Attack the claims
Show where the reasoning is weak, the language overreaches or the mechanism does not follow.
Not angry for the theatre of it. Angry that short political cycles keep outrunning the lives of the people who inherit their consequences—and determined to put an actual idea on the table.
I am Christopher Laidlaw. I am not a ministry, a political party, a youth-development authority or the final word on this subject.
I spent years in construction, where a problem does not become less structural because somebody writes a soothing memo about it. You trace the load, expose the weak point and decide whether the design can be strengthened.
I kept returning to a national question: why do we wait until lost confidence, weak pathways and disengagement become expensive adult outcomes before treating them as serious?
He Ara Angitū is my attempt to put a testable upstream proposal on the table—not to declare myself correct.
Every election, the major parties spend enormous energy explaining why the other lot are dangerous, incompetent or morally defective. Then somebody wins, governs toward the next election, and the country starts the argument again.
That may win elections. It does not build a nation.
Young people become builders, nurses, engineers, teachers, carers, employers, parents and taxpayers across several governments. New Zealand needs parties competing over the strongest long-term plan—not merely the most effective attack advertisement.
He Ara Angitū is not the complete 30-year plan. It is one proposal inside the larger demand that we start behaving as though the future is a real place.
I do not want New Zealand to fund this because I care about it. I want the country to test it because the problem is serious, the design is falsifiable and doing nothing is also a decision.
My name is Chris. Stones hurt. My ideas, however, are welcome to wear a helmet and enter the testing range.
Show where the reasoning is weak, the language overreaches or the mechanism does not follow.
Challenge costs, assumptions, formulas, counterfactuals, break-even thresholds and missing harms.
Expose gaming, capture, workload, stigma, privacy, inequity or delivery failure.
This is not a government programme or political-party policy. It does not have an organisation lurking behind the curtain.
The Māori name does not imply endorsement by iwi, hapū or Māori organisations. Cultural legitimacy must be earned through proper engagement and co-design.
Independent evaluation and governance must be able to contradict the founder, alter the design or recommend stopping it.
Email hello@hearaangitu.org. Financial or evidence challenges can also be submitted through the public feedback system.
Put the idea forward clearly. Expose the assumptions. Listen properly. Change what fails. Do not confuse personal attachment with public evidence.