With security issues highly newsworthy in New Zealand in wake of the atrocity last March, domestic terrorism a hot-button subject and the anniversary of the despicable act looming you could be forgiven for thinking that the launch of a New Zealand based journal featuring the writings of experts in their field and dealing with issues of domestic security and terror might have jolted the average journalist from twitcom-induced slumber, sufficiently arousing said navel-gazer’s to bring attention to the expert utterings therein.

Instead: there is only the sounds of silence. It’s almost inexplicable. Three months have passed since the inaugural issue of the “National Security Journal” and not a single scribe from main-stream news has made it to print with a report of the journal’s content.

How so?

Could it be the corral of cubs are too busy looking under rocks for unhinged right-wing extremists to have noticed the journal’s launch? Or perhaps the content was devoured but found to be unpalatable, indigestible in fact, and not aligned with the press-gang’s narrative thread? I strongly suspect the latter.

Since the MSM won’t do it, your favourite alternative news source will do the heavy-lifting (again).

The BFD.

Managing Editor John Battersby’s contribution to Issue 1, entitled “The Ghost of New Zealand’s Terrorism Past and Present” is an excellent and concise piece summarising the past fifty-years of our brushes with extremist lunatics. It’s a politically neutral, objective and memory-jogging summation in plain English, therefore an entirely newsworthy contribution, but I reckon some of our journalists will have choked on Battersby’s words:

Contrary to the emerging media myth that New Zealand has gone easy on its Right-Wing activism, it has been generally true that historically there has been more Left-Wing political violence in New Zealand.”

[My emphasis in bold]

If that wasn’t enough to unsettle the horses, there’s more. Examining the attitudes of some precious pearls of domestic political activism, including a certain ’author’, Battersby tells a truth the fake-news choose to ignore: the left will turn a blind-eye, play down, or even defend the un-defendable, if it suits their own political narrative:

Hager seems to be denying that an act of political violence is terrorism because it is an act of political violence and the nobility of the cause made it alright.”

I guess such comment is blasphemy in some circles and perhaps that explains what appears to be a media snub to the journal’s launch.

Based on Issue 1, I say the ‘National Security Journal’ may become a valuable contribution to our understanding of the evil that is terrorism and the politics at play in suppressing, or promoting, it.

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Living in Wellington idbkiwi is self-employed in a non-governmental role which suits his masochistic tendencies. He watches very little television, preferring to read or research, but still subscribes...