Explaining why he was already disappointed by the forces of modern political “conservatism” way back in 1951, the great satirical English novelist and Catholic convert Evelyn Waugh once observed that there was no point in voting Tory (as the UK Conservative Party is also often called) anymore, as, whenever returning back into office following any previous period of socialist or liberal rule, the organization had consistently “never put the clock back a single second.” (more…)
Tag: Henry Nowak
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Two of the biggest stories of the last week look as though they couldn’t differ more. The release of additional police bodycam footage of the murder of Henry Nowak in the UK needs following as closely as any film script, and we will. We all need to be film reviewers here. It shows something about the state of Britain, and the way in which its citizens are policed, particularly its white citizens, which the political and media class don’t want those citizens to notice. (more…)
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White people and black people differ in many ways, and one of these differences is coming to the fore. The difference is one of perception. Whereas black people merely believe they have a white problem, because they are taught that they do, white people increasingly know they have a black problem, even if they are not permitted to talk about it. Black people are told, constantly, that white people are a clear and present danger to their people (despite the fact that they are far more dangerous to one another). (more…)
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Post-Henry Nowak Policing
It is highly unlikely that anyone reading this does not by now know the name of Henry Nowak. Henry was an 18-year-old English student who died in police custody in December of last year after a false allegation of racism was made by his Sikh murderer, which meant that the attending police officers treated the crime scene as a racist incident rather than the stabbing attack that it was. I covered the details of Henry’s death here at Counter Currents, but I want to look at the consequences of this racist killing, both politically and in the media. (more…)
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You can buy Greg Johnson’s The Philosopher Is In here.

You can buy Greg Johnson’s The Philosopher Is In here.
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Greg Johnson and David Zsutty on the AI Economic Apocalypse, Palantir suppressing the far Right, the Remigration Summit, Jared Taylor’s harassment in France, the slip and fall fraudulent lawsuit against Return to the Land, how White Nationalists should talk about Trump, Henry Nowak’s murder and the reaction, exiting the Iran Crisis, and more.
Now for your streaming or downloading pleasure. To listen in a player, click here or below. To download, right-click the link and click “save as.”
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“I can’t breathe.”
The last words of George Floyd.“I can’t breathe.”
The last words of Henry Nowak.Henry Nowak was an 18-year-old Englishman, a student of Polish descent, and was studying for a degree in Accounting and Finance at Southampton University, England. (more…)
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Henry Nowak’s unnecessary death in the callously indifferent claws of the people who should have saved him is primarily about race. But not far behind race is the problem of who staffs positions of authority in society. Who will watch the watchers? Personnel is policy, and especially for positions of authority. But the people who pursue positions of authority are often the exact opposite of the type of people who should staff them. And Western regimes intensify this problem because it is to their benefit. (more…)
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Hers was the race that launched a thousand quips—most of them asking, in very blunt terms, just since when had Helen of Troy been a forty-plus Kenyan.
It has been confirmed that average-looking middle-aged black African actress Lupita Nyong’o has been cast to play history’s most beautiful woman in Christopher Nolan’s upcoming version of The Odyssey, a decision which suggests the concept of blind casting in Hollywood must now have been taken so far as to begin employing actual blind persons as the casting directors. (more…)
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Originally published on Substack.
Piecing together the details of what happened on the night of Wednesday the 3rd of December 2025 on Belmont Road in Southampton might be pointless – we know the gist – but still, it is interesting to do. (more…)
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Like Macbeth in Dunsinane, Sir Keir Starmer grows isolated. The British Prime Minister (PM) is loathed by the public, certainly, but that is of no importance to Starmer’s handlers, or “policy advisers” as they are euphemistically called. When these humorless young men and women look at negative polling indicating that the public—meaning the white public—intensely dislike current government policy, they will attempt the closest that sort of person gets to a smile. (more…)








