
Kept the superannuation age at 65.
Amended the Building Act and resource consent rules to make granny flats/small structures (up to 60sqm) easier to build.
Progressed review of the Retirement Villages Act; investigated funding for new residential care beds; undertook a select committee inquiry into aged care (including early-onset conditions and asset thresholds).
Explored enhancements to the Local Government Rates Rebate Scheme for SuperGold Card holders.
Impact: Greater dignity, security, and housing flexibility for seniors—recognising their contributions and needs.6. Democracy, Freedoms & Equal Citizenship: Restoring Fairness and SovereigntyNZ First ended race-based policies, protected free speech, and strengthened democratic norms.
Made English an official language, requiring government departments and Crown entities to communicate primarily in English (except Māori-specific entities).
Committed not to change New Zealand’s official name without a referendum; supported a binding referendum on a four-year parliamentary term.
Ensured publicly funded sports bodies uphold fair (biological) competition.
Protected freedom of speech by ruling out hate speech legislation.
Ended all remaining COVID-19 vaccine mandates and established a full independent public inquiry into the pandemic response (lockdowns, vaccines, social/economic impacts).
Removed co-governance from public services; issued a Cabinet circular prioritising services on need, not race; restored local referendums on Māori wards.
Impact: A return to equal citizenship, clearer governance, and defence of democratic freedoms—rebuilding trust that government serves all Kiwis equally.
These achievements reflect New Zealand First’s consistent focus on practical, people-centred outcomes. By holding the balance and negotiating firmly in the coalition, they have helped stabilise the economy, enhance security, support regions and seniors, and restore a sense of fairness and national pride. The results are already visible in repealed bureaucracy, new infrastructure funding, tougher crime measures, and a shift away from ideology toward results for everyday New Zealanders.

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