Revolutionary Ideas
Why not do as was the norm when I was at school and we all made our own lunches. We buttered bread and spread Marmite, or in some cases jam.
Why not do as was the norm when I was at school and we all made our own lunches. We buttered bread and spread Marmite, or in some cases jam.
The $881 million wasn’t just vendor agreements – it funded systems designed to track, measure, and condition young minds. This isn’t about saving money. It’s not even about politics. What’s unfolding reveals something far more profound.
The destructive idiocy of teaching kids ‘indigenous maths’.
No subject is safe. The teacher involved is excellent. But this is what she must do. The fault lies with the Ministry of Education prescribing such rubbish and with Hon Erica Stanford and Prime Minister Chris Luxon for overseeing it.
We let you know about Whanganui District Council's sneaky co-governance and sadly we have to advise you of another sneaky scheme...
Our kids are left lost and anxious and the situation is dire. What we are witnessing has been decades in the making.
As education fails Māori, so it fails the country.
While school lunches may seem small beer to some, they are a marker of a society steadily moving away from personal responsibility. And that’s not trivial.
So-called ‘anti-racists’ are very, very, racist indeed.
The ex-Premier, the PM and the ‘businessmen’ – just another day for Labor.
Socialist experiments fail, routinely and often horribly. So Marxists took over institutions in an attempt to fool the masses.
Here a few hints I have picked up through my experiences and through helping many children get through this kind of situation.
Let me give you a hint: exceptions are never decided in the White House.
The need for change is obvious but is there true political will?