Electronic sound maker & producer in London. I donโt write pop music , I write unpopular music. PlanetRobot on Bandcamp,Spotify,Apple Music,etc ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ
Everyone's out here waiting for aliens to arrive.
WE are the aliens.
A camera we built is orbiting mars right now, staring into a crater no living thing has ever seen. crossed the void, showed up unannounced, peeked inside.
In this story we're the visitors from another world.
and honestly? kinda iconic of us ๐ช
๐The Government will introduce a digital ID system
This would be an intrusive, multi-billion-pound system that no one wants, no one voted for and has no real purpose
We're campaigning tooth & nail to reject a sweeping digital ID system | https://t.co/Y6P1zIiUsf
Henry Said Please, Brother, I Can't Breathe. Nobody Took The Knee.
Henry Nowak lay bleeding to death in the middle of a Southampton street on December 4th 2025. He had been stabbed four times with an eight inch ceremonial knife by Vickrum Digwa, a man who had told arriving police officers that Henry had racially abused him. The officers believed the lie. They handcuffed the dying eighteen year old, ignored his pleas for help and placed him under arrest. His final words were please, brother, I can't breathe. He was pronounced dead at 12.37am.
Digwa has now been found guilty of murder. His mother hid the murder weapon. His father was at the scene. The prosecutor described the racism accusation as a wicked lie about a dying man. Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary is under investigation by the police watchdog. The deputy chief constable has apologised. Henry Nowak's family will never be the same.
George Floyd died on May 25th 2020. He said I can't breathe as a police officer knelt on his neck. His death triggered global protests, the toppling of statues, a worldwide movement and politicians across the Western world taking the knee in solidarity. Keir Starmer took the knee. Angela Rayner took the knee. Premier League footballers took the knee. Corporate boards issued statements. Institutions commissioned reviews. The machinery of progressive outrage ran at full power for months.
Henry Nowak's final words were the same as George Floyd's. The institutional failure that produced his death was equally documented. The officers who handcuffed him while he bled internally did so because decades of anti-racism training had conditioned them to treat a racism accusation as the primary fact requiring response. His killer knew it and used it. The prosecutor called it his trump card.
No march. No knee. No statement from Starmer. No statement from Rayner. No institutional review of the anti-racism training that produced those officers' response. Elon Musk called it unconscionable and pledged legal action. The political establishment that mobilised for George Floyd has said nothing about Henry Nowak.
The question is not why George Floyd's death mattered. It did and the officer responsible was convicted of murder. The question is why Henry Nowak's death has produced silence from the same people, the same institutions and the same political movement that found their voice so readily in 2020.
The answer is not complicated. George Floyd's death could be made to serve the progressive narrative. Henry Nowak's cannot. His killer deployed the progressive framework, the racism accusation, as the instrument of murder. His case does not vindicate the ideology of anti-racism training. It exposes it. A young man died because the officers sent to save him had been so thoroughly conditioned by that ideology that they handcuffed him on the word of the man who had just stabbed him.
The same long march through the institutions that produced a National Police Chiefs Council declaring structural and institutional discrimination operates at all levels within British policing, a Police Race Action Plan embedding anti-racism training across every force in England and Wales, a Louise Casey report condemning the Metropolitan Police as institutionally racist and a College of Policing that redesigned its entire disciplinary framework around racial sensitivity has produced officers so conditioned by that ideology that they handcuffed a dying eighteen year old boy because his killer said the magic word. The training worked. That is the most disturbing observation of all.
Henry was a soft gentle soul who lit up a room. He was eighteen years old. He said please, brother, I can't breathe. He deserved better than the ideology that killed him and the silence that followed.
"The answer is not complicated. George Floyd's death could be made to serve the progressive narrative. Henry Nowak's cannot."
A foreign billionaire just did the job the entire British press wouldn't.
@elonmusk asked the question every newsroom in this country should have been screaming for months. Who are the officers that handcuffed a dying boy and let him bleed out in the street? Who are they, and why are they still in a job?
Not the BBC. Not Sky. Not GB News. A bloke in Texas with no stake in this country.
They had the story. They let it die. He picked it back up, called it unconscionable, and offered to fund a wrongful death lawsuit.
The answer to his question? Silence. Still.
This is Henry Nowak. First year student. Walking home from a night out with his football team. A wounded teenager telling officers he couldn't breathe, and the response was handcuffs, not an ambulance.
A boy dies like this on a British street and it should never have left the front page. It should have been the reckoning that didn't stop until someone answered for it. Instead it took a man who owes us nothing to drag it back into the light.
Not one officer named. Not one suspended. The watchdog is investigating now, and only now, because the pressure came from a website and not a single news desk in this country.
Ordinary people never needed permission to care. They raised over ยฃ40,000 for Henry at a charity football match in his memory. That is the Britain that still has a pulse. The one that doesn't wait to be told who's allowed to matter.
When the richest man on earth has to do your journalism for you, what exactly is the British press for?
So let me ask you the question they wouldn't. Did you see Henry's name on the news? Or did you have to find it here?
Henry Nowak. 18 years old. Walking home. He should have made it.