Questioning Content Is Not Hate
The recent controversy involving Benjamin Doyle’s online content has raised deeper questions about the state of public discourse in New Zealand.
Across the country, many citizens — including parents, educators, and professionals — have expressed discomfort at some of the tones and innuendo found in MPs Benjamin Doyle’s social media posts and a now-removed article from the Burnett Foundation. Descriptions range from “distasteful” to “creepy.” Yet these concerns have been swiftly reframed as acts of hate against the rainbow community.
This deflection risks stifling legitimate criticism under the weight of identity politics. The term “hostility network” has surfaced in media commentary — but who coined it? Was it journalist David Fisher, the Gender Recognition Certificate lobby, or Dr. Sanjana Hattotuwa?
More crucially, should concern about public messaging be treated as moral heresy?
A free and democratic society must allow citizens to question — especially when it involves influential figures with platforms that reach into education and public life. Dismissing every objection as bigotry is not progress; it’s intimidation.
We call on media, policymakers, and community leaders to protect open dialogue and respect the right to disagree.