Sunday 26 February 2023

LUXON: ANTI-SCIENCE COWARD AND BULLY


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self-explanatory


Maureen Pugh MP's treatment by her boss Christopher Luxon was so cringe-making as to be embarrassing. Labour's propagandists at TvOne 'News' made a meal out of it but Luxon's words as reported in the print media were even more damning.

"Her and I had a conversation," said Luxon. So reminiscent of a Mafia mobster (an illiterate mobster at that) that one almost expects to hear of Pugh's body, in concrete shoes, washed up with the slash somewhere some day.

The terrible truth is, Pugh was right about 'climate change'. As such, it's non-existent. What we're seeing isn't "Mother Nature", it's "Father God" who is fed up with mankind, with our abortions, our same-sex "marriages",  our putting down the old and infirm. 

WOT? To be a climate change denier is now almost an indictable offence. As for blaming God for Cyclone Gabrielle and all the rest - everyone knows God doesn't exist and if He did He'd be a kind God who just wants to keep us all safe, a la Ardern of sacred memory (and NZ's Catholic bishops).



The irony of the Maureen Pugh furore is that it has caused far more damage to Christopher Luxon than to Pugh.


Luxon has come out of it looking like a control freak, intolerant of any deviation from the party line.

This should surprise no one. He comes from a corporate background, and the corporate world values conformity above almost everything else. Original thinkers are seen as problematical and even threatening. Conventional men who play golf and wear suits are naturally most comfortable in the company of other conventional men who play golf and wear suits.

John Key came from a corporate background too, but of a different type: one that placed a high value on individual risk-taking. One difference between Key and Luxon is that Key, for all his faults, seemed to have more trust in his own judgment.

But that’s not the only reason Luxon has come out of this affair looking bad. Many New Zealanders are likely to have taken a dim view of the way he threw Pugh under the bus.

Loyalty is a two-way street; party leaders are entitled to it, but so are their MPs – even lowly backbenchers. To publicly demean Pugh by ordering her to read some books on climate change – in other words, to go and stand in the naughty corner – was a bad look. It seemed petty and vindictive.

The result: Pugh finished the week having won public respect for having the honesty to say what she thought, even though she was then bullied into a humiliating recantation. People would have realised her backdown was insincere, but would have excused her because it was forced on her by her leader.

There was a simple way to avoid all this. When confronted by scalp-hunting political journalists about Pugh’s supposed climate-change heresy, Luxon could have casually waved it away. “Well, that’s Maureen,” he might have said. “She has her own way of looking at things. National has room for non-conformists.”

But he didn’t. He responded exactly as the media hoped and gave them the “Gotcha!” moment they wanted.

I think the underlying problem here is that Luxon is scared of the media and allows himself to be intimidated. Political journalists play him like a fiddle and end up effectively dictating the political agenda. This is no basis for a healthy democracy.

Luxon seems to lack the guts or confidence to stand up for principled conservative positions, fearing that the left-leaning media will punish him. The same is happening in Australia, where the once-formidable Liberal Party has been cowed into a state of paralysis by media that are even more aggressively leftist.

It wasn’t always like this. In the 1970s, the boot was on the other foot: New Zealand political journalists were scared of politicians – or to be more precise, one politician in particular, Robert Muldoon. That wasn’t good for democracy either. There's an honourable middle ground between these extremes.

Control-freak press secretaries appear to be part of the problem too. They wield far too much power. It emerged on RNZ this morning that when word of Pugh’s verbal indiscretion got around, Opposition press secretaries went into panic mode, scurrying around to ensure that all the other National MPs were “on message”.

Pardon me, but who’s in charge here? We don’t elect press secretaries to run the country. They are the modern equivalent of the palace courtier, wielding undue influence and orchestrating events out of the public eye. Political communications, aka the spin doctor industry, is a racket that’s out of control; a gravy train that needs to be derailed.

 


James Tissot (French, 1836-1902). Jesus Tempted in the Wilderness (Jésus tenté dans le désert),


For he saith: In an accepted time have I heard thee; and in the day of salvation have I helped thee. Behold, now is the acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation

-Epistle, First Sunday of Lent

2 comments:

  1. It was disappointing to see Maureen Pugh cave in to Luxon on the matter. I would have been impressed if she had stuck to her guns, perhaps supporting her view by directing her boss to an alternative view expressed by the likes of Patrick Moore and other scientists particularly concerned about the climate alarmism expressed by politicians.

    Scientists Sign Massive Declaration Admonishing Climate Alarmism
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=928bCqL4fZA

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    Replies
    1. Bob I agree, it was disappointing. She would have been subjected to huge pressure and risked losing her livelihood but still we wish she'd maintained the truth. We must pray for our politicians.

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