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.
"According to Jesus we're supposed to turn the other cheek when we're hurt, right?"
"Yes. In Jesus' time, a person that backhanded your cheek was treating you as lesser. So you turn the other cheek, forcing them to strike you as an equal."
"What does that have to do with immigration?"
"The contention is that immigrants are allowed to treat us as lesser because they come from incompatible cultures and attack us. But we can't then tell them no, because that's 'racist'."
"That seems contrary to what Jesus taught."
"It is, and amazingly so. Non-Christians often seize on the idea that Jesus advocated for non-violence to tell Christians to shut up and take what's being done to them."
"Are you sure that's what Jesus taught? It's not like you could ask him personally. He predates you by a millennium, right?"
"Jesus makes the same point with the story of giving away your cloak, and with going the extra mile. In the latter's case, a Roman soldier could make an Israelite carry anything like a pack mule for up to a mile. It was a humiliation. But Jesus told them to carry it another mile, to treat the Roman as you would a friend, which would both shame them and force them to treat you as a person instead of a mule."
"What about the cloak?"
"When you're poor and living in an ancient society, your cloak is vital for getting through the cold nights. In Jesus' time, it was common to get around this by demanding the other person give you their shirt. But if you give them the cloak as well, it is a deliberate provocation: if they take the shirt and cloak, they will be shamed by the community."
"And... the good samaritan?"
"The point was the man who was a neighbor was not the priest or the Levite, but the one who showed mercy to his neighbor. It doesn't say 'everyone is your neighbor', in fact it states the opposite rather plainly. It's your actions that make you a neighbor, NOT your ethnicity."
"So, not everyone is your neighbor?"
"The neighbor shows mercy to those who have been hurt."
"What does that have to do with immigration?"
"Nothing. They've decided it means that you must allow immigrants to raid and attack you and treat you like garbage without retaliation of any sort. You can't even say 'stop it' without being declared racist."
"Then why did he bring up Christianity at all?"
"Because he's not a Christian and doesn't understand it."
Everything he said is accurate. India is a disgusting third world country littered with garbage and filled with Izzat farmers who think scamming people out of their hard-earned money is an honorable way to live.
It isn’t. It’s as revolting as the average Indian street corner is when you drop down on Google street view.
This country exports some of the most ethno-religious tribalists imaginable to the West, who then turn around and nepotistically hire their co-ethnics at the expense of the native inhabitants of those very Western nations.
The tiny number of Indians who were already living in the US before COVID largely came here because they know this is all true and they wanted to escape it. We already brought in the “best and brightest” from the subcontinent. Anymore, and we will begin to look like this failed state ourselves.
Legal immigration to the U.S. is falling sharply in 2025 under Trump policies.
•Roughly 250,000 fewer visas issued vs. 2024
•About an 11% overall decline
Most major visa categories are down:
•Student visas: down over 100,000+ (30%+)
•Family visas: down ~27%
•Exchange / medical visas: down significantly
•Employment-based visas: also declining
•Multiple other categories also down
Exception:
•Temporary worker visas slightly increased (~+4,000)
•Visas for Chinese and Indian nationals fell by ~84,000
→ driven mainly by fewer students and skilled workers coming from those countries
The drop is policy-driven, not random:
•Expanded travel bans (19+ countries)
•Stricter vetting, including social media screening
•Paused or reduced visa interviews
•Reduced embassy staffing
Also tied to:
•Broader efforts to limit legal immigration pathways
•Administrative slowdowns and processing barriers
•For the first time in decades,
more immigrants are leaving the U.S. than entering
The debate (this is where narratives split)
Critics say:
•This hurts:
•Economic growth
•Innovation
•Universities and research pipelines
•Talent competitiveness globally
Supporters say:
•This:
•Protects American workers
•Reduces labor competition
•Forces companies to hire domestically
The U.S. is intentionally tightening legal immigration across most major pipelines, and the fight is whether that strengthens the domestic workforce or weakens long-term economic growth.
https://t.co/HzoxDLydWN