@Savsays That’s crazy. Can you imagine the precedent that might set if the defense won? It would mean schoolchildren could start bringing weapons to school …and using them. Good grief
Bro, let’s stop pretending.
Muslims make up about 25% of the entire world’s population — over 2 billion people across 50+ countries.
Japanese people? About 1.4% of the world. One single country.
Shinto exists only in Japan.
So when people say “Japan should prioritize minorities and be more accommodating to Islam,” who exactly are we talking about?
The global majority is coming to one of the world’s smallest ethnic and religious groups and demanding that Japan change its culture, food, and traditions for them.
That’s not “protecting minorities.” That’s the majority trying to colonize a tiny minority.
Japan has every right to protect its own people and culture first.
If Muslims want to live under Islamic rules, they already have dozens of countries where they can do that. They don’t need to come to Japan and turn it into another one.
It seems to me that Islamic demands for 'respect' is simply a way of trying to impose their culture on other people
Do they 'respect' British traditions ?
No, they don't.
This is one of the worst screenshots I’ve ever seen.
Look at the fucking demon claws on that woman cop as they handcuff a dying child.
This shit’s got me fucked up.
Taken from Facebook:
Kelly Hatchard
“To me, Henry wasn't a headline or a court case. He was my best friends funny, caring, cheeky son. Henry had a way of making people smile without even trying. He had so much life ahead of him, so many plans, and so much love to give. When Henry was just a baby, Lucy gave me the honour of being his godmother. Our kids, like us shared their childhood. Henry's loved ones were just normal people and we were enjoying watching our kids grow into adults, naively taking for granted that we would see all the wonderful things that life had to offer them.
On December 5th 2025, when the news broke, life as we knew it stopped.
My focus in what I want to say will always be Henry and Henry's family.
But, nothing I could ever say would come close to explaining the pain of losing Henry. But alongside the heartbreak of losing Henry has been the pain of watching one of the kindest families I have ever known have their entire world torn apart.
I was lucky enough to grow up with the family of my best friends Lucy (Henry's Mum) and Katie (Henry's aunty). The family make everyone feel welcome. Their home is filled with kindness, warmth and laughter. No matter what life throws at them they always find a way to bring light to those around them. They are generous with their time, compassionate in their hearts, and the sort of people who make others feel like family too, including me and then my children. Their laughter is infectious, their support unwavering, and their love for one another shines through in everything they do.
My heart is broken for them, a very large part of them died on the day that monster chose to rip Henry from their lives. Yet even through their darkest days they continued to be the wonderful people that they are. Their focus during these dark times was to shine a light on and raise money for the charity that has helped them.
Then, 6 months after Henry's death, the heart ache continued as they had to face the trial. Being subjected to sit in a room with the monster who brutally murdered their son and watch the lies spill so easily from his mouth. A man who has not once showed an an ounce of remorse for what he did. They endured a living nightmare.
Thinking that things could not possibly get worse, in the last few weeks they have learned that the very institution that is there to protect us not only ignored Henry's plea for help, but they sided with the monster who put him on the ground .
Henry's family learned that his last moments were not only spent so afraid of the monster who attacked him but he was then wronged and let down by the police officer who I have no doubt, Henry assumed was there to help him.
That police officer handcuffed Henry and read him his rights. The last thing my best friend's beautiful boy heard before we lost him forever.
This image, we will never ever be able to erase from our minds. Family, friends and now the world, will have seen that image and we all have to live with it forever.
Shame on the monster who took you, shame on the police officer who should have helped you and shame on the organisation that trained the police officer to side with an incorrect racist slur over a dying young man. Shame on you all!!
You treated a loving caring intelligent hardworking young man, with such disregard and disrespect. You treated Henry's family, such good people, with such dishonesty! The lies have been inforgivable !! HOW DARE YOU.
Henry deserved so much more from this life. Henry and his family have been let down so badly.
THIS COULD HAPPEN AGAIN TO ANYONE, ANYONE'S CHILD.
This has to stop now.
Henry we will fight until the end for you. The world will know your name. You changed our lives for the better for being a part of it, I believe you will now go on to change the lives of others by the legacy you will leave.
God bless you my darling 💙”
As a father of three children — two of whom are young men close in age to Henry Nowak — I write this with a heavy heart and deep professional disgust.
I served 18 years in the South African Police Service: first in a tactical unit, later in a specialised intelligence collection unit. My wife served 20 years, rising to the rank of Warrant Officer. My mother was a Forensic Officer who investigated thousands of unlawful deaths.
We know, from direct and brutal experience, what real policing looks like under the highest operational pressure.
Nothing — absolutely nothing — in that experience would ever justify failing to properly examine a clearly stabbed young man, mocking him as he lay dying, or refusing to handcuff his murderer.
@HantsPolice betrayed their badge, their community, and their oath. They represent the worst of the rot now infecting British policing.
This is not policing. This is institutional failure and moral collapse.
#JusticeForHenryNowak #UKPolicing #JusticeForHenry #ProtectOurChildren #ThinBlueLine #TwoTierPolicing
I can tell you how this encounter would have gone in our little town, with our quintessentially American police force…
Something interesting to note: Aside from a rule, American police are doctrinally far more heavily armed and also far more aggressive that British police. By that I mean the doctrine itself is more aggressive. We are more apt to detain, more apt to use force, and more apt to use deadly force as a matter of doctrine.
Yet in my experience, at least in conservative towns, those same American police are far more laid back in their interaction with non-violent offenders. And they are far more likely to laugh in someone’s face when he tries to report a “speech offense.” So we get a report of a disturbance and racist language. Two units are dispatched. We roll up.
“Hey, what’s going on, guys.”
“He was calling me this that and the other thing.”
“Okay, bud, we’ll get to that. You want to step over there with this officer right quick? You can give him your statement. Hey, man, what about you. You okay?”
“Help. I’ve been stabbed.”
“Okay, where have you been stabbed?”
“My chest. I can’t breathe.”
“Let me look at that. … Oh, wow. You have been stabbed. Three forty, detain that male. Dispatch, I need EMS for an adult male with multiple stab wounds, reporting trouble breathing. Say right here, bud! Keep your hand on that!” And the officer runs to grab a first aid kit and begins the MARCH algorithm, to include chest seals.
Meanwhile, 340 is drawing his gun. “Turn around and put your hands on your head! Do it now! Get on your knees! Both of you, down on your knees now! Face away from me! Do not ****in’ move!”
And every patrol unit not on a call converges on the scene at maximum Mach, to join in detaining everyone nearby and securing the scene for EMS.
Would that have saved Nowak’s life? Potentially, with some allowance for geography. Our little town has a typical EMS response time to a call like that of merely a few hundred seconds. Despite the severity of his pulmonary hemorrhage, EMS might very well have been able to drain and reinflate his lungs sufficient to preserve his life.
What I would draw your attention to, though, is the contrast in police attitude. The police of the UK, despite being largely unarmed and tactically useless, are bullies. They present from the first moment in gestapo-like fashion, as the face of a not only oppressive but disdainful government, very reminiscent of the agents described by Solzhenitsyn (in Gulag) in the early stages of the autocratic takeover, who, though haughty with power, are nonetheless at that stage few, and probably could have been resisted and counter-bullied by a mass-aligned population. But, as Solzhenitsyn describes, the population succumbs to the prisoner’s dilemma. No one wants to be the first to stick his neck out, the first to put his head before their batons. So, weak as they are in fact, they bully successfully.
American police are the same way in liberal enclaves, bullies, highly corrupt, but my point is that it is not their armament, or even their aggressive use of force doctrine, which makes them so. It is ideology. In countless towns across America you have police forces which are orders of magnitude more heavily armed, and orders of magnitude more violent in nature, who revel in a good fight, who yearn for it and itch for it, and yet are far less violent in practice because they aren’t bullies. They are, as Grossman calls them, sheepdogs. They like to hunt wolves, not bully sheep.
And because they fancy themselves dangerous, like Great Pyrenees among coyotes, generally, they tend to be much more relaxed even around potential offenders. The hand is ready, but the demeanor is easy. Even investigating family, we usually don’t handcuff as quickly as these officers handcuffed a man lying on the ground accused of words. We separate parties. We deescalate, we get everyone’s side of the story. We invite the suspect to surrender himself to arrest peacefully…
A Sikh man murders a British boy, he and his family blame the boy, and his mother hides the knife.
The British police handcuffed that boy and left him to die in the street.
And this is the coverage from the @BBC??
The Sikhs are the victims??
You don’t hate the media enough.
Not
Nearly
Enough.
I see my sister in Iryna Zarutska.
My daughter. My wife.
I see my brother in Henry Nowak.
My sons.
I don’t think anyone fully understand the primal rage that has just been released.
My tolerance has run out.
Henry Nowak was mortally wounded by a hostile foreigner, held down & arrested by White police because he was accused of racism by his own murderer, where he then bled out & died on the street.
This is an allegory for what is happening to European civilization on a global scale.
This is the most important image on the internet right now:
Henry Nowak’s hand cuffed.
Pale due to loss of blood.
Henry is dying.
The demonic hands of the British authorities restraining him as they coddle his migrant murderer.
Henry bleeds out as UK cops and migrants insult him
I posted the other day when this happened that this was over going into a other team's set area. I ran t&f in North Dallas from JH to Graduation. You don't go into another team's area unless invited and escorted.
We usually have our valuables, change of clothes, etc. We trust our teammates but not anyone else. Why would you? Unless a friend and always invited.
This kid knows that, ans you go there with a weapon to start something? Over wanting to invade space?
Unreal and completely avoidable. He went there to start something, who goes to a track meet in Frisco with a weapon? IYKYK
@CitizenLenz@CollinRugg There are actual studies on how the African culture and psyche is prone to mob violence and lack of impulse control. BTW, I love the dressed up, innocent pictures of the accused. But the internet is forever.