@BBCNewsnight@vicderbyshire So he hasn’t a clue what the answer is and evades.
You should have held his feet to the 🔥 until he said something meaningful as it would have been wrong. 😑
This is awful. The last ever Denby Pottery going to the kiln. Why is there not uproar? Where’s the government in this?? We all have Denby in our homes, in family heirlooms, as our history and now it’s closing through lack of support, such a sad sad day. #SaveDenby@denbypottery
This past week, on a test bed in Britain, a Rolls-Royce jet engine ran at full take-off power on pure hydrogen, putting out water vapour instead of carbon.
Nobody on Earth had managed it before. It is the sort of thing that ought to stop the country in its tracks, and it will be forgotten by the weekend.
Leave aside the recent paroxysms of renewed net-zero insanity from Derelict Ed and the pervasive atmosphere of offended envy that greets much homegrown achievement nowadays in Britain. This engineering is a wonder, and it's British to the bone.
We gave the world the jet engine in the first place - Frank Whittle, a Coventry man and an RAF officer, patented it in 1930 while the Air Ministry assured him it was a curiosity. Rolls-Royce is today one of perhaps three firms anywhere that can build a large aero engine at the outer edge of the possible, and it has just done what most of the industry swore was twenty years away.
As usual, you marvel at how little the people who govern us had to do with it. The engineers in Derby are world-class; the stewardship above them is third-rate. They pulled off a global first while paying the most expensive industrial electricity in the developed world to keep the power on over the bench - a weight no German, American or Gulf rival has to carry. We produce frontier brilliance on the shop floor and fritter it away at the despatch box, and we have done for two generations.
That is the maddening shape of modern Britain: brilliance from below, sub- (or, indeed, ultra-) mediocrity from above. The people here who actually make things are still among the best in the world; the state that is meant to back them treats a firm like Rolls-Royce as a photocall today and a takeover target tomorrow, and prices its energy as though it would prefer the next plant were built in Texas.
Progress starts from the other end. Give these people what every rival government gives its champions and we beg ours to do without: the cheap, abundant power their competitors already enjoy, a supply chain built around them, and a state that guards a national asset rather than auctioning it. The hard part of a British revival - the talent, the nerve, the engineering - is already done, and was done again this week, by people who deserve a far better country than the one currently sitting above them.
We just taught an engine to breathe fire and exhale water. The least we owe the men and women who managed it is a government and a state as brilliant as they are.
So it turns out the 999 call that was released wasn't the full call. This is the full call which is 12 minutes long, the version that was released had a lot of bits taken out. Now why would they do that 🤔. Notice the emphasis on it being an attack on a brown person and they want immediate action. Also the mention that they were restraining Henry. The call handler also says that an ambulance is on its way due to Henry bleeding from his mouth. I've had to share it in 3 parts as it wont let me share the full length version. Part 1 👇
White Mountains, New Hampshire. An early start on a guided tour for the vulnerable Bicknell’s Thrush. However, a big change in the weather overnight meant we had real difficulties finding them. Out of 9 people only 2 of us saw one but we all heard a couple of them.
My final Catharus thrush ✔️
@AlistairCarns And thanks to YOUR PARTY our veterans are being prosecuted in Northern Ireland.
Why didn’t you vote against this? Zero conscience nor principles. Typical Liebour.
Shame on YOU and your rotten party.
🚨 EXCL: A media company that made substantial donations to Andy Burnham’s mayoral election campaigns later received at least £338,400 in taxpayer-funded contracts from the Greater Manchester authority that he runs
I have written to Hampshire Police:
1) The body-cam footage directly contradicts the public statement made by Deputy Chief Constable Robert France.
DCC France claimed officers lacked "all of the information" and that Henry's injuries were hidden and internal.
The footage shows the opposite.
Before officers even handcuffed Henry, they were explicitly warned by a the murderer’s father that he had a "mouth full of blood" and couldn't hold himself up.
Henry himself clearly tells officers: "He stabbed me, I've been stabbed, I can't breathe."
The arresting officer's response?
"I don't think you have mate."
Henry was dragged across a driveway, handcuffed as a suspect rather than treated as a victim, and died minutes later. Judge Mousley KC’s sentencing remarks confirm Henry had a "clearly visible facial wound."
DCC France’s statement is misleading, indefensible, and a potential breach of Police Conduct Regulations.
2) DCC France’s statement implies that the police considered it justifiable to take what was claimed by an ethnic minority family as absolute fact.
Upon being presented with a man that has a "mouth full of blood", that "keeps dropping side to side" and repeats "I've been stabbed, l've been stabbed, I can't breathe, the arresting officer's response was "I don't think you have mate."
Attending officers had more than enough information to treat Henry as the victim, not the suspect.
Hampshire Police’s "Race Action Plan" embeds anti-white racism in its operations, which today’s reports in The Times reveal has left rank-and-file officers feeling "controlled and pressured."
The Police Race Action Plan, launched under the Tory Government, demands that Police Officers “(do) not treat everyone the same”, nor be “colour blind”.
The public deserves to know:
How has this plan operationalised policing?
We need answers.
WE WILL NOT LET THIS REST
As we mark the 82nd anniversary of D-Day, we remember all those who sacrificed, including the 98 fallen heroes whose names were recently added to the British Memorial in Normandy.
We will remember them.
Pakistani Muslim nonces a girl, gets two years.
21 year old British kid angry that police helped kill a British kid throws a traffic cone, it hits nobody, gets 3-5 years.
But remember, there's no two-tier policing.
On the 58th anniversary of my dad’s assassination, I’m remembering moments like this: touch football on Cape Cod with my siblings — David, Kathleen, Courtney, and me. #GetOutside#LiveRealLife
Henry Nowak died the same way a civilization dies: abandoned, handcuffed by authorities who neither trusted nor cared for him, and accused of hate crimes he did not commit. His murder is as tragic as it is enraging. He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrants, many of whom despise the West and the people who love it.
Henry was far from the first to so needlessly lose his life, and I fear he won’t be the last. Each time a life like his is lost, the proper response—the only response—is righteous anger. One of the most important things the Trump administration has proven to the world is that stopping the flow of mass migration and defending national sovereignty is a matter of political will and leadership. Anything else is an excuse.
It is because we love the West that we want to preserve it. We love our civilization. We love our country. We love our children. And nobody—nobody—should ever die the way that Henry Nowak died. May God comfort those who loved him, and may God rest his soul.