• rho50@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    I think almost any news coverage can be politicised in the comments, especially with the level of polarisation and discontent in NZ, and the scale of social issues currently in the media spotlight.

    I would consider all of the examples posted to be relevant to current affairs, and not necessarily politics focused (though I concede comments on them would likely stray into political debate almost immediately).

    Politics to me should be more scoped to stuff like “David Seymour says <controversial thing>”, “PM Hipkins talks to us about <topic>” etc.

    • RaoulDuke@lemmy.nzOPM
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      1 year ago

      See this still comes down to interpretation, and even how the headline is worded. The article in #5 features a video with James Shaw and Peeni Henare discussing the start of the ETS and focusses pretty much solely on the government. Stuff’s headline for the same story, Government thinks its climate policy is planting too many trees, sounds far more like politics too.

      • rho50@lemmy.nz
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        1 year ago

        Agreed, it’s a very fuzzy boundary. I guess my point/view is that the boundary is so wide as to make the distinction meaningless in most cases.

        The only kinds of posts I can think of that are unlikely to become political are non-news, non-rant posts like photos of NZ scenery or general discussions about activities or hobbies.