Did We Screw Up or Did We Not?
The consequences of our passivity, our surrender, and our loss of autonomy are not over. They’re just beginning.
The consequences of our passivity, our surrender, and our loss of autonomy are not over. They’re just beginning.
May I suggest that if new things are what have brought us to this point of crisis, then it is precisely old things that become the weapons of the counter-revolution. Things like faith, family, community, and nature itself are what ground us in the reality of who we really are as humans.
Even though time is passing and memories may have faded. The effect of the New Zealand Gene Technology Bill, if passed, will be not peripheral to our personal interests or safety.
Tax-to-spend is not what New Zealand needs.
Many New Zealanders who earn far less may see the strikes as self-serving rather than justified, reducing the unions’ moral leverage.
If we want a free, dynamic society of responsible citizens, safetyism browbeating has got to stop.
The MCNZ is not protecting the people of NZ but seems to be dancing to the tune of international bodies pushing pharmaceuticals. Is this who you want regulating your doctor and being present in the consultation room?
Labour, sort your house out. Or better yet, step aside and let someone competent have a go. The rest of us are tired of the circus.
Many researchers, health professionals and journalists, dependent on pharmaceutical funding or institutional support, have every incentive to avoid pursuing or amplifying questions that could threaten their livelihoods.
The links between anxiety and depression medications and the risk of suicide.
This exposes a new form of stigma – using the language of the left: detransphobia.