@mia967079: Travel makeup bag,large capacity fold down comestic bag for women. #makeupbag #makeup #comestics #girlthings #wubyhit

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Friday 10 July 2026 10:16:56 GMT
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Health ranks as the second most important issue to New Zealanders after the cost of living and it’s not hard to see why. If you’ve sat with your grandparents in the waiting room or if, like me, you live with disabilities which means you can be a frequent flyer to the emergency room - you’ll understand why health has shot up the priority list for so many people. I’m lucky because I can afford private healthcare, but for most New Zealanders, the local public hospital is the only option.  When I wait with my loved ones, I feel guilty because it’s hard to see the people you love most in pain for so long and it’s so easy to grow impatient. Emotion can so easily override reason but in reality, the reason everything takes so long is because there are staffing freezes, under-resourcing, important software upgrades that would make everything more efficient have been put off, and the physical hospitals themselves are falling apart. I spoke to a nurse who told me that they’re all so scared of getting sick because they know their whole team will be under extreme pressure without them because of the staffing freezes. She said she doesn’t get to have lunch most days and has her first meal of the day around 7pm if she’s lucky.  A wealth tax is too often framed by the privileged as a punishment imposed by the envious on the so-called ambitious.  What it really is is a basic desire for each person who receives care to have their dignity upheld by not being left writhing in pain. It’s seeing collective health outcomes improve because people don’t do everything imaginable to avoid going to the doctor. It really is just a basic desire for each person who chose to give their life to caring for others to be able to enjoy what they do, not sacrifice their own wellbeing to save others’ wellbeing.  These are basic values that we share in Aotearoa, and what we all contribute to through our income tax. But not everyone is paying their fair share at the moment which is what we’re keen to fix. We think they will be alright and that they too will benefit from living in a country with better health outcomes 🩷
Health ranks as the second most important issue to New Zealanders after the cost of living and it’s not hard to see why. If you’ve sat with your grandparents in the waiting room or if, like me, you live with disabilities which means you can be a frequent flyer to the emergency room - you’ll understand why health has shot up the priority list for so many people. I’m lucky because I can afford private healthcare, but for most New Zealanders, the local public hospital is the only option. When I wait with my loved ones, I feel guilty because it’s hard to see the people you love most in pain for so long and it’s so easy to grow impatient. Emotion can so easily override reason but in reality, the reason everything takes so long is because there are staffing freezes, under-resourcing, important software upgrades that would make everything more efficient have been put off, and the physical hospitals themselves are falling apart. I spoke to a nurse who told me that they’re all so scared of getting sick because they know their whole team will be under extreme pressure without them because of the staffing freezes. She said she doesn’t get to have lunch most days and has her first meal of the day around 7pm if she’s lucky. A wealth tax is too often framed by the privileged as a punishment imposed by the envious on the so-called ambitious. What it really is is a basic desire for each person who receives care to have their dignity upheld by not being left writhing in pain. It’s seeing collective health outcomes improve because people don’t do everything imaginable to avoid going to the doctor. It really is just a basic desire for each person who chose to give their life to caring for others to be able to enjoy what they do, not sacrifice their own wellbeing to save others’ wellbeing. These are basic values that we share in Aotearoa, and what we all contribute to through our income tax. But not everyone is paying their fair share at the moment which is what we’re keen to fix. We think they will be alright and that they too will benefit from living in a country with better health outcomes 🩷

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