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  1. The briefing, ahead of the first ‘Social Investment Ministers Group highlights three-quarters of youth crime was carried out by the “10 percent of young people who have the greatest exposure to hardship and disadvantage.

    So instead of calling for the Government to directly address hardship and disadvantage, the police call for big data child uplifts?

    But isn’t it widely known that kids in state care are more likely to end up in jail?

    And cost the state far more going foreword due to the damage they incurred in state care?

    This doesn’t sound like a very well thought-out solution.

    Further, wasn’t it also established that giving families the right to refute allegations in court was the answer that is lacking rather than forcing OT to negotiate with Iwi service providers before uplifting a child?

  2. While I share your concerns about social investment the blind belief by many that everyone can just do what seems right to them is the obvious cause of the faults in society. Targeting 9 to 12 year olds would be 9 to 12 years too late going on what I have observed over the last 60 years.
    The recent death of a baby from domestic violence and others injured in Hamilton along with the police officer killed in Nelson are just some of the signs that our society has lost its way and that our feelings are not the most reliable guide for making life’s decisions.

    1. ‘Society has lost its way’

      I think many would agree with that statement, Bonnie.

      Therefore, isn’t identifying the changes that have resulted in society losing its way and reversing them the real solution?

      We can’t expect the broken to be fixed while doing nothing to fix the society that broke them in the first place.

  3. Team of Commandos at North Pole storm Santa’s headquarters and grab his naughty and nice lists( after all the fat red one has centuries of surveillance on children).
    Major embarrassment when said lists reveal why most National Party members are on naughty list.

  4. To think that my dad would have been classed as an ‘at risk’ child. His father(my grandfather) used to regularly give him and all family members unsolicited boxing lessons.
    Instead of being taken into care so he could be buggered by priests or welfare experts twelve year old father responded to a kick up the arse by decking grandfather, leaving home and getting a job(in those days they had jobs for twelve year old boys).
    According to the smartarse, self-appointed judges of families that regularly contribute to this blog, Dad should have perpetuated ” a circle of violence’ to his wife and children.
    In fact he did the exact opposite. Loving and caring husband and father who did not use violence or even threaten it – except on that one occasion when we had a pommy teacher from somewhere in the North of England who used to smack us around the ears because we could not understand him – but personally I do not count pest control as violence.
    Think of what my father missed out on by not being handed over to the loving care of priests.

  5. So why do we need to have a special way of dealing with Maori children than those of any other race . All cases should have the same appraisal . I have friends in education who say they can identify those children who will grow into troubled adults very easily. It has to be excepted some people make poor parents and the state needs the power to try and change their future..We cannot allow these children to fail because we are afraid of being called racist by those that will use any opportunity to try and make this government look bad.

  6. Bomber, love the Blakes People, our another youth detention cantre is on the roof reaching for the sky, and takeaways.
    Caren, her, knowing care, is not knowing, to these others, what, no takeaways, just water blast them off the roof. then seg and and then add how many not months years.

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