I’ve never met Thomas Nash – in fact hadn’t consciously
heard of him until this morning. Yet I feel I know him.
The Wairarapa
Times-Age devoted its prime centre-page spread to an opinion piece, originally published on The Conversation but supplied by New Zealand Herald owner NZME,
in which Nash outlined his vision for New Zealand in 2040. It’s a standard
left-wing Utopian wish list, big on public sector control of the economy, central
planning, pure-green transport modes (pure-green everything, in fact) and heavy
iwi involvement in decision-making.
It ends on a note of bright-eyed optimism, envisaging a
society in which “Government agencies [are] now seen as useful and relevant,
having been equipped with the money to provide housing, social services,
environmental restoration and support for economic change”. But Nash notes that
it took “strict rules” to make it all happen – a telling pointer to the incipient
authoritarianism that underlies the neo-Marxist agenda.
The footnote to the article described Nash as “Social
Entrepreneur in Residence” at Massey University. As I say, I don’t know him but
felt I recognised him, simply because I read examples of verbal flatus from people
like Nash every day. New Zealand is full of Thomas Nashes, all with their noses
deep in the public trough and determined to transform the country whether the
rest of us want it or not.
My recent resolve to cut back on letters to the Times-Age turned out to be short-lived.
I sent them the following this morning:
Thomas Nash, who took
up a large chunk of yesterday’s paper with his idealistic vision of New
Zealand in 2040, was described as a “Social Entrepreneur in residence, Massey
University”.
Let me translate that
for your readers. Nash is paid by the taxpayer to promote the idea of a dreamy
socialist Utopia. The words “Social Entrepreneur” are capitalised as if they
mean something, when in fact the term is meaningless and often serves as a
synonym for political activist.
There are dozens more
like Nash – no, make that hundreds – embedded in the public sector who know
what’s best for us and are paid by us – not that we have any say in the matter
– to guide us into the sunny uplands of enlightenment.
Some of the goals
outlined in Nash’s article seem harmless – indeed, hard to argue with. What
worries me is the degree of state authoritarianism likely to be required to
force citizens to comply. As C S Lewis
said: “Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of
its victims may be the most oppressive.”
Incidentally, Nash
also exerts influence as a Green Party member of the Greater Wellington
Regional Council. And like others of his ilk, he’s hyper-active on social
media.
Ordinary working New
Zealanders, busy raising families and paying off mortgages, have little chance
of countering the influence of the highly motivated, publicly funded ideologues who
increasingly shape public policy.
I could have added that people like Nash have sympathetic
connections in the media, which would explain why his opinion piece appeared
not just in NZME papers (although independently owned, the Times-Age publishes content from NZME) but on Stuff as well. What used to be a broad-church press is now a
monoculture bent on indoctrination and increasingly
(one might say suicidally) out of touch with readers, as illustrated by plunging
circulation figures.