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  1. This looks like child abuse to me. I’m pretty sure that in Criminal Law, a blow aimed at one person and hitting another is an Indirect Assault offence. Sepuloni should be charged with child abuse. The buck stops with her if her department is damaging children. Whether they record the damage or not, is beside the point, but their cavalier attitude is mind-boggling, as well as negligent, as is her shocking decision to kneecap the Commissioner for Children.

  2. But surely they must be doing a great job otherwise why was their boss made Deputy Prime Minister.

  3. Snowball – a blow aimed can be contrived as assault if done in close enough proximity. The issues of children in poverty and suffering abuse also occurred under National governments (even with oversight) – were you screaming out for heads to roll at this time?

    RB – compared to any Nat led government, the current one is much more caring and compassionate. I could never see the Nats having a winter energy payment, cost of living payments, increased minimum wage, or a raft of other kind policy initiatives. Your second post?

    Trev – Jacinda’s decision to move on way self-less and has changed the likelihood of another Labour led government being returned to power later in the year. At the time of Jacinda’s resignation Labour were on a downward spiral that required decisive action to change. Chippy’s work since becoming PM has been excellent, for the most part. I look forward to political debates between Chippy and Luxon later in the year!

    In terms of the post I thought we were supposed to be responding to. I have to agree that it was folly to remove the oversight of Oranga Tamariki. But, also, you need to avoid confusing historical events with the current operating policy and situation. The events at Lake Alice should never have occurred, but were down to a couple of deviant people in power where there was minimal oversight of the operations of the institution. Even strong and pro-social policy which meets basic human rights will never stop the actions of the odd psychopath that is able to access power.

  4. Snowball – a blow aimed can be contrived as assault if done in close enough proximity. The issues of children in poverty and suffering abuse also occurred under National governments (even with oversight) – were you screaming out for heads to roll at this time?

    RB – compared to any Nat led government, the current one is much more caring and compassionate. I could never see the Nats having a winter energy payment, cost of living payments, increased minimum wage, or a raft of other kind policy initiatives. Your second post?

    Trev – Jacinda’s decision to move on way self-less and has changed the likelihood of another Labour led government being returned to power later in the year. At the time of Jacinda’s resignation Labour were on a downward spiral that required decisive action to change. Chippy’s work since becoming PM has been excellent, for the most part. I look forward to political debates between Chippy and Luxon later in the year!

    In terms of the post I thought we were supposed to be responding to. I have to agree that it was folly to remove the oversight of Oranga Tamariki. But, also, you need to avoid confusing historical events with the current operating policy and situation. The events at Lake Alice should never have occurred, but were down to a couple of deviant people in power where there was minimal oversight of the operations of the institution. Even strong and pro-social policy which meets basic human rights will never stop the actions of the odd psychopath that is able to access power.

    1. Bob. Briefly, Yes, probably to everything . Including presenting to a Parliamentary select committee at the invite of a prominent charity ; published in the Dom when Bill English used his veto to stymie the extension of paid parental leave – although I don’t think I knew he’d presented false financial figures at that time – and I have never stopped criticising the latter for his unacceptable attempts to typecast all our young males as useless druggies, and at a time when the suicide rate for 18-24 year olds was tragic.

  5. It’s a return to 19th century judgmental thinking with class disdain – and we thought we had got over that but there are pockets of it like disease-carrying pods ready to infect from the slightest tear in the wrapper.

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