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16 Comments

  1. Other countries have a “war on terrorism”. Our version is our “war on gangs”

    1. This is the problem with pakeha party mentality. If it’s a brown movement or a brown issue they’re right there at the head of the pack with statistics and leadership and all that and brown leaders just have to except that pakeha have to lead brown people. But as soon as it’s a pakeha or a mainstream issue National MPs are no where to be seen.

  2. National are toast now since the front bench is so old and notn one has the star quality to get the voter interested now.

    National cant re-invent the fresh style that labour used to get back into government so national will langish for the next ten years and just as well because it will take labour that long to fix the country now after it was burned by Nationals rorting slash and sell policies.

    1. They would, if they could get off their zimmerframes and struggle onto a 50cc niftyfifty Suzuki, David. I can’t even recall the last time I saw a Hells angel patched member. A bit “retro”, don’t you think?

  3. This is about Mark Mitchell trying to look significant by copying what’s gone down in Queensland. Mark Mitchell protector of women ? I thought that rescuing a dog was the high point of Mitchell’s time in Iraq.

  4. another Knat copy cat approach, The Aussy,s have been sending back their most violent gang members to this country, where are we gonna send them? Prison penal colony on Auckland island no doubt.
    This action is the most disgusting practice that there is, they have Kiwi,s locked in Concentration camps, personally i think we should cut ties with every state that behaves like unkle Adolf,s bastard cuzzies.

  5. “Does that mean, according to National, that you get freedom of speech if you are white, but not of you are brown?”

    And the penny drops.

  6. Don’t forget the air out of their backsides, as another form of ‘free speech’ BS.

  7. I remember my Sundays at Duder’s beach, down Clevedon way in the late 60s to early 80s where there were often gang members present. They managed without their patches there, & they often engaged me in conversation with them. As a NZRN it was inappropriate that we nurses wore uniform in public (except District Nurses). Times change & IMO it’s still inappropriate (& unhygienic) to wear nurse’s uniform in public. I can do very well without seeing gang-patched guys on the streets. IMO, It’s really a sign of their fundamental insecurity that they feel the need to wear their patches when out in the public eye.

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