Why does charlotte dawson hate nz




















She was adopted at birth, and at age 16 she embarked on a decade-long modelling career in Europe and with Ford Models in New York. She returned to Auckland in after splitting from husband, Olympic swimmer Scott Miller.

But Dawson felt bullied and told the Herald on Sunday her native country was "small, nasty and vindictive". Things were no better for her in Australia, where she was viciously attacked. Dawson was rushed to St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney in September after an apparent suicide attempt. But even her closest friends didn't notice the warning signs in her final hours. She appeared on Channel Nine's Morning Show on Friday morning, then met a close friend for lunch that afternoon.

She had been trying to quit alcohol and cigarettes, and avoided those temptations at lunch. One of her few complaints that afternoon was money. Despite her profile and the veneer of a lavish lifestyle she was borrowing from friends and struggling to hold down work. Charlotte was a hard-working and talented presenter and host who also became a strong advocate in relation to a number of modern social issues. Charlotte was a generous and passionate supporter of a number of key charities and will be remembered as an intelligent, enthusiastic and energetic woman.

The media industry was rocked by the news on Saturday, and celebrities poured out their feelings on Twitter. Vale Ms Dawson. And bravo. She took-up the fight for so many. She was so quick-witted and funny. Was she talented? I don't know.

Attractive as she was, Dawson had fat from her bottom injected into her face, and the inevitable boob job. That amounts to self-mutilation by surgeon. Few people look perfect, but surely we know we're more than our random genetic allotment of face and breasts, and that it's the brain, which nobody sees, that determines what we really are.

The internet has broken down many barriers, including cruelty and malice. A virtual society has grown up in which people believe they know people they've never met, and normal social constraints don't apply.

This gives malice free rein, with no fear of repercussions. Social media? I don't think so. What happens there suddenly makes censorship make sense. Surely the saddest comment on Dawson's death came from a friend who said, "When



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