"The Terrorism Files"

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  • Kracklite,

    Yup. But the word that was used was rape, not sexual violation.

    Ah, that's all right then. Sorry.

    The it's-not-quite-as-bad-as argument. Irrefutable, that is.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kyle Matthews,

    The it's-not-quite-as-bad-as argument. Irrefutable, that is.

    No that's not my argument. I was simply agreeing with your point that sexual violation is a crime and it's more than just inappropriate, which is all that you said.

    My point was if you're going to argue it's rape, argue that, sexual violation is not necessarily rape, though certainly all rape is sexual violation.

    My argument is there's nothing inherent in a cavity search that automatically makes it a sexual violation either, if intent of the searcher is part of your concern. It's possible for a cavity search to be sexual violation, but it's also possible for it not to be.

    You need to leap from 'a cavity search apparently took place' to 'rape/sexual violation took place', and the only way you can do that is if 'all cavity searches constitute rape/sexual violation'. And if they do, then NZ customs have got some serious navel gazing in the near future.

    And, if you're going to quote me, try and keep the context, since y'all so big on everyone else having to do it. I said it was "very inappropriate". If it actually did happen, then I'd imagine that's how the police would view it too.

    G'night.

    Since Nov 2006 • 6243 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    And if they do, then NZ customs have got some serious navel gazing in the near future.

    Maybe they do...

    If it actually did happen, then I'd imagine that's how the police would view it too.

    Your faith is touching. I can imagine pixies and elves, but I don't believe in them.

    "very inappropriate"

    Let's not mince words. It's "very inappropriate" to serve red wine with fish too. You do agree that sexual violation is criminal.

    OK, let's do some leaping to determine exactly where the moral line is drawn:

    "Your honour, my client did not ejaculate."

    "Your honour, my client did not achieve erection."

    "Your honour, the plaintiff consented."

    So where does the line get drawn, since the exact placement of that line is so important?

    Now those defences get used routinely in court, but I suggest that the key word might be consent. Supposed - I repeat, supposed intent is not a serious defence. Admittedly, in cases where a serious crime is suspected, a search may be necessary and even justifiable, without consent, but:

    An imposed cavity search by a male police officer on a female inevitably carries with it implications of violence and sexual humiliation.

    I'm sure it does. That doesn't necessarily make it rape though.

    And you accepted the "inevitably".

    So it's not rape, but it carries inevitable connotations of violation and humiliation... and then it doesn't.

    Which is it?

    My point was if you're going to argue it's rape

    I didn't. Don't put words in my mouth, otherwise I'll find myself wandering down the street muttering, "Pinochet, Thatcher...".

    In any case, sensitivity over this issue is called for. To - if this is the case - have a man conduct an act on a young girl that inevitably entails sexual humiliation without a female officer present and without a damn good reason is just plain stupid if not utterly vile.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kyle Matthews,

    __"very inappropriate"__

    Let's not mince words. It's "very inappropriate" to serve red wine with fish too. You do agree that sexual violation is criminal.

    You're the one that started mincing words. I just think if you're going to do it, it helps to quote the person accurately.

    OK, let's do some leaping to determine exactly where the moral line is drawn:

    ...

    So where does the line get drawn, since the exact placement of that line is so important?

    I don't see the relevance of a bunch of lines justifying sexual intercourse relate to the topic at hand. As far as I know, no one's accusing any police officers of having any sort of sex here.

    So it's not rape, but it carries inevitable connotations of violation and humiliation... and then it doesn't.

    Which is it?

    My point is, sexual humiliation does not necessarily mean rape. I'm sure some people feel humiliated after an up-close-and-personal visit to the doctor. That doesn't necessarily mean that the doctor did anything but a professional inspection.

    __My point was if you're going to argue it's rape__

    I didn't. Don't put words in my mouth, otherwise I'll find myself wandering down the street muttering, "Pinochet, Thatcher...".

    OK, if you're going to jump into a conversation talking about X, and then start talking about Y, expect people to say "hey, I'm talking about X".

    Kyle, Rape is not the same thing as sex. Sex is something people share. It is a depth of intimacy. Rape is the violation of personal boundaries. Rape is violence! Do you get it?

    Yeah thanks for that. What it's not, necessarily, is a cavity search.

    Since Nov 2006 • 6243 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    As far as I know, no one's accusing any police officers of having any sort of sex here.

    Rape is not the same thing as sex.

    OK, if you're going to jump into a conversation talking about X, and then start talking about Y, expect people to say "hey, I'm talking about X".

    The basis of your argument there seemed to be that the civil liberties of the accused should not be defended because, hey, Thatcher defended Pinochet. It was a cheap ad hominem shot at best.

    I'm sure some people feel humiliated after an up-close-and-personal visit to the doctor. That doesn't necessarily mean that the doctor did anything but a professional inspection.

    Doctors have to adhere to very strict ethical guidelines and are struck off and/charged if they don't because of the nature of the power relationship that they have with their patients. If the doctor was in full combat gear and carried a bloody big gun, I'd be rather concerned to put it mildly. You cannot argue that there is not a further elevation of a coercive power relationship there. That's a false analogy.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    They have been entrusted by us not to abuse people with the power differential bestowed upon them.

    My thoughts too. We can't just imagine that they have the best of motives and intentions and behave accordingly. That doesn't mean that they're fascist pigs, but in a society where certain people are granted extraordinary powers, then they must come under extraordinary scrutiny.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Finn Higgins,

    Kracklite, you're attacking me for failing to argue your points and then utterly ignoring mine. Pick your standard and live by it, please.

    Of course people are judged on their associations. That's exactly what happens in normal human society on a day to day basis. It's one of the most normal ways that human societies enforce their accepted range of behavior. I provided a couple of profile examples of people being judged on associations, but I could just as easily have used any number of everyday situations. Drawing a line of argument between yourself and the behavior or others is a huge part of politics of any description. How else do we oppose organisations like the National Front? With guns? I would most certainly judge somebody with connections to Kyle Chapman for refusing to condemn his activities, wouldn't you? Honestly?

    As for the "everything before but is bullshit" glib throwaway, feel free to address the point anytime. All you're doing is ignoring my point based on a grammatical construction; are you really going to make me go back and restructure my sentence to not include "but" before you answer the point contained within? If so you're being rather petty. I made a very specific statement that I do have an interest in the civil liberties issues raised. I also think that those making them are destroying their chance of their arguments succeeding by being completely blind to any possibility of wrongdoing by those they are vocally supporting. If you want to claim that is bullshit because you don't like my grammar then there's little point talking to you, because you're not arguing with anything resembling good faith.

    Next up, inadmissibility. That is a legal point, and an extremely valid one in giving people a fair trial on criminal charges with state-enforced consequences. When it comes to forming an opinion on whether you wish to support people's actions legal admissibility doesn't really come into it - you just consider the evidence and the rationale behind its inadmissability together in making your own judgments.

    To get back to a rather related point given many of the parties involved, let's try mentioning everybody's friend Clint Rickards again. Found not guilty. Still happy to associate himself with convicted rapists. By your argument, we've no right to judge him - legally speaking he's as innocent as he's going to be, and we can't judge people by their choice of people to associate with. Am I on the right track, or did I miss your argument?

    As for cherry picking... sure, I was making a pretty cheap point. I'll take that on the nose, I've got the 'flu at the minute and I'm grumpy. Now I've answered your points do you want to take a crack at the substance of mine?

    Wellington • Since Apr 2007 • 209 posts Report Reply

  • Kyle Matthews,

    The basis of your argument there seemed to be that the civil liberties of the accused should not be defended because, hey, Thatcher defended Pinochet. It was a cheap ad hominem shot at best.

    You're thinking of someone else there, who's not me. The person you're looking for in this matter is Finn.

    Doctors have to adhere to very strict ethical guidelines and are struck off and/charged if they don't because of the nature of the power relationship that they have with their patients. If the doctor was in full combat gear and carried a bloody big gun, I'd be rather concerned to put it mildly. You cannot argue that there is not a further elevation of a coercive power relationship there. That's a false analogy.

    Department of Corrections staff, Police staff, Customs NZ staff carry out these sorts of searches all the time, and sometimes it's done in the presence of armed guards, and sometimes the person being searched is restrained. I'm sure in most instances they do so very professionally, and following the ethical guidelines set down by their employers. And I can't imagine in many instances it's consensual. None of those things make it rape.

    Since Nov 2006 • 6243 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    I would most certainly judge somebody with connections to Kyle Chapman for refusing to condemn his activities, wouldn't you? Honestly?

    What has distinguished this case is the blanket smear of all involved when trials are pending based on some very murky associations created largely in some search warrants that in the end uncovered four guns. Moreover, they are certainly under surveillance still. As I've said before, anything they say may be used - and that is why evidence is suppressed and that is why they're staying silent.

    The choice they have is not between two black and white alternatives, it's between remaining silent and looking bad and saying to much and ruining someone's chance of a fair trial (if it hasn't been ruined already) and thereby appearing to justify the whole series of raids. One's bad, the other's worse.

    Truth be told, there is a lot of division in the activist community - they're not some monolith, but there has been conscious agreement among the networks that mutual finger-pointing isn't going to help anyone. They're not quite as dumb as the People's Front of Judea.

    Well, mostly not as dumb. The fact that some damned fool has got frustrated and posted the affidavit on the Internet and this document in particular seems to have come from the defence side probably has something to do with someone being a damned fool. Maybe they were angered at the fact that the Dompost already had been picking out choice quotes. The website, I hear went up long after Fairfax and TV3 received their leaked material.

    Chapman, OK, I was wondering when that would come up. I'd certainly not think very charitably of such a person, but I would not go around claiming that they must be fascists. I don't demand loyalty pledges. To refer to the unwelcome Thatcher/Pinochet comparison, some of my best friends vote Conservative... (yes, really).

    All you're doing is ignoring my point based on a grammatical construction

    Now you're arguing in bad faith. It was not a grammatical point: you constructed your argument to hold up civil rights specifically to put them down in relation to what followed. That is the point I was making. It would be the same if you said 'however" or "nonetheless" or whatever.

    consider the evidence and the rationale behind its inadmissability

    Indeed. Do so.

    Clint Rickards again. Found not guilty.

    Thatcher (by Kyle), Chapman (whoops, unintentional pun), Rickards. Who next, Napoleon?

    That's only pertinent if one takes a strict binarism of guilty/innocent and it's as reductionist and misleading as the doctor analogy above.

    It's not merely a matter of Rickard's associations. It's his admitted coercive, grooming behaviour of vulnerable young women that makes him a despicable individual. Most people think that rape has to be at knifepoint, where the alternative is clearly death, but for many women, it's because they're pushed slowly into a state of learned helplessness. Even if it wasn't defined as rape in the final courtroom verdict, admitted systematic intimidation and isolating behaviour are grounds enough to believe that "not guilty" is not the same as "candidate for sainthood."

    Add to that the fact that the trial was seriously unbalanced - that Louise Nicholas' past was brought up as a critical part of the defence, but the accuseds' pasts were suppressed, as was evidence from a prosecution witness and then the whole investigation was sabotaged by Dewar. That makes for a very dodgy trial and verdict.

    There's enough there to be reasonably sure that Rickards is not someone that i'd invite around to dinner.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    You're thinking of someone else there, who's not me. The person you're looking for in this matter is Finn.

    Sorry, I stand corrected. Flu also.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    None of those things make it rape.

    Did I say that it was rape? No. You are continuing to argue that if it is not one thing, then it must be the other of widely separated options. The doctor example was the most egregious.

    At least now you are bringing up clearly similar situations.

    Are you sure? How can you be sure? My point is not that it was rape, but that - as you yourself admit - it carries inevitable connotations. As you mention, there are often armed guards and consent is doubtful. This is where the person being searched is obviously a danger to themself and others. What you fail to notice is the power differential and the intimidation of a young woman.

    My point is that there must be extraordinary oversight for extraordinary circumstances because not only is the line between search and sexual assault very fine, the persons judging where it is - those with the guns - are not the best suited to make the call.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    because of people being arrested on the basis of quite specific evidence that they were preparing for violence. This is neither taking a balanced position or staying silent, so I think it's a pretty reasonable target for derision.

    OK, late night and too much Scotch. That's my excuse, Your Honour. Now to address that.

    I think that I've dealt with some of that above - balance is not between good and bad, but between bad and worse in the case of those remaining silent.

    In the case of the noisy ones, well they're often dealing directly with the likes of Greg O'Connor and Ron Mark at one end and Redbaiter at the extreme and plenty of angry letter-writers in the dailies shouting out "Terrorism!". Admittedly, there's not a lot of space in the middle it seems, but to say that the hysteria is all on one side, which it is not, and therefore deserves flat-out dismissal is unfair and inaccurate.

    People were arrested on specific and detailled evidence. The warrants were for firearms (not avocados) and those are the charges as they stand. Now 17 people were arrested for four guns. Something's missing here: napalm, grenade launchers, weapons of mass destruction.

    What we have seen is one side of the case in which terrorism is alleged - the evidence has not been placed under examination and which the SG says cannot be used. It is not unfair to argue here that people are being blanket condemned in public with banner headlines on the basis of deeply flawed evidence.

    I kknow that this sounds a bit like "I know something you don't", but here goes: the raid at 128 Abel Smith Street broke up a sinister cabal plotting to... discuss gluten-free food. The claims of "criminalisation of dissent", while seeming extreme, are to some degree justified due to the fact that the raids did not come out of the blue but were the latest and most extreme of attacks, false charges (which I've alluded to above) surveillance and bullying that has been going on for years. Not all of it makes the headlines, so a sudden eruption of press coverage and the activists' reaction can seem sudden, but it is rooted in history.

    There is a context there.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Finn Higgins,

    Thanks Kracklite, I think that's some progress in that we've got a lot to agree on now.

    The problem that many of us are having with the response of the activist community is less the lack of willingness to talk as the unshakable willingness to talk about the evils of others while remaining silent about the culpability of those they're defending. There are two sides to every argument, and contributing causes for every event. If you're saying that you are legally disadvantaged by discussing the actions of one side it would be a good idea to stop publically damning the other side with such force. As an example, the assertions that the Armed Offenders Squad should not have been used in the Ruatoki raids. It's impossible to have this discussion without actually talking about what the defendants were doing in the Ureweras with weapons and live ammunition, particularly those targeted by the Ruatoki raid. If what they were doing was insubstantial and non-threatening then an AOS call out should be considered a gross blunder. If what they were doing was deliberately trying to clone overseas models of training for civil unrest while talking specifically about killing police officers then I'd think an AOS call-out is the only likely or reasonable end-result, no? So are we talking about this issue or not? You can't just expect to talk about one side of the argument without people perceiving you as unreasonably one-sided. The comparative absence of people shouting one-note recitals of their own political viewpoint is one of the things about politics in NZ that redeems it considerably over, for example, the USA. I quite like that, so I'm quite keen on asking people to at least try to see both sides of the argument.

    I'm willing. If anybody has some substantial evidence of police wrongdoing then I want to hear it, I want to see it reported to the Police Complaints Authority and I want to hear their response. But trying to claim wrongdoing just because the arresting officers came dressed in black with guns is a bit off when you're totally refusing to discuss circumstances supporting why they might have come equipped like this. The context of what happened in the Ureweras is critical to judging the actions of the police, but nobody making criticisms seemingly wants to talk about that too much. And when the people making those criticisms just increase in volume every week (I think Sara's argument-free assertion of "very real ATROCITIES" is a new low for reasoned discussion in this thread) the likelihood of public opinion turning against their entire position increases.

    If you genuinely believe there are civil liberties issues to discuss then surely trying to avoid having your entire side of the debate discredited by unsupported, one-sided ranting would be a great starting point, no? I do think there are real civil liberties issues surrounding the present international environment. I don't like terrorism legislation, I'm glad to see that no terror charges have been brought in NZ yet. I don't want to see crap legislation from overseas imported here. But why is it that parliament found it so acceptable to basically laugh in Keith Locke's face when he made arguments against the TSA amendment? I can't help but keep hearing The Boy Who Cried Wolf throughout this entire debate, and parliament's response to Keith Locke was sadly like watching the little boy crying out about the real wolf while everybody laughed him off.

    Wellington • Since Apr 2007 • 209 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    Fine, Finn, thanks. Likewise, I can see important points of agreement.

    Alas, I have to go to work. I'll be back later.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Finn Higgins,

    <quote>
    I googled "15 year old girl cavity search" and came up with nothing. Got any more info on this? A link? <quote>

    Just while we're on the topic of "quoting out of context", this one's a cracker. I/O, you dirty, dirty man... ;)

    Wellington • Since Apr 2007 • 209 posts Report Reply

  • InternationalObserver,

    I/O, you dirty, dirty man... ;)

    Now now ... it was a serious google - and I've clearly sparked off some heated discussion since my post back on page 41. What's weird is the first result the google search came up with was 'Troy Fergusson - BFM - RockNRoll Wire'. ;)

    If a male cop did perform a cavity search on a 15 year old girl then I'll be one of the first to join the protest march. What perplexes me (warning: the next bit is rude, but I'm serious) is what were the Police expecting to find there? It must have been (again I'm serious) something very important that they couldn't wait for a female officer to perform the cavity search. Which is why I don't believe it happened. [*]

    Some may construe this as heartless, but I've been around the block enough times to believe that a 15 y.o. is old enough to 'embelish' what happened to suit her political cause. And it may even have started out innocently enough. As is evidenced by this discussion, words can be taken out of context and overblown. The girl may have just told her kuia that she was patted down and searched (but over her jeans) by the cop, and then this is retold as the cop stuck his hands between her legs, which is then retold as the girl underwent a cavity search. With everyone up in arms over that I can imagine the girl may have then been too timid to speak up and say "No, what actually happened was ..."

    But lets not get ahead of ourselves. No-one knows what happened (aside from those actually involved) and we (myself included) are just making suppositions and speculating. Does it really contribute?

    [*] The only possible scenario for this cavity search to have taken place would be something Sara hinted at earlier: the cop was trying to brutalise the girl to assert his power/control over her. But I'm not yet ready to believe this is Bosnia circa 1990

    Since Jun 2007 • 909 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    OK, let's approach this in our new-found spirit of conciliation (until I have my next tipple).

    There'll inevitably be some agreeing to differ.

    There are two sides to every argument, and contributing causes for every event

    Indeed, but the POV of those defending the activists is that one side is already out there and according to a poll a while back, 6/7 thought that the police were justified. Furious statements of support without balancing and rather ritual condemnations of terrorism are seen as part of a debate from a minority position that isn't getting the front page of the Dompost, not stand-alone statements.

    Ureweras with weapons and live ammunition

    Not all meat comes fom supermarkets. That may sound odd (especially to one as urbanised to me), but some people do still rountinely hunt, and they will be a bit cavalier about licences.

    Now, my personal opinion, which actually, despite my often furious tone, I've not often brought up when defending them is that there were some people who were caught up in some macho fantasies of a secret army and indeed, there may well be substance... but then the SG... oh sh*t, I used a "but". Well, I'm in two minds and I want to see fair processes followed.

    There's a line there between being a blowhard who likes shooty things and stockpiling and serious intent to form an armed fighting/terrorist force. The police thought that it was terrorism, the SG disagreed, the leaked evidence has now been presented as vindication of the police position. The Dompost wasn't exactly engaging constructively.

    can't just expect to talk about one side of the argument without people perceiving you as unreasonably one-sided.

    True, but as far as they're concerned, that horse bolted when the police went in in combat gear, when the word "terrorism" started being flung around and a whole herb escaped when the various fish and chip wrappers started going on about napalm and grenade launchers and plots to kill W. Too late, already.

    The comparative absence of people shouting one-note recitals of their own political viewpoint is one of the things about politics in NZ that redeems it considerably over, for example, the USA.

    Well, yes, somewhat. American debates are pretty awful with their toxicity and tribalism overriding any real discussion, but in comparison with the potential range of debate is big-endian versus small-endian (I'll support Bigend if its Hubertus... sorry, obscure joke). I want to see radical ideas aired coherently - not necessarily because I agree with them, but because, ahem "cognitive estrangement" is a good cold shower for the soul. If they're utterly alien to me, I want to think about why they should seem that way. My job has brought me into contact with people whose experiences have been very different from mine and I want to know how they got there (let me tell you sometime about one student I had once, a dyslexic man in his 40s with convictions for GBH and heroin possession and who is a really nice guy).

    I want to see it reported to the Police Complaints Authority and I want to hear their response

    Alas, for a lot of the older activists who remember the Springbok tour and the clowns incident, that sort of thing is suitable for a Tui billboard. Police investigating police is not something they care much about - certainly not after what came up during Dewar's trial, not when Greg O'Connor describes the Nicholas case as a "distraction" and "an isolated incident" and Bazley's report on a culture of misogyny and sexual abuse as a clean bill of health.

    Well, at a weekend BBQ (which is what we liberals in leafy suburbs do... tho' Aro Valley is as mildewed as it is leafy), I was speaking to a woman whose flatmate was one of those arrested and she remarked sadly on the severe polarisation of viewpoints. I agreed with her tone and was somewhat surprised, considering how close the issue was to her personally. Another friend is much less, um, subtle.

    Keith Locke was sadly like watching the little boy crying out about the real wolf while everybody laughed him off.

    Alas, yes. Funnily enough, I'm likely to vote Green, not because I much like them (Global Climate Change initiatives good, Luddism not), but because I want that ginger in parliament.

    You are assuming, I think, more foresight and co-ordination, and more uniformity of initial premises than is actually the case.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Kyle Matthews,

    Alas, for a lot of the older activists who remember the Springbok tour and the clowns incident, that sort of thing is suitable for a Tui billboard. Police investigating police is not something they care much about - certainly not after what came up during Dewar's trial, not when Greg O'Connor describes the Nicholas case as a "distraction" and "an isolated incident" and Bazley's report on a culture of misogyny and sexual abuse as a clean bill of health.

    I don't think older history is appropriate to reflect upon the PCA. I have very little faith in the PCA, but they have never had authority over most of these things. Springbok Tour etc all predate the PCA, and from what I heard on the radio this morning, it's only just became the case (along with a name change) that they can look at events pre-1988 (I presume they started in 1988).

    Looking at events older than 20 years ago and reflecting upon the actions to date of the PCA in their light isn't fair if they PCA didn't exist then, and wasn't legally able to look at them.

    Since Nov 2006 • 6243 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    I don't think older history is appropriate to reflect upon the PCA.

    Maybe not, but the PCA is perceived as a band-aid at best and incidents of twenty years or more ago are seen as part of a continuum/symptoms of a basic malaise leading up to the present day. The concept of "police investigating police" is not viewed without considerable cynicism.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Finn Higgins,

    Kracklite, thanks for all that. There's a lot to cover and I don't think I can go into detail on everything without starting to post things pages long, so I'll stick to a couple of points.

    The first point I would make is that the SG didn't specifically absolve anybody of any particular wrongdoing - he just said that the TSA wasn't applicable, and specifically criticised the law as being completely unusable in the context of domestic groups. I'm happy enough about that, I don't really want NZ to have domestic anti-terror laws; but as with the point you made about Rickards earlier, just because something doesn't meet a legal test for a particular criminal charge doesn't mean you'd want to invite the people involved over for dinner.

    Moving on to the hunting point... it's entirely possible that's all that was going on. But there are some pretty substantial questions surrounding that - some of the weapons discussed in the affidavit aren't particularly suited to hunting activities, and if the defendants were actually just hunting then I don't see how them all standing up and saying "we were just going hunting" would be harmful to their defense, unless it was proved to be patently untrue. But the thrust of my prior post was that we can't really talk meaningfully about whether the heavily armed police response was appropriate or not without discussing the details of what was happening in the Ureweras. There are plenty on the far left wanting to separate these two issues, that I'd have to say seem rather inseparable to me.

    Now for the PCA and activist distrust of it. This is where I would have to ask a pretty fundamental question: if you don't believe you can effect meaningful change in society, why be an activist? If you do not believe you can ever use systems created as a result of your protests, why protest? As a result of a number of cases that many of the same activists have been involved in the PCA has seen a number of increases in its powers of inquiry, and indeed I believe some of them (along with a name change) became effective today. It is the body that exists to police the police in NZ. If it is not doing its job then protests about this can be addressed to government, who have been at least somewhat responsive to them. But it's hard to expect government to respond to complaints about a system that has been ignored.

    I'm not going to claim the system is perfect; but I have had some positive response in reporting dubious police behavior to the PCA myself, so just ignoring the body that exists for the purpose of pursuing complaints about the cops seems utterly self-defeating. The new PCA and its new powers should be tested, not dismissed. It's in the interests of us all that we have an effective means of policing our police force, so if people believe they have genuine complaints then I'd like to see them pursued through the channels in society that exist for that purpose. If the system doesn't work we need to fix it ASAP, and it can't be easily fixed without good examples of it failing.

    This is getting awful long, so I'll stick with a short coda too...

    You are assuming, I think, more foresight and co-ordination, and more uniformity of initial premises than is actually the case.

    I'm not assuming foresight and co-ordination, I'm decrying the lack of it. I'd really like to see the activist communities whose mailers keep landing up in my inbox go back to first principles and discuss how the campaigns they're involved in at present are going to help them achieve their actual goals. My argument is that they're shooting themselves in the feet repeatedly at the moment by throwing all their weight behind a bunch of people who may very possibly have been doing some really stupid things that run counter to much of what these groups purport to believe in. It's hard to see a worse alliance than peace activists allied with people who believe peace to be bullshit, after all.

    Wellington • Since Apr 2007 • 209 posts Report Reply

  • Kyle Matthews,

    The concept of "police investigating police" is not viewed without considerable cynicism.

    That's also somewhat dated. All my police complaints from the 90s were handled by the PCA, but investigated by police. About five (?) years ago the PCA got staffed up in response to the above criticism and they now do their own legwork, rather than relying on the police to do it.

    I think the problem more is, they're pretty closely linked to police ideas, and reluctant to criticise the police unless their actions are quite blatant.

    Since Nov 2006 • 6243 posts Report Reply

  • Kracklite,

    Damn, wrote a reply and it evaporated, which REALLY pissed me off, cos' it was sooo eloquent.

    OK, again, and perhaps briefer (relatively).

    The first point I would make is that the SG didn't specifically absolve anybody of any particular wrongdoing

    And that's what infuriates a lot of people in the activist community. They're tarred with a brush... and now the accusations cannot be disproven in court. The mud has stuck. It's utterly unfair for a lot of them and leads them to believe that the T-word is just cynically and dishonestly being used as a stick to beat everyone with.

    I wouldn't invite a vegan to dinner - out of consideration for for their sensibilities. They wouldn't like my jokes about deep-fried whaleburgers.

    There is an irony here in that the activists have something in common with Greg O'Connor: some people think all police are rapists, racists and stormtroopers and some people think that all activists are terrorists.

    if you don't believe you can effect meaningful change in society, why be an activist?

    The end of slavery in the west, votes for women and independence for India did not come about by working within the system. One can draw a continuum perhaps: lobbyists who work with the system (and are seen as corrupt and corrupting by some), activists who compare themselves with the suffragettes and many other groups that have used civil disobedience to achieve social justice (and they are inevitably disruptive) and at the far end are terrorists who will not engage at all face to face with power.

    My concern here is the perceived legitimacy of power. Terrorism arises not in conditions of poverty, but when power is perceived as illegitimate. Bin Laden and Lenin are both from wealthy families. Lenin was even a lawyer, but his brother was wrongly condemned and executed by the Tsarist police. We all know what he decided to do next. Saudi Arabia is by no means a free and open state and notably most of the 911 perpetrators were well-off Saudis, not poor and uneducated. There’s a paper which supports this which I am too lazy to find and link.

    The problem is that whatever happened in the Ureweras, the police presented a face that looked authoritarian, arbitrary and violent. Hone Harawira, whether one agrees with him or not, articulated the perception that Howard Broad deliberately bypassed all his Maori advisors and even the local Ruatoki police when it suited him to.

    Trust is essential to a civil society, and if that trust is flouted, then the legitimacy of authority is undermined. Force achieves immediate results, but long-term consequences may be that the situation ends up worse than ever. I'm sure that in the eyes of Tame Iti and his supporters (right or wrong, moderate or extreme, sane or barking), the raids justified their polarisation.

    I don't think that anything good will come of this.

    There is definitely a line between activist and terrorist, but people who want to see the adoption of terrorism love seeing people who don't think of themselves as terrorists being treated as terrorists because then they find it easier join the <Darth Vader breathing effects>dark side</Darth Vader breathing effects>. Raids on gluten-free bread workshops (not even dwarf bread) and a womens’ refuge and pointing a gun at a twelve-year-old girl’s head simultaneously with raids on accused terrorists in Ruatoki using the same warrants and as part of the same operation sends a very strong message from the police about who they think that they’re dealing with (my default disclaimer here is “even if that’s not their intention, that’s the effect”).

    Now, the biggest fault of the far left is indeed to assume that the enemy of their enemy is their ally. It's hardly unusual - John Pilger and Tariq Ali seem to love Chavez and Castro because they're not W and W loves the House of Saud.

    Sometimes it's Realpolitik and sometimes that works - Nixon and Kissinger achived detente with Russia and China after all, despite their repugnance for communism. Sometimes it's just naive, but smart people make that mistake.

    It goes back at least as far as Truman who said of one unsavoury dictator, "He's a son of a bitch, but he's our son of a bitch."

    Guns, hunting, NRA, NRA not terrorists... sorry, I'm being lazy (but you can fill in the gaps) and I'm not proposing that as an argument to justify actions, but to describe a point of view that is strongly held.

    Now I hate patriarchal macho thugs with advanced cases of testosterone poisoning who play with guns... but to even mild-mannered activists who had workshops on gluten-free bread broken up by cops and their members arrested for possession of avocados (or whatever), jerks playing secret army or cops look very similar.

    I'm not assuming foresight and co-ordination, I'm decrying the lack of it

    Allow me to rephrase my original observation: a lot of what you've been saying I agree with, but it's based on what people (on both sides) should do, not what the really do, what they see and how we need to deal with the consequences arising.

    Now, what I want is to see the Maori Party and the Greens in parliament, with all their more extreme elements and hangers on visible there and able to use the levers of power. On the other hand, activism and civil disobedience have worked in the past - very well - and they have in retrospect seen to be on the side of right.

    Simultaneously rounding up activists and accused terrorists is a very dangerous precedent because it will polarise society and undermine the legitimacy of power itself - with potentially the negative consequences I've described above.

    If the system doesn't work we need to fix it ASAP

    Agreed! I think that MMP helps here better and transparency helps even more. The increasing paranoia and clumsiness of the current government does not.

    My main objection to the raids is that they are not only outrageously intimidating - they are also outrageously stupid.

    The Library of Babel • Since Nov 2007 • 982 posts Report Reply

  • Sara Noble,

    What Kracklite said, with bells on!
    Thank you BJD.

    Auckland • Since Nov 2007 • 127 posts Report Reply

  • blindjackdog,

    'Salright Sara. Thank you.

    Since Nov 2007 • 40 posts Report Reply

  • Finn Higgins,

    By that I assume you mean Disneyland-esque anti-capitalist theme restaurant feel?

    Wellington • Since Apr 2007 • 209 posts Report Reply

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