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Sam Wilks
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Profiling Isn’t Prejudice, It’s Pattern Recognition That Saves Lives
Let’s stop pretending that pattern recognition is inherently unjust. What’s unjust is letting ideology override safety.

Sam Wilks
May 114 min read
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No Bail, More Jail, The Data Behind Holding Repeat Offenders Before Trial
From a security standpoint, the pattern is predictable, fewer conditions, more crime, less supervision, more escalation.

Sam Wilks
May 104 min read
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Crime Drops When Consequences Rise
The rapist that gets immediately released on bail, quite predictably offends again.

Sam Wilks
May 103 min read
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Can Canberra’s Migration Plans Work for Territorians?
Population growth is not a moral imperative. It is a logistical challenge. And when policies are made without listening to the people who live under them, the result is not harmony, it’s hostility.

Sam Wilks
Apr 285 min read
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Growing the Territory, Is Federal Immigration Policy Straining NT Infrastructure?
Immigration is not inherently harmful. But when used to mask economic stagnation or prop up GDP figures while ignoring infrastructure, it becomes a liability. Federal policymakers must stop treating Darwin as a checkbox on a diversity spreadsheet and start treating it as a capital with finite capacity.

Sam Wilks
Apr 276 min read
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Economic Policies for a Resilient NT
There is nothing moral about destroying incentives to work, invest, or create value.

Sam Wilks
Apr 273 min read
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Can Canberra Help Restore Safety in NT Communities?
The idea that Federal legislation can override local judicial leniency is not without precedent. The Northern Territory is not a state. It is a legislative child of Canberra, and Canberra has acted before, during the Intervention, with alcohol bans, and through court-mandated reforms to sentencing.

Sam Wilks
Apr 266 min read
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Modern Solutions Rooted in Timeless Ideas
Reform doesn’t require reinvention. It requires the courage to apply timeless truths in modern ways.

Sam Wilks
Apr 263 min read
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Will Federal Policies Tackle Rising NT Crime Rates or Just Fund More Excuses?
Crime in the NT is not a mystery, it is the consequence of policies that reward excuses, punish self-defence, and defer to unelected legal elites.

Sam Wilks
Apr 256 min read
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tHE gUILTY jUDGE
A man of seventy-one stood tall, A simple life, a steady call. A hand to hold, a path he made, A quiet home, a love well-laid. Fifty-one...

Sam Wilks
Apr 251 min read
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Steel and Silence
They landed hard on foreign sand, With rifles shaking in their hand. The sea behind, no way to flee, Just death ahead and dignity. The...

Sam Wilks
Apr 251 min read
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Community First
National governments should provide guardrails, not handcuffs.

Sam Wilks
Apr 253 min read
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Healthy Territory, Healthy Future, Maybe not
Statistically, iatrogenesis is a silent epidemic. A recent meta-analysis found medical error to be the third leading cause of death in developed nations.

Sam Wilks
Apr 246 min read
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A Blueprint for Change
This is not a call for perfection. It is a call for courage, the courage to speak plainly, act decisively, and govern with the people, not above them. If the Territory is to rise, it will be led not by those who pander, but by those who perform.

Sam Wilks
Apr 243 min read
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Restoring Trust in the NT
To rebuild trust, decisions must be justified in real time, with evidence, logic, and accountability.

Sam Wilks
Apr 243 min read
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Waiting for help in the Outback
What the NT needs is accountability, local autonomy, and a market-based system where results, not intentions, are rewarded.

Sam Wilks
Apr 237 min read
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Practical Ideals
The lesson is clear. When people are paid to fail, they will. When they are rewarded for effort, they rise.

Sam Wilks
Apr 233 min read
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Justice in Action
The first step toward real reform is to remove the perverse incentives that reward failure.

Sam Wilks
Apr 233 min read
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Dreaming of a Home in the Territory
Until politicians stop treating housing as a platform for ideology or pity, the dream of owning a home in the Territory will remain just that, a dream.

Sam Wilks
Apr 226 min read
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Security, Order, and Individual Rights
The answer is not a police state, it’s a principled state. One that understands the difference between liberty and license.

Sam Wilks
Apr 223 min read
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