MEDIAWATCH: Heather Duplicity Allan would have sided with the Dawn Raiders

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Privilege never looked so beige

The protests outside Winston Peters’ home were taken too far a long time ago – Heather du Plessis-Allan

What a surprise, Heather is arguing against protests outside politicians houses while utterly missing the context.

Do you know what the first protests outside Auckland Politicians Houses were?

The Dawn Raids!

That’s right.

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Protestors felt that if the Politicians could send the dog squads onto Pacifica communities at dawn, then protestors would return the favour and protest outside their homes at Dawn.

Very few would damn those Dawn Rid protestors now, but because Winston’s doggy woggy had glass shower it, it’s the worst political violence in Western Civilisation.

As Adam Pearse from the NZ Herald notes

But although Peters condemned the attack on his house as a “disgrace”, he was quite happy to taunt Swarbrick as “crowbar Chlöe”. Shane Jones, vocal even by his standards in defence of his leader, freely bellowed: “Where’s the crowbar?”

Either it’s a serious attack that threatened a politician’s family and crossed a line, or it’s something to tease your political opponent with. It shouldn’t be both.

…as the country loses its mind over Winston’s broken window and his dog, the Government pushes ahead with criminalising protest outside politicians homes and the protestor who put Winston’s address online has been cut from a TV advert while Winston has been allowed to wallow in victimhood.

Let’s remember, Winston is a man who has built a political career out of dog whistle personal attacks on minority, migrants and vulnerable groups.

Remember what he said about Benjamin Doyle, Rawiri’s facial tattoos, Harry Tam, Migrant Green MPs.

More than any other politician in recent years, Winston thrives on exploiting community divisions for political gain.

For him to play the victim is like the Taliban demanding to see the manager.

Let’s be clear, of course, in any normal situation, we shouldn’t protest outside politicians homes, but when it comes to genocide, the frontline for protest is everywhere.

Winston put us on the side of war criminals and genocide, protesting outside his home is a legitimate response to that.

If the Government get their way they will be able to imprison you for 3 months for protesting outside their homes, as Rights Aotearoa points out

A Government bill that would see peaceful protesters jailed for up to three months represents a dangerous attack on democratic accountability and will disproportionately silence marginalised communities, Rights Aotearoa warned today.

The human rights organisation has submitted a comprehensive legal analysis to the Justice Committee urging outright rejection of the Summary Offences (Demonstrations Near Residential Premises) Amendment Bill, calling it “a solution in search of a problem” that criminalises democracy itself.

“This Bill hands elected officials a tool to silence dissent when they find public accountability uncomfortable,” said Paul Thistoll, Chief Executive of Rights Aotearoa. “Discomfort is not harm. Inconvenience is not intimidation. And the price of living in a democracy is that those who wield power must face the consequences of their decisions—including peaceful protests outside their homes.”

The Bill’s Explanatory Note reveals its true purpose, stating that residential protests “have the potential to deter elected officials from taking stands on contentious issues.” Rights Aotearoa says this fundamentally misunderstands democracy.

“If Ministers are deterred from unpopular decisions because they fear public protest, that’s democracy functioning as intended,” Mr Thistoll said. “The alternative—elected officials insulated from public reaction to their policies—is authoritarianism.”

Existing law already covers harassment and intimidation

The submission comprehensively demonstrates that existing legislation—including the Summary Offences Act, Harassment Act, Trespass Act, and Crimes Act—already prohibits intimidation, harassment, threats, trespass, and excessive noise.

“The Government has not identified any gap in the law that justifies this Bill,” Mr Thistoll said. “What existing law doesn’t do is protect politicians from being confronted with the human consequences of their decisions. And it shouldn’t.”

Vague language guarantees discriminatory enforcement

The Bill criminalises demonstrations “near” residential premises that cause “unreasonable disruption”—terms left entirely undefined. Unlike safe access zone legislation, which specifies precise distances, this Bill provides no guidance on what constitutes illegal conduct.

“Protesters cannot know in advance whether they’re breaking the law. Police officers will make subjective, on-the-spot decisions about what’s ‘unreasonable,’” Mr Thistoll said. “We know from decades of research that vague laws are enforced discriminatorily against marginalised communities and unpopular causes.”

Rights Aotearoa predicts the Bill will be disproportionately enforced against Māori sovereignty protesters, climate activists, disability rights advocates, union members, and LGBTIQ+ communities, while more socially powerful groups receive greater tolerance.

The chilling effect will silence those who can least afford it

The submission warns that even if never enforced, the Bill’s existence will silence marginalised voices through its chilling effect.

“Communities already facing systemic oppression cannot afford the risk of criminal records or imprisonment,” Mr Thistoll said. “For many marginalised communities, direct protest is the only avenue for holding power to account. We don’t have the institutional access or resources to influence policy through lobbying or private meetings with Ministers. This Bill forecloses our only meaningful avenue for democratic participation.”

Three months imprisonment for peaceful protest is grossly disproportionate

The Bill imposes a penalty of up to three months’ imprisonment or a $2,000 fine for conduct that involves nothing more than peaceful assembly and expression near a residential property.

“No comparable democracy imprisons people for peaceful protest that doesn’t involve violence, threats, or harassment already criminalised under general law,” Mr Thistoll said. “This Bill places New Zealand outside international norms for the protection of fundamental freedoms.”

The Bill fails the constitutional test for limiting rights

Rights Aotearoa’s legal analysis demonstrates that the Bill fails every component of the section 5 New Zealand Bill of Rights Act proportionality test. The submission argues the Bill:

      • Is not rationally connected to its objective because existing law already addresses the identified harms
      • Does not minimally impair rights—multiple less restrictive alternatives exist
      • Is grossly disproportionate in prioritising convenience over constitutional rights
      • Uses excessively vague language that violates rule of law principles

“The Bill targets the expressive nature of protest itself, not underlying harmful conduct,” Mr Thistoll said. “It criminalises demonstrations based on location and perceived inconvenience, not because they involve any conduct that would otherwise constitute an offence.”

Rights Aotearoa calls for outright rejection

The organisation urges the Justice Committee to recommend Parliament reject the Bill entirely, rather than attempting to fix its fundamental flaws through amendment.

“This is not a good idea, poorly executed. It is a bad idea that is fundamentally incompatible with New Zealand’s constitutional commitment to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly,” Mr Thistoll said. “The chilling of dissent is not a price worth paying for the comfort of the powerful.”

…if this power had been available to the Police during the Dawn Raids, they would have arrested everyone.

The power is so draconian it is similar to what the UK have down with Palestine Action, as a matter of free speech and democratic rights, if this law passes people have an obligation to turn up and be arrested and imprisoned for 3 months in numbers so great the system gets over whelmed…

Police arrest almost 500 people over Palestine Action support

…this is where we are going to ensure Politicians never face the contempt of their decisions.

Again, under any normal situation, we shouldn’t protest outside Politicians homes, but when they do things totally out of line like the Dawn Raids, like siding with War Criminals, citizens have an obligation to act.

Heather Duplicity Allan would have sided with the Dawn Raiders

The worst political violence in Western Civilisation

 

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18 COMMENTS

  1. I cannot stand Heather’s whine voice but I would agree with her on the dawn raids .Plenty of people played a straight bat and came to NZ through official channels. They past health checks ,criminal background checks ,work history all designed to make sure NZ was getting good people while others just came on holiday and stayed which was not fair on the legal immigrants. They often worked illegally bringing down wages and standards of work and not paying tax while using schools and health facilities.

    • Past-passed? You need a better spell checker, although it’s not really a surprise that you didn’t notice the difference.

    • You obviously do not remember the Dawn Raids Trevor.
      They only targeted Pacific Islanders, white overstayers were not molested. I worked with Poms that bragged about how they came to visit relatives and never went home.
      Pasifika households with small children had everyone dragged out of bed and put outside on dark winter mornings (this repeated in the Urewera raids for supposed terrorists). This applied whether overstayers were found or not.
      White South Africans who came here as visitors are still here(their families were outraged when they found their children went to school with brown kids – after all they did NOT come here to escape Apartheid – they came here as coward runaways).
      ‘The dawn raids were particularly controversial since Pacific Islanders made up only one-third of overstayers but accounted for 86% of those arrested and prosecuted.[3] The majority of overstayers were from Great Britain, Europe, South Africa, and the United States.[4][6] Effects were particularly felt in Auckland, where two-thirds of the Pasifika community lived at the time.[7] The city’s Māori community were also adversely affected because of the similarities in appearance between many Māori and Pasifika. The police controversially told Māori to carry a passport with them, in case they were stopped by police on suspicion of being illegal immigrants.[8] The raids continued until 1979, when they were halted by the Muldoon government as deporting migrant workers was a burden on the struggling economy, but they continued sporadically until the early 1980s.[4]
      This is from Wikipedia Trevor but you can get more information TE ARA

    • Completely agree – you enter a country on a tourist visa and then decide to stay on permanently / illegally and then everyone is supposed to be outranged when the police come to your house early in the morning when you are likely to be there?

    • Interesting to see what ChatGPT has to say about your psychological profile based on the paragraph you wrote.

      Summary Personality Traits (Based on This Writing)
      Trait Likely Tendency
      Conscientiousness High (values rule-following)
      Agreeableness Low to Moderate (judgmental tone)
      Openness to Experience Low (rigid views, literal)
      Emotional Reactivity Moderate to High (irritated tone)
      Empathy Low toward out-groups
      Need for Control High
      Cognitive Complexity Low (black-and-white thinking)

      So, to summarise (my words), you’re an obsequious, disagreeable, bigoted, emotionally unstable, unempathetic, narcissistic control freak with minimal cognitive ability.

      Now, probably 50% of the population is of similar mould, judging by the voting % for the CuCs, so it’s hard to criticise such a low level of capability, but the juxtaposition of such a level of fuckwittery alongside a heightened sense of arrogance makes you and your brethren an exceptionally ugly representation of society.

  2. A question for the rightwingers on this blog. Do any of you actually listen to HDP? And if so, why?

    • I do not listen to the whole show but enjoy hearing her interview with Barry Soper. I do not listen to Hoskins either. I do not like their pompous rants and anti Maori rhetoric

        • I agree
          Yes, Trevor, why don’t you take the big leap and come over completely. You can’t dabble toes in both pools at the same time and really feel comfortable.
          We are not nasty spoilt brats or dangerous radicals, in any way.
          If you think we are, you have been listening to the wrong people.
          We are just nice normal people who try to see things clearly. If we can’t, things are unclear and tangled, we ask why and we follow the money.
          Stevie’s comments put things in perspective a bit, don’t they?
          HDPA and her dear old hubby, Soper, aren’t all that entertaining.
          Notice the righties who are on the radio and compare them to the lefties on the radio. Are there any? Not many. That’s because they can’t afford radio stations and they aren’t usually loud-mouths.

Comments are closed.