How Anti-Racism Became Institutional Racism The Henry Nowak Tragedy Is Not an Isolated Incident When an Allegation Matters More Than a Life Why was Novak Arrested?
Raw Transcript:
Horrifying body cam video has been released by the police in the UK on Henry Nawak, an 18-year-old.
Put the hand in the cuff, mate.
And the video basically shows that in the UK, an allegation of racism is much worse than murder. It
demands more of the attention of the police and shows you just how bankrupt the UK is becoming in its morality and
in its values. One accusation and a dying boy bleeding on the ground is handcuffed,
having been stabbed five times. But once that accusation of racism comes around, nothing else matters. We're going to
cover this video, analyze it, and more of what else is going on after the attacks on the police yesterday as well,
including remarks by Starmer and by Farage. This episode is brought to you by the Warriors of Tiana Men's Retreat.
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would love to see you there. Now, let's get into this.
Well, I'm sure you've already seen the video on this. If not, we're going to break this down a little for you and dissect what is actually happening
throughout this video. I think there's a lot that can be seen and understood if we just stop at certain points in the video and talk about what is going on.
And keep in mind as we're looking at this, you you have a a police force that has been completely re-educated on
racism and other offenses, right? uh completely trained, especially since the
George Floyd incident and all of the BLM issues. Remember those riots? Remember the burning down of the buildings?
Remember the killings, the beatings.
None of that, of course, is going to happen in this circumstance. But the UK adopted much of that BLM movement if you as you recall with the statues and the
protests. Uh there were a number of people harmed. We'll go over that. But the mentality of the police as they come
to this scene and understand because of a phone call by the brother of the the murderer
saying that there was a racial problem, a racial event that had happened. There is immediate belief to the point that
with the allegation alone, a short allegation, they take the handcuffs and arrest the
man, the boy, the 18-year-old boy that is laying on the ground dying. It's insane. How can you possibly trust this
police force at all? And this isn't an isolated event. So, let's take a look at this video. I want to analyze what's going on here. Just a few points here.
It's a short video obviously, but but I think there's some things we need to understand. First of all, what is happening is going to happen under the
the culture, under the training, under the policies of what was pushed through during the George Floyd period, right?
So, this is you remember that with BLM and and all of the riots and death and and mayhem and destruction and buildings
4 minuteson fire, all of these things, it it moved to the UK, right? because you have BLM and its uh uh brothers and sister
organizations that want to have that have the same agenda as BLM does. A Marxist revolution is what BLM is all about and they say it themselves.
They uh they are also organizing and and making havoc in the UK, right? And so
there are the government makes all of these changes in the police departments and they have certain training that they have to go through and and and and
remember that the UK does not have a first amendment. We we are so blessed in the US compared to the UK because they
they do not have a first amendment. And there are several things that have happened where where that laws that have been passed that stifle speech,
including hate speech and opposition to certain things, you could get a knock on
the door from the police department. So this is the environment that these police officers are working in. They
make arrests all the time for what is said online and they have been trained to be very very serious about accusations about race.
Just a reminder here the brother of the murderer Vicram Digua is the one who called and said that there was a racial event that had happened. So this is the,
you know, once this is in, okay, all those protocols, all those policies that the police are trained for are now put in place and they understand what they
probably have to do. They need to arrest the perpetrator, the racial racist perpetrator. And that's exactly what
they're going to do is they ignore the entire scene. They do not even try to check for the stab wounds uh of the man
laying on the floor saying nine times that he can't breathe. That's the stage that is set here.
All right.
He keeps dropping side to side. So I'm just trying to keep him set up.
He's got a mouth full of blood. I don't want him. He was on the bin on the other side of this.
He's jumped over these fences and stuff like that. He came over this fence.
Okay. So, this is what's uh yeah, he probably was running for his life. Uh but understand how many people are here, right? Just take a look at this.
And he's away, mate.
He's obviously he's falling from there. He slipped from there, mate. What's your name, mate?
Okay, so again, what's the scenario here? You have other people around Vikram Digwis, the murderer,
that are lying for him, right? They are supporting the narrative to the police. They know what has
happened. They know that Digwa has had has had a a large knife and that he stabbed this guy. They know the narrative.
7 minutesHuh? Has anyone been hurt other than him?
Yeah. Me. My brother. He took my turban off. So I grab on my head. Are you injured?
Yeah. Yeah. I've got swollen eye. Little Okay. Look at that. swollen eye that you can't even see on camera. He's
been injured. Oh, okay. The guy who's not white has been injured and he's the
one with the racial accusation. We know what's going on here, right? We know what's going on.
All right, let's get you out of there, shall we? I was involved.
What's happened to you? All right. You've been stabbed. Whereabouts? I don't think you have, mate.
I don't think you have, mate. Now, remember this guy has not even looked.
That's his first response. Again, this is a systemic issue. This is not just his police, this policeman. I maybe if
this guy was more heroic, he would have done what was right, but all of the other police officers are doing the same
thing. It's not just this guy, right? There is a certain mindset, a certain worldview, policies, procedures,
and training that say if this guy has has caused a racial incident, if he has said something, maybe hurt this guy to
put a little bit of a red mark on it above his eyebrow, then then we know what we need to do.
Get this guy into cuffs and take him in as soon as we can and disregard the entire situation.
And then I'm going to There they go. right away. Hand. No one's watching.
I can't breathe. Put the hand in the cuff, mate.
This is I can't breathe. Okay, so again, this is the exact thing that George Floyd said.
This guy says it nine times. I can't breathe. I've been stabbed. I've been stabbed. I've been stabbed. And they
don't even check because this guy's a racist, obviously.
and and that is what's the most important thing. In fact, we're not even going to check because he we know who this guy is and we know the policy
around this and we're going to put him into into into in handcuffs immediately regardless of his
situation. We're not going to assess the problem. We're not going to react to the guy that says he can't breathe.
It it's th this is this is a flash point and a clear understanding of the state of
policing in the UK. And I'm going to give you support for that in a minute here.
Sy's been stabbed since you think in the face. I know. But we have to check, don't we?
In the face.
We have to check, don't we? Not pulling back. I'll keep you on your side, mate.
What's your name, mate? At the moment, you are under arrest.
That's for assault. So, you do not have to say anything. May harm defense. If you do not make your own question later of court, anything you do say may be given an evidence. All right.
Okay. I want to stop for a second. What is he being arrested for? What is he being arrested for?
He's going to be sick, I think.
He obviously doesn't look good. He's going to be sick. No checking. We're not going to look for a staff.
Yeah. Um, we've got this male. He just been beat up. Be able to get an ambulance, please.
Wow. Um, very disturbing. Obviously, I don't see how anyone can
say that this isn't disturbing. I I this is simply another symptom of what the UK is going through, what they're
transitioning to. What is their transition? Their transition is to totalitarianism.
Their transition is to a highly woke enforced policy, procedure, and laws.
But wokeism is dead right now. Many of us have already seen this and and understand what is happening. There's some new events that have happened
recently in response to this. Now, of course, they do take Vic take Vicram Digua into uh custody eventually after
uh Henry Nak dies. This was interesting for what the police are saying now. And he is tried and he is convicted and he's
going to prison for at least 21 years to life.
So, there's some justice in their justice system still. Amazing. However, at the time of this recording, all of
those police officers are still working except for one. One resigned. I believe it's the woman. The others, the other
three are all still working. No suspension as far as we can see anywhere. No relief of duty, no firing
anybody for this. And remember this body cam has been around since December of 2025 when now dies.
So you start thinking about well what what does this mean for the UK? What do the UK residents think about this? They see everything that's starting to happen
here. Here is a question. Have you lost complete trust in the police in the UK?
I I'll be honest. I think about it. I've been to the UK. I think about walking around and finding myself in some situation somewhere
and understanding that I really have no rights whatsoever, especially if it's a racial event and and anything that might be said, in
fact, they've already stated based on um certain things. This is the EU also, by the way, that if they find social media,
even if you're from out of the country, you could be arrested or kicked out of the country based on your tweets, right?
So that's a question. Do you have trust in the in the police department and any of the police departments in the UK
based on this and based on so many other things and the trends that are happening there in the UK? It is very obviously
pull your head out of the sand. It is very obviously an agenda. This is not just oh they're just kind of trying to
be nice uh to certain people. There is a very clear-cut agenda happening in the
UK and throughout Europe. Here is Kier Starmer's words. Not rage.
And let me be clear, we will ensure anyone found engaging in disorder meets the full force of the law as we have done before.
Yeah, they we saw this, right? We saw this at Tommy Robinson's um um at any type of protest against
immigration here. We've seen the full force of the law. We saw the full force of the law here with Nawak with Henry Nawak.
What we didn't see was the full force of the law during the riots, the BLM riots in 2020 in the UK, the defacing of statues.
Kier Starmer was a part of advocacy for the BLM movement. Let's keep going.
But no matter the pain we feel, there is no justification for more violence and disorder.
The attacks directed towards police officers in Southampton last night were okay. So in Southampton, there were attacks at the police station
and there was a little violence and there was, let's call it disorder. There was a big protest, but you never see this come up as a problem that Starmer
comes out and talks about if it's anybody else, any other racial group.
15 minutesThere's no calls for no violence. It's always let's listen to what they have to say or if you're going to try and stop
them or if you're doing something in the same regard in terms of a a protest, we're going to pull you away. You're waving a British flag. You're getting yanked. There's plenty of video on this.
disgraceful and completely unacceptable.
This is a time for serious work, not rage. What is that work?
And let me be clear, does not will ensure anyone found engaging in disorder meets the full force of the law, of course, as we have done before.
As long as it's on one side, no matter the pain we feel, there is no justific. Okay, now we'll go over to Neil Farage.
Following the horrendous circumstances of Henry Novak's death, can I urge the prime minister to consider this? It is
now clear to growing millions in this country that we're living under two tier policing.
There's no question about this. I mean, people could fight against this. It's all political. It It is very much two-tier policing. instructions that are
given to police officers from police bosses are clear and written down in
ink. It says you must treat different ethnic groups in different ways.
This is exactly what happened. Apart from the apart from the the upset and the anger at the circumstances of his death, the anger that you saw spilling
out in Southampton last night
condemn it. All right. Did these individuals who are asking for this condemning this, did they condemn the BLM riots?
Now, I would say the right thing to do here, regardless of the side that you're on and regardless of what the other side has said, is you condemn any violence,
not the protesting though, right? You condemn any violence and which is in danger. condemn the violence
which is in danger of getting considerably worse.
If the public lose trust it condemn it.
If the public lose trust in being treated fairly by the police, can he take some action? End this divisive
practice of two-tier poling and make sure that all British citizens are treated the same. Okay. So the the the
opposition here is is saying uh let's you know condemn the violence and he should fine condemn the violence but really what they're trying to do is move
the narrative. They're trying to move it away and and so the point isn't what happened with the police officers with
Henry Novak. The point is wow look at these protesters uh coming at in Southampton at the police department.
They're moving it all to that side.
And that's where the narrative will go with the mainstream media and and the and the British press. It's going to be about the opposition. It always is. When
I say the opposition, I mean the opposition to their agenda.
I mean, what do you do? What do you call a class running a country? Right?
There's a certain elitist class here that is running the UK and the EU, right? What do you call a class that's running a country who has systematized
the allegation of racism into worse than murder or dying? That is their values
hierarchy currently. Where is Britain's morality today? They see this as a morality. Don't mistake that. They're
not just going out and being evil, trying to turn things on its head.
They're turning things on its head because they want a different morality.
They value different things from traditional western civilization and from Christianity. And this is not an
isolated event. Don't look at this like, oh, the just some bad police officers.
This is not an isolated event. I remember learning more about UK and free speech and wokeism there in the UK in
2016. Do you remember a man named Mark Meum?
and online he went uh he had his handle was Count Dankula, right? Count Dankula.
And he's kind of this right-wing dude, right? And he's from Scotland. And and he was he would post things that are
pretty right-wing, right? So in 2016, he uploaded a video as a joke in which he taught his girlfriend's pug, his dog,
her dog, to respond to phrases such as see Kyle, right, by raising its paw. So he was training the dog to do these
stupid funny things, right? He was arrested.
He was arrested and prosecuted. And in 2018, he was convicting convicted under what is called section 127 of the UK's
Communication Act of 2003, right? This is of 2003. Why? Because he was sending a grossly offensive message via a public communications network.
This was on uh I believe was on Twitter at the time. So for training the dog to be ridiculous and do the sigh hyle
raising his his his paw, he was arrested and convicted by the law. And I remember seeing that and saying, "Whoa, I don't agree with this guy in a lot of other
things that he says, but this was just a joke." And imagine a police state that that
will arrest you for doing something like this. There are a few different laws in the UK that are used for speech as an
example. And this goes right along with what happened here with Henry Novak. The Malicious Communications Act of 1998,
1988 criminalized certain threatening or distressing communications. So that sometimes is used, but those are usually extreme. We talked about the
Communications Act of 2003 uh and section 127 of that act which makes it an offense to send messages
that are grossly in offensive, indecent, obscene, or menacing through public communication networks, right, through
social media. So, people have to be very careful and walk on eggshells whenever they're going to put something on social
media. Well, was this a one-off with Mikum and his example of his dog, of his girlfriend's dog? No. The last data
shows that there are roughly 33 arrests a day for this, for saying the wrong thing online.
So, we need to understand that the UK and and America have very different free speech traditions. And the UK's seems to be spiraling out of control right now.
Going back to 2023, then the last time we have a full account of these arrests, there were 12,183
arrests under section 127 and section one of the Malicious Communications Act.
22 minutesGoing further to this tyrannical watch out what you say or we're going to arrest you and and make sure that you
never say these things again. Going to that type of a culture. Remember this adding to the culture of the police departments in in the UK. One police
department decided that they were going to have a little fun and show what they hire some women, their police officers to do, and that is to go out and pretend
they're jogging. And as they jog, if there were any cat callers, well, they would get information on those individuals.
Um, my name is PC Abby Haywood. I work out of North Division. So, I'm on Runny Me safer neighborhood team. So the change I'd like to see is for people to
recognize that it's not right. It's not just a small act. It's a thing that
can make someone feel really quite uncomfortable.
Okay. So the police are hiring these women uh sending out police officers to
to work as undercover joggers and to uncover the cat callers in the UK.
So I think it's important. Sorry police are taking it so serious. It's one of our forces for force priorities. Um and for me that force priorities
makes me feel proud to work for sorry police because for me it's such a personal experience and I know for a lot of other if not all other women who
experience it. So I feel empowered to be a part of such a such an operation and work sorry police when their force priority is to tackle vorg.
So so the UK police this is just another example. There's examples all over the place about how these how these woke
police departments are trying to instill totalitarianism. It's like sending out the little KGB joggers
to to uh find out, you know, who are the cat callers here? What are the problems?
We're going to set them right. We're going to go out and and tell them what they really need to do and what they need to be. And I'm not saying cat calling is good, but to send the police, this is one of their priorities.
A really upside down world.
I want to go to an article that uh Constantin wrote. He is British. He is was born in Russia, but uh his family
migrated to the UK. And uh he says some very interesting things here about this
event with Henry Novak. Henry Novak, he says, "How anti-racism gave you racism."
Remember anti-racism and Ibram Kendy, uh, that was so popular, right? He had raised hundreds of millions of dollars
and I think it was hundreds of millions of dollars and was found out that he was embezzling all a lot of this money. There was his whole little anti-racist empire fell apart.
But he came out with another book recently. His book, How to be an anti-racist, was actually featured at BYU by the
25 minutesKennedy Center. And all the students got to learn about anti-racism because of the prof the the the
departments and and professors that were pushing this message of anti-racism on video, by the way, which I have
number of these professors talking about how great anti-racism is. Not just don't be racist, be kind to other races.
That's not what it is. It is an absolute woke ideology that is in and of itself racist.
And Kendi admits this.
It is the most bankrupt racial morality and approach to racial engagement that
that you're ever going to find. But it has had a big effect obviously on the UK. So I want to read Constantin's words
here. He says, "Digua was convicted of murder last week and sentenced to life imprisonment. Hampshire police issued a
public apology." Yeah. The OPC launched an investigation.
We'll see where that goes. And a country that had spent the better part of a decade being lectured about the unique and unforgivable evil of racism was left
to contemplate what it what its anti-racism had actually produced. Well, this is what it has produced.
He says the answer, if you're willing to look at it honestly, is this. A new form of racism, a bureaucratic racism, an
actually institutionalized racism, a racism so thoroughly laundered through the language of progress and inclusion
that the people enforcing it genuinely believe they are on the right side of history. And that's what I want to make clear,
right? It's a new morality that destroys goodness that destroys It is a morality
to them. They believe they're doing this at the morality is basically driven by empathy and compassion and it's misplaced.
And then he gets to something here.
Remember this guy is from Britain. He knows the the area and the culture very well. Keeps his ear to the ground on these things. He says, "To understand how we got here, you have to understand
what the postfloy reckoning actually did to British institutions." This is key, especially the police. The response to Floyd's death wasn't merely emotional.
It was ideological. There's no question about this. And it was systematic.
Forces across the country underwent mandatory diversity and anti-racism training. The principal drilled into officers. By the way, many corporations
have gone through this, right? Mandatory training on all this. We had this in church-owned uh uh subsidi church-owned
corporations. Same thing. They had the church-owned corporations. Every one of them had a they just took it off earlier
this year or beginning of last year. It was uh a DEI statement on the front of every one of these uh corporations that
were run and or that were owned by the church. And you saw it on at BYU. You saw DEI statements all over the place.
They were a little tempered, but not completely. And you still can find some of those in certain departments and colleges at BYU.
The reason I bring up BYU, remember I love BYU. The reason I bring it up is because I want you to see how this enters things. This is obviously a UK
incident, but but this is something this virus enters into institutions and completely changes them. The principle,
he says, drilled into officers explicitly or implicitly was that accusations of racism must be taken with
the utmost seriousness. that the historic failure of institutions to believe minority victims of racism was
the original sin. This is exactly what Kendi goes through. Very manipulative in his postmodern use of language.
He calls this not racist. All right, the notra racist because when someone is accused of being racist and then they
say, "I'm not racist." He was weaponizing this. and the notra racists are racist is basically what he was
saying. So the historic failure of institutions to believe minority victims of racism was
the original sin and it needed atoning for. Now this is the important thing to understand. Again this is how the virus works and and I agree with him on this.
He says I want to be precise here because precision matters. I am not saying that the officers who attended the scene that night are bad people. No.
No, but they've got the virus or that they set out to let Henry Novak die. I believe in fact the opposite.
That they were following the spirit of their training, their training and of the culture that had been built around
them in good faith over years. That is exactly the issue.
All built around a false compassion, untethered empathy from any kind of truth. Truth doesn't matter. The
accusation does. A system that taught them in effect that an allegation of racism is a trump card that overrides
normal investigative procedure, normal medical common sense, and normal human judgment. It's the change of values.
Now, this is what they're going to say, and this is already happening now. This is already happening. And and this is understand that we know what's going to happen because we know the pattern.
So don't say, "Oh, Greg, you don't know how this is." No, we already know what is going to happen with this. This is what Constantin says. They will not
acknowledge what they built the new system. They will say that this was an isolated failure of individual officers,
not a systemic problem because they don't want to change anything.
They will say that raising this case is itself a form of racism,
an attempt to undermine legitimate anti-racism efforts by dwelling on an edge case. They will say, as they always
say, right? They always say that the real problem is that we haven't gone far enough. We're not listening enough.
So understand what has taken place here.
What you again when you capture the institutions I get people to tell me all the time well wokeness is dead or or this this
kind of problem this progressive problem is dead look at what happens in the US and the the government is kind of going after all these things and that that's
true that's true but see the institutions are already captured they're holding back and restraining to
some degree because of government pressure but it's not gone they have infected all of the institutions and the next round is going to be much worse.
Right? The forces across the the the UK, they underwent mandatory diversity and anti-racism training. It is drilled into
them. They may already be at a point of no return. Honestly, I the UK might be at a point of no return.
Uh because they've lost the institutions just like the United States has. I don't think we're at a point of no return because of our founding documents. That
can help us quite a bit. and the First Amendment, but the UK doesn't have that. So, the
the UK not having that, it it makes it just that much easier to fall into a police state over what is said or even
thought, what is placed on a on a tweet or an Instagram post.
So, we'll see where all of this goes. I would not be optimistic about things.
You've got the power of the law, the government behind continuing to push this type of an agenda. I think you're going to see a lot more instances that
are very similar to this. We already have. Remember the young girls in Scotland that were fighting off with it with their own swords? young girls to an
older sister trying to protect her young sister from men that were following her around and and in an environment where
these these young girls are at times abducted and groomed and have horrible
things happen to them. This is not an issue about race. It's not an issue about race unless the government makes it about race. It is about decency.
It is about the law. The color of your skin should not matter if if you've broken the law. But it seems to matter
quite a bit in the UK. The new narrative is now that the police are saying that Henry Novak would have died anyway. And
I think that that is true. I do think that that's true. As if somehow they are absolving theelves of this whole situation. Didn't matter anyway. No, it
shows very precisely a sickness that exists in the UK. Are
the people going to be strong enough to turn it around? The question is, how long do you allow it? How long do you
tolerate it? And what do you do to reverse it? Thanks for listening.
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