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  1. SADLY they DON’T want to fix what really matters.
    Everything is just an excuse, as is the ‘first 100-day’ line of thought.
    They simply do NOT want to fix anything, they just want to keep us quiet enough, whilst the rich suck us dry, or whatever the great plan is, that we aren’t privy to.

  2. Keep up the good work Martyn.
    We must all stand against this.
    While we as individual citizens may not be able to stop unconscionable acts within we all fall sway of them once they are in place.

    I take the view that we must dissent massively, as social and legal settings move toward the removal of the evidential threshold and the concomitant erosion of the presumption of innocence.

    Stand up and oppose this brothers and sisters, before the state gives itself the power to silence you as a citizen by accusations alone.

    1. You are right but who do you protest without looking like you side with Tamaki and Co.The ballot ox used to be the way but government debts go unchecked which ever party is in power

  3. Labours plan seems to be to hire ever increasing numbers of bureaucrats, mostly in HR or comms

    1. Well put, the uni-party.
      They don’t give a F about anything that really matters to the 90% of Kiwis.
      It’s just a big con, that they’re getting away with, whilst the sheeple ‘get programmed’ by the media and TV.

  4. Warmest congratulations Martyn. For your courage and persistence. It show that you genuinely care about these kids…..

    I wouldn’t have followed this story much (we all have our own issues that we focus on). Thanks to the Streisand effect, I am listening now.

    Within the appalling state of broadcasting in NZ, there are some who shine a light…..you are one of the few Martyn

  5. I was a state ward from about 1987 (under “care n protection” rather than “youth justice”). Mercifully I was 13 years old by then and managed to side step the horrific sexual and other abuses that went on, but I did experience lesser abuses and I heard about them from other kids. My takeaway from my experiences of being one of the great unwashed and unwanted are numerous, but it has always bewildered me the foster “parents” I was placed with and shipped around too were mostly all single women with grown up kids and no job. They had zero experience or skills in nurturing young troubled kids. One was an alcoholic who drank daily and only ever got dressed to go out grocery shopping or if a social worker was coming over. One used another foster kid I lived with as per personal slave, doing all the household chores, shopping, food prep, dishes, washing, foot massages! Later I found out how much they got paid for each of us. It was very lucrative for the otherwise unemployed and unemployable. Thankfully I had some sense back then n got the hell out by the time I was 16, educated myself, sustained a career, had my own family etc. My heart goes out to all my fellow foster siblings of decades past and present. I guess I was one of the lucky ones, in a decade slightly less horrific than the previous, but I still have healing to do yet. I have so many many first hand stories of the shit that was endured and the system whose aim was to break vulnerable kids. There’s no other explanation for it. MSD broke kids, with their ignorance, ineptitude, disdain and cruelty. We should wrap around these kids now, and the adults they’ve become. We/they fucking deserve our love for what they have endured. It’s time to acknowledge and own our own shit so we can all heal. Fuck MSD and the horse it rode in on

  6. Sinic Thanks for solid anecdotage. And don’t give a horse to the MSD – horses are noble animals and such ignoble MSD people shouldn’t have command and neglect of them.

  7. https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/ninetonoon/audio/2018855561/the-hazards-of-helicopter-parenting”’
    Helicopter parents can seem too overprotective, Johal says, perhaps wanting to oversee everything their child is involved in and sometimes even acting on behalf of their child, particularly when they’re in a group.

    These parents are coming from a good place, but their behaviour can have unintended consequences.
    “Often they’re trying to think about protecting their child from harm. It’s not that they don’t trust their child, it’s just that they prefer not to see their child in emotional pain, not letting them get into trouble, perhaps.
    “But it can take its toll as well, not just on the child, but perhaps interfering [with] some of their developmental pathways.”

    Not only does overinvolvement impact a parent’s time and energy, Johal says it can also rob the child of life experiences and opportunities to learn and adjust to the world.

    So not any old foster parent can manage to help the children in their care. But not even the real parents can This shows how hard it is to parent well and that it needs education for the parents to strike the right balance to bring up a child who can cope in our complex and often contradictory, often lying society.automatically gtow good tall, not bent, strong children.

  8. The Stuff article was like a PR piece trying to downplay things whereas the newsroom article showed some real journalism. Peter Hughes is another of these CEOs who like the fat salary but don’t want any accountability to go with it and resort to the ‘I was unaware of this’ line. It’s staggering when CEO’s profess to have no idea of what is going on in organisations that they are paid hundred’s of thousands to manage.

    I was particularly disgusted with his final statement: “Then he focused on the 14 public sector chief executives, who, he said, had listened carefully to survivors’ evidence, and fronted the commission over the last fortnight.

    “I’m proud of them for doing that. That is not an easy thing to do, and they did that. That is the start of change.”

    Courageous? Give me a break. They’ve overseen this travesty. The very least they should do is front up. Talk about trying to frame the abuser as the victim.

    Look this has been happening under both National and Labour – and by extension their coalition partners – but Labour’s reluctance to address it and hold these organisations fully accountable and on top of that remove their independent oversight is nothing short of staggering. Even more so when they have a clear majority. Add in things like the refusal to investigate the response to the Parliament protests and the subterfuge with things like 3 waters and the government that promised to be the most transformational and transparent is turning out to be the least so.

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