Why are we not surprised by this?
Here’s a question for ya;
Name a nation that was fixed with peace?
Why did Hamas murder 1200 Jews?
Would Hamas gottem the current peace deal if it didn’t attack Israel?
Why do people choose terrorism as a way of resistance?
If Hamas didn’t choose violence, would Palestine get this close to become a sovereign state?
WATCH: Here’s Elon Musk talking about on War, and why Hamas choose violence
The likely choice for violence today is to provoke and use that to push your agenda.
New Zealanders who voted to fix New Zealand with violence will likely use violence to get an aggressive response, and then leverage that to rally Kiwis who are unsatisfied on a wider range of issues, including the economy, and cost of living.
This will likely be successful. The people who call for violence will win in this instance.
Low voter turnout in local elections is a strong indicator
This suggests that people have lost trust and don’t believe that the government is going to fix anything.
Expect more people to disengage and not vote in the 2026 general elections.
Which, for many, will be a gateway to choose violence as an option to ‘fix’ New Zealand.
WATCH: Charlie Kirk explained why people are becoming radicals
When appearing on the Tucker Carlson Show, Kirk explained how economic pressures—like the rising median age for first-time home buyers increasing from around 30 to 38 due to inflation, high interest rates, and wealth transfer under “Bidenomics”—are fueling frustration and pushing younger generations toward radical politics.
He tied this to broader mismanagement, including easy money policies, corporate home-buying, and debt burdens, arguing it creates “debt slavery” that could lead to revolution or populist shifts if not addressed.
If you think condemning violence and urging politicians to tone-down the rhetoric - is the solution - you’re tone deaf
Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams said:
“It’s alarming that so many New Zealanders think violence might be justified to ‘fix’ the country. This isn’t a fringe issue any more; it’s a massive red flag for the health of our democracy.”
“Younger people are not only more open to violence, but they’re also less likely to have friends who see the world differently. That kind of political isolation breeds extremism.” “It is frustrating that having had staff receive death threats and direct intimidation, the Police take absolutely no interest. It puts off good people from participating in public affairs - although for some that is the very purpose. We should not have to wait for a tragedy for the Police to get their act together.”
“It’s also time for party leaders to take responsibility and tone down the rhetoric before it escalates further. Democracy depends on debate, not intimidation. Once people stop talking to each other and start seeing violence as an answer, we’re in real trouble.”