Kim Robinson 13 February at 13:31
Dude, you have seriously lost it in the head... any respect I had for you has gone out of the window.
Time you take a serious retirement from politics.
Michael Laws 13 February at 13:32 Report
Moron - like a give a continental what YOU think.
Kim Robinson 13 February at 13:51
English definition of Moron = Michael Laws.
Michael Laws 13 February at 14:18 Report
homo
Haha....I love it when Michael Laws shows his true colours.
For a self professed "National Media Commentator" and a "Publicly Elected Official" he sure behaves in a manner that would put a 12 year old to shame...over, and over, and OVER again.
I think he is purposely committing career suicide. Either that or he is just plan mad. Or both.
Maybe we are all witnessing a case of how we start out in this world as babies...unable to do anything for ourselves, and having to be taught / shown how do to everything, and we eventually all end up like that again in our old age. It is usually a slow progression though, like how the clouds move across the sky on a windless day. Maybe Michael is doing it in super duper fast forward motion so that we can all witness his deterioration right before our eyes.
Whatever it is. I hope someone is folding his nappies, and pureeing his food...as i type!



1 comments:
How ODD! At the exact same time that he was telling someone that he didn't care about his opinion, and calling him a moron and a homo...he was trying to come across so hard done by and misunderstood, on a Herald discussion board. Crack up.
Hi, Michael Laws here.
Bevan Hurley, the journalist who wrote this story, has wholly mischaracterised my show on Radio Live that contained the disability discussion. If you want to listen to my remarks then www.radiolive.co.nz and it was Friday's 9-to-noon talkback.
Second, the point I was making that it was ludicrous to put disability athletes vs able bodied for the Halberg Awards. As it would be putting athletes from the Masters Games (age defined) or Special Olympics (mentally defined).
I also made the point that the myriad of definitions of disability - for the purpose of the Games - is overwhelming. And that, like squash, it is not a sport that raises the spectator pulse.
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