This
is the video of Kim Dotcom and the young people of Christchurch that
the corporate media and the elite who sold this country down the
river, are getting their knickers-in-a-twist about.
If
Kim, Laile, Hone and John can't get the young people out to vote this
government out of office then no one can.
Let
me join the chant: “Fuck John Key!”
Join
the Revolution - Change the Government!
Here
is the response from the media who are rushing in to defend the
interests of the elite that run this country on behalf of Wall St
In
response to NBR – this is neither “nasty fascist overtones” or
“drunk students having a laugh” (there was no alcohol).
Hopefully there is a revolution happening that is coming from the
young people of New Zealand who see no one in the political system
that remotely represents their interests.
http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/we-dont-censor-youth-expression-—-harre-internet-manas-fk-john-key-video-ck-160469
UPDATE:
Internet Party spokesman John Mitchell says: "No free alcohol
was served. The venues we held the parties at have strict liquor
licensing obligations, not to mention that we are not permitted to
supply free alcohol. No paid Internet Party staffer took part in, or
led, the chanting. It was completely spontaneous."
The
Internet Party is drawing flak for a video placed on its official
YouTube channel.
The
clip shows Kim Dotcom onstage addressing students during a rally in
Christchurch.
"Are
you ready for a revolution? Are you ready to take down the
Government?," the Mega founder asks the crowd.
"Are
you ready to extradite John Key?"
The
next shot shows the crowd with right arms raised chanting "F***
John Key".
The
editing makes it impossible to tell if Mr Dotcom led the chant, or it
was spontaneous.
The
Internet Party says the latter was the case, and it was simply a case
of student exuberance at the rally.
"We
don't censor youth expression," Internet Laila Harre said of the
clip during her Ask Me Anything with NBR readers this afternoon.
However,
Ms Harre has yet to answer a question from one reader, who posted:
"It is disturbing on so many levels, and many parallels are
being made to Hitler's 1935 speech, right down to the hand gestures.
How can you possibly align yourselves with a person like that?"
NBR
political columnist Matthew Hooton says the longer-term impact of the
video would depend on whether evidence emerged that the "F**k
John Key" chant was planned.
"Laila
Harre is saying it was a spontaneous response from a drunk
Christchurch crowd, which is one thing," Mr Hooton said. "But
information is emerging it was planned by Mr Dotcom's strategists,
who planted paid Internet Party staffers in the crowd to start the
chant on cue," Mr Hooton says.
"Apparently,
the same chant began at exactly the same time at a similar event in
Wellington. If that's the case, this is an extremely disturbing
development in New Zealand politics, with a real Munich Beer Hall
feel."
That
might be pushing it, but the official video definitely feels a bit
feral for a party trying to position itself as a serious policy
contender.
It
comes down to whether it's drunk students having a laugh, or an
orchestrated mob moment.
Neither
are what Laila Harre signed on for.
The
Internet Party leader's thoughts must be turning to Kim Dotcom's
anti-John Key rally scheduled to be held at Auckland Town Hall a week
before the election, and what shape that event will take.
Massey
University political marketing specialist Claire Robinson says she
can't believe the the Internet Party has sunk so low. She sees clip
as robbing Laila Harre of the moral high ground after she slammed
John Key over his "sugar daddy" slur.
Otago
University lecturer and political commentator Bryce Edwards has a
more upbeat take.
"This
video could be wildly successful for the Internet Mana Party,"
he tells NBR.
"It
fits perfectly with the election campaign strategy that the party is
running — of being an anti-Establishment party with an
unconventional and youth-based orientation. The use of the ‘F**k
John Key’ slogan by the partygoers will be almost entirely
uncontroversial to the youth target market of Internet Mana.
"Of
course, the aggressive swearing will be controversial and repellent
to many in middle New Zealand, especially amongst more conservative
voters. But Internet Mana isn’t attempting to win over such
audiences.
"The
'F**k John Key' video nicely encapsulates and captures some of the
enthusiasm and sometimes-radical nature of the party. It also shows
Kim Dotcom resonating with youth — which is the message that the
party is trying to get across to the public. And the party is able to
convince the public that it has a growing support base, this will
feed into the ‘bandwagon effect’ in which voters are more likely
to support a party because they believe it is fashionable to do so."
Some
voters — especially those that are already disillusioned or less
enthusiastic about the mainstream parties - will find the
colourfulness of the Dotcom campaigning to be quite refreshing, Dr
Edwards says.
"Therefore,
although the video doesn’t fit into the usual political marketing
style of political parties, it will help the party differentiate
itself even more.
"The
video is likely to receive controversial media coverage, and that
will only help Internet Mana more. Minor parties are clamouring for
public visibility at the moment, and Internet Mana is showing that it
has a huge capacity for winning attention. Once again, the polarising
nature of Kim Dotcom will keep the party in the headlines."
There
is also the secondary issue, however, of how voters in Mana leader
Hone Harawira's Te Tai Tokerau electorate will see the clip — or,
for that matter, voters for potential coalition partners Labour and
the Greens.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.