DSC principles and policies worth checking out
The old parties, whose social and economic experiments have given us what we have got, are now frantically grabbing for power so that we can be served more of it. “Fanaticism” says Santayana “is redoubling your efforts when you have lost sight of your aim.” And insanity is doing the same thing again and expecting to get a different result
Democrats for social credit offers a fresh approach and a tested portfolio of policies carefully reasoned over time; not a grab bag of instant promises. Have a look at the policies on this website. You’ll find real reform, offering powerful policies and solutions to social security, student loans, good health and the impact of crime on the community.
We stand for social, economic and environmental justice. At the heart of our vision for New Zealand is a fundamental reform of the monetary system. We offer policies to strengthen communities, reward enterprise and safeguard the environment. Policies that will see:
A nation free of debt
Publicly funded education for all
A guaranteed basic income for all New Zealanders
A people with a deep respect for our fragile environment
A people whose priorities are housing, health and education
Increased individual spending power through abolishing GST
Interest free and low interest loans for capital infrastructure and community projects
There is no good reason, political or economic, why the power to create money should be in the hands of the trading banks. We will reclaim for the state the right to create money.
We were the first Party in New Zealand to promote a nuclear free policy, first to propose proportional representation. We are the first to propose real economic reforms.
We are the Democrats for social credit and we’re worth checking out.
Written By:
Neville Aitchison
Party President
This election should be about creating a better world for tomorrow; about reasoned argument; about examination of policy and principles - not personal muck raking that passes for debate, and offers to spend your pocket-money in the lolly shop.
Published: March 2008