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Thursday, June 5, 2025

Lindsay Mitchell: Ardern - If she insists on being remembered, I will oblige


One thing children who get murdered never seem short of is names. The latest example is Catalya Remana Tangimetua Pepene, the four-year-old Kaikohe child who recently met a violent death. Late 2023 it was Taita toddler, Ruthless-Empire Souljah Reign Rhind Shephard Wall. Or in 2016, 14 week-old Richard Royal Orif Takahi Winiata Uddin. Examples abound.

What they were definitely short of is love and care. That is what lies at the heart of New Zealand's high rate of child abuse and neglect. Not material poverty. Not a lack of money.

It's a fact ex Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern either willfully or naively chose to ignore. Her solution to the plight of too many suffering children was greater wealth redistribution. Inventing new payments for families with babies, lifting benefit rates and installing families in motels were three major policies designed to alleviate poverty. But the mayhem goes on. The Salvation Army Social Policy Unit recently summarised the trend:

"Violence against children is increasing. The number of children admitted to hospital with injuries because of assault, abuse or neglect increased sharply in 2024 to the highest number in at least a decade. Violent offending against children also continued to increase and was at levels much higher than five years ago."

In her heart Ardern must surely understand that what every child needs, above anything else, is at least one dedicated parent or caregiver who puts their child first every time. Who puts the child's needs above their own. As a mother, it must be obvious to her.

No New Zealand child is at risk of death from war, widespread disease or starvation. With the kind of extensive social system provided by charities, non-govt agencies and the state, a child death should be rare.

So we come back to the question of why do these children - only the tip of the maltreatment iceberg - die?

Because nobody has been their determined stalwart. Their uncompromising champion and defender.

Throwing money at people who become parents willy-nilly, who lack any financial or emotional wherewithal, who can't look after themselves let alone a demanding, time-intensive baby, is nothing more than a salve to the conscience of people who have misdiagnosed the problem. Led by the likes of Jacinda Ardern.

This is what Ardern's famous form of kindness and compassion actually looks like. Lecturing well-heeled members of society about how they need to walk a mile in the shoes of the poor and down-trodden, and graciously stump up tax for her to apply bigger and better band-aids on a suppurating sore.

It's no coincidence that these children often come out of communities where addiction, and the associated violence, is rife. Only the addict thinks the solution to his or her problem is more money.

I would never question Ardern's deep love for her own child. What I would ask is why does she think she can persuade other parents to care in the same fashion and to the same degree simply by putting more money in their bank accounts every week?

Poor families throughout the country do a fine job by their children in spite of their low incomes. Unskilled immigrants, refugees, those who have seen real poverty make their children the very centre of all they do. They care for them and are ambitious for them.

They don't load them up with meaningless, social-media inspired monikers which do nothing but reflect the immature fantasy worlds their parents inhabit.

So while we endure the massive media-hype around Ardern's biography, and most detractors focus on her horribly hypocritical claim to a compassion-driven Covid response, remember, her main reason for entering politics was to help children.

Not only did she fail, but she may have made matters worse.

Lindsay Mitchell is a welfare commentator who blogs HERE - where this article was sourced.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Jacinda has always relied on a carefully crafted media image. In that way, she is just like Princess Diana and Meghan. Truth and substance don't matter as long as the story sells. And she knows that fiction will sell when people want to believe it and there is an obliging mainstream media who will sell it for her. The same applied to Lange a generation earlier.

Her qualifications are in communications. Most of her efforts in power related to information hiring an army of public service PR people, restrictions on official information and media manipulation. And when reality did become apparent she created scapegoats.

Jacinda is like a woman who spends half the day in front of the mirror while her life is falling down around her. Her failings don't matter as long as she looks good.

Anonymous said...

New Zealand will continue for a very long time to pay in ever falling living standards & community misery for the racial, social and economic divisive policies of this hypocritical, self-serving and manipulative person Ardern.

Anonymous said...

Ardern is a bird brain who teaches failure. She's a fish n chip wrapper at best, yet the morons in this country voted for her. The rest is history. She's an incompetent out of her depth far left nut job....she is perfectly qualified for the left tho.....

Barrie Davis said...

Lindsay, the three examples you gave of child deaths were Maori. Like the aggressive haka, roromi is a Maori tradition. The problem is Maori culture. The solution is European civilization.

Doug Longmire said...

Comrade Ardern would have been a good match with Prince Harry, The Spare.

Gaynor said...

I agree with Barrie that many Maori problems are self - inflicted , but I recognize there are evils from the West , like Marxism that have added to the their problem . Giving welfare money to solo mothers is disastrous and encourages licentiousness and solo parent homes but also not educating lower SES children by using in effective teaching methods is destructive as well.
There has been a lot more violence toward children since Sue Bradford's anti-smacking law and that was clearly not the solution to the large numbers of disgraceful infant Maori deaths .
Traditional values like self-control, patience and perseverance etc are what is needed but even our European permissive child-rearing discourages common sense like that.

Robert Arthur said...

The lengthy names curious. Is it just a sign of the anti establishment attitude? Or devised under an influence? Or to facilate Benefit fraud and other illegal activity and elude creditors in later life?

Anonymous said...

Very sadly, future historians will find Ardern's book and make the assumption that it is a true reflection of her time in politics simply because it was written, printed, and published.
What they are unlikely to find are all these critical comments which cumulatively tell the truth about this vile woman.

Similar to the post war adulation of Churchill - he was no friend of NZ if you look critically at his abuse of our military.

Richard said...

Ms Mitchell, if you don't like the media driven hype about her book, have you thought of not reading the massive media driven hype about her book? If it bothers you that inuour terms she didn't achieve all she set out to do with children, do you think having to respond to things like the Christchurch massacre and White Island took up an unexpected amount of time.. Might that be a little like setting out to build and, and then one family member falling ill and needing intensive care? When unexpected things like that happen, house building tends to take longer, doesn't it.

Another unexpected thing that amounted to a medical emergency without warning called COVID. That must have been quite time consuming and stressful too. Did you know that NA COVID death toll was 118th out of 280 countries - lower than most other developed countries. We don't know how many lives we're saved through that response.

Have you thought of becoming Prime Minister? It seems easy to criticism but surely if you do so you should be confident you can do better.

Anonymous said...

Richard, are you blissfully aware that Ardern deliberately set about destroying democracy in NZ, and establishing apartheid ?
Have you skipped reading her He Puapua document ?

We could recover from all the other issues you mention, however, restoring equal rights for all is going to be extremely difficult.

It will take people who have more guts than our present leaders.

Robert Arthur said...

From the snippets of reviews I have heard seems Adern's book is aimed at the US market. Apart from her teeth and hair I cannot imagine why any American would be remotely interested. Does the book cover the inflltion effect of the money give aways? The He Puapua debacle? The general encouragement of maori takeover?

Anonymous said...

I wonder how much Oprahs fee for the 'book' promotion was?

Anonymous said...

Excellent synopsis of Arden’s failed leadership. Her book unfortunately only reflects her socialist view of the world, with no self reflection of her complete lack of ‘kindness and empathy’ towards those who did not agree with her policies. She reflected the dictatorial nature of authoritarian regimes.

Allen said...

Looking at some of the videos on Utube of interviews with her I have to admire her spin doctors who have changed her image from the one that most Kiwi's have of her, to one of a universally adored leader. I say looking because I couldn't stand the idea of listening to her voice so I just watched the body language and read comments. I wonder if at some point the people writing the comments will discover the truth and realize how massively they have been conned.