Matua Kahurangi
Just a bloke sharing thoughts on New Zealand and the world beyond. No fluff, just honest takes.

Storm Constable-Carter is not some confused young man who made a ‘mistake’. He is a monster. I wrote about how he admitted to stockpiling and distributing thousands upon thousands of sickening images of child abuse and animal torture. Babies. Children. Animals. Tortured for the enjoyment of perverts like him.
Go look at his social media and you will see what he wanted the world to see – rainbow flags, makeup tutorials while he studied at Samala Robinson Academy, multi-coloured hair and endless TQ+ slogans. The picture of a ‘progressive, colourful young person’. The mask of acceptance. In the courtroom, though, that mask was gone. Stripped of the glitter, he stood there exposed for what he really is.
Storm Constable-Carter guilty of creating and sharing child abuse contentMatua Kahurangi 20 Aug
How many times do we need to see this? Time and time again, these predators are not the rugged, old school, creeps hiding in vans. They are the rainbow-clad activists with dyed hair and hashtags. Proudly flaunting their identities online while hiding some of the most depraved obsessions imaginable.

What do the so called “support agencies” do? Groups like the Burnett Foundation spend their time pushing extreme gender ideology down the throats of young people, waving flags and slogans, while failing to pick up on the glaring warning signs. They enable this circus instead of confronting the fact that some of the loudest voices in these movements are unhinged and dangerous.
Peru has already taken the step of classifying transgenderism as a mental health disorder. Meanwhile, in New Zealand, we are told to celebrate and affirm every fringe identity, no matter how detached from reality. How many children need to be abused before we stop pretending this ideology is ‘healthy’?
The truth is ugly, but it needs to be said that monsters like Storm Constable-Carter thrive in a culture that hides behind rainbows.
This article was originally published on the author’s Substack.