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  1. Yes, some of these Natzo Ministers are now confronting the reality of where our society is at–and who they actually have to deal with day by day.

    “Hang’em high”, “throw away the key”, “bullets are a waste of lead on ’em” does not quite cut it in 2024 when there has been a hell of a lot of Māori capacity building particularly during peak COVID. When disaster strikes Marae give shelter and resources to all, Mercenary Mitchell better wake up.

  2. Mark wants us to fix up the government mess ITS their shit not ours; gangs were created from state abuse in homes like Epuni Boys. Mitchell talks about drawing a line in the sand like he is blaming us (Maori) hello, the best gang is the whanau, and we don’t wear patches unless they are nicotine. But gangs are also a product of prisons, its complex.
    Now Mark speaks with his forked tongue of partnership with our people, yet his party is allowing the concept of partnership in the TOW to be poo pooed on by seemore, bloody hypocrites make up your fucken mind. Mark is looking to apportion blame he is as sly as a snake in the grass.

    1. I lived in Epuni in the early 1970s. You ignore that they ended up in the Boys home for a reason in the first place, so the state didn’t start their progress to dysfunction. You can put the fair share of blame on irresponsible parents, same as today 50 years later.

      1. Actually you cannot always blame the parents I have many gang whanau being Māori and their parents were not gang members so your wrong there Robbie who lived in Epuni. The state exacerbated there dysfunction when they stepped over the line by abusing their power and there is no excuse for this and no need to trivialize or pretend the abuse did not happen courtesy of the state.

  3. Sneaky superficial Mitchell is about money and meeting Correction’s cuts not co-governing.

    Where else were the savings to be made when Corrections already struggle to recruit staff ? On prisoners of course.

    Watch the further leaching of charitable/ iwi/ voluntarism agencies who already work in prisons as rehabilitation programmes are slashed.

    What say you Mitchell to addressing the ills of the other 55% ( 2019) non maori criminals ?

  4. As far as Māori are concerned I would think the iteration of National that included Key and Finlayson was probably a better bet.

  5. Yes I spoke to an ex pakeha prisoner last week .He said it is a fucken joke throwing him out of prison with $350 and no where to go or a job .And guess what he is the product of a posh education at ST PETERS at Cambridge .Even though he is from a well off family he has no support or contact with his whanau any more .

  6. While I agree the $350 release money is a joke where was the complaints about the Labour Government not increasing it .They had money to give to the gangs.

    1. Good question Trevor. As you may know, the Ardern regime’s Welfare Expert Advisory Group delivered their findings on “the inadequacy of the reestablishment grant payments, particularly… the Steps to Freedom grant” in February 2019.

      I guess there just wasn’t time to, y’know, actually do something in the intervening period until late 2023? It’s not like they had to massively overhaul welfare. They could have just spent five minutes writing a bill that did a one time indexation to inflation.

    1. What about the other 50% + of non moari violent offenders ? Co govern with Grey Power maybe ?

    2. 46% of those incarcerated are Maori.
      So what about the other 56%, lattes all round?

      I can see why nobody is your name.

    3. Fuck of we ain’t slaves putting us in prison working camps next will be concentration camps. Prisons aren’t geared to do rehab not enough funding only enough money for landlords and tax cuts.

  7. Why doesn’t corrections get prisoners in some form of paid employment, especially those that will be released in 18-24months. The money that prisoners earn could be shared 50/50 with victims and themselves, which they can only spend once they leave prisons.

  8. They are already doing this Benny but when they get out, they have nowhere to live and often they have burnt their bridges with their whanau.

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