Waatea News Column: Is our public health sector too sick to save us?
The latest review into public health has been released and it has managed to utterly ignore Māori grievances and criticism from the disability sector.
The latest review into public health has been released and it has managed to utterly ignore Māori grievances and criticism from the disability sector.
The decision to tinker rather than transform is a political decision and those who are left behind are the societal casualties of that political cowardice.
One could argue that’s what happen when settlers renamed towns, glorified certain people and changed the narrative to hide the violence of colonisation
Māori development minister Nanaia Mahuta released an insane proposal on Māori media last week, set a ridiculously tiny window for consultation on that insane proposal and seems to have utterly ignored anyone else’s view who might have helped avoid such a ridiculous blunder being introduced in the first place.
What on earth is this Principal of Marist saying?
The latest Oranga Tamariki report by the Office of the Children’s Commissioner came out this week and it is again grim reading for anyone who has been following this neoliberal experiment in social policy.
Guled Mire and JessB are on the show tonight 8pm on Māori TV to discuss Black Lives Matter, Racism and having African whakapapa on Māori land.
With NZ First barely polling 2% in the Polls, this gasp for political relevancy faces a more desperate struggle this time around because of the enormous political capital Jacinda has built over the pandemic.
It’s not an Either/Or moment. Supporting the Black Lives Matters movement does not mean you do not care about issues here in Aotearoa.
Four consecutive Polls in a row, Newshub, TVNZ, Roy Morgan and UMR, have all put Jacinda and the Labour Party in the unprecedented position to be able to govern alone.