Lyndon Hood: Protest Briefs
Protest Briefs
Satire by Lyndon HoodIn a General Election held over the weekend, the Protesting Truck Drivers achieved a landslide victory.
"We weren't supposed to have an election for a while yet," explained New Zealand today, "but I suppose we all just got caught up in the general enthusiasm of it all. Trucks are cool! Honk honk! Plus, they got me the morning off work."
The Protesting Truck Driver Government's first action will be to pass legislation that Road User Charges shouldn't be very high. They will also formalise their policy of serving as a focal point for the simmering resentment of the electorate.
No other policies have been developed, but the Truckies assert they have a mandate to "fix the economy, stop crime, make more electricity and lower cheese prices and also petrol prices".
Other clues to policy direction include the fact Road Transport Forum chief executive Tony Friedlander was a National MP for 12 years.
In response to claims the Truckies' election was suspicious, Friedlander said he was certain it was legitimate. "Who do you think transports the ballot papers?"
A crowd of approximately ten thousand people marched from Palmerston North to Bulls yesterday in protest against the Government's mishandling of the Law Commission, Annette King's other portfolio. King is also Minister of Transport, Justice and Police.
Organisers explained that they "thought it was a game" and were hoping to win a prize for completing the set.
Responding to the widely-supported protest action, King said something that somehow made things vaguely worse.
In other news, a Christchurch man is currently considering a hikoi to his Television set to protest his lost remote control.
Garth McVicar, spokesman for the Sensible Sentencing Trust today welcomed reports that Peter Low, organiser of the Asian Anti-Crime march, was proposing the use of Triads for crime protection.
"Now I have someone to play with!" said McVicar.
McVicar, who is a "character", has previously promoted the belief that crime is cause by welfare, asserted that a guy who stabbed someone was "a decent hard working citizen is facing a murder charge because of his frustration over [tagging]" and is given to asking rhetorical questions like “Who are the real criminals, those committing the crime – or [someone else]?” in way that suggests he's thinking of the latter.
In response to Low's Triad suggestion, McVicar said, "Who are the real criminals, those who commit the crime, those who hire other, unrelated international gangsters in reponse to the criminals committing the crime, the academics and liberals who complain about this arrangement, the third-party criminals who I mentioned earlier or the politicians under whom crime continues to exist?"
Fears that New Zealand First would be forced to remain silent on the recent "Asian Anti-Crime March" were dispelled today.
It was speculated that the party would be robbed of the chance to endorse the march's hardline anti-crime stance, as doing so would also involve supporting Asians. However law and order spokesperson Ron Mark today revealed his press statement, which deftly satisfies all New Zealand First's election-year requirements.
The release, which begins
New Zealand First says the best way for the Asian community to fight crime in Auckland is to expose the people among them responsible for flooding New Zealand with methamphetamine.is available now.