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SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

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$4 million lost to scams last year – Report by Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

February 23, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Figures released by a Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment-led consumer fraud working group [0n 22 February 2013] show Kiwis lost close to four million dollars to scams last year.

Out of the 4204 reports last year, 727 people lost money ? an average of $5,464.55 per person. Many people reported losing significantly more.

MBIE’s Scamwatch spokesperson Jarrod Rendle said losses reported by members of the public rose by more than $1.7 million between 2011 and 2012, despite 1309 fewer scams being reported.

This is in part due to a marked increase in losses to investment-related scams.

“Losses to investment-related scams such as boiler room fraud rose by 77 per cent last year. People that fall prey to investment scams can lose very large sums of money – with three people losing more than $150,000 each.”

The group also saw a large increase in the amount lost to dating scams – more than $2.2m in losses compared to $900,000 in 2011.

NetSafe’s Lee Chisholm says, “These scams can see the victims emotionally devastated and lose their life’s savings. Fraudsters usually befriend vulnerable people online and later claim to urgently need large sums of money for an overseas financial emergency. Three people lost over $100,000 each last year.”

The group’s report shows a 23 per cent drop in the amount lost to phishing. Losses to scams that trick people into thinking that they have a virus on their computer also dropped by 67 per cent.

Reported Scams [Nos] … 2,860 (2010); 5,514 (2011); 4,205 (2012)

Reported loss [$]

1,772,984,97 (2010); 2,271,677.05 (2011); 3,972,734.86 (2013)

Report released 22 February 2013

http://www.consumeraffairs.govt.nz/scam-news/4-million-lost-to-scams

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Filed Under: Crime Tagged With: consumer affairs, dating scams, investment scams, phishing

Dominatrix Forklift ad ruled offensive by Advertising Standards Authority

February 19, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

An ad for used forklifts featuring a ”sexualised and objectified” woman in dominatrix-like clothing has earned a South Island company a slap on the wrist from the advertising watchdog.

The ad featured the woman holding a heavy chain, with a forklift in the background. The text read: ”You know you’re not the first … But does that really matter? Used Forklifts.”

The Advertising Standards Authority [ASA] has upheld a complaint that the ad was offensive, saying the advert used inappropriate sexual appeal.

The Advertising Code states products cannot be promoted through the use of exploitative or degrading sexual images, especially if the product is completely unrelated to such images, as was the case here.

The complainant said it was ”just offensive to see that women’s bodies are used to sell a service that clearly targets men”.

”It becomes a sort of attention-seeking behaviour that is in many ways detrimental to how all women are viewed,” the authority was told.

The advertiser, Independent Forklifts, said the campaign had been running for three years without complaint.

It also stated if the Jockey campaign featuring All Black Dan Carter in his underwear was acceptable, its imagery must be as well.

The Complaints Board said the Jockey ads were different as the product being sold was underwear.

The watchdog also said as the advert was on a vehicle, it would be highly visible to the general public, including children, rather than just its presumed target market of adult men.

If a complaint to the authority is upheld, the advertiser is asked to remove the ad, though there is no punishment.

Source: Fairfax News NZ. 

Saucy forklift as deemed offensive. Story by Olivia Wannan. 19 February 2013.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8322044/Saucy-forklift-ad-deemed-offensive

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Filed Under: Censorship, Enforcement Tagged With: Advertising Code, Advertising Standards Authority, ASA, degrading sexual images, dominatrix, exploitative sexual images, Independent Forklifts, sexualised and objectified

Children’s Television watching linked to criminal activity by researchers

February 19, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Children who spend hours watching television after school are more likely to become criminals, researchers say.

A University of Otago study found the risk of having a criminal conviction by early adulthood increased by about 30 per cent with every hour children and teens spent watching TV on an average weeknight, co-author Associate Professor Bob Hancox said.

See: Fairfax NZ News Report by Bronwyn Torrie: http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/digital-living/8320462/TV-watching-linked-to-criminal-activity

Watching more television in childhood was also associated with aggressive personality traits, an increased tendency to experience negative emotions, and an increased risk of antisocial personality disorder in adulthood.

“While we’re not saying that television causes all antisocial behaviour, our findings do suggest that reducing TV viewing could go some way towards reducing rates of antisocial behaviour in society,” said Dr Hancox, of the Department of Preventive and Social Medicine.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends children watch no more than one to two hours of quality television programming each day.

University of Canterbury sociology professor Greg Newbold said bad parenting, rather than excessive television watching, caused children to become criminals.

“The primary factor, I think, will be the fact that kids who are allowed to watch lots and lots of television have parents who do not play a very active role in their lives. Bad parenting and television are linked and criminality is a consequence of that.”

The study, Childhood and adolescent television viewing and antisocial behaviour in early adulthood, was published in the United States journal Pediatrics yesterday.

The research is another strand of the longitudinal study into a group of about 1000 children born in Dunedin in 1972-73. Every two years between the ages of 5 and 15, they were asked how much television they watched. They were then tracked until they were 26.

It is believed to be the first “real-life” study following television viewing throughout childhood, and then looking at a range of antisocial outcomes.

Study co-author Lindsay Robertson said children who watched more television were not antisocial in their younger years. “Rather, children who watched a lot of television were likely to go on to manifest antisocial behaviour and personality traits.”

This was not explained by socio-economic status, IQ, antisocial behaviour in early childhood, or lack of parental control.

As an observational study, it cannot prove that watching too much television caused the antisocial outcomes, but the findings are consistent with other research and provide further evidence that excessive television viewing can have long-term consequences for behaviour, Ms Robertson said.

Dr Hancox said a limitation of the study was the lack of information on the type of programmes the children had watched. “We can’t tell if it was a particular type of programme or just the fact they were watching TV at all.”

The question was whether the content contributed to violent and antisocial behaviour later in life, or whether the amount of time spent watching television meant children did not develop pro-social behaviour and life skills, he said.

But there was enough evidence to come to a conclusion backed by other studies.

“Children who watch violent TV behave in a violent way afterwards and people who watch a lot of TV are more likely to have bad behaviour later in life.”

SCREEN SHOTS

Excessive television viewing in younger years is associated with increased antisocial behaviour in adulthood.

The link between television viewing and antisocial behaviour in adulthood was similar for boys and girls.

However, antisocial outcomes were less common in women.

The connection between television viewing and violent convictions were not significant after controlling for other factors.

Source: Fairfax NZ News

See: http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/digital-living/8320462/TV-watching-linked-to-criminal-activity

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Filed Under: Children's Television, Crime, Youth Crime Tagged With: antisocial behaviour, bad parenting, Children's Television, violent TV

Redefining marriage is unnecessary – Gordon Copeland

January 24, 2013 by SPCS

THE DEBATE on same-sex marriage lacks context because its promoters have failed to take into account the equal rights already established in New Zealand law for same-sex couples.

Everyone remembers the passing of the Civil Union Act in 2004 because of the publicity it generated. The Civil Union Act was followed by a companion Relationships (Statutory References) Act in early 2005 – the Relationships Act. It was passed by Parliament without fanfare and little publicity. It has therefore been missing from this debate because its purpose and legal effects are largely unknown to New Zealanders. Yet it is of crucial importance.

So what did the Relationships Act do? It amended more than 130 acts of Parliament to add, after every reference to “marriage” , the words “civil union and de facto” so there would be a complete and perfect legal equality between marriage, civil unions and heterosexual or homosexual de facto relationships. It means all couples, in any of these relationships, have the same rights under New Zealand law, with the possible exception of the adoption law.

Therefore, nothing is to be gained from redefining marriage to include same-sex couples, since equal rights have already been granted. That battle was fought and won in 2005.

In 1893, New Zealand was the first nation to grant women the vote, but we did not do that by redefining men to include women, but rather by recognising the equality of women. In the same way the Relationships Act does not alter the definition of marriage but rather recognises the equality of same-sex unions, be they civil union or de facto, at law.

The mantra of “marriage equality” needs to be viewed against that background. In my view, that mantra does not stand up to scrutiny because all of us can surely agree that a marriage between a man and a woman is biologically different from a union between two women or two men. Just as women and men are different, so those relationships are different (de facto relationships are different again because they exist in fact, but involve couples who are not married or in civil unions). Let us not forget that New Zealand law does permit homosexuals, who so choose, to marry [a person of the opposite sex] and some have.

Recognition of the reality that women and men are biologically different does not constitute discrimination, inequality or a denial of rights. We separate women and men for sport and boys and girls for sport and education. Most Wellington secondary schools, for example, are single-sex, but that does not mean boys from Wellington College are not the equal of girls from St Mary’s. Our laws against discrimination are founded on the principle of “different by equal”.

Consequently, although it is illegal to discriminate on the basis of gender, nationality, race, religion, marital status, and so on, in employment, housing, voting and the like, the law also recognises differences in many ways. Indeed, in our language we always, without exception, give different names to different things because life would  become confusing if a rake was called a spade or vice versa.

Marriage is too important to the stability of our society and the raising of children to risk such a radical change to its traditional definition without sound reason. In my view, no such reason has been advanced,

Marriage can result in lifelong loving relationships between the spouses. It remains the best and most stable environment in which to raise children. It has stood the test of time and is common to all cultures and nations. Like democracy, it is not perfect, but it is better than all the other models. It would be greatly strengthened if governments invested in the delivery of pre-marriage preparation and post-wedding marriage enrichment programmes by non-government organisations, because marriage underpins a successful society, while the root cause of much poverty and delinquency arises from causal, stable or broken relationships.

The Relationships Act created “relationships equality” and nothing more is necessary or desirable. The redefinition of marriage bill should not proceed.

____________

Source: Opinion Piece: Published The Dominion Post. Thursday, January 24, 2013. , p. A9

Gordon Copeland is a former MP who was in Parliament in 2004 – 2005 when the Civil Union and Relationship (Statutory References) Acts were passed. He opposed both.

 

 

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Filed Under: Marriage Tagged With: Civil Union Act, Gordon Copeland, marriage equality, redefining marriage, Relationships Act, relationships equality, same-sex marriage

Topless Vatican protesters – “In gay we trust” – Video Link

January 22, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Four women went topless in St. Peter’s Square to protest the Vatican’s opposition to gay marriage as he delivered his traditional prayer from his studio window overlooking the piazza … Protester and protest spokeswoman Inna Shevchenko, a “Ukrainian Feminist”, told a reporter on camera:

“Today we go with a message to the Pope to shut up his mouth and not to give his advices [sic] to those people who decide to legalise gay marriage. Today we are here to possess [sic] [protest] against homophobia”.

To view the videos illustrating the extreme tactics of some within the “gay”rights movement see:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXQtrOl7_mw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=IEGECK0Ec2o&feature=endscreen

For a scholarly analysis of the term “homphobia” see the SPCS article:

The term ‘Homphonia’: Its Origins and Meanings, and its uses in the Homosexual Agenda

https://www.spcs.org.nz/2007/the-term-homophobia-its-origins-and-meanings-and-its-uses-in-homosexual-agenda/

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Filed Under: Homosexuality, Sexual Dysfunction Tagged With: gay marriage, homophobia, homosexual agenda, Inna Shevchenko

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