Henry Nowak’s death shows how brainwashed Britain’s police have become

Henry Nowak’s death shows how brainwashed Britain’s police have become

I am crying. It is hard to write down the circumstances of the death of Henry Nowak without crying. Each time I think about how that young man met his end, I find myself consumed with sadness and a sense of raging disbelief. I admit I’ve become somewhat obsessed with the case because Henry’s murder, and the way Hampshire Police not only failed to help him but actively supported his killer to the point where they handcuffed the 18-year-old student and cruelly mocked him as he drowned in his own blood, is emblematic of how Britain has lost its way.


Does anyone in the GTA believe they can trust the police, I mean anyone who isn’t a government designated victim group enjoying two tiered policing and justice.

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The figures that reveal the suicide of Western civilisation

The figures that reveal the suicide of Western civilisation

EUROPE is rapidly transitioning from a civilisation shaped by natural change and continuity to one that will be defined by immigration-driven replacement. That’s the central message from several new bombshell studies of how Europe’s population is being radically transformed.

The population of the UK is being completely overhauled, despite no democratic consent from the people. But if you look at the much bigger story that’s unfolding across Europe you’ll see a picture that’s just as astonishing.

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Reform is now the undisputed party of the working class

Reform is now the undisputed party of the working class

This week brings yet more evidence of working-class voters having ditched the Labour Party for Reform UK. A new survey reveals that trade-union members, who have historically been very left-wing, are now evenly split between support for Reform and Labour. Astonishingly, Nigel Farage comes out on top as their preferred choice for prime minister. It is Farage, not Keir Starmer, who is perceived as the party leader most likely to benefit working people.

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The plot for a British caliphate

The Muslim Brotherhood is many things: a political organization with global presence; a secretive society, with high-level connections into business and government; a missionary body that seeks to maximize the presence of Islam around the world; an institution-builder, whose members are prolific in setting up organizations, putting its presence at one remove; a movement, stretching way beyond its Arab Muslim origins; and a network of networks that among other things allows Muslim and non-Muslim groups to fight alongside each other. It is associated with Hamas in Palestine and has past ties to Al-Qaeda. Its people put themselves forward as interlocutors, seeking to intercede between governments and their Muslim populations, using their networks as leverage. In some respects it is a state proxy, closely linked to Qatar and the Turkish regime of President Erdoğan. It is a charity promoter, working for the sake of Muslims and Islam worldwide, but especially in Palestine. And, last but not least, it is an ideology, with a commitment to Islamic supremacism and the defeat of the West.

These different aspects don’t always work in tandem. Indeed, the Brotherhood sometimes finds itself on different sides of political conflict. But such ambiguity can work to its advantage, creating leverage to maximize its interests and undermine its real enemies: to turn them against themselves and each other.

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Could aliens ever visit Earth? An aerospace scientist unpacks the challenges of interstellar spaceflight.

Could aliens ever visit Earth? An aerospace scientist unpacks the challenges of interstellar spaceflight.

On May 22, 2026, the Pentagon released a second batch of previously classified photos and videos showing what appear to be unexplained flying objects. These file dumps were the culmination of a process that was set in motion back in July 2023, when a group of government whistleblowers testified before Congress that the U.S. government was secretly in possession of extraterrestrial spacecraft and suspected alien body parts.

That congressional hearing marked the beginning of a cultural shift in which UFO reports are increasingly treated as a matter for serious discussion, both within the government and the scientific community.

(more…)

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Britain is facing huge demographic change

This week, the ONS published data on births during 2025. According to their data, for the first time over 40 per cent of children born in England and Wales had at least one foreign-born parent. This rate has risen from 34 per cent in 2021, pre-Boriswave. As recently as 2008 children of foreign parents were only 30 per cent of the population and in 1998, before the ‘Blairwave’, they represented fewer than 20 per cent of births.

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The small-boats grooming gang

The small-boats grooming gang

Seven Afghan men – five of whom entered the UK on a small boat – have been charged with 40 offences after an investigation into a grooming gang in Norwich. Of the remaining two, one came to the UK concealed on a lorry and another arrived through ‘a port’, according to the BBC. All arrived illegally, none speaks English and all are classified as ‘refugees’. The charges relate to two girls, aged in their early to mid-teens at the time of the alleged offences, which police say occurred between August 2023 and May 2025.


Shocka!

h/t Patti Jo

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Henry Nowak and the evil of ‘anti-racism’

Henry Nowak and the evil of ‘anti-racism’

Henry Nowak was 18, and at the end of his first term at Southampton University, when he was murdered. Around 11:30 p.m. on 3 December last year, Henry was walking back from a night out with his university football team. He hadn’t drunk heavily – during the trial we heard that he was below the drink driving limit. On the way home Henry encountered Vickrum Digwa, the 23-year-old Sikh man who would murder him.

h/t Patti Jo

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Employers in Britain hire 27 young non-EU migrants for each young Briton

Employers in Britain hire 27 young non-EU migrants for each young Briton

Employers in Britain have hired 27 young non-EU migrants for every one young British worker since 2020, according to new analysis by the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) that highlights a stark displacement effect in the youth labour market.

Using His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) payroll data, the think tank found that the number of non-EU nationals under 25 in employment surged from 81,500 in January 2020 to 370,900 by December 2025, a rise of 289,400 or over 355 per cent

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UK: Share of babies born to migrant parents hits record 40%

UK: Share of babies born to migrant parents hits record 40%

The share of babies born to migrant parents reached 40pc for the first time last year, new figures show.

Latest Office for National Statistics figures showed the number of newborns with at least one parent born abroad had risen from 39.5pc in 2024 to a record high of 40.2pc last year. It was 30.1pc in 2008.

That equates to more than 235,000 of the 585,396 births last year.

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White Britons betrayed – the truth about net migration

White Britons betrayed – the truth about net migration

FIGURES published last Thursday showing that both net immigration and asylum claims are falling ‘are being used by Sir Keir Starmer to prove he’s turning things around and delivering for Britain’, the Telegraph reported.

People are not so easily taken in, however. The net migration figure of 171,000 last year – trumpeted as the lowest since 2012, and down from nearly a million in the year to 2023 – is created by taking away the number of people who left Great Britain from those who arrived. The figure that is not trumpeted is the roughly 246,000 British nationals who leave the UK each year to live abroad, of whom the latest stats show only about 110,000 return to the UK annually. This widening gap results in a net loss of more than 130,000 British a year and confirms that many are establishing lives overseas rather than coming back. Increasingly it is white, young and skilled Britons who are fleeing, as we reported at the beginning of the year. For the 12 months ending June 2025, 693,000 people left Britain, an increase of 40 per cent on 2022. Of those leaving, 230,000 were British nationals under 45 years of age.

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Elegy for the Royal Navy

Elegy for the Royal Navy

I do not think there has ever been a naval dictatorship. Hungary’s Admiral Horthy, though a sort of dictator, lacked an actual navy, or even any sea, by the time he came to power. So he doesn’t count. Why might this be? Seamen tend to be wary of authority, unless it is wisely exercised. For they know a bad captain is more likely to kill them than to kill the enemy. And while warships may in theory be used to overawe civilian uprisings, this can only work in seaports and is rather hard to do even there. Winston Churchill parked the cruiser HMS Antrim in the Mersey in 1911, during a violent transport strike. The great ship lurked menacingly, but her guns remained silent. Ashore, by contrast, mounted soldiers opened fire on rioting crowds and killed two men.

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Dorset Asylum Seekers 9,000% More Likely To Commit Sexual or Violent Crime

Dorset Asylum Seekers 9,000% More Likely To Commit Sexual or Violent Crime

Official statistics have shown that asylum seekers in one English county are approximately 9,000% more likely to commit sexual or violent offences than their share of the local population would indicate, as protests against asylum accommodation—some turning violent—have intensified across Europe in the last week.

British Home Office asylum support data for the end of September 2025 recorded 618 asylum seekers in the Bournemouth, Christchurch, and Poole council area, where most asylum accommodation is concentrated. With Dorset’s total population at approximately 800,000 to 820,000, and no asylum hotels recorded in the rest of the county, this equates to roughly 0.08% of the local population.

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The Two Britains on the Streets of London

The Two Britains on the Streets of London

Britain is no longer divided by ordinary politics. It has split into two rival nations which loathe each other, obey different moral rules and receive radically different treatment from the state.

Last Saturday’s rival demonstrations in London exposed that divide with unusual clarity. On one side stood ‘Unite The Kingdom,’ the event organised primarily by now-veteran nationalist campaigner Tommy Robinson. At this, thousands of people who are angry about immigration, national decline, and the feeling that their country is being transformed without their consent gathered in order to display their frustration and patriotism.

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