Funding silence
As a university cancelled a talk I was about to give (due to being too sensitive a topic supposedly), I ponder whether taxpayers should keep funding such censorious institutions.
I was recently asked to give a talk at a New Zealand university, sharing my impressions of my recent trip to Israel and the Gaza envelope. It would have had a political and legal perspective to it (along with the ethical), so I would assume much discussion with those attending on the nature of the conflict; whether international law is being broken; what possible solutions are possible and feasible; and more.
I was happy to accept the invite but knew in the back of my mind that it was highly likely to be cancelled.
So, I was not surprised when an email came to me stating that because the topic and timing were sensitive, that the talk would be cancelled. At one level I chuckled, possibly due to being correctly prescient yet at another level, I was deeply disappointed – not for me, but our universities as a whole.
I will quickly add, the individual organisers themselves have been great to deal with.
There is clearly something deeply wrong with universities when discussion is being actively and repeatedly stifled. My cancellation or de-platforming is just another example in a long list and it is important not to get too caught up in my particular experience. Instead, we should step back and see that universities are no longer serving their core purposes. In fact, they have not been serving their core purposes for some time now and this ultimately does raise the question why we, the taxpayer, continue to fund these institutions.
The Education and Training Act clearly articulates what we intuitively know universities are meant to be about:
“a wide diversity of teaching and research, especially at a higher level, that maintains, advances, disseminates, and assists the application of knowledge, develops intellectual independence, and promotes community learning.”
And then there is the well-known legislative (and moral) requirement that “they [universities] accept a role as critic and conscience of society”.
Sadly, many are failing in this regard. If people cannot discuss complex, controversial, and complicated issues at a university then why have universities at all. They simply become hollow echo chambers; theatres filled with highly paid actors who are not creative but simply repeat approved creeds to a captive audience.
I recall when I studied at university, it was a wonderful time exploring a whole range of ideas. My memory was of all sorts of lectures and evening talks, from the absurd to the amusing, from the far left to the libertarian right. The biggest and gnarliest of ethical issues were robustly discussed, often with a good dose of enthusiasm and entertainment.
I was initially going to write that our modern universities appear to now have a list of taboo topics. But I think it is worse than that, with certain topics only discussable if they affirm a single perspective. Whether it is Israel-Gaza, the Treaty of Waitangi, gender ideology, or ethical topics like abortion and euthanasia – only one perspective is tolerated within the universities.
The claim that some topics (like the one I was to speak on) are sensitive is incorrect. More accurately, it is that some people are sensitive to perspectives they don’t agree with.
Yet if we run with the idea that there are sensitive topics, then the greater the controversy or sensitivity, the greater the discussion should be. Instead, in the modern university environment, as something becomes controversial we see only greater suppression of discussion – usually by the radical left and progressives.
I think it was several years ago that a leaked report from the University of Auckland noted something like 85% of staff felt they could not speak freely and respectfully without fear of some form of negative repercussion. This at supposedly our foremost university!

Which once again begs the question – why do we have universities if they cannot discuss tough topics? Why do New Zealanders work long hours to fund institutions that are scared to talk, an essential prerequisite of learning?
The government is seeking to address this damaging culture in universities. An amendment to the law is currently making it’s way through Parliament and will impose new duties on university councils to protect academic freedom and freedom of expression. These university councils will also have to report annually around complaints and I would hope, how many talks were cancelled and so on.
While a positive step, I fear the cultural rot within our universities runs deep and a legislative change is not enough. Yet the solution, at this time, is not to remove funding. As with most transformative change, it begins with people being willing to stand up and lead. In this case, it is primarily academics prepared to speak into the difficult topics and not be silenced. It means supporting an array of speakers to come onto campus. It means courage.
Certainly it comes with great risks, but that is what built the great universities – men and women who risked new ideas, often battled entrenched thinking, but whose arguments eventually won the day.
IN MEDIA …
As you may know, I do an array of media - hosting podcasts and an online radio show among other things. I also get interviewed by others! A few highlights below:
I talk with two time breast cancer survivor, solo mum of three, resilience coach and all round fabulous person - Karin Horen. An encouraging discussion around how to face the challenges in life.
I also sat down with Maryanne Spurdle from the Maxim Institute where we talked about how the underfunding of palliative care is removing genuine choices from individuals at the end of life:
On Reality Check Radio (RCR), I had a fascinating chat with Steph from the Free Speech Union about their submission to the Royal Commission into Covid. We discuss how mandates, public messaging, and institutional pressure interfered with fundamental human rights:
And not just me interviewing! I recently joined
on his Good Oil podcast, talking freely and frankly on life in parliament and much more:
Very disappointing! New Zealand universities are not serving their purpose. They are increasingly places of ideological homogeneity, where students are treated like kindergarteners who must be protected from the world and ideas.
"why do we have universities if they cannot discuss tough topics? Why do New Zealanders work long hours to fund institutions that are scared to talk, an essential prerequisite of learning?"
Good question
Universities have now become the 'gargoyles of woke'!
I attended a Free Speech Union meeting recently on 'Institutional Neutrality: Academia and the Fight for Open Dialogue'! Three University academics spoke!
Not surprisingly the conversation moved away from the stated topic to something else, ‘academic freedom’, which I believe is a totally different subject!
Only one of the speakers seemed to be on point in respect to what I & I expect others came to hear debated.
Instead the two men were indulging in for the most part, ‘intellectual sophistry’, with no connection to reality; what is actually happening in society, our Universities & also other work places, especially Government funded ones but not exclusively!
I would say at best they were indulging in ‘introspective navel gazing & intellectual dishonesty’! They didn’t address the topic, which is how universities or other academic institutions are dictating to their students & faculty what they should think, believe & hence say!
They were mostly talking from their own perspective as employees of a university! Did they not understand the topic, or were they being deliberately evasive?
To be honest, it got a bit boring as things do when we are no longer on task, & NOT addressing the ‘elephant in the room’; what is actually happening to our society with Cultural Marxism inveigling its way into every ‘cultural sphere’ of society, so that we are being led into a another 'lock down' of ideas & open debate! Another Dark Ages!
Look at what has been happening in England, literally people being arrested for a ‘thought crime’ as in silent prayer or preaching the gospels!
The very idea that universities should be the ‘critic & conscience’ of society, ‘nice slogan’, is actually quite scary given where they are going! Plus whose conscience? Woke Marxist Progressives’?
Remember, society used to be predicated on Judeo-Christian values, which gave rise to our western liberal democracies, but now those very democracies & values have been hi-jacked in the name of ‘democracy’ by left wing ideologues & activists, which Universities have been & are hotbeds for! Their goal is to ultimately suppress ‘thought & debate’ as in the novel ‘1984’, which is what in effect happened during this 'debate'!
The shift away from those traditional ‘underpinning values’ is the problem! Take away the foundations of a building & it will fall! Mt 7:24-27, Mt 28:18-20
The Left have craftily shifted the goal posts so that we are now debating according to their ‘terms & references’, & what is now ‘supposed orthodoxy’!
The ‘Treaty of Waitangi’ is an example! They have so deviated the meaning of the Treaty to mean something other than what it actually states with a bit of ‘clever mistranslation’ from Maori back to English! Yet English is the ‘source language’ & everyone understands English! It’s not like having to learn Greek & Hebrew to understand the source documents of the Bible! (Look up the ‘Littlewood Draft’ re the Treaty)
People have been so brainwashed about the Treaty that even Parliament was too scared to debate or even want to acknowledge David Seymour’s Treaty Principles Bill’! There’s your left wing progressivism silencing people & debate even in the hallowed ‘debating chambers’ of Parliament!
Hence my frustration!
For ‘free speech’ to be ‘free speech’, it does require the ‘truth’, not ‘misinformation & word salads’!
What did Jesus say? “The truth will set you free”, not just in an existential way, but also in practical material ways, hence we have science for that purpose plus everyday truths about the world around us & how to live safely in an ever changing physical world as even our parents taught us!
If political candidates lie to us about their true intentions, then we can’t make an ‘informed decision’ about who to vote for! So ‘truth & honesty’ underpins a ‘free’ & ‘well functioning society’! If you don’t know the rules to a game, you can’t be ‘free’ playing it!
All these institutions as so the Government must be held up to the ‘scrutiny of truth’, & that is why people must be educated enough to know what is going on in their nation, as whilst people are in the dark & not actively involved, then we will be led to somewhere we don’t want to go, as both Fascism & Communism have proved!
The Marxists, Progressives are leading an ‘unwitting population’ like lambs to the slaughter!
Intellectual banter among academics is all well & good, but it won’t save our nation!