Siouxsie Wiles says online threats persist years after pandemic | CENTRIST

Siouxsie Wiles says online threats persist years after pandemic

Convictions related to recent cases may lead to penalties of up to 10 years in prison and fines of €1 million. Employment reviews and possible criminal inquiries are ongoing, with more than half of the listings based in Auckland.

“Let me tell you, if the bill can’t be fixed up, it won’t be going ahead.”

Discussions continue over the internal behavior of TPM, focusing less on chaos and more on who ultimately failed the public — the party or the media establishment itself.

“I eventually decided she was Machiavellian.”

Her resignation sparked renewed debate over whether women in political life are undermined by bias or by their performance, and to what extent allegations of harm should influence accountability.

“It’s incredibly difficult to get your head around what basically spiritual concepts are doing inside a regulatory scientific regime.”

The article also noted that by omitting Paul Stevens’ activist history, The Press effectively transformed a partisan figure into what appeared to be an impartial authority.

Observers argue that New Zealanders’ declining trust in media is not only due to misinformation but also to the way narratives are shaped and presented to the public.

Author’s Summary

Ongoing inquiries, biased reporting, and political double standards reveal how media framing continues to distort trust and accountability in New Zealand’s public discourse.

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Centrist Centrist — 2025-11-07

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