Anonymous ID: 8ffbd3 Can we start a page Jan. 8, 2019, 8:43 p.m. No.4675026   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6021 >>7378

Can we start apage on http://voiceanything.com/ same as face book but no censoring or that crap

to keep up with what is going on in NZ the MSM is government controlled or where we can wake up the people

Anonymous ID: 8ffbd3 Jan. 8, 2019, 10:28 p.m. No.4676366   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4676021

>New Zealand is not a place where elite can run away to hide.

This will fade away and people find it hard to follow and leaving comments we are here long now people is not always persistent

Anonymous ID: 8ffbd3 New Zealand Hundreds of newborns taken from mothers over last three years Jan. 12, 2019, 11:13 a.m. No.4727328   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The number of newborn babies being taken away from their mothers into government care is leaping, new figures show.

 

Over the last three years, 574 babies ended up in Government care within the first month of their life, according to figures released under the Official Information Act.

 

Forty five of these were taken from their mum the day they were born.

 

Child protection agency Oranga Tamariki said some of the babies would have been taken for planned adoption rather than protection reasons and taking any child away was a last resort.

 

Yet a social worker says many of the uplifts are harmful and unnecessary.The number has climbed over the last three years, with 225 in 2017 - 38 more than 2016 and 63 more than 2015.

 

Paora Moyle, a social worker of 20 years, now working on a PhD around state care, said more children are being uplifted from their family than ever before.

 

The practice was doing more harm than good for the babies, Moyle said.

 

Moyle, who used to work for Oranga Tamariki - then known as Child Youth and Family - said caregivers aren't always screened and social workers are over-worked and under-resourced.

 

"We are uplifting at a rate that we can not find placement for," Moyle said. "When you do that you put children at risk. So we either put them in a risky situation at home if they are older kids or we put them with caregivers who have not been screened."

 

More than half of these newborns are uplifted from young Māori mothers, Moyle said.

 

"You've got institutional racism rife.

 

"I know what it is to grow up in state care and be taken from my whanau. I spent 14 years in state care. I've seen it all. The same practice was happening then is the same practice that is happening now."

 

A large proportion of eventual prisoners come from a state care background, she said.

 

"There are more children harmed going into state care than there are being saved.

 

"It's not good enough."

 

In 2017, Auckland had the most cases at 79, while Te Tai Tokerau had the least at nine.

 

Midlands region, including the Waikato, saw 37 cases in 2017.

 

Oranga Tamariki chief social worker Paul Nixon said in a statement that planned adoptions were behind some uplifts.

 

And when the uplift was due to safety concerns, taking any child away was a last resort.

 

"A newborn may be taken into care due to care and protection concerns. In the case of newborns, assessments may have begun before a baby is born if concerns are evident at that time."

 

Oranga Tamariki were unable to provide data on how many babies were taken into Government care due to drug-related concerns.

 

Other family members are the first point of call, Nixon said.

 

"In some cases, the right support can help a parent/caregiver bridge that gap so they can safely care for their child again."

 

The ratio of caregivers to babies is a problem, educational psychologist Dr Kathyrn Berkett said.

 

Berkett, who trains agencies working with children in care, said Government caregivers often deal with about four children at one time. Outcomes of newborns in care can be good, providing the baby has a caregiver aware of it's needs, Berkett said.

 

"It's not that someone has to be paid to look after kids, it's not that they have to be family, that doesn't matter. What matters is can they attune and [whether] they have them for long enough.

 

"A lot of our care givers in government care move through quickly.

 

"[Newborns] can't tell you that they're hungry, they can't tell you that they're tired. The absolutely only way they can get their needs met is if somebody recognises their needs and appropriately responds."

 

But every baby is different and without consistent caregivers able to recognise their needs, social and cognitive development is compromised.

 

"It's not a judgement on those people doing the care.

 

"To think of even possibly being able to do that at a four to one ratio … when we've got higher numbers, I don't care how good that person is - you can't attune to [four] newborns."

 

Ruby Nyika

13:41, Apr 05 2018

 

This is form a STUFF article

 

The amount of children and new born that is been taken away form parent is stupid for a population of 4.5 million to 4.7 million.

 

Something stinks Bad here!!!

Anonymous ID: 8ffbd3 Department of Conservation Independent Poisoned Cow Investigation - nothing "independent" about it. Jan. 12, 2019, 3:19 p.m. No.4729859   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9888

Thursday, 25 October 2018, 8:54 am

Press Release: The Graf Boys

DOC Independent Poisoned Cow Investigation – Nothing Independent About It

 

Clyde Graf – TV Wild

 

On the 6th of September 2018 the Department of Conservation aerially spread 1080 poison across the Mapara Scenic Reserve. The aerial poisoning operation resulted in the death of 8 cows. The cow's owners say that they were not fully informed about the consequences of the aerial operation, and followed the instructions provided to them by the Department of Conservation.

 

In response, the Department of Conservation has stated that it is not responsible for the cow deaths and is pinning the blame squarely on the shoulders of the farmers. The cost to the farmers for the poisoned cows is over $10,000.

 

In a letter to the farmers’ lawyer, Sue Grey, the Deputy Director General, Mervyn English stated "The fact is the cattle entered the area of your clients' property which your clients had formally signed up for inclusion in the pests control operation, through no fault of the Department."

 

What is concerning about the statement made by the Deputy Director General is that the evidence indicates that the cows were poisoned in the paddock they were found dead in, and that they did not necessarily enter the operational area.

 

The Deputy Director General also stated "The public must have confidence in our operational expertise." To ensure that the Department gets its way, and regains public confidence, it has selected Waikato Regional Council to undertake its independent review.

 

However, the relationship between the Department of Conservation and Waikato Regional Council appears to be anything other than independent. For example, the Waikato Regional Council has an MOU with DoC, the two organisations have shared the costs of aerial poisoning operations in the past, and in 2015, TB Free New Zealand, the Department of Conservation, and Waikato Regional Council jointly applied to Waikato Regional Council for a resource consent to enable them to aerially spread 1080 poison across the Waikato Region for another 35 years.

 

The “independent” Department of Conservation poisoned cow investigation story is presented in this video clip … https://youtu.be/9EmNIR1iBrk

 

The Waikato Regional Council’s independent investigation is expected to be released within the next few weeks.

 

Ends

Anonymous ID: 8ffbd3 Jan. 12, 2019, 3:23 p.m. No.4729888   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0435

>>4729859

The question is is our milk products for infant formula rely so clean and not contaminated with poison. if cows die it must be ingested it some how and cows do not walk alone ?