The fallout from the release of the video showing the murder of young Brit Henry Nowak at the hands of a “ceremonial knife” wielding Sikh continues.
When the police initially arrived on scene, they accepted the attacker’s claim that he was the victim of racist abuse and handcuffed the gravely wounded teenager as he bled to death. In my last report, I noted that officers from the force that utterly failed Nowak have now admitted they felt “controlled and pressured to feel certain ways” after mandatory DEI sessions that hammered home ‘white privileged’ and unconscious bias.
Now, the Sunday Times reveals that the police wanted to issue a statement implying Nowak was the aggressor.
The Sunday Times can also reveal that the force wanted to portray Nowak as the aggressor in an official statement three days after his death, but changed their wording after outrage from his grieving family….An initial police statement later that morning said: “It was reported two men had been assaulted by an unknown man.”The Nowak family, raw with grief, became concerned that a false narrative was being pushed about their son. It is understood that police told the family the next update they planned to publish, which would include the Nowaks’ tribute, would again imply that he was the initial aggressor.Officers dropped that section of the statement, which only referred to an “altercation” when published.
It is difficult to cover all the developments related to protests against the critical race theory, DEI-infused application of a two-tier system for justice and policing. The challenge is that the elite media continues to suppress news related to protests over these events, and focuses on woke takes offered by the bureaucrats and politicians who have foisted this system on their citizens.
For example, today’s hyper-partisan news focus is on British Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary David Lammy challenging Vice President JD Vance over comments linking the killing of Nowak to immigration. Apparently, it hurt our “special relationship.”
Lammy said he emphasized that multiple investigations were already underway into both the killing and the police response before telling the vice president he disagreed with his assessment.”I disagree with him. This has got nothing to do with mass migration. This young man was a Brit. Let’s be clear about that,” Lammy said.”And I said, ‘Look, Mr. vice president, you’re wrong about this.'”Lammy added that murder rates in Britain were falling and said the conversation remained cordial despite their disagreement.
The real news is playing out on social media. Across Europe, Nowak is to be remembered with a moment of silence.
Marches in Germany also commemorate Nowak’s tragic death.
Poland’s citizens set up a shrine in front of the British embassy… which was later taken down by the Brits.
However, there is little news of the depth and breadth of these events in mainstream media.
In the previous week, many asked why the police and politicians were not “taking a knee” for Nowak, as they did for the druggie George Floyd, who died while police were arresting him.
The hypocrisy was noted, and many are “taking a knee” to underscore the point that race-based policing is deeply wrong, no matter how it is practiced.
Anti-police protestors took the knee and chanted ‘I can’t breathe’ during demonstrations for Henry Nowak outside a police station in Southampton.A crowd bearing flags and megaphones gathered outside Portswood Police Station on Sunday evening to vent anger at the ‘two-tier policing’ they believe Henry was subjected to….Protestors came from across Southampton to the flash demonstration, which was announced on social media only hours before it began.Some got down on one knee as a mark of respect to Henry, and his dying words – ‘I can’t breathe’ – were chanted by the crowd.Police officers at the scene were met with hostility, with cries of ‘shame on you’ and ‘no peace, no justice’ heard.
What we are witnessing is not just a tragic killing, but the slow-motion exposure of an institutional mindset more concerned with narrative management than truth-seeking.
While officials and media allies fixate on deflecting blame and policing the “correct” interpretation, ordinary citizens across Europe are responding to what they can plainly see: a grievous failure of justice compounded by attempts to reshape the story after the fact.
The protests, the vigils, and the growing public anger are not emerging in a vacuum; they are filling the void left by a press corps unwilling to report the full picture.
Ignoring that reality does not make it disappear; it simply ensures that distrust deepens in both the politicians and the press.
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