Chantelle Baker uncovers the war propaganda pattern. From Ukraine to Palestine, Croatia to Israel. We are manipulated to be divided.

Seymour’s truancy push met with scepticism from mayors
“It’s not a core role or focus of the council.”
Chantelle Baker uncovers the war propaganda pattern. From Ukraine to Palestine, Croatia to Israel. We are manipulated to be divided.
“It’s not a core role or focus of the council.”
Up nearly 40 percent in the last half of 2024.
The coalition campaigned to “stop all work on He Puapua.”
“Just another publicity stunt…”
“Even ministers now recognise that policy unpredictability has become a genuine investment risk.”
“…school boards largely operate as judge, jury, and executioner…”
“It’s not a core role or focus of the council.”
Up nearly 40 percent in the last half of 2024.
The coalition campaigned to “stop all work on He Puapua.”
“Just another publicity stunt…”
“Even ministers now recognise that policy unpredictability has become a genuine investment risk.”
“…school boards largely operate as judge, jury, and executioner…”
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Christchurch’s rain “records” are wrong. NIWA’s missing data and false claims are fuelling climate hysteria. Centrist reveals historic deluges that dwarf today’s storms, and why Science Minister Shane Reti must intervene before the damage becomes policy.
Those in other countries, including New Zealand, who are disdainful of the Trumpian approach will do well to pay attention to what is happening in our own institutions.
Charlie Mitchell’s analysis is thoughtful in parts, but some conclusions need a second look.
Are parents being let off the hook?
By calling the keffiyeh a “terrorist tea towel,” Shane Jones brought culture war language into Parliament.
The same newsroom that gave Doyle the benefit of nuance turned around and gave Campbell the axe. Does this suggest that, at the Herald, politics decides the tone?
Christchurch’s rain “records” are wrong. NIWA’s missing data and false claims are fuelling climate hysteria. Centrist reveals historic deluges that dwarf today’s storms, and why Science Minister Shane Reti must intervene before the damage becomes policy.
Those in other countries, including New Zealand, who are disdainful of the Trumpian approach will do well to pay attention to what is happening in our own institutions.
Charlie Mitchell’s analysis is thoughtful in parts, but some conclusions need a second look.
Are parents being let off the hook?
By calling the keffiyeh a “terrorist tea towel,” Shane Jones brought culture war language into Parliament.
The same newsroom that gave Doyle the benefit of nuance turned around and gave Campbell the axe. Does this suggest that, at the Herald, politics decides the tone?