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  1. I feel angry at most of the actions of this new government however I also believe that we should love our enemies and pray for those in power so hopefully others can adopt the same attitude till we get a chance to vote them out. As long as the freedom to peacefully protest is available that should reduce the risk of violence.

  2. No mention of the political violence already being meted out on the poor and minorities, or what’s going on in winz offices, hospitals, motels and supermarkets at the front lines of it’s implementation.

    If you think it’s bad now, a couple years of this bollocks and the big worry will be if all the pigs are going to OZ, who are they going to give the bushmasters and glocks to?

  3. We’ve already had Maori radicals arrested and charged for terrorism. The fact that they got off the charges is more a reflection on our piss-weak judicial system than their innocence. This is the main threat to peace in NZ, what with the hate-filled polemic coming from the Maori Party it’s not hard to see a radicalized, meth addicted young Maori man taking matters into his own hands. Things may come to a head if and when ACT puts their Treaty referendum before Parliament.

    1. Yep just like those young Maori that pole axed all those saintly pom soldiers back in the 1830’s aye!

  4. James Shaw got punched in the face which is sort of political. And recently people went berserk on the grounds of Parliament protesting the forced vaccinations and ridiculous pseudoscience. Political violence comes in many forms and subjugating a population and shaming them for their health status is up there with the worst (that is what this is).

  5. In the case of the new government its really a case of give them enough rope. I expect them to be out at the next election having screwed over the converts they got from Labour’s inaction. However, that’s my take. I expect there to be a lot of people who will take a much less passive attitude. Most likely this group will target the demographic vilified by the coalition. So potentially the trades hall bombing or other acts, maybe attacks on food banks or MSD. There is also a not insignificant group who are ready to kick off at the first sign of what they perceive as organized Māori resistance. This is the group who will have hidden their guns. So potentially Seymour could indirectly trigger violence as a an attack on the backlash to his policies. Dangerous times, since the one advocating the current policy agenda are insulated in their bubbles. As usual its ordinary people who get hurt.

  6. There are various dark twisted fuckers in this small population country, some due to enduring post colonial denialism–sitting on stolen land–and others to the digital world and rabbit holes, and economic inequity and subsequent crime.

    Political violence will take its own course depending on how the State Forces behave towards the oppressed and exploited of Aotearoa NZ, and how working class organisations get active.

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