The Jackal
 


7 Jul 2025

Unresolved Questions About Epstein's Paedophile Network

Jeffrey Epstein’s criminal enterprise represents one of the most sophisticated pedophile and blackmail operations in modern history, facilitated by an extensive surveillance network that recorded illicit activities across his Manhattan townhouse, Palm Beach mansion, Little St. James island, New Mexico’s Zorro Ranch, and the New Albany estate.

Despite numerous investigations and document releases, critical aspects of this extensive operation remain unexamined, including the technical infrastructure that enabled it, the individuals who implemented these systems, and the apparent institutional failures that have allowed key evidence to disappear or remain hidden.

Recent developments have added new complexity to the case. The United States DOJ is apparently still reviewing materials from the FBI investigation into Jeffrey Epstein as Attorney General Pam Bondi supposedly wants to release more files. However, Bondi’s public statements have created confusion rather than clarity.


On Wednesday, Stuff reported:

Mystery surrounds the Jeffrey Epstein files after Bondi claims 'tens of thousands' of videos

It was a surprising statement from Attorney General Pam Bondi as the Trump administration promises to release more files from its sex trafficking investigation of Jeffrey Epstein: The FBI, she said, was reviewing “tens of thousands of videos” of the wealthy financier “with children or child porn.”

The comment, made to reporters at the White House days after a similar remark to a stranger with a hidden camera, raised the stakes for President Donald Trump's administration to prove it has in its possession previously unseen compelling evidence. That task is all the more pressing after an earlier document dump that Bondi hyped angered elements of Trump’s base by failing to deliver new bombshells and as administration officials who had promised to unlock supposed secrets of the so-called government “deep state" struggle to fulfill that pledge.

Yet weeks after Bondi’s remarks, it remains unclear what she was referring to.

...

The filing suggests a discovery of recordings after the criminal cases had concluded, but if that's what Bondi was referencing, the Justice Department has not said.

The department declined repeated requests from the AP to speak with officials overseeing the Epstein review. Spokespeople did not answer a list of questions about Bondi’s comments, including when and where the recordings were procured, what they depict and whether they were newly discovered as authorities dug through their evidence collection or were known for some time to have been in the government's possession.

“Outside sources who make assertions about materials included in the DOJ’s review cannot speak to what materials are included in the DOJ’s review,” spokesperson Chad Gilmartin said in a statement.


What the Stuff article fails to mention is that Bondi, in April 2025, was secretly recorded claiming the FBI was reviewing “tens of thousands of videos” of Epstein “with children or child porn,” statements that were later contradicted by FBI Director Kash Patel. Patel then appeared on the Joe Rogan show, claiming that the delay was because of the amount of evidence they were having to look through. 

Patel's appearance was likely due to Bondi’s February 2025 release of “declassified” Epstein files, 200 pages of public flight logs and a heavily redacted contact book, which received substantial backlash from observers, with most of the material having already been released and used in the trial of Epstein associate and abuser, Ghislaine Maxwell. 

The limited nature of these releases, combined with contradictory statements about video evidence, has fuelled speculation about continued cover-ups. This analysis examines some of the systemic failures that continue to obstruct justice for the victims of Jeffrey Epstein and his pedophile accomplices.

Representatives Robert Garcia and Stephen F. Lynch have demanded answers from Attorney General Pamela Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel about whether the Epstein files are being withheld because they personally implicate President Trump. Senator Marsha Blackburn has requested the FBI Director release complete, unredacted Epstein records. These congressional actions highlight the political dimensions of the case and the continuing pressure for transparency, while also revealing the extent to which partisan considerations may be influencing investigative decisions.

Allegations of Jeffrey Epstein’s connections to Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, have emerged from multiple sources, suggesting his blackmail operation may have served geopolitical interests. Former Israeli intelligence operative Ari Ben-Menashe alleged in 2020 that Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell acted as Mossad assets, using their access to influential figures to collect compromising material for strategic leverage. 

Court documents from Virginia Giuffre reference Epstein’s ties to international networks, potentially including foreign intelligence, while former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s documented visits to Epstein’s properties raise questions about their relationship. The Tel Aviv branch of Jean-Luc Brunel’s MC2 modelling agency, linked to Epstein’s victim recruitment network, further confirms an Israeli connection. Although no definitive evidence has been made public, the FBI’s failure to investigate these international ties, combined with missing surveillance data, leaves critical questions unanswered about whether Epstein’s operations intersected with Mossad’s objectives.

Another largely unexplored aspect of Epstein’s criminal enterprise was his comprehensive surveillance network, which was professionally installed. A surviving victim, Maria Farmer, in her first television interview, alleged that Epstein had extensive surveillance inside his home, including tiny pinhole cameras, and that Epstein showed her cameras throughout his house. Now deceased victim, Virginia Giuffre’s memoir describes a room equipped with monitors displaying real-time footage from throughout the properties, suggesting a centralised monitoring system. 

The 2006 Palm Beach police raid uncovered multiple hidden recording devices, while court documents reference compact discs labeled with “young" victims names discovered in Epstein’s safe, indicating systematic cataloging of recorded material. Conservative radio host Buck Sexton correctly noted that “Epstein was running a blackmail operation based on surreptitious video, as evidenced from the extensive surveillance set ups in his various mansions”.

The scale and sophistication of Epstein’s surveillance network required professional-grade information technology infrastructure. Such systems demanded secure data transmission, encrypted storage, and remote access capabilities, features consistent with enterprise solutions like those offered by Citrix Systems, technology mentioned in Jeffrey Epstein’s released files. Products such as Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops, Workspace, or NetScaler provide the encryption and remote access functionalities necessary for managing sensitive surveillance data across multiple properties while maintaining operational security. 

The technical complexity of managing surveillance systems in New York, Palm Beach, and Little St. James simultaneously would have required specialised expertise in network architecture, data storage systems, and security protocols, expertise that Jeffrey Epstein was reported to not have himself. This level of sophistication suggests the involvement of experienced IT professionals with access to enterprise-grade technology platforms.

Central to understanding Epstein’s technical infrastructure is Tim Newcombe, aka Tim Newcome, listed on page 95 of Epstein’s contact book with two Columbus, Ohio telephone numbers identifying him, despite an extensive attempt to scrub the internet of any leads. Jeffrey Epstein’s house manager Alfredo Rodriguez identified Newcombe as a “Citrix Systems programmer” likely responsible for IT and surveillance systems across Epstein’s numerous properties. Newcombe’s professional associations include Newcome Corp./NES and Digital Interiors, Ohio-based firms specialising in fibre optics and home security systems. Additionally, Newcombe appears to have connections to Ambassador Software Works, a company funded by Rev1 Ventures, an investment fund with ties to Leslie Wexner’s extensive Ohio State University network.

This connection is particularly significant given Wexner’s central role in Epstein’s operations and the billionaire’s influence within Columbus’s technology and the US business ecosystem.

Wexner’s relationship with Epstein from the mid-1980s through 2007 provided the foundation for much of Epstein’s wealth and operational capacity. As Wexner’s financial manager with power of attorney, Epstein controlled significant assets including the New Albany estate where Maria Farmer alleged abuse occurred in 1996. Newcombe’s Columbus base suggests Epstein leveraged local technical expertise to maintain IT systems at Wexner-connected properties, potentially utilising Citrix tools to secure surveillance feeds and manage encrypted data. 

The geographic concentration of technical resources in Columbus, combined with Wexner’s institutional connections, created an environment where sophisticated surveillance systems could be implemented and maintained with minimal external oversight. This local network effect may have facilitated the blackmailing and pedophilia operation’s longevity through technical sophistication. It may also explain why evidence is still only now being decrypted.

Despite the apparent significance of Newcombe’s role, several critical questions remain unanswered: What specific technical services did Newcombe provide to Epstein’s properties? How extensively was Citrix technology utilised in the surveillance infrastructure? Why has Newcombe’s involvement not been subject to a formal investigation? 

The absence of investigation into these technical enablers represents a significant gap in understanding the full scope of Epstein’s pedophile and blackmailing operation.

FBI agents and FOIA analysts have been holed up in the bureau’s sprawling Central Records Complex in Virginia as they process thousands of documents of Jeffrey Epstein files, yet critical evidence appears to have been compromised or lost. Surveillance video taken outside of the Manhattan jail cell of accused child-sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein during his apparent first suicide attempt was permanently deleted, raising questions about the bureau’s evidence preservation protocols. The video cameras being turned off when Epstein apparently did commit suicide is also questionable. 

The FBI’s 2019 raid on Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse reportedly uncovered extensive photographic and video evidence, but the current status and contents of these materials remains unclear. Why were authorities so unprofessional in gathering evidence or securing crime scenes? Journalist Michael Wolff and others have noted the apparent disappearance of substantial evidence collections, suggesting either systematic destruction or deliberate concealment.

The failure of US law enforcement is equal to that of New Zealand's apparent lack of concern for an international pedophile ring. Epstein’s international "model" recruitment network extended beyond Jean-Luc Brunel’s MC2 agency, located in New York City, Miami, and Tel Aviv, to include an unnamed New Zealand "mother" modelling agency linked to Brunel’s recruitment operations. This connection suggests a systematic approach to international trafficking that utilised legitimate business fronts to identify and recruit victims. 

The New Zealand connection remains uninvestigated, potentially shielding additional accomplices. Adding to the New Zealand connections, Karen and Brice Gorden, New Zealanders who managed operations at Epstein’s Zorro Ranch, represent another unexplored dimension of his international pedophile network that may still be operating to this very day.

Epstein’s financial dealings are another unresolved area that's crying out for further investigation. The convicted pedophile used complex networks of banks, investment funds, and financial institutions to hide and embezzle his wealth. Bank of America, for instance, processed $170 million for billionaire Leon Black in connection with Epstein-related transactions, while investments in Liquid Funding Ltd. and Bear Stearns hedge funds remain opaque, much like Donald Trumps earlier financial fraud that he's still to face any consequences for. 

These financial networks enabled the operation’s scale and sophistication while providing mechanisms for money laundering and asset concealment. The institutional failure to fully investigate these financial enablers represents another significant gap in accountability efforts.

Last year, the Guardian reported:

Donald Trump ordered to pay over $350m in New York financial fraud case

Donald Trump, his eldest sons and associates have been ordered to pay over $350m plus pre-judgment interest by a New York judge who found them guilty of intentionally committing financial fraud over the course of a decade.


Federal agencies’ focus on consumer-grade platforms and social media monitoring overlooks the sophisticated enterprise technologies that likely enabled Epstein’s operations, both in money laundering and blackmail through recording child sex abuse. The FBI’s Operation Innocent Images and similar initiatives target generic platforms while ignoring enterprise-grade solutions like Citrix systems that could have secured blackmail operations and facilitated encrypted communications. 

This technological blind spot in federal investigations reflects broader institutional limitations in understanding and investigating sophisticated criminal enterprises that utilise legitimate business technologies for illicit purposes.

The systematic loss or destruction of surveillance evidence suggests either incompetence or deliberate concealment within federal agencies, further eroding the public's trust in these institutions. The technical complexity of Epstein’s surveillance systems required specialised expertise to properly investigate and preserve evidence, yet there is little indication that federal agencies brought appropriate technical resources to bear on the case, or investigated all potential leads.

As well as numerous pedophiles in positions of power, the Epstein case reveals fundamental weaknesses in federal agencies’ capacity to investigate technologically sophisticated criminal enterprises. Future investigations must include comprehensive examination of enterprise-grade systems used to facilitate criminal operations, investigation of IT professionals and technology contractors who enabled criminal infrastructure to be installed and maintained, robust procedures for preserving and analysing digital evidence in complex cases, and enhanced cooperation with international partners to investigate transnational criminal networks.

Twelve Epstein accusers have sued the FBI for allegedly failing to protect them, with the complaint filed in federal court alleging the FBI “turned its back on survivor victims”. This legal action highlights the need for institutional accountability and reform within federal agencies responsible for investigating complex criminal enterprises. The systematic failures in the Epstein case, from evidence preservation to witness protection, require comprehensive review and reform of federal investigative procedures.

The Epstein surveillance network represents a case study in how sophisticated criminal enterprises can exploit legitimate technologies and institutional weaknesses, as well as compromising corruptible powerful people, to operate with relative impunity. The unresolved questions surrounding technical infrastructure, the role of IT professionals like Tim Newcombe, and the systematic failures in evidence preservation highlight the need for more comprehensive and technically sophisticated approaches.

Until authorities confront these systemic weaknesses and pursue the unresolved leads in the Epstein case, the full scope of the operation will remain obscured, and justice for victims will remain incomplete. The shadows that continue to shroud critical aspects of the Epstein blackmailing and pedophile operation are not merely the result of the case’s complexity, they reflect fundamental failures in how institutions investigate, preserve evidence, and pursue accountability in cases involving sophisticated technologies. Only by addressing these systemic failures can we hope to prevent similar operations in the future and deliver justice to those who've been victimised by them.

5 Jul 2025

The Dangerous Lie That Homelessness is a Choice

The callous rhetoric emerging from this Government's housing ministers reveals a profound disconnect from the harsh realities facing thousands of New Zealanders. When politicians like Mark Mitchell and Rotorua Mayor Tania Tapsell suggest that homelessness is somehow a matter of personal choice, they perpetuate a dangerous myth that absolves the state of its fundamental responsibility to provide adequate housing for all citizens.

Yesterday, Stuff reported:

 
Mayor says police minister ‘well informed’ in saying 'sleeping rough is a lifestyle choice here'

The mayor of Rotorua says the police minister was “well informed” with comments about rough sleeping as a “lifestyle choice” there.

There was a group of about 12 to 15 homeless people in Rotorua who were choosing to sleep on footpaths in the city centre, Mayor Tania Tapsell said.

Police Minister Mark Mitchell, at an event on Thursday to launch a “beat team” to patrol the city centre on foot, said many rough sleepers chose to be on the street.

Asked on Thursday how the new team of five constables and a sergeant would help with the issue, Mitchell said the officers knew most of the people, and their circumstances.

“A lot of rough sleepers have got somewhere they can go and sleep, but that's a lifestyle choice they choose to come out onto the street,” Mitchell said.

“There's a whole lot of reasons for that. Might be mental health reasons, or they just feel a sense of community when they come together.”

“I can't comment for every rough sleeper, but from my own experience, rough sleepers have got somewhere to go,” Mitchell said.

Tapsell said the minister’s comments were “well informed”, and based on what they’d been hearing on the ground in Rotorua.

Council staff had for three months been trying to support those people into housing, but they’d told her, local organisations, and media, that they were choosing to, or preferred to, sleep on the streets.

“Some also do have accommodation to go to,” Tapsell said.


This narrative isn't merely tone-deaf, it's actively harmful. The assertion that people "choose" to sleep rough ignores the complex web of circumstances that force individuals and families into homelessness: job losses, family breakdown, mental health crises, and most critically, the systematic dismantling of social safety nets that once provided a pathway to stable housing.

The Government's approach to emergency housing provides a stark illustration of their ideological blindness. Rather than addressing the root causes of homelessness, officials have focused obsessively on reducing numbers through administrative sleight of hand. The target has been achieved early with the 3141 households in emergency housing in December 2023 reduced to just 591 a year later. This dramatic reduction sounds impressive until one examines the methodology: The rate of applications being declined has also almost tripled from 3% a month in the 2023 calendar year to 10% for August 2024.

The strategy is brutally simple: make it harder to access emergency housing, and the statistics improve. They've more than halved in the last year: in July 2024 there were 3,330 people in emergency housing, down from 7,554 in July 2023. 

Emergency housing applications have plummeted from an average of 8,660 applications per month last year to under 4,000 per month now, a clear indication that people are being actively discouraged from seeking help. 

The Ministry of Social Development is now declining more than 90 emergency housing applications monthly because people have apparently "caused or contributed to their immediate need," a subjective criterion that places blame on vulnerable individuals, including women trying to escape domestic violence, rather than addressing systemic failures and a lack of investment. 

But where have these people gone? The answer is grimly predictable: into cars, onto the streets, and into increasingly precarious arrangements that render them invisible to official statistics.

In Rotorua, the Government's flagship intervention has been equally callous. Rotorua is a focus for the government, who is cutting the number of motels contracted to provide emergency housing from 13 down to seven. They also plan to reduce this further to just four motels by mid-2025. This isn't housing policy; it's social cleansing dressed up as administrative efficiency.

The human cost of this approach became starkly apparent during "Operation Trolley," when police targeted homeless individuals using shopping trolleys to transport their possessions. Waiariki MP Rawiri Waititi's response to this operation captured the fundamental issue: homelessness represents governmental failure, not personal deficiency.

Meanwhile, the Government's housing construction programme has stagnated. According to Stats NZ, new dwelling consents nationwide in 2024 were down 9.8% on 2023. This decline comes precisely when New Zealand faces its most severe housing crisis in decades. The nation's housing stock has failed to keep pace with population growth, and the Government's response has been to reduce both public housing targets and support for private construction.


The economic environment has compounded these policy failures. Rising interest rates and construction costs have driven private developers from the market, while the Government has simultaneously reduced its own building commitments. This dual contraction has created a perfect storm of reduced supply precisely when demand remains acute.

The social implications extend far beyond individual hardship. When governments normalise homelessness through rhetoric about "choice," they erode the fundamental social contract that underpins democratic society. The suggestion that people voluntarily embrace destitution is not merely factually incorrect, it is morally reprehensible.

New Zealand once prided itself on being a nation where hard work and fair play guaranteed basic security. That promise has been systematically undermined by policies that prioritise fiscal austerity over human dignity. The current Government's approach represents ideological extremism dressed up as economic necessity.

The path forward requires acknowledging that housing is a human right, not a commodity to be rationed according to market whims. This means substantial investment in public housing, regulation of speculation that drives prices beyond the reach of ordinary families.

Until politicians abandon the cruel fiction that homelessness represents personal choice rather than policy failure, New Zealand will continue its descent from egalitarian society to stratified oligarchy. The question isn't whether we can afford to house all New Zealanders...it is whether we can afford not to.

3 Jul 2025

Bob Vylan Censored While Gaza Genocide Ignored

The recent blacklisting of British punk-rap group Bob Vylan, following their provocative chant of “death, death to the IDF” at Glastonbury 2025, exposes a chilling double standard in Western governance.

The swift and heavy-handed response, launching a criminal investigation, revoking the band’s visas, cancelling future concerts, and seeing them dropped by their agency, stands in stark contrast to western government's silence on Israel’s ongoing atrocities in Gaza. 

This is not merely an attack on free speech; it's a grotesque display of selective outrage, where dissent against a genocidal military machine is punished while mass starvation and slaughter is ignored.


Yesterday, The Irish News reported:

Police investigate Bob Vylan over ‘death to IDF’ call at gig before Glastonbury

Punk duo Bob Vylan are being investigated by police after allegedly calling for “death to every single IDF soldier out there” at a concert one month before Glastonbury.

The pair are already being investigated by Avon and Somerset Police over their appearance at Worthy Farm when rapper Bobby Vylan led crowds in chants of “death, death to the IDF (Israel Defence Forces)” during their livestreamed performance at the Somerset music festival last weekend.

In video footage, Bobby Vylan, whose real name is reportedly Pascal Robinson-Foster, 34, appears to be at Alexandra Palace telling crowds: “Death to every single IDF soldier out there as an agent of terror for Israel. Death to the IDF.”


Bob Vylan’s chant, raw and unfiltered, was a cry against the Israel Defense Forces’ documented brutality, which has seen over 56,000 Palestinians killed since October 2023, many of them women and children. The United Nations has described Israel’s actions as consistent with genocide, yet Western governments continue to arm and defend Israel while condemning artists who dare speak truth to power. 

Bobby Vylan’s words, far from inciting violence, we're a justified response to a military force that has shot unarmed Palestinians seeking food aid, with soldiers admitting to using “unnecessary lethal force” against civilians. This is the real scandal, not a musician’s chant, but the West’s complicity in a humanitarian catastrophe.

In New Zealand, the hypocrisy is equally glaring. Free speech advocates like David Seymour, who once championed unfettered expression, have been conspicuously silent or contradictory when it comes to Bob Vylan’s case. Seymour’s libertarian rhetoric falters when the speech challenges Israel, revealing a selective commitment to free expression that bends to geopolitical convenience. 

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Winston Peters has sat on his hands over what is clearly a terrorist group, the IDF, as New Zealand quietly removed the Proud Boys from its terrorist list, despite their history of violent assaults, including the January 6 Capitol riot in the US, which caused the deaths of nine people, including police officers.


Today, RNZ reported:

It's no longer illegal to be a proudly violent Proud Boy

Then, in 2022, the New Zealand government took a bold stance, listing the Proud Boys as a terrorist entity, a move that made global headlines and was praised by anti-extremism campaigners.

"It was big news... and what it would mean in practice was that anyone who supported or funded or participated in Proud Boys actions here was committing a criminal act, imprisonable by up to seven years, so it was a big deal," Penfold says.

But then last month, without any fanfare, the group slipped off the list of designated terrorist entities.

The only statement on the move was released on the website of the New Zealand Gazette - the newspaper of the government. Penfold describes it as bland and brief.

"The designation had been made under the Terrorism Suppression Act... and every three years that designation will expire unless the prime minister seeks to extend it."

When asked why he didn't extend it, a response to Penfold from the prime minister's office "didn't specifically answer that", but she was told "the Proud Boys remain on the radar... and if any new information comes to hand, they will consider it."

"Those who monitor terrorist organisations and far-right extremist groups... are really concerned at this step that the designation has been allowed to lapse", Penfold says.

So as New Zealand grapples with the rise of conspiracy-fuelled protests and declining trust in democratic institutions, the Proud Boys' shadow, although faint, may still be felt.

 

The government should not be ignoring the Proud Boys' role in spreading white supremacist propaganda, propaganda that has lead directly to people dying. This leniency towards far-right extremists, who've incited and committed real violence, contrasts sharply with the heavy-handed crackdowns on pro-Palestinian voices.

Brenton Tarrant, the Christchurch mosque shooter, was radicalised on websites like 4chan and 8chan, where white supremacist narratives, including the "Great Replacement" conspiracy, festered in unmoderated forums. These same platforms, known for their extremist subcultures, were also used by the Proud Boys to propagate their "Western chauvinist" ideology, share memes, and recruit members, creating an overlapping digital ecosystem of hate.

Other white supremacist figures linked to the Proud Boys and similar online spaces include Dylann Roof, who massacred nine Black worshippers in Charleston in 2015 and was active on sites like Stormfront...and Patrick Crusius, the 2019 El Paso shooter, who posted a manifesto on 8chan echoing the same anti-immigrant rhetoric embraced by Proud Boys, which is earily similar to the rhetoric used by Donald Trump to justify the illegal ICE abductions. The shared use of these platforms underscores a broader network of far-right radicalisation fuelling violent acts.


On Tuesday, the NZ Herald reported:

Christchurch mosque attacks: Podcast questions lone wolf theory

Tarrant was asked to join the Lads Society, an Australian white nationalist and Islamophobic extremist group, in 2017.

Following Tarrant’s attack in Christchurch, the group’s members posted to a closed social media channel.

Some celebrated the attack, others questioned if it was a false flag, possibly to restrict firearms access in New Zealand.

“This one’s not a false flag. Take my word for it,” the group’s founder Thomas Sewell said.

“He seems to know more than the others,” another member replied.

“What do you mean, take my word for it. That almost sounds like you know the cobber.”

Sewell then responded – Tarrant had “been in the scene for a while”.

Sewell later compared Tarrant to Nelson Mandela, saying he would be imprisoned until “we win the revolution”.

 
In stark contrast, the designation of Palestine Action as a terrorist group for spray-painting planes and buildings with red paint is another grotesque overreach. This non-violent protest group, which seeks to disrupt western arms supplies to Israel, is branded a threat to national security, while Israel’s starvation policies and bombing of civilians in tents and aid sites go unchallenged.

In Gaza, hundreds have been killed near food distribution hubs, with Israeli soldiers openly admitting to treating starving women and children as a “hostile force.” Western governments offer tepid criticisms at best, while their actions, continued arms exports and diplomatic support, enable the carnage.



The hypocrisy extends beyond individual cases to systemic patterns of enforcement. Across Western nations, authorities deploy extraordinary measures against pro-Palestinian demonstrations while showing remarkable restraint toward far-right rallies that openly promote racial hatred. Police forces that brutalise peaceful protesters demanding an end to the collective punishment in Gaza then turn their attention to escorting white supremacist marches safely through diverse communities.

Free speech advocates who once championed absolute protection for controversial expression now perform intellectual contortions to justify censoring criticism of unjustified military actions. These same voices, who defended the rights of Holocaust deniers and racial provocateurs under abstract principles of open discourse, suddenly discover compelling state interests that justify silencing uncomfortable truths about contemporary violence.

This selective censorship reveals the true nature of Western liberal democracy's commitment to free expression: it extends only as far as speech that doesn't threaten established power structures or challenge strategic geopolitical relationships. Artists, activists, and ordinary citizens who dare name ongoing atrocities face swift punishment, while actual violent extremists operate with relative impunity.

The Bob Vylan controversy thus represents far more than an isolated incident of artistic censorship. It exemplifies a broader authoritarian drift wherein Western governments abandon foundational democratic principles when confronted with dissent that threatens preferred narratives. When free speech becomes conditional upon political convenience, democracy itself withers.

This is the West’s moral collapse: a world where punk bands are vilified for decrying genocide, but white supremacists and war criminals are indulged. Bob Vylan’s blacklisting isn't just an attack on art; it's a warning to all who dare challenge the status quo. As socialist Jewish activist Naomi Wimborne-Idrissi noted, suppressing outrage against a “televised genocide” only fuels its expression. If New Zealand and its Western allies truly valued free speech and justice, they would hold Israel to account, not silence those who speak for the oppressed.

2 Jul 2025

Democracy Under Siege: NZ Government Gags Youth MPs

In a development that epitomises authoritarian overreach masquerading as administrative procedure, the Coalition of Chaos government has decided to censor Youth MPs during the 11th Youth Parliament, an event that was meant to amplify the free voices of our young people.

The revelation that youth representatives, invited to Parliament to debate the very issues that will define their futures, have been forced to water down or outright remove criticisms of government policy represents a fundamental assault on the democratic principles this coalition once claimed to champion.

Yesterday, RNZ reported:

 
Youth MPs accuse government of 'censoring' them, ministry says otherwise

The government is rejecting accusations it is censoring Youth MPs, saying the protocols followed are the same as 2022 and the young people get the final say on their speeches.

However, the email sent to one Youth MP carries the subject line "changes required", and stated the ministry "have had to make some changes".

Some of the Youth MPs involved say they will not be suppressed and the issue has fuelled the fire to make their voices heard.

 

Coalition parties spent years in opposition decrying Labour's supposed nanny state mentality, lambasting what they saw as overbearing governmental control. Yet here they stand, dictating what young people can say in a forum explicitly designed to foster free expression and democratic participation. This isn't the bold, open democracy that Chris Luxon promised, it's a masterclass in hypocrisy that would embarrass even the most cynical political operator.

The current Youth Parliament involves 123 young people aged 16-18, selected by MPs to represent their constituencies. But despite this broad church of political views, these voices are being systematically silenced when they dare to speak truth to power. 

The Ministry of Youth Development's decision to issue emails with the subject line "changes required" to approximately half of the Youth MPs preparing to address Parliament reveals breathtaking audacity from a government that has transformed from opposition critics into zealous practitioners of the very control they once condemned.

Youth MP Thomas Brocherie, co-director of Make It 16, cut straight to the heart of the matter:


However, the Youth MPs spoke to reporters at Parliament with one - Thomas Brocherie, a spokesperson for Make it 16, a group pushing for a voting age of 16 - saying the approach taken to the speeches was diluting the value of the Youth Parliament.

"We have been told to not argue on either side of contentious issues such as the pay equity reforms or the Treaty Principles Bill for the excuse that they are current topics in the current Parliament. This is not just illogical, it is censorship," he said.

"We cannot say we value democracy unless we actually show and prove we value democracy. Silencing the stakeholders of the future does not value democracy."

Another Youth MP Nate Wilbourne, a spokesperson for Gen Z Aotearoa, said rangatahi were being silenced and censored.

"We've been told to soften our language, to drop key parts of our speeches and to avoid criticizing certain ministers or policies. This isn't guidance. This is fear based control."

Brocherie said the emails being titled "changes required" was "not at all a suggestion, that is blatant editing, they want us to change something to suit their purpose, to suit their agenda".

Youth MP Lincoln Jones said they were provided with "a PDF of edited changes... delivered to our inbox, and that was the expected requirement, that we speak that speech".

"It's honestly like they've gone through with it with a microscope to find any little thing that might be interpreted wrong against, I guess, the current government."


These young people's arguments carry particular weight when considering the existential nature of the issues they're attempting to address, climate change being foremost among them.

Two-thirds of New Zealanders expect severe climate impacts in their area over the next 10 years, whilst New Zealand ranks 41st internationally as a "low climate performer". These are not abstract policy debates for young New Zealanders, they represent the scaffolding of their future. When Youth MP Nate Wilbourne speaks of the "war on nature" and attempts to name ministers responsible for environmental vandalism, he exercises the fundamental democratic right to hold power accountable on matters of existential urgency.

The government's justification for this censorship reveals either breathtaking ignorance or calculated dishonesty. Minister for Youth James Meager insists speeches are not being censored whilst simultaneously defending a process that removes criticisms of government policy, edits references to environmental action, and sanitises language deemed "too political." This isn't guidance; it's censorship dressed up in bureaucratic doublespeak.

However, the decision to abandon livestreaming of this year's Youth Parliament, citing "resource constraints" represents perhaps the most cynical element of the government's censorship regime. Previous Youth Parliaments were fully livestreamed, allowing young New Zealanders across the country to witness democratic participation in action. Youth MP Lincoln Jones rightly identified this change as an attempt to "ensure that speeches that don't fit the narrative of this government are not getting out to the general public."

Youth MP Sam Allen noted that participants have gone "from what should be a really exciting event" to "just feeling quite scared" about potential consequences. This erosion of confidence in democratic participation reflects something far more troubling than isolated administrative overzealousness, it's symptomatic of a broader democratic crisis that extends well beyond Parliament's youth programme.

This pattern of democratic erosion has not gone unnoticed by New Zealand's most respected institutions. The New Zealand Law Society's recent watershed report painted a stark picture of rule of law deterioration, highlighting "unequal access to justice and concern at an increased failure to follow good lawmaking processes." 

The Society warned that "accelerated legislative processes have restricted public consultation and select committee review through the use of urgency and Amendment Papers," cautioning that "without deliberate action and adequate investment public confidence in the justice system, and the principle that all are equal before the law, will continue to erode."

On Friday, NZ Lawyer reported:

Access to justice barriers and poor legislative and policy making processes were two major threats

The New Zealand Law Society | Te Kāhui Ture o Aotearoa has released a watershed report that has cautioned against the rule of law being eroded.

The Strengthening the rule of law in Aotearoa New Zealand report indicated that significant and urgent threats included access to justice barriers, poor legislative and policy making processes, and sustenance of the judicial system's independence.

"Predominantly, what we heard focused on unequal access to justice and concern at an increased failure to follow good lawmaking processes. Issues with access to fair justice processes were particularly prevalent in the conversations. The barriers vary, including unaffordability of legal services, underfunded legal aid and duty lawyer schemes, and delays in courts and tribunals", Law Society President Frazer Barton said.



Outgoing Auditor-General John Ryan delivered an equally damning assessment in his final report, noting that "public trust in government is declining." His observation that "trust is the lifeblood of a well-functioning democracy but it is vulnerable" proves particularly prescient when examining how this government treats criticism from any quarter, whether from teenagers, councils, or democratic institutions themselves. 

Ryan identified that Māori, disabled, and Pasifika communities, who "experience disproportionately worse outcomes," show less trust in the public sector, a crisis compounded when young advocates for these communities face systematic silencing.

Yesterday, the Controller and Auditor General reported:

Public trust in government is declining

The public sector represents about one third of the economy. To be successful as a country, we need an effective and efficient public sector that demonstrates that it provides value and is trusted by the public. Although there is much to celebrate in the quality and resilience of New Zealand’s public sector in recent years, the public’s trust in democratic institutions is declining.

Trust is the lifeblood of a well-functioning democracy but it is vulnerable. We saw, for example, in the latter stages of the Covid-19 pandemic how disinformation and a breakdown in trust in parts of the community negatively affected how some responded to public health messages, guidance, and restrictions aimed at protecting the health of all New Zealanders.

We know that levels of trust vary considerably between different population groups. Māori, the disabled, and Pasifika communities experience disproportionately worse outcomes in health, education, housing, employment, and justice. It is likely no coincidence that they are less inclined than the rest of the New Zealand population to trust the public sector.

In my view, the persistent inequity of outcomes needs to be tackled if we are to increase and maintain the trust of all New Zealanders in our system of government.

 

This government’s penchant for undermining democratic processes is further evidenced by its handling of the Fast-track Approvals Act, passed in December 2024.

The government's authoritarian legislation, which allows ministers to bypass standard regulatory processes for infrastructure and resource projects, was rushed through Parliament with limited public consultation and minimal transparency. Documents detailing the 149 projects included in the bill were withheld from MPs until just 72 hours before the final vote, severely restricting scrutiny and public debate. 

Critics, including the Waitangi Tribunal, have raised alarms about the Act’s potential to erode Māori rights under the Treaty of Waitangi, particularly in relation to seabed mining off Pātea. This blatant sidelining of democratic oversight and indigenous voices underscores a troubling willingness to prioritise corporate interests over public accountability.

Equally concerning is the government’s suspension of three Māori Party MPs in June 2025 for performing a haka in protest against policies perceived to undermine Māori rights. This heavy-handed response to a cultural expression of dissent within Parliament, a space meant to embody free speech, signals an intolerance for any opposition that runs counter to their authoritarianism.

The haka incident, coupled with the coalition’s broader moves to review the Treaty of Waitangi and reduce the use of Māori language in government, has sparked widespread protests and accusations of rolling back decades of indigenous progress. Such actions suggest a government more interested in consolidating control than fostering inclusive debate.

The government’s moves to override local councils through Resource Management Act (RMA) reforms further exemplify this democratic erosion. By centralising decision-making powers and sidelining local authorities’ ability to reflect community priorities on housing and environmental protections, the coalition has effectively neutered local democracy. 

These reforms, driven by a top-down approach, limit public input and undermine the ability of councils to represent their constituents, echoing the same authoritarian impulse seen in the censorship of Youth MPs. This pattern of stripping away local agency betrays the coalition’s earlier promises to empower communities, revealing a government more concerned with control than collaboration.

When teenagers can't criticise ministers over climate inaction without bureaucratic interference, when councils can't represent their communities without central government override, and when proper legislative processes are abandoned in favour of urgency and expedience, we witness democracy's foundations being systematically undermined by a government that treats participation as an inconvenience rather than a cornerstone of good governance.

This government must immediately reverse its shameful censorship of Youth MPs, restore transparent democratic processes, and abandon its attacks on local governance. The warnings from our legal and auditing experts are clear, we stand at a crossroads between democratic renewal and authoritarian drift. New Zealand's democracy cannot survive when those in power systematically silence criticism and circumvent accountability. Our young people deserve better, our communities deserve better, and our democracy demands nothing less.

30 Jun 2025

Shane Jones is a Fascist

The spectre of authoritarianism rarely announces itself with jackboots and torchlight parades. More often, it arrives draped in the rhetoric of economic necessity, promising prosperity whilst systematically dismantling the institutions that protect democratic accountability. 

Such is the case with Shane Jones, New Zealand First's Resources Minister, whose latest tirade against regional councils represents a chilling escalation in his campaign to eliminate environmental oversight that stands between his corporate benefactors and unfettered resource extraction.

Jones' inflammatory rhetoric comparing the Otago Regional Council to the "Kremlin of the South Island" and dismissing its qualified staff as "KGB green zealots" would be laughable were it not so dangerously revealing of his authoritarian instincts. His call to "disestablish regional councils" because they dare to apply existing environmental law represents nothing less than an assault on New Zealand's democratic institutions. This is the language of a man who views legitimate democratic processes as obstacles to be eliminated rather than safeguards to be respected.


On Friday, the ODT reported:

 
‘Kremlin’ councils need to go: Jones

Resource Minister Shane Jones has called the Otago Regional Council "the Kremlin of the South Island" after an application to expand the Macraes gold mine ran into trouble.

Mr Jones, who is also the regional development minister, said the council was full of "KGB green zealots" and the episode showed why regional councils needed to be scrapped.

The Otago council’s assessment of environmental effects — which recommended Oceana-Gold’s application to expand its mine be declined in full — was "ideological scribbling".

Any other investor or miner in New Zealand would now quickly conclude they had to join the fast-track application process, "which will enable these economic saboteurs to be marginalised", he said.

 

The parallels to historical fascism are unmistakable. Like the dictators of the 1930s who railed against "enemies of the people" and "saboteurs," Jones employs inflammatory language to delegitimise any institution that challenges his pro-drill agenda. His dismissal of evidence-based environmental assessments as "ideological scribbling" echoes the fascist contempt for expertise and scientific inquiry that characterised regimes which prioritised ideology over evidence. 

When Jones describes regional councillors as "Politburo apparatchiks," he reveals his own authoritarian mindset, anyone who disagrees with his vision for environmental destruction must be part of some sinister conspiracy rather than public servants just doing their legally mandated jobs.

What makes Jones' extremism particularly troubling is the financial corruption that underpins it. The Resources Minister's relationships with mining companies extend far beyond policy alignment into the murky waters of financial influence. Analysis of political donation records reveals a staggering pattern of corporate capture that would make even the most cynical observer blush.

NZ First received at least $121,680 from donors linked to fast-track projects in 2024 alone, with Jones personally benefiting from quarry company J Swap in August 2023, the same company that subsequently donated $11,000 to NZ First and applied for fast-track approval. AJR Finance, connected to quarrying interests, contributed a massive $55,000 to NZ First. These figures represent just the tip of the iceberg in a system where corporate donors are literally buying policy outcomes.


Last year, RNZ reported:

Quarry company J Swap's fast track plea after donations to Shane Jones and NZ First

A NZ First donor wants Fast Track legislation to free up permanently protected land for quarrying.

J Swap, a company involved in quarrying, wants land protected under QEII covenants to be available to quarry. It donated $11,000 to NZ First in December, after the coalition was formed.

It also gave $5000 to NZ First's Shane Jones in August 2023 and $3000 to National's David MacLeod in September 2023.


The proposed Fast Track legislation is touted as a "one-stop shop" for approving infrastructure projects. It would sit over a range of existing acts and regulations and would mean an application would only need to go through one process for approval instead of several consents under the existing system.

Jones' undeclared dinners with mining company representatives, arranged by his own staff, demonstrate a level of impropriety that would have seen ministers resign in shame during more principled eras. That he refuses to answer questions about these meetings whilst simultaneously pushing legislation that directly benefits his dinner companions represents corruption in its most brazen form.

The Minister's attacks on environmental groups further reveal his authoritarian tendencies. His vitriolic campaigns against Greenpeace and the Green Party are not merely political rhetoric but systematic attempts to delegitimise opposition voices. When Jones declares that environmental organisations are "economic saboteurs," he employs the classic fascist tactic of painting political opponents as traitors to the nation. This is the language of autocrats who cannot tolerate dissent.

His promise that fast-track legislation will "enable these economic saboteurs to be marginalised" is perhaps the most revealing statement of all. Here, Jones explicitly acknowledges that his legislative agenda is designed not to improve environmental processes but to eliminate environmental opposition entirely. This is not governance; it is the systematic dismantling of democratic accountability.

The implications extend far beyond mining policy. If Jones succeeds in eliminating regional councils, institutions that employ thousands of professionals and manage critical functions, he will have destroyed a fundamental layer of New Zealand's democratic architecture. These councils don't just assess mining applications; they manage flood protection, biosecurity, civil defence, and public transport. Their elimination would represent the largest centralisation of power in New Zealand's modern history.

Regional councillor Alexa Forbes correctly identified Jones' rhetoric as undermining confidence in both central and local government. When ministers attack the institutions they're supposed to work with, they erode the very foundations of democratic governance. This is precisely how democratic backsliding occurs, not through military coups but through the gradual erosion of institutional safeguards by those entrusted to protect them.

Jones' vision of New Zealand is one where corporate donors write policy, environmental laws are ignored, and democratic institutions are eliminated if they prove inconvenient. His $3 billion mining export target comes with a hidden cost: the transformation of New Zealand into a corporate playground where profit trumps the environment and democracy becomes an obstacle to be overcome.

The tragedy is that this assault on our democratic institutions is being conducted by a minister whose own party received just 6.08% of the vote in 2023. Through the accidents of coalition politics, a fringe politician bankrolled by mining interests now wields the power to reshape New Zealand's governance structures according to his authoritarian vision.

History teaches us that democracy's greatest threats often come not from external enemies but from those within who promise prosperity whilst dismantling the institutions that protect the Kiwi way of life. Shane Jones embodies this threat, and his agenda must be recognised for what it truly is: not economic development but undemocratic destruction, funded by corporate interests and executed through authoritarian rhetoric that would make history's dictators proud.

29 Jun 2025

Government Doesn't Care About the Nelson-Tasman Flooding

New Zealand’s weather is turning rogue, and the National-led government seems content to sit on its hands. The recent flooding in the Tasman District, which claimed one life and left homes, businesses, and livelihoods underwater, is yet another stark reminder of the escalating climate crisis.

This deluge, described by locals as unprecedented, saw the Motueka River breach its banks and State Highway 6 close due to slips and flooding. The government’s response, or lack thereof, betrays a disturbing indifference to the growing frequency and severity of such extreme weather events, driven by climate change.

As New Zealand grapples with an ever-wetter, wilder weather pattern, the coalition’s inaction on flood resilience, emissions reduction, and basic preparedness is nothing short of reckless.

On Friday, 1 News reported:

'Heartbreaking': Flooding turns Tasman farm into 'raging creek'

A farm owner in Tasman says severe weather which has "smashed" her farm overnight is "heartbreaking" for her business.

A state of emergency in place for part of Marlborough, as well as Nelson and Tasman as heavy rain batters the regions. Marlborough District Council has asked residents to avoid all travel unless absolutely necessary.

Wild Oats farm owner Kirsty Lalich told 1News it wasn't the first time her farm on Pretty Bridge Rd had experienced flooding, but said she'd "never, ever seen it like this".


The Tasman floods are not an isolated incident. NIWA’s updated storm rainfall profiles and Nelson City Council’s flood modelling show that climate change is amplifying the intensity and frequency of extreme weather. Since 2018, New Zealand has seen over 30 local states of emergency due to flooding, more than double the number from the previous five years. 

The 2022 Nelson floods were a warning. However, here we are, three years later, with the same region battered again and the new government dragging its feet. Climate change is no longer a distant threat; it’s hammering our communities now, and the National-led coalition seems wilfully blind to the urgency.

Emergency Management Minister Mark Mitchell’s response was emblematic of this apathy. On May 26, 2025, Nelson Mayor Nick Smith, who declared a local state of emergency alongside Tasman District Council, spoke with Mitchell about the escalating crisis. Mitchell downplayed the event, stating the threshold for a national state of emergency hadn’t been met and that the storm would likely pass. Tell that to the family of the person killed while clearing flood damage. 


Yesterday, the NZ Herald reported:

 
Person dies near Nelson after being hit by tree while clearing floodwaters

A person has died after being hit by a tree while clearing floodwaters near Nelson.

Acting Nelson Bays area commander Senior Sergeant Martin Tunley said the incident happened at Wai-iti, southeast of Wakefield, this morning.

“Around 9.40am, emergency services were called to a property on State Highway 6 after a person was reportedly hit by a tree while clearing flood damage.”

Despite efforts by emergency services, the person died at the scene, Tunley said.

 

Mitchell’s dismissive stance, coupled with his absence from meaningful action, underscores a government more interested in optics rather than saving lives. A national declaration could have unlocked critical resources, but instead, locals were left to fend for themselves.

Associate Transport Minister James Meager’s silence is equally damning. When approached by media about the flooding and repeated calls for a Nelson weather radar, Meager didn’t even bother to comment. This radar, which could provide precise, real-time data to predict severe storms, has been a priority for Nelson and Tasman councils since 2010. MetService has acknowledged its value but noted it lacks Crown funding, a decision that rests with the government. 

The public, caught off-guard by the storm’s ferocity, had little warning due to reliance on Wellington’s distant radar, which is obstructed by terrain. This failure to invest in basic forecasting infrastructure is a direct betrayal of communities facing increasingly volatile weather.

Worse still, the National-led government has slashed funding critical to flood resilience. In Budget 2024, it returned $3.2 billion of the $6 billion National Resilience Plan, established in 2023 to bolster infrastructure against extreme weather. This gutting of funds, intended for medium and long-term projects, leaves regions like Nelson Tasman vulnerable. 

The coalition’s broader climate record is equally dismal: it has watered down emissions reduction targets, scrapped the Clean Car Discount, and prioritised fossil fuel interests over renewable energy. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s government seems to view climate adaptation as an inconvenience rather than a necessity.

The Nelson Tasman floods are a clarion call. New Zealanders deserve a government that takes climate change seriously, through robust emissions cuts, investment in forecasting tools like the Nelson radar, and restored funding for resilience projects. 

Instead, we’re left with a coalition that downplays disasters, ignores media, and leaves communities to drown. The tragedy in Wai-iti and the chaos in Nelson Tasman region demand accountability. It’s time for the government to wake up before the next deluge washes away more lives and livelihoods.