Losing a teaching licence in New Zealand was one of several crises that forced Chris Valli to confront difficult truths about himself. Following a period of professional and personal upheaval, some of it self-inflicted, he came to see vulnerability not as weakness, but as an act of courage and honesty.
In this conversation, Chris reflects on poor decisions, consequences, accountability, and where an honest examination of one's own story can lead.
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VULNERABILITY: And the courage to be honest https://t.co/hcvt3FGlbB via @YouTube
The polls are showing more than a growing interest in Hanson. It seems she's a rock star for those desperate for something other than the two major parties.
Will it last or will something change, turning this disruptor into another has been?
A Conversation with Greg Cheesmanhttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2570764/episodes/19240274
For decades, Australians have been denied the freedoms and self-evident truths their nation was founded upon. While a parade of political dinosaurs, claim to be their defenders. But the problem runs deeper than politics. Selfishness and egocentricity are corroding our civic life just as collectivism and co-dependency sits on the other side of the pendulum. What does genuine responsible citizenship look like and who's standing in the way?
A conversation with Sam Belfield
https://t.co/6kqQWMJJNH
Zohran Mamdani swept into office promising a new New York, but is Zohran Mamdani's vision of government actually what citizens thought? Critics say his brand of progressive governance is less about lifting people up and more about another agenda. Is he leading New Yorkers or creating a state of co-dependency?
A conversation with Lawrence Rogakhttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2570764/episodes/19174774
When a teenager lies seriously injured on the road, the first instinct should be simple: call 000.
Not so in the infamous Bike Boy case involving former Premier Daniel Andrews and his wife Katherine.
A not to be missed conversation with Scott Hanley - private investigator - on phone calls, photographs and so much more.
https://t.co/TGJRUZFTW5
Did you know that domestic violence is written into the Australian Constitution - to protect one state against the other. What does that mean for Australia as a Commonwealth nation'?
Britain's independent school sector is in free fall.
Since 2010, over 1,100 schools have closed and the pace is accelerating. VAT on fees, rising costs, and a co-dependency on international enrolments have pushed closures past 100 since January 2025, with some forecasts suggesting the sector could shrink from 7% of pupils to just 3%. For independent schools survival means charitable status, mergers, or acquisition. There's a solutions gap - correction - a solution being ignored.
https://t.co/imfDdOx1Tk
Australia’s Constitution does not provide the Commonwealth with specific legislative powers for energy or electricity generation.
The Commonwealth, state and territory energy ministers work collectively on matters of national significance under the 2004 Australian Energy Market Agreement.
The agreement provides for consistent legislation, implemented in each participating state and territory (with South Australia as the lead legislator).
This enables the National Electricity Law, under which the National Electricity Rules are made.
More on this shortly.
The United Nations sells a vision of peace and unity, but its foundations tell a harsher story. Bankrolled by John D. Rockefeller Jr., its headquarters rose where a neighbourhood once stood, wiped away to make room for global powe
https://t.co/QXIJJ0EMPB
Elon Musk thinks about education the way he thinks about rockets - question every assumption, strip it to its fundamentals, and rebuild from the ground up.
He’s a first principles thinker. That’s exactly how I think about education too.
https://t.co/jUq0WeJsc2 via @LinkedIn
50% + 1 - that's the balance of probabilities in civil cases. Ben Roberts Smith now arrested for 5 counts of murder (war crimes) on a 50% + 1 decision made by one man in a civil case.