An 18-year-old, identified as Justin Veronneau, has been charged with first-degree murder after OPP Const. Tarun Bali was killed in the line of duty near Hearst, Ont.
Police say the 29-year-old officer was struck by a vehicle while investigating an incident on Tuesday.
An 18-year-old, identified as Justin Veronneau, has been charged with first-degree murder after OPP Const. Tarun Bali was killed in the line of duty near Hearst, Ont.
Police say the 29-year-old officer was struck by a vehicle while investigating an incident on Tuesday.
An 18-year-old, identified as Justin Veronneau, has been charged with first-degree murder after OPP Const. Tarun Bali was killed in the line of duty near Hearst, Ont.
Police say the 29-year-old officer was struck by a vehicle while investigating an incident on Tuesday.
We are hearing reports of mobs in Belfast used lists showing where migrants lived. Thankfully, no one has died but many are traumatised. For Sikhs, this evokes painful memories of November 1984, when organised mobs used lists to target Sikh families.
https://t.co/gurY1uIa4q
To summarise: 1) the murder weapon was illegal (and not a kirpan). 2) No Sikh or anyone else is legally permitted to use a kirpan in self-defence. 3) Anyone can carry a knife legally if the intention sits within UK law. 4) Tommy Robinson and others on the right have condemned anti-Sikh racism. 5) Standing against mass uncontrolled illegal immigration does not mean you are racist. 6) Those saying that all Sikhs, who legally live in the UK, should return to India are possibly falling for a psyop. 7) Misunderstanding about the Sikhs triggers division, which furthers various undemocratic agendas such as digital ID.
Tomorrow I'm going the Mike Graham Show (I've been invited because I've publicly opposed anti-Sikh racism in the light of Henry Nowak's brutal murder)
To be clear, the murder of Henry Nowak was a horrific crime and the killer deserves life in prison (as a minimum).
What should NOT happen is the demonising an entire peaceful community.
The kirpan is a recognised article of the Sikh faith. UK law provides a defence for carrying one for genuine religious reasons. It does not give Sikhs any special right to use force or to use a kirpan in self-defence.
The evil man convicted of murdering Henry Nowak was also convicted of possessing a bladed article in public. The weapon used in the attack has since been identified as a 21 cm pesh kabz (Persian/Afghan fighting dagger), not a traditional Sikh kirpan. The court said it was illegal for him to have been carrying that weapon.
As a former headteacher, I spent years facilitating Forest School sessions, lawfully carrying fixed-blade whittling knives to teach children outdoor learning skills. I continue to take a six inch knife to the woods with my children for the same reason today. Additionally, families lawfully transport carving knives to outdoor barbecues (eg. to the beach or the woods etc). Chefs carry kitchen knives to work every day. The law has always recognised that context and purpose matter. In the UK, if we can show there is a good reason to be carrying a knife, we are allowed to do so.
My concern is that we could be stepping into a trap.
After every tragedy, the public understandably demands that politicians "do something". Too often the answer is another restriction and another erosion of civil liberties (just remember how stupid that got during Covid). Today the debate is about the kirpan. Tomorrow it could be the bushcraft knife, the camping knife or the carving knife in a picnic basket. I wouldn't put it past the UK's nanny state to demand that we only carry plastic knives to the beach, when camping, or even at lunch in a cafe.
We should not exchange our liberty for the illusion of perfect safety.
I'm also aware of the increasing tendency to judge entire groups and to generalise them. White people who question illegal immigration are often labelled "far right" extremists (I've been called that myself). Many Jewish people are assumed to support every action of the Israeli government when it comes to Gaza (hence the rise in anti-Semitism). Muslims are automatically linked to Islamist extremism (even if they're against it entirely). Now it's ordinary Sikhs who are being viewed with suspicion.
Tommy Robison has publicly condemned racism towards the Sikhs (and yet MSM are silent about that). Andrew Bridgen has released an excellent statement in defence of the Sikh community (again, silence from the media). On the left, Owen Jones has condemned racism towards the Sikhs. Why isn't the government and media praising them for this shared view?
It would appear that government and MSM would prefer to keep us locked in our tribes and for our tribes to be at war with one another. The wider public can then scream for a solution, which will come in the form of digital ID and other attacks on our civil liberties.
The voices that are getting amplified are those of the genuine racists (like they forgot we fought the Nazis in WW2), and of idiots like Bobby Singh (who doesn't represent the Sikhs and is winding everyone up with his nonsense).
Let's not get played again and fall for the latest psyop. The globalists would love us to be at war with one another, instead of looking up at who's pulling the strings (and then collectively resisting the erosion of our hard-won civil liberties).
An 18-year-old, identified as Justin Veronneau, has been charged with first-degree murder after OPP Const. Tarun Bali was killed in the line of duty near Hearst, Ont.
Police say the 29-year-old officer was struck by a vehicle while investigating an incident on Tuesday.
This is what Harman Singh Kapoor thinks of white working-class people:
“Today, I’m in a lavish hotel in London, and a white man is about to come and polish my shoes. I told him that he would be recorded, but he refused. It’s fine. The white man will come to polish my shoes, and I will send you the photo. Jai Bharat (Victory to India).”
Hindutva RSS bottom feeding paid provocateur Harman Kapoor formerly known as Harman Chopra @kingkapoor72 pictures have surfaced showing his cosplay as a Sikh to tarnish the faith.
Also a little snippet to remind us what he thinks of English folk