Christianity and the Death of the Nation
The harsh truth is that you can’t have a nation if you also believe in Christianity.
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The harsh truth is that you can’t have a nation if you also believe in Christianity.
Add to this their working-class roots and their lack of interest in ‘issues’ that stars like Swift profess to care about and the reason for Oasis’ pariah status becomes clear.
‘Globalisation’ and ‘globalism’ may sound kinda-sorta the same, but they’re critically different terms.
It is difficult to argue that Seymour’s pithy compression of the three key elements of the treaty doesn’t capture the essence of its purpose admirably.
Settling the treaty principles and closing the borders will go hand-in-hand if we want to embrace the ‘two people one nation’ solution that has been proposed.
It is stupid window dressing for laws that are already in effect and already ineffective.
The very thought of normal people gaining access to primary sources is hateful because it means there is no place for court historians.
Never before in the field of human knowledge has so much been unknown by so many.
C S Lewis’ ‘The Last Battle’ and globalist multiculturalism.
For New Zealanders alive today, much now depends upon whether Queen Ngāwai takes after Elizabeth or Mary.
Christianity was at the foundation of both the New Zealand state and the King Movement.
It only takes a ‘severe weather event’ to remind us how unprepared we are.
If national holidays are going to exist, and I’m not convinced they should, then the last thing they should do is celebrate everything that New Zealand isn’t.
A range of controversial speakers have included New Zealand in their international speaking tours. None of them should have to wade through a murky process to determine whether Immigration NZ believes allowing them to speak in NZ serves the subjective and arbitrary ‘public interest’.
Multiplicity is better than uniformity.
The game ends when the players are so drunk that all racial hypersensitivity has been banished by the liberating power of liquor and, ironically, a sober view on ‘cultural offensiveness’ has been restored.