Action Station and Greens all down with ‘These Queers Bash Back’ protest at same space Posie Parker was attacked

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Tēnā koe, e Martyn,

My name is Rangimarie and over the past six months, I’ve been working within our team on our Te Tiriti o Waitangi campaigns here at ActionStation.

I’m a proudly takatāpui wahine and after seeing the footage of Brian Tamaki’s ManUp team violently storming the Te Atatū Library recently, I feel compelled to share some thoughts about what happened. 

If you missed the news, Brian Tāmaki called for a children’s event to be shut down by members of Destiny Church during the Pride Festival. They blockaded the library, harmed multiple Council staff, members of the LGBTQ+ community and members of the public (including concussing a 16 year old girl). They created an environment of fear and then attempted to stop the Pride parade with a haka. It was a horrific display of violence targeting the most vulnerable members of an already vulnerable community. 

I want to be clear – I respect that faith-based communities have brought meaning and beauty into the lives of many, including people in my own whānau. But the harm that Destiny Church has caused, under the guise of faith, is beyond justification.

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If we don’t talk about what’s really going on, then we become complicit in allowing this violence to happen again.

So let’s go there: There is no Destiny Church without the far-right. 

The term far-right refers to a specific set of ideas about the world. They often include a belief that there is a rigid social hierarchy, with some people at the top and others (from marginalized backgrounds) at the bottom. They are intolerant of diversity and tend to scapegoat minority groups, blaming them for society’s problems. They try to incite fear and division within communities, often through conspiracies and disinformation. There is a clear rise in the far right groups, in the USA, Europe and here on our own whenua.  

So how is it that here in Aotearoa, a predominantly (and intentionally branded) indigenous presenting religious group such as Destiny Church /ManUp able to publicly demonstrate such an appalling upchuck of far-right vitriol? And, importantly, why would they?

The answer is simple: This is a tactic straight out of the far-right playbook. 

The idea is to find disenfranchised people and incite lateral violence towards each other. If one minority is fighting with another, then they won’t have the time, energy or resource to challenge their own lack of power in the system you create for them. 

Enter Destiny Church. 

For a long time, Tamaki has used language and leadership styles that appeal to people and turn them against people in their own communities. Takatāpui have always been a part of Te Ao Māori and yet, Destiny Church calls on its members to protest our own people based on their gender or sexuality. Instead of challenging the real cause of peoples’ problems like the rise of the ultra-wealthy driving the cost of living, Tamaki deliberately creates distractions that serve his far right agenda. 

To be clear: Takatāpui, trans communities and drag performers are not the reason that many of us are struggling to afford to live. 

Emmy Rākete does a great job in this article explaining that when governments stop providing the things people need to live full, dignified lives, then groups like Destiny Church step in and promise safety and security if they attack gay people, trans people and left-wing social movements.

With a Coalition Government that is culling jobs, defunding the public services, giving tax breaks to the biggest landlords and allowing huge corporations to make mega profits from the basics we need to survive – they are creating the conditions that give people like Brian Tamaki more power.

So what can we do, to turn the tide on hate? 

I know that one of the most significant things that has helped me this week is taking tangible actions to feed my sense of community. Sometimes this can look like reaching out to others, creating space for joy and consuming LGTBQ+ media and music. 

Our team has pulled together a list of things that we think might help others who are asking themselves what we can do in the wake of these events – let us know if we’ve missed something!

Reach out to your takatāpui, LGBTQ+ friends and whānau

This can look however you feel is best – invite them round for dinner, send them a kind message, head to an event together etc. The best thing we can do right now is let the people that you love, know that you love them. 

Support those affected

Send a donation to the drag performer who was targeted by Destiny Church – Hugo Grrrl – shout them a coffee here

Attend an event

Show up in solidarity at ‘Defying Destiny’ in Tāmaki Makaurau this Sunday with speakers such as Dr Emmy Rākete (PAPA), Chloe Swarbrick (Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand), Rev Mua Strickson-Pua (Tagata Pasifika Resource Centre) & more friends and allies. 

Sign a petition

Join the thousands of people who are holding Destiny Church’s violence to account and calling on them to have their charitable status revoked here. 

Stay connected 

In times like these, it can be really easy to assume that distance and time will heal all wounds, but if there’s one thing that the LGBTQ+ community has taught the world, over and over again, it’s that joy will always win over hate. 

To give a personal example, I have an uncle who is openly homophobic – I blocked him from social media years ago. But my Mum (his sister, who has become quite the ally in her later years), frequently sees his anti-queer posts and will put a little rainbow in comments, or says “Love is Love” on everything he shares. Over time, he’s stopped posting as much, even if his attitude hasn’t changed significantly – his expressions of hate have reduced. 

These small acts are a reminder that she stands in solidarity with me and my queer cousins. She uses her privilege to remind him that his bigotry isn’t going unnoticed or without consequence. She can love him and disagree with him at the same time. And that’s the kind of solidarity that slowly erodes someone’s rigidity. 

So whether your solidarity is a loud proud proclamation or a condescending cheeky wink, make it known, make it kind, make it joyous and ultimately, make it queer. But over all – do what’s best for you, your safety and your wellbeing. 

I’ll leave with this whakataukī:

He pōkeke uenuku i tū ai (a rainbow appears brightly amidst the dark, gloomy clouds). 

Nei rā he mihi aroha,

Rangimarie 

I don’t know.

‘These Queers Bash Back’ seems to be promising political violence doesn’t it?

Is that really the message that should be getting sent?

At times like this?

At the same spot Rosie Parker was attacked and driven out, which probably cost us the last election?

Really?

And with the co-leader of a major political Party at it?

These seems a tad on the hoof without a wider appreciation of where we are now at.

The Posie Parker fiasco changed the rules, I warned this at the time.

I fear todays protest could test things.

Auckland’s queer community intend to stand up to recent Destiny Church abuse  with their message ‘These Queers Bash Back’ which seems like a red flag to the Destiny Church bull and every transphobic arsehole in the City.

My hope is that the community backlash at the appalling tactics used by Destiny has spooked Bishop Brian Tamaki and because he and his christofascist thugs are at heart cowards, they will hopefully ignore the provocation of the ‘These Queers Bash Back’.

It’s fascinating watching those in the Queer Community who were so instrumental in making the Trans debate so radioactive, as Dr Emmy Rakete was, leading the resistance to the very alienation they helped create.

This has all the ingredients of a very combustable mix.

I hope the Police are prepared and Destiny Church is asleep.

Thoughts and prayers for 2pm.

How the Spinoff attempted two paint the Posie Parker event vs how it actually went down

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12 COMMENTS

  1. Bashing back is not helpful messaging at all. As painful as it is, to counter Destiny’s Church you have to be the bigger individual in the debate. Easy for me to say of course and I can see how years of being ostracised and possibly being beaten would make you violent (and yes what happened when that cow of women came to Albert Park, was unacceptable) Ironically that same abuse and lack of respect has most likely been dished out to members of Brain ‘the wanker’ Tamaki’s flock. That alienation has done wonders for Tamaki’s tax fee income.

    • Nah, while I may not support either party involved here, the fake anti-christian Brian Tamaki, who serves those who his own religion says killed the Prophet Jesus, thoroughly deserves punishment. I don’t care how that happens.

  2. FFS – the bash is a play on “gay bashing” and I’m all down with bashing back against bigotry and hatred – including Posie Parker and her fucking trans predator equivocation.

Comments are closed.