I am sure that by now many of you will have seen the horrifying footage of Henry Nowak’s death. It is the most troubling footage I have seen. I will not post it here.
The hypocricy of this Labour government is breath-taking. About how the same political class that fell over itself only six years ago to express sympathy for a man who died in America is conspicuously silent about a man who died in remarkably similar circumstances — surrounded by police incompetence and while uttering the exact words: “I can’t breathe”.
We need to understand how police officers can arrive at a murder scene, be told by the victim he’s been stabbed, and for one officer to respond: “I don’t think you have, mate”.
We should do is deport the murderer’s mother, an Indian national, and any other members of the family who tried to help the murderer conceal his murder weapon, or obstruct justice.
We have to draw a line in the sand: foreign nationals who commit crime, including facilitating the murder of our own people, must be removed from the country.
The truth is that Henry’s murder lies downstream of a much deeper and perverse ideology that has entrenched anti-white racism into the very fabric of our institution.
For thirty years now, a succession of Tory and Labour governments have imposed a sprawling regime of political correctness, hate speech laws, speech codes, and ‘diversity, equality and inclusion’ (DEI) policies, much of which is code for discriminating against white people.The end result, as a whistleblower from Hampshire police, the same authority that responded to Henry Nowak, made clear to journalist Alison Pearson this week, is that the police are now told to respond to different ethnic groups in different ways, while police officers themselves are promoted and evaluated not on the basis of their performance but, crudely, on the basis of their race and ethnicity.
Only yesterday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer once again told the British people and the country “there is no such thing as two-tier policing”. Yet, this morning, policy chiefs openly say they will review guidance, published by the National Police Chiefs’ Council, that specifically advises police officers to treat ethnic minorities differently.
This is not treating all people equally before the law. This is not a politically neutral police force. And this is not colour-blind anti-racism, of the sort that motivated an earlier generation of civil rights activists, such as Martin Luther King.
This is blatantly biased, politically compromised, two-tier policing that has clearly decided to prioritise minorities over the majority. It is pro-minority, anti-majority. And this is precisely how you end up, downstream of this ideology, with police officers concluding that the most important thing of all is not trying to help save somebody’s life but handcuffing somebody (wrongly) accused of racial abuse.
And now this ideology — which has been imposed on our schools, universities, National Health Service, the BBC, and more — is having devastating effects.It’s hideous consequences are visible not just in the shocking murder of Henry Nowak but the grooming gang scandal, the Southport atrocity, the Nottingham stabbings, and the Manchester Evening News Arena bombing.
All these shocking incidents could either have been stopped completely, or had their damage minimised, were it not for public officials feeling far more concerned about potentially being accused of “racism” than actually doing their job.The security guard in Manchester. The social workers, police officers, and councillors across Labour-run councils across northern England. The mental health worker in the case of Axel Rudakubana. The medical professional in Nottingham. And now the police officers who responded to Henry Nowak, all of whom had been influenced by endless ‘race action plans’, mandatory ‘anti-racism training’, DEI programmes, and a wider national culture that prioritises the anti-racism taboo above everything else.
Resist Comment.
For those of us who want to acknowledge this difficult truth, the path ahead is clear. We need to root out the ‘Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion’ agenda from our taxpayer-funded institutions. We need to overturn the blatant politicisation of not only the police but our schools, universities, health service, and government institutions, all of which define themselves as ‘anti-racist’ organisations, meaning they are politically compromised and openly biased against the majority in favour of minorities.
And we need to get back to being a country that treats everybody equally and fairly before the law, irrespective of their race and ethnicity.