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"One of the most invigorating things about Camp
Freedom is the absence of fear. The protesters aren't scared. They move freely
amongst the crowd and greet and socialise in the usual human ways. There are
smiles, handshakes and hugs.
"I am not a hugger but I could not help myself. I
hugged at Freedomville. I felt human. I was a person not a biohazard.
"It was so unbelievably joyful."
Today, another post on the Occupation of Parliament grounds, this one from a temporal perspective (the here-and-now), from Rodney Hide, ex-MP and former leader of the ACT Party.
Rodney Hide: "The mandates will go"
To step into the camp is to step into freedom.
Stepping out was to cross back into tyranny where people fear each other and
wear filthy hankies tied across their faces in a madcap attempt to stay safe.
It's the lack of fear that makes for freedom and
provides joy. Having left the Camp, I want to go back. The Camp is normal life to me;
outside is weird, miserable, irrational and tyrannical.
It is the same feeling I had crossing Checkpoint
Charlie. It wasn't the prosperity that you missed but the freedom and the joy.
And when you crossed back you left the fear behind. The fear was etched in
people's faces and made you fearful. Fear is infectious. But so is courage.
There's also the particular joy that comes with
successfully defying a tyrannical parliament on their front lawn and outside
their front window. There's a brotherhood and comradeship that comes with
living behind enemy lines in hostile territory.
A Parliament that locked us up at home for months
can't kick us off their lawn. How marvellous is that? That is a feeling that
can't be beat. We will never be locked up again. And the mandates will go. It
was wonderful to be a part of that.
There's also breathtaking resourcefulness with the
Camp an exhibition of kiwi spirit and ingenuity. It is astonishing what has
been achieved without plan or organisation but with skill, commitment and a
can-do kiwi attitude. I love it.
And it generates a spirit that is palpable. It's
the ANZACs pinned at Gallipoli showing huge resourcefulness and courage.
I want to go back to Camp Freedom to revel once
more in the freedom and to feel the comradeship. And to defeat tyranny.
I thought the protesters would need moral support.
They don't. It was me who needed it. They love it there. I loved it there.
I went to thank the protesters. But once there it
wasn't enough. I want to be them. I want to share in their freedom, their
courage, their joy, their success.
I went to denounce our MPs and journalists. But
didn't. They have been made fearful. They are scared of getting sick. They are
scared of the protesters. They have nappies tied to their faces, they socially
distance and stay high up in their parliamentary tower cowering behind a wall
backed by police.
The protesters on the Berlin Wall weren't lawful.
They were a rag tag lot. They had no leader. The media denounced them. They
upset the neighbours. But the Wall came down.
It's time ours did."
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