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  1. Steve Abel and the other speakers at the Devonport rally may have drawn their audience to some wrong conclusions. Firstly, that politicians can lead the way to a moral foreign policy, and second that shouting slogans and waving flags while marching down the street can dissuade Israel and the Five Eyes states from engaging in horrendous acts of genocide.
    The truth is that the campaign against French nuclear testing and the follow up campaign for a nuclear free New Zealand were forced on the political establishment by a weight of public opinion manifested through campaigns of civil disobedience on the water and on the land.
    Similarly the New Zealand government pulled out of the Vietnam war not because it was genocidal (which it was) but because it was being defeated on the ground in Vietnam and at the same time had provoked mass public anger which sparked off demonstrations so large that they could no longer be controlled by the New Zealand Police, as well as acts of civil disobedience and eventually domestic armed resistance to the colonialist military forces.
    The current round of protests against the Gaza genocide are being led by people from Te Kūaka, Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa and Palestinian Youth Aotearoa and the Green Party who appear to have no experience of those earlier struggles, and little understanding of just how brutally amoral the colonialist regime can be. Their chant of “grow some balls Luxon” is exactly what we do not need. The leaders of these groups need to grow some balls themselves. They should move as swiftly as possible to acts of civil disobedience and explicitly dissociate themselves from the colonialist regime if they are to have any hope of forcing the New Zealand government away from the policy of genocide which it has followed on and off for the past 184 years. It would be ridiculous to wait for the next electoral cycle, because even if anti-war members form a majority in the house by the end of 2026, the war in Gaza will have already been won and lost by that time and the morehu of Gaza will either be refugees in Egypt, or will no longer be in need of our help.
    Lastly, the battle can only be won if those leading it subscribe to the principles of rangatiratanga. The coalition of groups which led the Devonport rally have a long way to go before they can be an effective force in support of the people of Palestine.

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