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  1. The AAAP are correct in its view that lunches in schools must be universal, but not for the reasons it says. They say universality needs to be across the board to help address poverty levels. I’d say the need to do that should be more about steering remedies away from widening the cultural divide between the poor and the well off and shunning the institutionalisation of how basic needs are met according to financial resources. We saw this in the early 1990s when food banks emerged as a response to the reforms of the Bolger/Richardson/Shipley government. Now we have MSD referrals to food banks as an accepted part of their practice which is just hideous. Our 1938 social security legislation was introduced as a rights-based method of income-redistribution aimed to help dispense with people relying on charity just to feed their kids. There’s currently a very real risk that the way we deal with homelessness is going down the same road with government hell-bent on acquiring “facilities” with “beds” as a way to address how the housing crisis tends to affect the poor. It’s difficult to criticise attempts like these to “help” the poor because of course food is better than no food and shelter is better than no shelter, but this government needs to look at how easy it is for the methods it sees as necessary to address immediate need to become so entrenched they’re impossible to change. So far many of those methods if left unchecked will highlight the very inequality the government thinks its addressing.

  2. Facilities with beds – they’ll be bringing back the workhouse soon. Pick your oakum and we’ll let you have food and a bed

  3. I heard some nasty NZders moaning about this policy on the radio, saying people will depend on our government if we do hand outs, yet we got outs in the 60s we got free fruit in kindergarten we got free milk and we got subsidized milk@ 4 cents a bottle we got hot chocolate for 2 cents a cup, yes 2 cents a cup we also had a mum at home waiting for us who had baked wow! many children don’t have this luxury anymore so why are people being so fucken nasty. I also remember our mutton was subsidized by our government in the 80s so we could afford it. We can prop up banks, SC finance company, and we can pay millions for mico plasma bovis people need to wake up in our country and stop being fucken selfish. I have no children my daughter is grown up but im paying for middle class (working for families) i dont care as long as people can care for their whanau. Lastly some NZers go free tertiary education.

    1. Exactly, and what was good about it is that it was universal. There was no singling out of individuals because of who they were to be treated differently, like food in schools if you’re poor. Food in schools is a great idea but it must be across the board. It may well be about fed kids learning better, but it’s also about fostering a sense of community at schools and no doubt a whole bunch of other positive reasons that go with that. Limiting food in schools to the poor highlights and embeds inequality.

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