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13 Comments

  1. Well, they are not wrong.
    And lets face it, The Victoria League was/is a fairly marginal group.

    The one thing in its favour, apart from the draped flag which always fascinated me, is that it maintained a reminder of a War that was pretty much deleted from public consciousness by the 1920s. I know that as a kid in the 70’s I didn’t have a clue what it was referring to.

  2. Would that be the morallly superior left-wing intellectuals known as Antifa?

  3. About bloody time.

    They have a political economic message spelt out as well. Good work people.

  4. Antifa activists are doing a good job trying to draw comparisons to the Maori experience and the Jewish one at the moment. It was all kicked off by David Cohen some years back. Very evident in Jewish social media accounts pushing teo reo and Maori separatism at the moment.

    Plan B South Island.

    1. Oh no you don’t.

      Piss off. The South Island is just fine as it is.

      No more JAFAs down here thanks.

      😀 😀 😀

  5. While they have a point, where does this stop. What was acceptable many years ago may be no longer acceptable but does that mean we have to revisit and, in some cases, apologise for the actions of our ancestors? Do the Danes have to feel bad because their Viking ancestors created havoc? Do the descendants of Genghis Khan do the same? Are we still doing things which will be viewed differently in 100 years time and will no longer be acceptable – yes we are, but it is not the things we are knowingly doing such as polluting our waterways, but it is the things we are unaware of?

  6. I’m concerned that we are atomizing instead of coalescing, and it is a real pity to see. Whatever the answer may be, unceremoniously trashing historic monuments can’t be it. The only attention it will get is from the likes of Brash or Ansell. It’s clear that their views have little currency, we’re in the kind of climate now where nobody could entertain the notion that the continued existence of old monuments amounts to public endorsement of the land wars. We face a shared challenge to understand and contest the power games of global corporatism, and there can be no hierarchy of outrage when it comes to the deliberate exploitation of billions of people.

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