Here is yet another example of a taxpayer-funded health professional teaching that self-destructive behaviour by Maori is the fault of colonisation: land dispossession, loss of language, attack on family structures, attack on belief systems etc.

Click to view
The above slide is part of a presentation from Oranga Tamariki Team leader Psychology, Health and Clinical Services. It was published in April this year.
Given it's Maori gangs - Mongrel Mob and Black Power - predominantly selling the drug, it's to be assumed they too are doing so due to the ravages of colonisation.
There is no end to what can be explained and excused under this lazy, pathetic and repetitive 'modelling'.
But what about the vast majority of Maori who do not use meth? Wouldn't it be far more useful to examine what creates resilience and success, and strive to emulate the values and upbringings that contribute to the positive outcomes most Maori experience?
The past cannot be undone. We only have the future.
This pervasive apologism practised by supposedly 'educated experts' serves society very poorly. It's the thrust of a western movement that pimps indigeneity for all its worth.
If people are told that it isn't their fault they are using methamphetamine, how do they take the ownership needed to stop?
Lindsay Mitchell is a welfare commentator. This article was sourced HERE

8 comments:
If you repeat this rubbish ad nauseum, it becomes the truth - it needs to be condemned now.
Pure Marxism , which has captured the minds of those in all our institutions as planned all along..
Taking responsibility for your own actions is really a cultural Christian view and Marxism will not tolerate that superstitious nonsense in this supposedly post Christian era.
>"Taking responsibility for your own actions is really a cultural Christian view"
Oh really.
I think you'll find Islam is pretty heavy on taking responsibility for one's own actions too - more so when one considers the "get out of jail free" card that Xianity offers and Islam does not.
I think you'll find the Far Eastern religions put great emphasis on personal responsibility and choice-making as part of the Law of Karma - all deeds have consequences extending beyond the individual and this life.
What a stupid, ignorant thing to say.
That this like the golden rule, is held by other religions doesn't mean it can't be a belief of Christianity as well. I never said it was exclusively Christian. But here we are being taken over by Marxism in so many areas of our lives ,and what are the options for countering it eh ?
The options for countering NEO-Marxism (classical Marxism survives only in North Korea as far as I know), Anon 813, are to dissemble the protective institutional fortifications that the marxofascist (as I prefer to call them) have built around themselves. Applicants for positions and promotions need to be assessed on the basis of job-specific competencies and nothing else - not sex, not race, not ideology. Interviews need to stop being exercises in political vetting. The trendy-tits new totalitarians are quite articulate at first sight but it's the kind of articulacy one associates with fervent believers rather than seasoned debaters - they're not very bright and easily get caught out, which is when they go tell Big Sister about the awful racist/sexist/whateverist who has made them look like what they are, which is fools.
An earlier article on BV told how the Psychology profession has been taken over the Treaty apologists. No wonder those psychologists employed by Oranga Tamariki spout this garbage
Thanks for pointing out that the biggest threat to Māori are from their own "patch wearing" internal terrorists.
We need to adopt the same strategy as many southeast Asian countries for dealing with that problem.
Regrettably NZ is too weak and don't have the stomach for fighting that kind war.
I agree Anon 7:55. The jail sentences handed down here for drug importing and dealing are far too lenient. No wonder our drug use is rising.
Post a Comment
Thank you for joining the discussion. Breaking Views welcomes respectful contributions that enrich the debate. Please ensure your comments are not defamatory, derogatory or disruptive. We appreciate your cooperation.