"Ka Noho i Roto i te Ahi: The Government's Toll Booth to Hell and the Green Party's Open Gate" - 24 march 2026
They set your house on fire. Then told you to fill in a form before you could have the hose
They set your house on fire. Then told you to fill in a form before you could have the hose
He Kōrero Tīmatanga — Opening: The Hidden Hand Behind the Wheel On Sunday, 22 March 2026, the Green Party sent a letter to Prime Minister Christopher Luxon offering something remarkable: 15 votes to pass an urgent, bipartisan fossil fuel crisis relief package — no coalition strings, no political theatre, just help for
The Fisheries Amendment Bill, the Sealord Shield, and the Silencing of the People
The numbers don't lie, and neither does history. The RNZ-Reid Research poll released this week delivers a verdict the whānau already knew in their bones: this coalition government — National, ACT, and NZ First — is a wreckage operation dressed up as economic management. Christopher Luxon sits at a net
This is an incompetent Goverment that needs to be "assed out"
He made the cold. He stood at the door. He sold you the dream of the fire he stole.
He accepted a chiefly title with one hand. With the other, he signed away $150 million that Pacific nations needed to survive the rising sea. This is not a relationship. This is a colonial heist dressed in a sulu.
He kūkū ki uta, he kaiō ki tai — a mussel on shore, a mussel at sea. Grant wears two shells: libertarian saint for Pākehā power, silent stone for Māori pain. Both are his. Neither is principle
Kaitiakitanga
They couldn't steal the land fast enough, so they handed your children's data to strangers they never even looked in the eye
Christopher Luxon gave America a blank cheque drawn on Māori blood. Trump's own spy chief just confirmed the account was fraudulent — and our Prime Minister still won't ask to see the receipt
"They dragged her through the High Court, lost on every page, and offered her ten minutes. Fifty-five pages of court findings. One text message. This is not leadership. This is whakamā dressed up as mana — and every Māori voter can smell the difference."
They logged on for 45 minutes, logged off richer by $12.8 billion — and every last cent came from the wages of women who care for our sick, teach our children, and hold this nation together