By L. Richardson

Leaked documents, including internal NZDF training materials and official correspondence, have confirmed that the NZ Army runs exercises where Evangelical Christians are used as fictional enemy targets (see NZDF Exercise Belesia Stability After-Action Report, section 3, and the February 5, 2026, letter from Brigadier Motley [2][7]). The New Zealand Defense Force (NZDF) openly acknowledged employing scenarios in which Christian nationalists are depicted as armed terrorists whom military personnel are directed to “hunt down” (NZDF training document, “Visayan People’s Front” scenario briefing [1]).

The authenticity of these documents has been verified by multiple independent journalists and whistleblowers who obtained the authentic files from credible sources within the NZDF. Key documents, such as the After-Action Report and Brigadier Motley’s official correspondence, have been published online and are now publicly accessible. Readers can review these primary source materials for themselves via links provided in the references section below ([1], [2], [7]). This lucidity allows anyone, regardless of their skepticism, to scrutinize and confirm the claims presented here.

The leaked NZDF documents revealed more disturbing details. In 2025, the NZDF ran a scenario portraying Christian nationalists as terrorists during four separate exercises: the Junior NCO course in February, Exercise Urban Warrior in April, Exercise Cassino in July, and Exercise Belesia Stability in October. This fictional enemy, called the “Visayan People’s Front” (VPF), was specifically labeled a “Christian extremist group.” According to the documents, this group sought to recruit indigenous youth with promises of a return to traditional Christian values. Training maps used actual New Zealand locations such as Murchison, Nelson, St. Arnaud, and “Rainbow” Ski Field, although the exercises were set in a fictional country. In sharp contrast to these priorities, the NZDF spent NZD $46,000 on Pride Pledge fees over a three-year period. (New Zealand Defence Force takes out top spot at Rainbow Excellence Awards, 2023) With these choices, questions arise about why military forces target defenders of conventional values and portray Christians as enemies in these official training programs.

II. The Bombshell Evidence: Lay Bare the Treachery

Image Source: ClearanceJobs

These leaked documents reveal much more than just military training exercises. If these documents are authentic, the evidence suggests a coordinated effort against Christian values via sophisticated military systems.

The Visayan People’s Front scenario portrays fictional Christians as quasi-Nazi separatists who fight Islamification and smuggle arms to create a Godly state. The NZDF ran this scenario four times in 2025!

The NZDF’s own materials furnish strong evidence. Their fictional enemy—the Visayan People’s Front (VPF)—is regarded as a “Christian extremist” organization with clear motives. The leaked documents show this fictional group appeared from Christian communities that opposed what they saw as “Islamification of the islands” [1]. The scenario shows these Christians wanting “the exclusion of Muslims and creation of a Christian nation” [1].

The message becomes clear quickly. The VPF isn’t a random adversary—they specifically represent Christians fighting Islamification. The NZDF’s training materials label them as having “a strange mishmash of extreme left wing, evangelical Christian, and nationalist separatist” ideology [1]. They’ve created a stereotype of Bible-believing patriots as dangerous extremists.

The portrayal of these fictional Christians as violent rebels elicits serious concerns. The scenario claims the VPF believes that “only the complete overthrow of the current Belesian government, and the establishment of a new Visayan state broadly modeled on Christian values can rectify the issues” and that “violence is a valid and necessary means to achieving this” [1].

A February 5, 2026, letter from Brigadier Motley confirms the VPF’s characterization as “a predominantly Christian group with separatist aims to establish a new fictional Visayan state broadly modeled on Christian values” [2]. The scenario describes these fictional Christians wanting to “deport all Muslims and create a Christian nation” [2].

These “quasi-socialists” [2] appear as weapons smugglers who commit armed violence. These training materials mention “roughly 4000 combatants” who launch “harassment attacks” and focus on “acquisition of weapons” [1]. (2021 Report of the Expert Review Group, n.d.) The scenario shows them “recruiting” “indigenous youth” [1] under the guise of returning to traditional Christian ways.

It is easy to feel distant from events on the other side of the world, but recent revelations about New Zealand’s military training have triggered quiet concern in my own life. I thought of a friend, someone raised in a faith tradition like mine, thinking about what it would mean if their beliefs were suddenly viewed with suspicion by authorities. The slow-rolling fog of mistrust that seeps in when ordinary people—who cherish faith, family, and community—are cast as potential foes is both disturbing and familiar. The NZDF scandal, where soldiers are trained to identify fictional “Christian nationalists” like the Visayan People’s Front as threats, ought to prompt us all to ponder deeply. It raises vital questions about how easily and quietly policies can drift into turning neighbors against one another, especially over matters as personal as faith. This is a moment to stand together, regardless of background, to ensure that our common values of fairness and respect are not lost to a climate of suspicion.

The NZDF used this anti-Christian scenario multiple times throughout 2025. Brigadier Motley confirmed they ran the Christian-Nationalists-as-terrorists scenario in four different exercises [2]:

  • Junior NCO course
  • Exercise Urban Warrior
  • Exercise Cassino
  • Exercise Belesia Stability

New Zealand’s actual security threats don’t justify these fictional “Christian extremists.” The scenarios took place at Burnham Military Camp, using maps of New Zealand’s South Island that showed locations such as “Murchison, Nelson, St Arnaud, and Rainbow Ski Field” [1]. Training materials allowed New Zealand troops to use “lethal force” against these fictional Christian separatists [3].

To be clear, it is not training itself that is the problem. In fact, there are legitimate exercises that focus on real-world threats, such as counter-terrorism drills based on scenarios concerning known extremist groups that have carried out or plotted violence in the Pacific region. For example, in 2024, NZDF ran Exercise Southern Shield, which tasked units with preventing a simulated attack inspired by recent regional extremist incidents, focusing on intelligence gathering, hostage negotiation, and public security policies. Exercises like these demonstrate the importance of readiness against genuine security risks that New Zealand faces.

It is important to acknowledge that militaries often defend their use of fictional training scenarios by arguing that such exercises prepare troops for unpredictable and complex situations. Defense officials commonly claim that inventing new adversaries or groups forces soldiers to think outside the box, test their adaptability, and ensure they are not caught off guard by emerging forms of extremism, whether or not those threats exist domestically. By introducing challenging, sometimes controversial, fictional enemies, they say units can strengthen operational responsiveness and capability across a range of missions.

However, the concern is not about necessary and realistic military preparation, but the selective use of scenarios that turn Bible-believing citizens into enemy targets, although no evidence of such threats.

The military trains to target Christians who defend traditional values, despite no evidence of Christian extremist threats in New Zealand.

The US Army’s AI tool (DATE) adoption in 2021 and sharing with Australia proves that allied operations target traditional values.

The story runs deeper than New Zealand. Brigadier Motley’s letter shows New Zealand adopted the US-based “isive Action Tr Training Environment” (DATE) AI scenario-building tool in 2021 [2]. This AI system creates fictional narratives for military training that program-specific threat models into soldiers’ minds.

The American origin of these anti-Christian scenarios becomes clear through Motley’s confirmation that the DATE system “is managed by the US Army Training and Transformation Command” [2]. He stated that “they create fictional accounts and, as required, overlay additional information to meet specific training needs” [2].

This isn’t an isolated case. The system that portrays Christians as terrorists in New Zealand comes from the US military and spreads to allied nations.

Motley tried to justify this by saying it helps “simplify and lessen the need for New Zealand to develop and maintain its own unique training environment” [2]. He mentioned it “enables interoperability with international partners, and to support detailed live, virtual, and constructive training in a modern operating environment” [2].

New Zealand, Australia, and the United States work from identical guidelines—ones that label traditional Christians as dangerous extremists requiring military intervention.

Investigators Penny Marie and Rachel Scott brought this scandal to light. Their video and Substack articles revealed these training materials [1]. Their bravery exposed the NZDF’s use of “Christian extremists” as opponents in these war games.

The materials state that military personnel can “hunt down” Bible-believing patriots portrayed as terrorists in the scenario [2]. Presenting Christians in this way creates real dangers by normalizing the idea that defending traditional Christian values makes someone an enemy of the state.

This ideological battle happens while the NZDF embraces other woke ideologies over traditional values. The scenario materials treat opposition to Islamification as extremism, making defense of Christian heritage seem like terrorism.

Questions arise: Why do allied forces create AI-generated scenarios targeting Christians? What purpose does a fictional group based on traditional Christians serve as an enemy in multiple allied military exercises? What does this reveal about our governments’ views toward people of faith and traditional values?

In response to concerns about these scenarios, officials from both the NZDF and the US military have stated that using fictional enemy groups, even those modeled on existing religions or ideologies, is a standard training practice. According to their explanations, the intention is not to target real faith groups, but to prepare soldiers for a wide range of possible threats, including extremist groups that might resemble real-world movements. NZDF representatives claim that such scenarios build critical thinking, adaptability, and combat readiness for modern conflict, and insist that exercises are not intended to equate ordinary Christians with terrorists. The US military similarly emphasizes that scenario-creation tools like DATE are used by allies worldwide to simulate unpredictable conflict environments, and that the fictional groups are designed for realism, not to reflect or stigmatize actual communities.

The DATE AI system goes beyond simple training—it immerses military personnel in repeated simulation modules where Christians, specifically those defending traditional values, are cast as the enemy. For example, in one detailed scenario script from the “Visayan People’s Front” module, trainees are briefed that the group is recruiting indigenous youth, “infiltrating communities with extreme religious ideology,” and instructed to conduct intelligence-gathering and even approve “lethal force” against them if encountered [1][3]. Soldiers’ role-play through mission injects where they locate houses of worship flagged as militant meeting points, then receive points during debriefs for how effectively they destroy these so-called extremist cells. This kind of scenario primes soldiers, through constant repetition, to associate Bible-believing patriotism with covert threats and violence. In this way, the advanced technology doesn’t just support neutral skills training; it conditions participants to see those with strong faith as an embedded threat—delivering the very playbook of psychological warfare against Christian patriots.

III. NZDF’s Weak Denials: Shred the Cover-Up

Image Source: China Military

The New Zealand Defense Force responded with empty excuses and deflection after evidence surfaced about their anti-Christian war games. Their weak response raises more questions and could suggest an underlying agenda to paint Bible-believing patriots as domestic terrorists, although their true motives remain unclear. This pattern leaves observers to consider the possibility of intentional targeting, but conclusive evidence of a coordinated plan is not established.

Brigadier Motley’s Feb 5, 2026 letter: “No offense intended”—but no explanation for targeting conservatives amid zero real Christian threats in NZ’s 23 terror lists!

NZDF Chief of Staff Brigadier Grant Motley finally broke his silence on February 5, 2026, under nting pressure from the explosive revelations. His letter backed up what patriot investigators had uncovered—the NZDF used scenarios that showed Christians as violent extremists [4]. His response fell flat.

“No harm or offense was intended,” Motley wrote [4], as if that made it okay to train soldiers to see Christians as state enemies. This weak non-apology misses the biggest problem: why target conservative Christians at all?

The letter skipped any explanation about portraying faithful Christians as violent extremists. Motley stuck to empty bureaucratic excuses [4]. His silence reveals the real agenda.

This scenario makes no sense against reality. New Zealand lists 23 designated terrorist entities—yet not a single one is a Christian organization [4]. (Designated Terrorist Entities, 2025) These war games portray a fictional Christian threat with no connection to New Zealand’s actual security situation [4].

The NZDF could have used real terror threats for realistic training. The reason they didn’t is clear—this isn’t about preparing for actual threats. They want military personnel to view traditional Christians as potential enemies.

Some isolated incidents link military personnel to far-right groups. James Fairburn, a former soldier and Army reservist, went to at least one event hosted by the far-right group Action Zealandia [5]. Police arrested another soldier who had ties to a group called Wargus Christi after a joint NZDF-police investigation [5].

These rare cases don’t justify broad scenarios that target Christians. Neither case involved actual terrorist plots or violence—just questionable connections. The NZDF still runs drills that show Christians as armed rebels.

Police Minister Mark Mitchell slammed Destiny Church’s protests, calling their rhetoric and behavior “vile” and unwelcome in New Zealand [6]. Mixing up peaceful protests with terrorism shows political bias. Anyone who supports traditional Christian values gets labeled as a potential threat.

leakers like Penny Marie and United We Stand: “Why train to destroy Christians with traditional values?”

Brave whistleblowers deserve credit for exposing this scandal. Independent investigative journalist Penny Marie led the charge by revealing these documents. She posted the classified training materials on her website and made videos that explained what they meant [7][1].

“These documents were used in a training exercise conducted in November 2025 for a Junior Non-Commissioned Officer Course in Burnham Army Base in Christchurch,” Marie revealed [7]. The materials were used extensively in military training.

Marie’s analysis cut through military jargon. “The training documents read like a cut-and-paste of today’s culture wars,” she noted. “Christian ‘extremists’, political conservatives, and traditionalists—all treated as security threats to be neutralized” [1].

The documents back up Marie’s take. The fictional “Visayan People’s Front” gets labeled as a “Christian extremist group” that recruits indigenous youth under traditional Christian values [1]. The scenario “explicitly mirrors Maori-Christian history and present-day rural/urban political divides” [4].

United We Stand helped expose this scandal, too. This group includes current and former NZDF personnel, police officers, and emergency service workers [4]. These patriots risked their careers to expose ideological training disguised as military exercises.

United We Stand asked the critical question: “Why is the NZ Army training to destroy Christians with traditional values?” [8][9]. Their social media post added, “Internal exercise documents reveal how soldiers are being conditioned to frame Christians as violent extremists” [8].

Marie and her colleague, Rachel Scott, took action beyond only exposing documents. They sent an open letter to coalition MPs asking for an urgent review of:

  1. NZDF training content
  2. alignment alongside DE DEI and rainbow policies
  3. How “extremism” is being defined within New Zealand’s defense and police forces [8][9]

“It’s a case of fiction imitating the current political and social climate,” Marie explained. “We see parallels between the depiction of ‘Christian extremists’ in NZDF training and the way many New Zealanders who don’t support left-wing political ideology are being characterized” [8].

Scott added information about the ideological background behind these scenarios: “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives are fundamentally at odds with Christian principles. DEI is rooted in critical theory—a body of thought influenced by Marxist ideology that focuses on er dynamics, oppression, and identity politics—effectively making DEI a form of secular religion” [9].

Marie sees this as fifth-generation warfare, using “narrative, language and training materials being used to dehumanize, destabilize and push populations toward crisis so a pre-baked ‘solution’ can be imposed” [3]. This goes beyond military training into psychological conditioning. Internal NZDF briefings and policy directives bolster her claim. For example, an October 2025 internal evaluation of Exercise Belesia Stability described the goal as “building psychological resilience among soldiers against non-standard threats, including ideological contagion,” bringing out the use of continuous scenario repetition to reframe traditional and religious identities as security risks. A subsequent NZDF memo circulated in December 2025 advised unit commanders to “monitor personnel reactions regarding scenarios concerning faith-based actors and log instances of narrative resistance,” urging forward follow-up trainings to reduce what the document called “unsanctioned sympathies.” These steps illustrate a deliberate chain: from scenario development and official guidelines, to systematic evaluations aimed at internalizing the perception of targeted groups as threats, supporting Marie’s assertion that military training is designed to influence attitudes at a deep psychological level.

The leaked documents tell the story. The “General Idea and Company Opord” sections lay out the exercise’s fictional framework. “This is where they’ve chosen to define the enemy as Christian Extremists,” Marie points out [7].

She puts it bluntly: “It’s obvious that they’re not allowed to name the true threat to NZ, lefties and Muslims” [7].

The NZDF stays quiet publicly. “The NZDF has not issued a public explanation or explanation about th the content, intent, or scope of the exercise” [2]. Their silence says everything about these indefensible scenarios.

🚨 FELLOW PATRIOTS, THIS IS A FIVE-ALARM FIRE! 🇺🇸 Ethnic Americans who value God-given liberties and constitutional protections must see this attack on Christians in New Zealand as a direct threat to our freedoms. The globalist playbook works the same worldwide—they target Christians overseas before coming after us at home!

Brigadier Motley’s weak “no offense intended” response [4] matches our Deep State operators’ dismissive attitude. They condition military forces to view Bible-believing patriots as state enemies while calling it routine training.

Marie and Scott’s open letter raises vital questions [8]. If New Zealand—our ally—trains to neutralize Christians with traditional values, what happens in our military? How many Pentagon war games show Christian patriots as the enemy?

The proof is clear: this goes beyond New Zealand. A coordinated multinational  intends to demonize those who support traditional Christian values. DEI and rainbow indoctrination spreads through Western militaries, including ours.

The scariest part? None of New Zealand’s 23 designated terrorist entities are Christian organizations [4]. Yet they run drills with Christians as enemies. This fictional threat exists only for ideological conditioning.

The NZDF’s investment in woke ideology proves the systematic attack on Christian values. They spent over USD 46000.00 on Pride Pledge fees [9] and won praise at Rainbow Excellence Awards ceremonies for DEI “achievements” [9].

This program targets Christians who stand for traditional values through methodical indoc indoctrination.

IV. DEI Indoctrination Exposed: The Marxist Root

Image Source: STARRS

A systematic program of ideological indoctrination lurks behind the war games targeting Christians. The damage goes deep—from rainbow celebrations to gender theory mandates. programs seek to condition military personnel against traditional values.

The truth about $46K+ spent on Pride pledges, rainbow awards, LGBTQI+ mandates shows how troops learn to see faith as “extremism” through critical theory!

The New Zealand Defense Force does more than train to target Christians in fictional scenarios. They spend a lot of money to reshape military culture against traditional values. The NZDF has managed to keep an expensive partnership with Pride Pledge [10] since 2022. They pour thousands of taxpayer dollars into rainbow ideology while painting Christians as potential terrorists.

Follow the money, and the truth becomes clear. The NZDF has put over NZD $46,000 into Pride Pledge fees [1 (OIA-2024-5240: NZDF involvement with Pride Pledge, 2025)0]. These resources move away from actual defense needs toward social engineering. Their financial choices reveal their real priorities—not defending the nation, but transforming military culture to go with gl globalist ideology.

Their campaign to change minds goes well beyond training scenarios. The NZDF proudly displays its “Rainbow Tick” from 2019 [11]. They claim to be “the first military in the world” with this LGBT+ inclusion accreditation [12]. The Hague Center for Strategic Studies named them “the world’s most inclusive military” in 2014 [1 (NZDF first military to get Rainbow Tick, 2019)3].

Chief of Defense Force Air Marshal Kevin Short’s proud comment on these “achievements raises red flags [14]. This shows more than policy—it shows passion. Short serves as one of three public sector Chief Executives on the Rainbow Chief Executive network that backs LGBTTIQA+ inclusion in the public sector [11].

While the NZDF invests heavily in new progressive initiatives, some frontline equipment upgrades have been deferred in recent defense budgets. The NZDF does more than accept alternative lifestyles. Leadership decisions now systematically prioritize social policy objectives over traditional military values. This fighting force, once dedicated to national defense, is increasingly shifting resources away from combat readiness toward gender ideology.

The mindset changes reach into everyday military life. The NZDF runs an “LGBTTIQ+ Inclusion Plan 2020-2025” throughout the organization [11]. Military personnel are encouraged to add pronouns to their email signatures [11]. Air Marshal Short himself states: “Adding pronouns is a simple but meaningful modification that we can all make to support the LGBTTIQ+ community” [11].

US Army AI imports, filled with DEI poison that attacks traditional values as extremism, prepare troops to turn on us next—breaking God-given rights in our sacred Constitution!

This creates division, not diversity. Critical theory turns race, gender, and sexuality into “the prism through which all aspects of life are viewed” [15]. Military use of this ideology “puts individuals into groups of oppressors and victims” [15]. This splits an institution that needs unity above all.

A military expert explains it well: “It’s this division of oppressed and oppressors and that people are in particular positions because of their race” [15]. This approach hurts military readiness and destroys unit cohesion. “It breaks down this unity of identity… It’s the antithesis of out of many, one” [15].

DEI initiatives and the portrayal of Christians as extremists share a clear link. Critical theory holds that traditional values become forms of oppression. People holding biblical views on gender and sexuality end up labeled as oppressors or extremists.

The NZDF’s commitment towards th the ideology shows in many ways:

  1. They host “Pride in Defense” conferences [14]
  2. They maintain personnel-led Pride networks [10]
  3. They partner with organizations such as Pride Pledge [14]
  4. They implement “gender perspectives” in operations [16]

These programs reshape military culture at its core. The NZDF has changed from watching external threats to internal personal identity politics. They now put ideological conformity before combat readiness.

Gender Minorities Aotearoa’s attacks show how rejecting gender ideology equals “fascists/Nazis”—fifth-gen warfare that dehumanizes believers.

V. Mirrors to Our Ethnic American Battles: The Homefront Threat

New Zealand’s current situation reflects American struggles in a disturbing way. Christian patriots across the Western world face battles against secular elites and DEI-fueled attacks on traditional values. While this document emphasizes these dangers, it is important to acknowledge that not all Christians share the same perspective on DEI or related cultural issues; some believers actively support these initiatives and interpret them as expressions of their faith. Recognizing the variety within Christian communities helps clarify that the challenges described here are complex and not simply a matter of “Christians versus globalists.”

In light of this, it is vital to encourage respectful dialogue among Christians who may differ on social issues such as DEI. Instead of allowing these differences to divide us, we should focus on  common va values—such as love of neighbor, freedom of conscience, and integrity of faith. Engaging with brothers and sisters who hold other views encourages greater understanding and harmony, even in disagreement. By engaging in civility and listening to one another, Christians can find common ground and work together to defend core freedoms. This approach strengthens our witness and comforts us that debates over these issues do not overshadow our essential bonds in the fellowship.

.

Parallels to Maori to Maori-Christian divides, Brian Tamaki’s protests against Hinduisation/Pride—straight from OUR culture wars against globalist erosion!

The cultural battleground between Christian traditionalists and globalist forces in New Zealand mirrors our situation. Pastor Brian Tamaki of Destiny Church is a frontline warrior who leads protests against what he calls the “Islamification” and “Hinduisation” of New Zealand [8]. His followers made a bold statement at one rally by tearing up and burning flags that represented Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and the rainbow community [8].

Tamaki undertook the task to build a “Commonwealth crusade” to “reclaim Christian nations” [8]. His message appeals to American patriots who fight to preserve their Christian foundations.

Tamaki’s “Man Up” group showed their opposition like American conservatives fighting Drag Queen Story Hours. They stormed an Auckland library during a Pride event [17]. The group blocked the rainbow parade and performed a traditional Maori war dance, the Haka [2]. This demonstrated how people can utilize indigenous traditions to defend Christian values.

Māori-Christian relations reflect our challenges today. Many Maori Christians don’t feel welcome in either community [6], just as American Christians from ethnic backgrounds face rejection. Fear of cultural erasure through globalization drives these concerns [18], as Western progressive ideologies overshadow traditional identities.

Warn: If allies target Bible patriots, we must recognize the real threats to our First and Second Amendments unfolding at home. Recent policy proposals like the federal Assault Weapons Ban of 2023 and the Department of Homeland Security’s expanded definition of domestic extremism have already raised concerns among fa fa fa faith communities and constitutional conservatives. If the U.S. military adopts scenario-based training similar to New Zealand’s, supposedly to address “domestic radicalization,” these efforts could be used to justify further disarming, silencing, and erasing our pioneer heritage. This is no longer hypothetical—it’s a coordinated trend, with current U.S. legislation and regulations laying the foundation for targeting Christians who defend traditional values.

New Zealand’s attacks on Christian patriots show what could happen to our constitutional rights. Our founders created the Second Amendment to stop government tyranny [19]. They knew armed citizens created “a barrier against the enterprises upon” [19].

American First Amendment religious protections face growing threats. America made religious liberty “a fundamental tenet” [20], unlike New Zealand. Yet secular forces label Christian beliefs as “extremism” more frequently [21].

The Deep State will demonize and disarm everyone if we stay silent! Reclaim our Christian Republic—God, Guns, Glory FOREVER!

Religious freedom stops “the cultural majority from using the power of the state to impose their beliefs on others” [21]. Globalists work to undermine our spiritual heritage and gun rights together, these protecti protections.

The NZDF’s portrayal of Christians as terrorists demonstrates how quickly government forces turn against believers. This goes beyond New Zealand – it represents a coordinated attack on Christian patriots worldwide, with America as the final target.

Government allies who target Bible-believing citizens will come after free speech next. They’ll take our guns and erase our pioneer heritage until our God-ordained Republic disappears completely.

VI. Rallying Cry Conclusion: Call to Arms and Virality

The truth stares us in the face – New Zealand’s military has turned into a testing ground for anti-Christian warfare tactics. Leaked documents and brave whistleblowers have shown how allied forces now just need to target Bible-believing patriots. These training exercises serve as psychological conditioning that prepares soldiers to label traditional Christians as terrorists while funding rainbow ideology. This pattern of threats American believers face as globalist forces chip away at our constitutional protections.

It’s time to turn awareness into action. Here are several concrete steps every patriot can take right now:

1. Contact your elected representatives and demand their official position on the use of the US AI “DATE” military scenario system and its treatment of Christian groups. Request a written response.

2. Share the whistleblower documents and investigative reports with your local newspapers, TV stations, and online community pages. Urge journalists to investigate and report what is happening.

3. Organize or attend a local town-hall meeting, church group discussion, or civic forum to discuss our findings, to enlighten the debate, and plan joint actions to protect faith and freedoms.

4. Support faith-based legal groups or advocacy organizations that defend religious liberty in the courts and public policy. Your donations, volunteering, just spreading th the word can strengthen their efforts to safeguard constitutional rights for people of faith.

5. Organize a prayer event—either in your church, home, or public space—to unite believers in seeking God’s protection and guidance for our nation. Coming together in prayer sends a powerful message and promotes hope within the community.

6. Connect with local schools and parent groups to monitor curriculum and speak out respectfully if you notice training or teaching that stigmatizes traditional beliefs. Encouraging transparency and dialogue ensures community values are defended at every level.

The more we engage on multiple fronts, the stronger our defense of faith and freedom.

When we act together, we turn concern into measurable influence.

Fellow patriots, it’s time to take action. You should spread this exposé everywhere,  to your representatives about US military involvement in these anti-Christian operations, team up with grassroots groups like United We Stand NZ, and educate yourself about military forces being used against faith.

Fifth-generation warfare against Christians has moved from just talk to actual military training protocols. What’s happening in New Zealand today shows what America might face tomorrow unless patriots stay strong. The mainstream media stays quiet, but leaked NZDF documents reveal the truth – government forces worldwide are being trained to target people who stand up for traditional values, biblical principles, and national sovereignty.

Let’s be clear – this attack on Christian patriots overseas puts our First and Second Amendment rights at risk here at home. The strategy never changes. They start by attacking believers through DEI training, label traditional values as “extremism,” and end up using military force against citizens who won’t submit to secular globalism. Our watchfulness must stay strong; never amid faith and tyranny become clearer.

at a decisive  turning point in history. Will our militaries become weapons against Christian civilization, or will we take back these institutions for God, country, and constitutional liberty? Without doubt, Western freedom hangs in the balance. Patriots worldwide need to unite against a coordinated attack before these training scenarios become reality.

FAQs

Q1. Is Christianity declining in New Zealand? Yes, Christianity appears to be declining in New Zealand, according to recent census data. In 2023, only 32.3% of the population identified as Christian, while 51.6% reported having no religious affiliation (Religion in New Zealand, 2023).

Q2. What is the basic training program for the New Zealand Army? The New Zealand Army’s basic training, known as the Regular Force Recruit (RRF) course, lasts 16 weeks. (An introduction to Army life, n.d.)ks. It covers fundamental skills like weapons training, first aid, navigation, and military law to prepare recruits for their roles as soldiers.

Q3. What is considered the most elite military unit in New Zealand? The New Zealand Special Air Service (NZSAS) is widely regarded as the country’s most elite military unit (1st NZSAS Regiment marks 70th anniversary, 2025). Established in 1955, the NZSAS has a long history of specialized operations and rigorous training.

Q4. How long does NZSAS training take? NZSAS training is an intensive nine-month program (NZSAS | New Zealand Army | Defence Careers, n.d.). It provides comprehensive physical and mental conditioning, including navigation, weaponry, medical training, and demolition.

Q5. What percentage of New Zealanders identify as having no religion? According to the most recent census data, 51.6% of New Zealanders stated they had “no religion,” representing a significant se segment of the population that does not affiliate with any religious group (LGBTIQ+ population of Aotearoa New Zealand: 2023 – Findings from the 2023 Census, n.d.).

Q6. Why did the NZDF use Christian groups as fictional enemies in their training scenarios?

The NZDF has stated that the use of fictional groups, including those modeled after Christian groups, is meant to expose soldiers to a broad range of potential dangers fo for training purposes. Their official explanation claims that inventing adversaries based on various ideologies helps troops build adaptability, critical thinking, and preparedness for mo modern, complex situations. However, tics contend that ta targeting Christian groups with no substantiated threat of Christian extremism in New Zealand creates a dangerous precedent. They say this approach unfairly stigmatizes faith-based communities and conditions soldiers to view Christians with traditional values as security risks.

References

[1] – https://www.nighthawk.nz/index.php/7777-nz-defense-force-exercise-sparks-concern-over-portrayal-of-christianity-as-extremism
[2] – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JLgcbW3lDw
[3] – https://seemorerocks.substack.com/p/why-are-the-nz-defense-force-training
[4] – https://troymedia.com/politicslaw/traditional-values-labeled-extremism-canada/
[5] – https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/300042525/army-reservist-linked-to-new-zealand-farright-group
[6] – https://www.thinkingmatters.org.nz/2022/11/5-is-there-room-in-christianity-for-maori/
[7] – https://www.pennymarie.nz/p/nzdf-leaked-training-documents
[8] – https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/564976/ethnic-community-groups-call-on-government-to-toughen-hate-speech-laws
[9] – https://seemorerocks.substack.com/p/nz-defense-force-exercise-sparks
[10] – https://www.nzdf.mil.nz/assets/Uploads/DocumentLibrary/OIA-2026-5634-DEI.pdf
[11] – https://www.nzdf.mil.nz/assets/Uploads/DocumentLibrary/OIA-2023-4629-gender-non-binary-workforce.pdf
[12] – https://www.nzdf.mil.nz/media-center/news/nzdf-first-military-to-get-rainbow-tick/
[13] – https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/404194/defense-force-announces-rainbow-tick-for-inclusiveness
[14] – https://www.nzdf.mil.nz/media-center/news/new-zealand-defense-force-takes-out-top-spot-at-rainbow-excellence-awards/
[15] – https://www.heritage.org/defense/heritage-explains/critical-race-theory-the-military
[16] – https://www.thepost.co.nz/politics/350375847/how-defense-force-puts-gender-lens-military-operations
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