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 wonโt be the last. Each time a life like his is lost, the proper responseโthe only responseโis 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 nobodyโnobodyโshould ever die the way that Henry Nowak died. May God comfort those who loved him, and may God rest his soul.
They told you this country has nothing to be proud of.
They were wrong. ๐ฌ๐ง
2,300 years ago, Greek explorer Pytheas of Massalia sailed to these islands. He found Cornish tin miners already trading with the ancient world, and Stonehenge, built before the pyramids of Giza. He named us Pretannike. The Painted Isles. Britain.
That's a snippet of who we were. Here is what we built:
๐ Isaac Newton, a farmer's son from Lincolnshire, gave us the laws of the universe.
โก Michael Faraday, a blacksmith's son from Surrey, made electricity usable.
๐ Edward Jenner, a country doctor from Gloucestershire, gave the world vaccination.
๐งซ Alexander Fleming discovered Penicillin, saving over 200 million lives.
๐ป Alan Turing broke the Enigma code at Bletchley Park.
๐ Charles Babbage & George Stephenson pioneered the computer and the railway.
๐ Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web. He could have patented it and become the richest person alive. He gave it away for free.
We are the ordinary people who forced the most powerful empire on Earth to end slavery. Not once, but twice:
๐ The Slave Trade Act 1807
๐ The Slavery Abolition Act 1833
Then, we sent the Royal Navy to enforce it globally.
The West Africa Squadron patrolled for 60 years. They captured 1,600 slave ships and freed 150,000 people. 7,000 British sailors died doing it. Nobody asked them to.
No other nation joined them. They did it anyway.๐ฌ๐ง๐ซก
That's a snippet of what we chose to do. Here is what we gave the world:
โ๏ธ Magna Carta (1215) & Habeas Corpus
๐๏ธ Parliamentary Democracy
๐ Common Law, now used by 80 countries and 3 billion people
๐ค The Commonwealth. 56 nations.
They weren't forced to stay. They chose to join.
We are on a mission to bring back our glorious history.
Not to pretend we never did wrong, but to show the enormous amount of right.
Every fact verifiable. Every claim true.
We are Britain. We are mighty.
Every video we make is funded by people who believe our history is worth saving.
Stand with us: https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf
Be part of us.
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ๐ฌ๐ง Before 1830, nobody had a lawn.
The rich had their grass cut by scythemen. Ordinary people had no garden worth speaking of.
Edwin Budding was an engineer in Stroud, Gloucestershire. Working in a textile mill, he noticed a machine using a cutting cylinder to trim the surface of cloth.
He looked at it.
And thought about grass.
He built a machine with a cutting cylinder mounted on a wheeled frame. Then pushed it across his garden at midnight. At midnight. So the neighbours wouldn't see.
It worked.
He patented it in August 1830.
Within twenty years the Victorian suburb was born. The striped lawn. The neat garden. The Sunday morning ritual.
Every suburban garden in America. Every cricket ground. Every football pitch. Every golf course on earth.
Traces back to one man. In Stroud. With a cloth machine. At midnight.
Right now, somewhere in the world, someone is cutting their grass. And they have no idea who Edwin Budding was.
Help us share more of our history:
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Be Part Of Us.
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
A gardener designed the largest building on Earth. He got the idea from a lily pad.
1851. Joseph Paxton, head gardener at Chatsworth House, designed the Crystal Palace.
1,848 feet long. 293,000 glass panes. Built in eight months.
The largest enclosed space on Earth.
He wasn't an architect. He was a gardener who studied the ribs of a giant lily pad and realised nature had already solved the engineering problem.
He stood his seven-year-old daughter on a lily leaf to prove its strength.
The Great Exhibition opened inside his glass palace. 100,000 objects from 25 countries. The first World's Fair. Six million people came.
But when it opened, only the rich could get in. Five shillings...
A full day's wage.
Working people could see the glass palace from the street. They couldn't walk through the door.
Then they dropped the price to one shilling.
Special trains ran from every factory town in England. Four and a half million working people walked through the doors. Seventy-five percent of every visitor.
The profits built the Victoria and Albert Museum. The Science Museum. The Natural History Museum. The Royal Albert Hall. Imperial College.
Everything on that road in South Kensington exists because a gardener had an idea and working people walked through the door.
They opened the door. Help us keep it open.
Every video we make is funded by people like you. No sponsors. No ads. Just people who believe our history is worth saving.
Be part of us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง๐ช
https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
Sources and more at https://t.co/wN9S2gRmFj
The FA wrote the rules of football in 1863.
The rules you actually play by?
A greenhouse. In Sheffield. 1858.
Two mates from the cricket club went for a walk one autumn afternoon. They wanted something to do when the cricket season ended.
So they started a football club. The first one on earth.
Their headquarters was a greenhouse. Their pitch was the field next to it. There was nobody else to play. So they split into married against singles.
Then they wrote rules. No hacking. No tripping. No holding. Free kicks. Throw-ins.
Corner kicks. The crossbar. Heading. Eleven players. Ninety minutes. Referees.
All Sheffield.
When they played London in 1866 and headed the ball, London laughed at them.
Nobody's laughing now.
In 1867 Sheffield hosted the world's first football competition. Four years before the FA Cup.
The trophy went missing for 130 years. A Scottish antiques dealer found it. Worth over ยฃ100,000 today.
When football turned professional, Sheffield refused. They chose the game over the money. And the game left them behind.
William Prest died at fifty-two. His gravestone was removed from the cemetery.
Nathaniel Creswick died in October 1917. Exactly sixty years after founding the club.
In 2004, FIFA gave Sheffield FC the Order of Merit. The only other club to receive it?
Real Madrid. Eighty thousand seats. One of the greatest clubs on earth.
Sheffield FC play in the ninth tier of English football. Two thousand seats.
Every corner kick. Every header. Every ninety minutes.
Two friends. One autumn walk. A greenhouse.
Sheffield started it all.
The beautiful game had humble beginnings. So do we. Your support keeps us on the pitch.
Be part of us.
https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
You already know Alfred The Great saved England. ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ๐
But you don't know who he actually was.
He was the fifth son. Never supposed to be king.
His four older brothers were.
One by one, the Vikings killed them all.
He suffered from a painful illness his entire life. Something that left him unable to move for days.
This was the man who was supposed to stop the Vikings.
By 878 he was hiding in a swamp.
A peasant woman scolded him for burning her bread.
She didn't know he was the king.
That's how far he'd fallen.
From that swamp he rallied every man in Wessex who still believed.
At Edington he crushed the Viking army.
Then instead of destroying them, he made peace. He baptised their king.
Drew a line across the map. Mercy over slaughter.
He built fortified towns so no one was ever more than a day's march from safety.
Built ships. Rewrote the law. Added something radical: Mercy.
He could barely read until he was twelve. When he learned, it changed him.
He translated books into English himself. All because he believed ordinary people deserved to understand the world they lived in.
He wrote: "I desired to live worthily as long as I lived, and to leave after my life, to the men who should come after, a remembering of me in good works."
The only English monarch ever called "the Great." Not Henry. Not Elizabeth. Not Victoria. Alfred.
Before him, there was no England. After him, there could be.
These stories don't tell themselves.
They survive because people like you decide they matter.
No corporate backing. No agenda.
Just ordinary people who believe we deserve to know who we are.
Find out who we are and what we're building at ๐ https://t.co/oNQ4y5eGyZ
Be part of us.
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
#ProudOfUs #BritishHistory #AlfredTheGreat #HistoryMatters #AngloSaxon
๐ฌ๐งBritain sent warships into Brazilian harbours. Without permission.
Seized ships at anchor. In their waters. Under their flag.
Brazil refused to stop the slave trade. So Parliament passed the Aberdeen Act. It authorised the Royal Navy to treat Brazilian slave ships as pirates. Anywhere.
Brazil was furious. Diplomatic crisis.
The Navy went anyway. Into harbours. River mouths. Ships seized. Crews arrested. Enslaved people freed.
Within five years, Brazil banned slave imports.
The world hated Britain for this. Ending slavery cost them trade. Cost them allies. Other empires called it interference.
Britain didn't care.
Be part of us: https://t.co/wN9S2gRUuR
Be proud of us. ๐ฌ๐ง
One man taught children to read on their only day off.
A bishop called his schools "agents of the devil." ๐ฟ
250,000 children came anyway.
His name was Robert Raikes. Gloucester, 1780.
Working-class children worked six days a week. Some of them were six years old. Sunday was the only day they had.
So Raikes opened a school in a house on Sooty Alley. Directly opposite the city prison. He could see both futures from his window.
In seven years, 250,000 children learned to read.
Factory owners said educated workers would demand better wages. Politicians said readers would learn about rights. A bishop called the schools "agents of the devil."
The children came anyway. Their parents sent them anyway.
By 1831, 1.25 million children were in Sunday Schools. A quarter of all children in Britain.
Working-class families took control of the schools themselves. It wasn't charity anymore. It was theirs.
The government took a hundred years to catch up.
A book. A room. A Sunday. That was all it took to change Britain forever.
See how you can help change Britain at:
https://t.co/oNQ4y5eGyZ
Be part of us.
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
He was called the strangest man in physics.
Not the brightest. Not the fastest. The strangest.
But here's what they never told you about him.
His name was Paul Dirac. Born in Bristol, 1902.
His father had one rule: you could only speak to him in French. When young Paul couldn't find the words, he stopped speaking entirely.
That silence became a superpower.
At 25, he wrote a single equation that united quantum mechanics with Einstein's relativity. Two pillars of physics that nobody could connect.
A quiet boy from Bristol did it with a pen.
Then his equation predicted something impossible. A mirror particle. Matter that shouldn't exist.
Other scientists said he was wrong.
Dirac said nothing.
In 1932, they found it. Antimatter. Exactly where his equation said it would be.
They gave him the Nobel Prize. He nearly REFUSED it โ he hated publicity so much.
They offered him a knighthood. He turned that down too. Didn't want to be called Sir.
He was given Newton's chair at Cambridge. Held it for 37 years. Barely spoke a word.
Today every MRI scanner uses his equation. Every particle accelerator is built on his work. Every smartphone chip traces back to his mathematics.
His memorial stone lies in Westminster Abbey. Right next to Newton.
The greatest British physicist since Newton. And most of Britain has never heard his name.
Until now. https://t.co/oNQ4y5feox
Be part of us.
Be Proud Of Us. ๐ฌ๐ง
Wilberforce, and people like him, ended the global slave trade that had existed for several thousand years.
They didnโt invent it, but they did stop it.
I should say almost entirely. There are still remnants of it in some parts of the world.
In 1707, two thousand sailors DROWNED.
Not because of a storm.
Because nobody could tell where they were at sea ๐ฌ๐ง
This was the longitude problem. The deadliest puzzle in science.
Parliament offered ยฃ20,000 to anyone who could solve it.
Nearly four million today.
Every great scientist in Europe tried. Newton. Halley. The finest minds alive.
All of them failed.
The man who solved it was a carpenter from Yorkshire.
His name was John Harrison.
No formal education. No university. No wealthy patron. He taught himself clockmaking.
Built timepieces out of wood.
His idea was โsimpleโ. If you know the exact time at home and the exact time at sea, you can calculate exactly where you are.
The problem?
No clock could keep accurate time on a moving ship. Heat warps metal. Cold contracts it. The ocean never stops moving.
Harrison spent DECADES on it.
H1. Twenty years of work. Not good enough.
H2. Better. Still not enough.
H3. Seventeen years. Over 700 parts.
Still not enough.
Then he did something nobody expected. He stopped building clocks.
He built a watch.
H4. Thirteen centimetres across. The most important watch ever made.
They sent it across the Atlantic. Eighty-one days at sea.
When they arrived, it had lost five seconds.
Five seconds. In eighty-one days. The problem was solved.
But here's the uncomfortable part.
They didn't give him the prize.
The Board of Longitude was run by astronomers.
The very men who'd been trying to solve it their own way.
The Astronomer Royal was both judge and competitor.
They changed the rules. Demanded his designs. Refused to pay.
A working-class carpenter had beaten every astronomer in Europe. And the establishment couldn't accept it.
Harrison was nearly EIGHTY before he got justice.
He went directly to King George III.
The king tested the watch himself and told Harrison to petition Parliament with the king's full backing.
Parliament paid. Harrison died three years later.
After his death, every ship on earth carried a chronometer based on his design.
Every GPS satellite. Every ship's navigation. Every flight path. All of it traces back to a carpenter from Yorkshire who taught himself to build a watch.
His watches are still at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich. Still ticking.
Still perfect.
The establishment tried to bury him once.
We're not letting it happen again ๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf
Be part of us.
Be proud of us. ๐ฌ๐ง
โA very male, violent and misogynistic movement.โ
@Glinner believes his most important statement to the US Congressional committee was that the Government is ignoring the Supreme Court gender ruling in Britain, and emphasising the 'cruelty' of trans activism.
NEW: The family of fallen Army Staff Sgt. Michael Ollis receives a call from President Trump, telling them their son would posthumously receive the Medal of Honor.
Ollis was killed in Afghanistan in 2013 when he shielded a Polish army officer from a su*cide bomber.
Ollis saved the life of Karol Cierpica, who became the father of a baby boy shortly after.
Cierpica named the boy 'Michael' in honor of Michael Ollis.
"Your son is gonna get the highest honor that you can have. There's no higher honor than the Congressional Medal of Honor," Trump said on the call.
Video: SSG Michael Ollis Freedom Foundation / fb.
๐จHOLY COW: Florida is set to become the FIRST STATE in America to BAN ALL vaccine mandates of any kind โ not just COVID.
"Your body is a gift from God... Pretty much every state has them. It's wrong."
Should this be done in every state?
Follow: @ItsCarterHughes
"At my direction, the U.S. Armed Forces conducted an extraordinary military operation in the capital of Venezuela...This was one of the most stunning, effective, and powerful displays of American military might and competence in American history." - PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP ๐บ๐ธ
Slavery had been the norm throughout all of history, for thousands of years, impacting all people, including millions of Europeans enslaved in the Ottoman Empire - which had institutionalized the sexual slavery of European women. Yet children are led to believe that slavery was a uniquely American activity.
Now why do you think that is?