Henry Nowakโs family have lost their son and brother in the most appalling circumstances.
Nigel Farage is exploiting this tragedy to create grievance and division.
Itโs completely unforgivable.
Former MI6 chief Sir Alex Younger on Brexit: โPutin would have been absolutely delighted by our decision.โ
โSo would Xi. France has effectively eclipsed us. Brexit has marginalised us.โ Most striking of all: โJust nobody mentions the UK.โ
Very sad that Sir Alex Younger, chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, born on July 4, 1963, died of pancreatic cancer on June 2, 2026, aged 62
#SarahEverardโs killer was a serving police officer.
Back then, #NigelFarage told people not to turn a womanโs murder into attacks on men or the police.
Now he is leading attacks on the police because the suspect fits a narrative he can exploit.
Principles that change with the ethnicity of the accused arenโt principles at all.
Children Were Kept In Outdoor Cages During Snowstorms
This is a clip from Stone Cold Justice, John Lyonsโ investigation for Four Corners (ABC, 2014). It exposed Israelโs industrialised cruelty way before Oct 7th 2023.
At Ofer Military Prison, Palestinian children are dragged through hearings that last seconds. Shackled, silenced and convicted without being looked at.
Israelโs military courts brag about a 99.74% conviction rate. Thatโs not law, thatโs a rigged machine. A conveyor belt designed to crush children until guilt becomes inevitable.
UNICEF called it systematic, institutionalised abuse: threats of death, beatings, isolation, sexual violence.
This is Israelโs legacy in full view: a state so afraid of Palestinian children it has to break them, then call it justice.
And the world still calls this a democracy.
Nigel Farage demands accountability from everyone except Nigel Farage.
That tells you more about his politics than any speech, campaign slogan or BBC lawsuit ever could.
For years, Farage has built his political brand around the idea that Britain is being misled. By politicians. By the media. By the civil service. By the establishment. The message is always the same. Other people are not telling you the truth.
1. Yet when you look at some of the most controversial moments of his own political career, accountability seems to disappear. After Southport, Farage amplified speculation and suspicion before the facts were fully established. At a moment when tensions were already dangerously high, he chose to raise questions that fuelled distrust rather than calm it.
2. Following the murder of Henry Nowak, we saw a similar instinct. Again, the focus quickly shifted towards institutional failure, hidden truths and public anger.
3. The point is not that politicians shouldn't ask difficult questions. They should. The point is that there is a difference between seeking facts and feeding suspicion.
4. Farage, like Trump, has latched onto something unpleasant that has entered modern politics. Distrust spreads faster than trust. Anger spreads faster than caution. People are far more likely to share a suspicion than a correction.
5. That is why today's threat to sue the BBC is so revealing. Because the same politician who has spent years benefiting from outrage, distortion and selective framing suddenly demands the highest standards of accuracy when he believes he is the victim.
6. The hypocrisy is obvious. When others are misrepresented, nuance often seems optional. When Farage believes he has been misrepresented, it becomes a matter for lawyers.
7. This is also why comparisons with Trump are increasingly hard to ignore. They share the same lack of accountability. If something helps the narrative, amplify it. If something damages the narrative, attack the source. If criticism follows, claim victimhood. And never, ever accept responsibility.
8. That last point matters most. Because accountability is not demanding answers from other people. It is being willing to accept scrutiny yourself. Accountability is not demanding answers from other people. It is being willing to accept responsibility when your own words have consequences.
That is the standard Farage applies relentlessly to everyone around him. Just never to himself. Because the central promise of Farage's politics is that Britain has been failed by everyone else.
The central flaw in it is that he never seems willing to consider his own role in making things worse.
This is Luke Jahn.
He's a wannabe neo-Nazi.
He took part in violence against the police in Southampton.
He's based in Portsmouth (or, as he spells it, 'Porstmouth').
Luke is a thick thug.
Luke belongs in prison -- or, more likely, a psychiatric hospital.
@Luke_Jahn_@HantsPolice
The British establishment pulled out all the stops to prevent Jeremy Corbyn becoming PM, simply because he criticised Israel and wanted fairer wealth distribution.
Yet Nigel Farage instigates riots and they still court him as a potential PM.
Make it make sense.
So Mandelson was in talks with Farage, and told Labour comms not to say anything "disobliging".
But Farage obliged by recommending Mandelson as Ambassador.
Something about all this stinks
Actual Nazis mobilising and rioting on the streets of Southampton today.
The moustached man in this video is Luke Jahn of the National Rebirth Party, a neo-Nazi movement led by Alek Yerbury, an infamous Adolf Hitler cosplayer.
Tommy Robinson told his supporters to go to Southampton Police Station, claiming he was only going there to report on the situation.
As soon as he arrived, he was rushed to the front of the crowd. When it was announced that he would be saying a few words, he initially pretended he didn't want to speak, saying, "No, I'm fucking not."
A few seconds later, he was on the microphone claiming that he had predicted Pakistani Muslim gangs would start a race riot.
The killer is Sikh, and it had nothing to do with Pakistanis or Muslims.
Here's another low-life scum that can be added to the arrest list for the Southampton riots. Laurence Fox seen here blatantly inciting an angry crowd. #FarageRiots#FarageRiots2