PeraB

A day in the life of a Māori journalist The world is more connected than ever and hundreds of racist attitudes are just a click away. From well-meaning to outright hateful, when you’re a young Māori journalist working in the mainstream media, the sheer volume can be overwhelming. My alarm goes off. Still half asleep, I rummage around

There’s so much in here worth quoting, but just look at the picture, then give it a read. Kia ora The Spinoff https://ift.tt/2QIDEVE from Pera Barrett https://ift.tt/2QIDEVE via IFTTT

E te whānau Shoebox Christmas! Today is the last day for Wellington and Christchurch drop offs! (Unless you’been allocated an emergency helper gift – if you were allocated yours this week, that’s you!) Not delivering a gift to a local tamariki this year but still want to help? There’s a Givealittle page here you can …

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#Repost @timferriss • • • • • • So, so great. Read the description and listen carefully to the teacher. There are good people out there. #Repost @brendanschaub ・・・ God I love this 🎥 x @complex ・・・ This severely colorblind student was given glasses by his principle that allowed him to see color for the …

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Beautiful day to move some Women’s Refuge gifts to the DHL office. Kia ora DHL for helping us get these beautifully wrapped bundles of aroha to the kids who need them most. Years ago when I was planning the model, I emailed DHL and another company at around 10.30pm. I didn’t really expect a response. The project was tiny back then, it was only the couple hundred people and the kids they’d gifted to who had heard about it. But Dean from DHL replied at 7am the next morning saying they would love to help. BNZ have been the same with branch managers putting their hands up to be drop off points across the city when we needed them, and helping out from day one. I’ve changed the delivery model and direction since then as we all paddle this waka closer to a truly community powered project and one that doesn’t rely on me at the front. That’s why we drop off at the schools now instead. There’s two cool things about DHL and BNZ’s help: Tahi) Good rangatira/leaders being smart in leveraging the resources on hand to make a difference and play their part, Rua) Companies being smart in empowering those leaders to make good decisions. Kia ora to the smart companies using their people and resources to deliver social good, not just shareholder returns.

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I worked my way out of poverty – but I’m the exception, not the rule OPINION: I was one of the poor kids – cold and hungry with ill-fitting shoes we couldn’t afford to replace.

“There’s this myth that anybody can do anything if you just work hard enough. But if you can’t afford decent clothes for a job interview, or petrol to get there, or money for your phone to call about a job, then it gets tough.” https://ift.tt/340mU03 from Pera Barrett https://ift.tt/340mU03 via IFTTT