🌟 A Day to Remember: Atyeti Pune Team Outing Adventures! 🌟
The Atyeti Pune team took a well-deserved break and stepped into a world of fun, laughter, and bonding during our recent team outing. Here’s what made it unforgettable:
🎮 Engaging Games – From thrilling challenges to lighthearted fun, our games brought out the best in everyone, strengthening our teamwork and competitive spirit.
🤝 Collaboration at its Best – Every activity reminded us of the power of teamwork, as we solved challenges, shared ideas, and cheered for each other.
🏞️ Breathtaking Scenery – The serene surroundings and lush greenery provided the perfect backdrop for unwinding and creating cherished memories.
🍴 Delicious Food – From mouthwatering delicacies to comforting snacks, the food added a flavorful touch to our outing, keeping our energy high and our hearts full.
🏠 A Fantastic Venue – The thoughtfully chosen location was nothing short of perfect, combining beautiful views, great amenities, and a vibe that made us feel at home.
This outing was not just a day away; it was a celebration of our camaraderie, a reminder of the strength of our team, and an opportunity to connect beyond work.
Here’s to many more adventures with the amazing Atyeti Pune team. 🚀🎉
Hey you!
If you’re a gujarati speaker and interested to create reels in gujarati in the upcoming auto expo on 17th and 18th january in delhi.
Comment down below so that we can discuss the details!
Quick quick!
#Gujarati#anchor#socialmedia
Customer Success Leader | Driving Growth Through Retention, Experience & Adoption-Expert in SaaS & RaaS, customer retention, and product adoption. Passionate about building high-impact teams and driving scalable success.
To many fair minded New Zealanders, the idea that indigenous peoples would have underlying pre-existing rights in their lands is no surprise, and nor is it contrary to our way of life, collectively.
To many fair minded New Zealanders, the idea that the pre-existing rights of indigenous peoples in their lands would and can be recognised in law, is straight-forward.
To many fair minded New Zealanders, the idea that the inherent interests of indigenous peoples can be recognised in law is no surprise, and nor is it contrary to our way of life, collectively.
To many fair minded New Zealanders, the idea that we should scrape away those indigenous rights, ignore them, pretend them away, marginalise, is unjust. To do so requires us to look through the lens of superiority, through the lens of the doctrine of discovery... and we are learning to not do so. Slowly.
"Toitū Te Tiriti is tupuna inspired, tiriti led, mana motuhake driven and mokopuna focused."
This is a message for all New Zealanders: it is neither divisive, nor angry, nor false.
https://lnkd.in/gd-daHwN
DOCTRINE OF DISCOVERY -> INABILITY TO COMPREHEND PRE_EXISTING RIGHTS -> COLONISATION -> ACT/NZF/NATIONAL COALITION.
The missing link in understanding the efforts of ACT, NZFirst + National as a coalition government informed by the doctrine of discovery, in re anti-Maori rhetoric + sentiment: te Reo, history, treaty principles, etc. I'm sorry it's taken so long to write this.
1. The Doctrine
- The doctrine of discovery cemented + 'codified' the prevalent (but pre-existing) European sense of pre-eminence (superiority) in the world.
- A central idea of the doctrine is that only Christian heritage + traditions would be recognised in meeting with new populations.
Non-Christian populations are declared to have no rights as humans or in land or property, + no means to call on justice to protect them. They could, of course, call on God, & many did, but were still not spared.
2. Colonisation
- Doctrine-informed colonisation followed, with the superiority recorded in the doctrine fuelling the take over of lands and the degradation, killing, and taking into slavery of hundreds of thousands of people globally.
- The doctrine set the scene for not recognising those populations as having any rights whatsoever.
- The idea emerges that 'we cannot comprehend the rights of any other peoples - we cannot perceive them to have any underlying and real interest in the thing we now have an interest - our interest is simply more important.
3. Customary law and common law
- For the English, this doctrinal heritage was met (and maybe even hindered by, to some small scale) with an entrenched common law recognition of common law - a recognition of pre-existing rights, rights which were found outside of legal doctrine (recognition of which is at issue in the foreshore debate, where more white voices express dismay at any recognition being afforded those pre-existing rights, even when it is by their own legal system).
4. ACT, NZFirst and National coalition
- The ACT, NZ First and National coalition can't accept or recognise the existence of customary rights and common law, where those thing cut across their current colonial/capitalist interests.
- The coalition's policies battle forthrightly against the very simple and core notion that through te Tiriti the Crown (the Crown itself!) sought to recognise, in small ways, genuinely or disingenuously, that Maori had existing rights in Aotearoa, rights that pre-existed the Crown's interest.
- The coalition, informed by the doctrine of discovery, can't comprehend a world in which someone has existing interests or rights in something they now have an interest in. Their policies implement this ideology of supremacy and none other.
- The coalition, informed directly by the doctrine of discovery, can't comprehend a world in which non-Europeans have rights in something they now have an interest in, that compete against their expectations as Pakeha of superiority. Their policies implement this ideology of superiority and none other.
"Toitū Te Tiriti is tupuna inspired, tiriti led, mana motuhake driven and mokopuna focused."
This is a message for all New Zealanders: it is neither divisive, nor angry, nor false.
https://lnkd.in/gd-daHwN
Java | Spring boot | microservices | azure cloud | azure devops | Kafka | docker | machine learning
2moAnup Belsare