1938: Jessie Mackay
August 23, 2019
By AHNZ
Today in New Zealand history, 23 August, 1938, the death of Jessie Mackay.
Social Justice Warrior, Feminist, school teacher, main stream media journalist and editor. Treacherous Victimhood Culture witch. Writer, prison reformer, land socialiser, single woman with no children, political activist. Khaleesi of the suppressed brown people, finger-wagger at the white people.
Born of hard-working parents who were useful to their community. (People who turn 180 degrees on their culture like this always are.)
As you’d expect, a fan girl of the loathsome Jock McKenzie….
The heart of New Zealand went beside
All the way, all the way,
To the resting-place of her Highland Chief;
Much she thought she could not say;
He found her a land of many domains,
Maiden forest and fallow plains —
He left her a land of many homes,
The pearl of the world where the sea wind roams – Poemhunter
If she lived her life today, Miss Mackay would be recognised at once as a Social Justice Warrior. She would be writing weekly columns for the NZH about toxic patriarchy and celebrating gay weddings. She would be Tweeting about “decolonisation” and trying to open the borders to convicted criminal Islamic refugees and encourage them to run for political office. She would be pro-disease (aka anti-vax) and publicly advertise how Right Think her diet was (vegetarian) while trying to ban you from eating sugar. She would be helping invent new euphemisms for abortion. She would be delighted with futile gestures like banning plastic bags and desirous that all Pakeha statues be recycled and the New Zealand flag changed to a Che Guevara T-Shirt!
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Image ref. Wiki