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  1. “The Minister for Social Development [Anne Tolley] needs to issue a full universal apology to those abused while in state care, and immediately set up an independent body to resolve historic and current complaints of abuse and neglect.”

    This Government survives on denial, as they cannot survive in a real & honest world, so I wholly agree with you Martyn.

  2. It is the false narrative portrayed by the Tories and MSM, always blaming the victims. Just like beneficiary bashing when there actually aren’t any jobs available in the marketplace?

  3. It is the false narrative portrayed by the Tories and MSM, always blaming the victims. Just like beneficiary bashing when there actually aren’t any jobs available in the marketplace?

  4. The abuse in state care is not past, it is systemic, and it most certainly does continue today. Sign the petition to lend your support.

    Nice work Martyn, thanks.

  5. The Nats feel it’s ok to give a Saudi business 9 million of our dollars as “compensation”, but don’t see the need to compensate people who’ve suffered at the hands of the State. What’s wrong with that picture??

  6. What happens AFTER the apology, the enquiry, the public announcement?

    That’s the bit that really matters.

    Access to counselling, treatment, civility when accessing social services, mentoring. Those things that have usually been priced way away out of reach.

    For as long as necessary. Rest of life, if that is what is required.

    For those still in the webs and toils – make sure the social workers are sufficient in numbers and training, the inspectorate is partisan for the people in care, and the foster people are more loving than family.

    Otherwise – the money goes to the enquiry and the survivor is still living a crippled life.

    Be damned to the apology. Address the ‘after’ with fullness.

    1. That is the crucial point – as one of the people in the articles points out, a few thousand dollars and a paper “apology” is an insult in these circumstances.

      The effects people experience from these kinds of abuse experiences are absolutely staggering. People who have been through experiences like that don’t get better after four 50 minute sessions with a half-trained, underpaid counsellor or social worker. It affects the rest of their lives, period. And that is the absolute best case scenario. The extent of harm caused, the extent of terror, fear, and loss experienced by victims like that, it is unfathomable to witches like Tolley.

      The responses by Tolley and Finlayson, and the larger bureacracy would make anyone weak at the knees:

      “[Cooper] cites a cabinet paper from Tolley, which lists some of the risks the backlog of claims – which is in the hundreds – poses for the government.

      They include “fiscal risk”, “loss of confidence and trust in the process,” “the potential of a renewed call for a public enquiry into historical claims” and “an alternative process being called for either by the Courts or through public opinion and pressure”.

      The paper also discusses how the government expects the number of claims to reduce as victims die out.”

      Make no mistake, this has nothing to do with fiscal risk. The money is pocket change for the government in the grand scheme of things. It’s just a perverse excuse to deny people even the most basic acknowledgement. It has everything to do with avoiding responsibility, until they can simply issue one or two words in a speech somewhere, and have the public clap politely and go on about their day. It’s atrocious, and people like that man in the article deserve so, so, so much better.

  7. We live in a broken society. And all systems are geared to breaking it some more.

    It’s only ever about money, and never about actual the welfare of citizens, be they children or adults.

    Don’t look for change for the better because the system is a system of abuse and is incapable of changing for the better.

  8. The State prison system now open to privatisation, is another disgrace with inmates being raped and sexually assaulted every day.

    Debilitating disease is spread and psychological damage unavoidable as lack of any concern for individual rights, is normalised by uncaring and politically aligned management policies are put in place.

    The State is responsible for this criminal activity and the damage done to inmates who go on to being further screwed up and eventually the tragic consequences affect thousands.

    Presently there is NO rehabilitation program anywhere for these victims.

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