Protesters denounced the blatant hypocrisy of the New Zealand government’s decision to designate Hamas as a terrorist organisation, while supporting Israel’s genocidal slaughter in Gaza.
Because you seem to be arguing from a ridiculous assumption that the government is more representative of people from New Zealand in general than the people protesting its support for a genocidal apartheid regime.
Fun fact: while the rest of the people get to choose which of the options to vote for, they don’t get to choose the options. Besides, it’s not like the majority of the people elected to the NZ government ran on a platform of "let’s help good ol’ Bibi commit genocide.
Unconditional support for the Israeli government is one of the many things most Western governments do against the will of the majority of the people to not get on the bad side of the US global hegemony.
Like when the countries go to war, the people don’t get a say. It’s not how democracy is supposed to work, but that’s how it is right now.
There’s a shitload of room between “dictatorship” and “everything the government does is perfectly in line with what the majority of the people want them to do.”
This is clearly an example of the government not being perfectly representative while also not being a dictatorship.
That IS the main method to express that you’re not satisfied with the actions of those more powerful than yourself, yes.
Edit: and also because 60% said so back in November and there’s absolutely no reason to believe that the percentage would have decreased since then rather than the opposite.
Expressing a majority opinion, see my edit of my previous reply.
which means their government represents people other than them first.
Not when their opinion is in line with that of a significant majority of the population
You’re genuinely arguing ‘minorities represent the majority’ which is intrinsically false.
Nope, you’re the one doing that by pretending that the minority group known as The Government automatically only makes decisions that their voters agree with.
Btw, the current government coalition was voted in by a total of 37.23% of those eligible to vote (51.72% of votes cast with 72% voter participation), NOT the majority of the population.
Because you seem to be arguing from a ridiculous assumption that the government is more representative of people from New Zealand in general than the people protesting its support for a genocidal apartheid regime.
Really? The people in power are more representative than those without it?
Who would have thought? Lol.
Fun fact: while the rest of the people get to choose which of the options to vote for, they don’t get to choose the options. Besides, it’s not like the majority of the people elected to the NZ government ran on a platform of "let’s help good ol’ Bibi commit genocide.
Unconditional support for the Israeli government is one of the many things most Western governments do against the will of the majority of the people to not get on the bad side of the US global hegemony.
Like when the countries go to war, the people don’t get a say. It’s not how democracy is supposed to work, but that’s how it is right now.
You are doing a lot of mental gymnastics to avoid admitting that New Zealand’s government is representative of their people.
It’s not like they have a dictatorship, lol.
Miss me with that ridiculous false dichotomy.
There’s a shitload of room between “dictatorship” and “everything the government does is perfectly in line with what the majority of the people want them to do.”
This is clearly an example of the government not being perfectly representative while also not being a dictatorship.
Because some people are protesting? Lol.
That IS the main method to express that you’re not satisfied with the actions of those more powerful than yourself, yes.
Edit: and also because 60% said so back in November and there’s absolutely no reason to believe that the percentage would have decreased since then rather than the opposite.
They’re a minority, which means their government represents people other than them first.
Those ‘other people’ are the ones I’m referring to. You know, the ones who put this government in power.
My initial statement applies to them, which are the majority of New Zealanders since they are a democracy.
You’re genuinely arguing ‘minorities represent the majority’ which is intrinsically false.
Expressing a majority opinion, see my edit of my previous reply.
Not when their opinion is in line with that of a significant majority of the population
Nope, you’re the one doing that by pretending that the minority group known as The Government automatically only makes decisions that their voters agree with.
Btw, the current government coalition was voted in by a total of 37.23% of those eligible to vote (51.72% of votes cast with 72% voter participation), NOT the majority of the population.