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  1. My tears are all dried up. Arms limp from boxing at shadows. Tired I am not. Let me at em.

  2. This vain-glorious woman who seems to allot more time to choosing big earrings than being concerned about children, and who, for some inexplicable reason, wears party frocks to Parliament, will be hoping that there is no hell, because if there is, then that’s where she’s headed.

    Labour’s axing of the Commissioner for Children, should ensure the axing of Labour. Labour’s Minister for Children, Davis, should to be told, “ What you did for the least of my children, you did unto me.” Go home, Kelvin Davis, and be grateful you’ve got a home to go to, you’re not wanted any more.

    1. You’re not channeling the ghost of Joan Rivers by any chance? Earrings, summer frocks? Sepuloni certainly has a lot to answer for but fashion faux pas?

  3. Agree 100%

    We have kids being found dead in drums and suitcases and NZ kids in state care, tortured with electric shocks to their genitals while not prosecuting the people that did.

    When will they learn that the cover ups to this type of behaviour and lack of solid investigation , is what makes the state more guilty and does as much damage as the deaths and torture themselves!

    Placements and lack of oversight of vulnerable children by the state seems to be getting worse https://www.9news.com.au/world/how-did-four-year-old-malachi-leave-court-with-his-killer/a8ebd658-f2d4-442e-be79-6df66d7ac1fc

    How jealous lies sent a teenage boy to prison for rape he didn’t commit
    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/how-jealous-lies-sent-a-teenage-boy-to-prison-for-rape-he-didnt-commit/CUI5EFPR7FCILMGEL76DVW7MLQ/

    Dimetrius Pairama remembered as a ‘bubbly’ girl who loved to sing
    https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/115998022/dimetrius-pairama-remembered-as-a-bubbly-girl-who-loved-to-sing

    ‘It never goes away’: New Zealand survivors of abuse in care hope testimony will herald change
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/may/11/it-never-goes-away-new-zealand-survivors-of-abuse-in-care-hope-testimony-will-herald-change

    All very well having justice hearings to expose what happened in these cases but where is the real change so that it doesn’t keep happening.?

    It sounds like change is coming it sounds like the opposite, less transparency of state so that justice is a long time coming and abusers get away with it by being able to cover it up and be supported by the state as we have seen in many cases.

    Lying and misrepresentation by OT to courts and undermining judges that take that seriously, is part of the problem. https://thedailyblog.co.nz/2022/05/17/oranga-tamariki-critical-race-theory-dogma-in-reverse-uplift-trauma-highlights-perverse-ideological-outcomes/

  4. Wonder if Gaurav got anything on Carmel, tidbits, goss,…peccadilloes. Anything Sharm?

    1. Ethan woke. I’ve been wondering what Mallard has on Arden and Robertson to score a job which he’s patently unsuited for.

    2. There is one thing out there which is more public knowledge than speculation, is that Carmel’s stormtroopers will literally raid the lives of beneficiaries if someone dobs them in about a dole overpayment, but if someone in Carmel’s government makes a complaint about one of their own then the stormtroopers will move heaven and earth to do nothing about it.

  5. Not all children in care are the outcome of hopeless parents. My children’s father died young of an horrific medical condition. Fortunately, I lived long enough to see them through to adulthood. When grandchildren arrived, their parents set up guardians to care for them, should tragedy also strike them along the way. When my first child was born, my late husband and I lodged a document specifically excluding certain whanau, megalomaniac religious nutters, from having any input into the welfare of our children. Fortunately, that never came about either.

    The very sad case of two little Korean children found in suitcases, appears to be linked to the fairly recent death of their own father, and a bereft young mother left alone in another country. Being a single parent is hard. I found it hard.

    The modern nuclear family often lacks supportive family networks, hence the importance of agencies like Oranga Tamariki acting in lieu of parents, prioritising the well-being of the children, with the same sort of “ excellence” which government spouts about extremist speech and other pc meanderings.

    That this country with its dark underbelly of violence should axe its Commissioner for Children beggars belief – and sends a dreadful message to all of our children, all of whom matter.

    1. Shades of the Muslim shooting aftermath. Young mothers, parents left without a clear pathway for managing their lives and a hypocrisy by government about feeling sorry but with the western present anti-societal approach of putting an economic fix when there was heart needed. So women with dead husbands being expected to go to work in a strange country, unfamiliar language, often without family networks .

      1. Grey Warbler. I don’t really want to get into this, but I know enough to know that the young Korean mother, a stranger in a strange country, coping with the loss of her husband from cancer, may well have been crippled with grief.

        There are some losses which one never really recover from, in spite of what the death-and-dying gurus say. Caring for two small children suffering from the loss of their father, could have been unimaginably difficult. My young son navigated adolescence without a father or father figure. My eldest child contacted an uncle suggesting he show an interest. Uncle said if he was depressed he should see a counsellor. Affluent white whanau, where the loss of a shoe or jacket isn’t a financial challenge, nor interferes with skiing holidays.

        Elsewhere I knew a kind woman whose family think lost her mind after the loss of a child in her care. The lady died young. Korean women are quite culturally different from our lot, and like the Muslim widows who you mention, the impact of a catastrophic life and death shock is an unknown to outsiders, and it is not for others to judge or generalise about. Sadly, a good hospital social worker may have been able to help in a scenario like this one, but that’s another unknown.

  6. The government just announced plans to bring thousands more foreigners into the country as cheap labour (and probably residency pathway), but what we don’t need here is more homicidal maniacs who can just stuff their kids in a storage shed like some disused furniture and casually fuck off back to their own country. And today we read about one of New Zealand’s true creeps, lawyer Tony Ellis, who is terribly concerned about the welfare of another South Korean, a homicidal maniac who fled to our country after they killed another human being, and who Ellis and Mahuta say will suffer at the hands of China if deported. These people are truly sick, playing politics with innocent lives, using our country as an insane asylum, and fighting for the privileges and emotions of murderers. This is what they do for a living, this is who they are.

    1. Cripes Jody. It used to be that we were to look for Reds under our Beds – now it’s Homicidal Maniacs. I think that the very high emotion that comes from people who have found a recipient to pour out all their negative emotions on. It is easier to pick one type of person for the target. It is much harder when one looks at the wider world nad sees the liquefaction of so much that used to be held dear. You are not helping in our fight to hold onto a moral culture and principles that go with it, when you turn on Tony Ellis. One barrister killed himself probably from facing the sly, evil side of all our natures to often. Learn about projection in psychology and then get a bit humble.

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