The Changes to NCEA Are A Class War
If every “reform” makes it easier for the privileged to win… is it still reform — or something else?

If every “reform” makes it easier for the privileged to win… is it still reform — or something else?

Seymour and Winston want New Zealanders to stay calm. Trouble is, the IEA and JP Morgan are waving around numbers that look a lot more like an energy crisis than a minor blip.

A political editor apologising to a minister for telling the truth? That’s not journalism — that’s something else entirely.

They didn’t think anyone would notice.
Now one of NZ’s most recognisable fishers is calling it out — and asking who this law really protects.

If Australian SAS are already in the region, the question isn’t if — it’s whether New Zealand is next. And Luxon isn’t answering.

From the heart of Auckland, the message was blunt: If New Zealand won’t speak out, what exactly does it stand for?

They’re caring for New Zealand’s most vulnerable — and paying for it themselves. Even after the increase, many say they’re still going backwards.

More than 50 beds gone. An ageing population rising. And nowhere for people to go except already stretched hospitals.

Three days. That’s all it was. Now even that’s too much to ask from a system that never wants to switch off.

If it’s about safety, why no body cams? If it’s about protection, why does it feel like surveillance?