Haven’t watched the downward societal spiral in Britain for a while now, I’m not quite prepared to say they are on the cusp of an…well…’awakening,’ per se.
But there does seem to be a different feel in the air. A different undertone to much of the same rhetoric that’s been spoken and written after one of these horrific atrocities is committed. British people might express some frustration or even anger publicly, British politicians invariably get their prickly backsides up, issuing ‘Now, now’ lectures and blaming the aggrieved citizens for objecting to the blood in their streets.
Stern-faced government nannies then warn them off resenting the perpetrators, issuing condemnations of their lowly working-class ‘phobias’ while enacting laws to punish the native populace for whatever manner these offenses are reported to have surfaced.
A glance interpreted as cruel by a passerby on a sidewalk? A critical comment online?
These guarantee a doorbanging visit from a cadre of Starmtroopers for, at the very least, a grilling on one’s intentions for promoting such ‘hate,’ if not being carted off for ‘inciting’ it.
This aversion to one’s own citizens and preference cascade for the imported ‘alien cultures’ can even prove lethal, as the cold, blue, handcuffed hand of a young eighteen-year-old stabbing victim proved.
Oh, and how DARE you criticize the assailant or the police?! Didn’t you hear the lad’s parents say not to politicize this horror?
CLEAN UP ON AISLE FOUR
What ‘Nudge Unit’?
There has been a great deal of talk, over the last two years but especially in the last few days, about the UK government’s “Nudge Unit”.
According to the talk, this Unit is dispatched to perform a critical ‘clean-up’ function after domestic atrocities and flashpoint events occur, arriving on doorsteps to manage the grief of the affected and bereaved, and giving them reasons, of one kind or another, to take the establishment line on the matter. To disavow violent reprisal (great!), to appeal against division etc.
…The government also runs a Counter Disinformation Unit, quietly renamed since its establishment, which monitors the social-media posts of ordinary citizens, journalists and members of Parliament. Its purpose is to watch what you say.
And it maintains a standing apparatus of community-tension monitors and cohesion teams, deployed, in its own words, “rapidly, as and when tensions occur.” Its purpose is to manage how you react.
Now set all of that beside the other thing nobody troubles to deny: the steady pressure on the mainstream press not to report certain facts and material details during coverage of crime and national crisis events. Think the information vacuum after Southport that the state plainly preferred to a plain account of who Axel Rudakubana (infamously described as a “Welsh choir boy”) was and what it had long known about him…
There have been vigils since the trial of Henry Nowak’s killer and the release of all the unbelievable footage.
“Lady Justice Is Blindfolded.”
Locals hold Henry Nowak memorial outside Portsmouth Central Police Station. pic.twitter.com/zHgNSZuUg1
— Turning Point UK 🇬🇧 (@TPointUK) June 11, 2026
‘The most powerful card a guilty man can play’
Henry Nowak said, ‘I can’t breathe’ nine times.
Henry Nowak said, ‘I’ve been stabbed’ four times.
In the wake of Henry Nowak’s brutal murder, the FSU has published a new briefing: Fear and Favour: Britain’s Policing Emergency.
Britain’s policing culture has made a false accusation of racism the most powerful card a guilty man can play — the result of policy that has worsened… pic.twitter.com/rwiDHyncew
— The Free Speech Union (@SpeechUnion) June 11, 2026
…Britain’s policing culture has made a false accusation of racism the most powerful card a guilty man can play — the result of policy that has worsened over the past 30 years.
This briefing reveals:
• Why Henry Nowak’s killer reached for the race card — and why it worked.
• How a doctrine that rejects equal treatment under the law has come to shape modern policing.
• How the Met rejected a free speech and impartiality policy, only to embrace one that described impartiality as a racial myth….
First, Starmer talked about Henry Nowak’s life having been ‘stolen.’ ‘Mistakes were made,’ and the accusations of racism playing a part in police decisions would ‘have to be looked at.’ He saved his ire when he went for Nigel Farage, who’d spoken of the ‘cold rage’ he felt.
¡STARMER DEBE CAER!
🇬🇧 El primer ministro y odiador de los británicos, Keir Starmer, finalmente rompió su silencio sobre el asesinato de Henry Nowak, pero en lugar de condenar a la policía por su inacción o a la familia del agresor sij Digwa por sus supuestas mentiras, optó por… pic.twitter.com/lrwZuuzV6P— 📢Rebelión en la Granja🚨 (@elorwelliano) June 3, 2026
And then he went for the obvious guilty party.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer accuses Elon Musk of “trying to whip up division in the UK” following the murder of Henry Nowak.pic.twitter.com/Hfr2Wpyjll
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) June 4, 2026
Not a peep about the murderer or his guilty ‘accessory to murder’ family members.
And then the horrific video of the attempted beheading in Belfast, Northern Ireland, when a Sudanese asylum seeker attacked an innocent man, hit the internet.
…Hadi Alodid, 30, who used a loophole in the asylum system to gain entry to the UK, is accused of attempted murder, possessing a knife and threatening to kill an NHS radiographer on the same day as the alleged offence.
He was remanded in custody at Laganside magistrates’ court earlier on Wednesday over the attack, in which victim Stephen Ogilvie lost his left eye and suffered deep cuts to his face.
All the efforts of the British government to tightly control the reaction of their subjects there is looking tenuous at best.
🇬🇧 A Sudanese thug who attempted to behead a man in Belfast received asylum through a simplified procedure
Instead of a standard interview, he filled out a ten-page Home Office questionnaire, a scheme introduced in 2023 to speed up the processing of migrant applications.
Even… pic.twitter.com/3eQFiqgEYj
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) June 11, 2026
Belfast has exploded in rage. And it could quite possibly burn out of control, as there are always tensions simmering right under the surface there at the best of times.
And these could soon prove to be some of the worst of times if the government doesn’t figure it out fast.
WATCH: Car engulfed in flames crashes into an apartment building in Belfast amid ongoing protests after attempted beheading of a man. pic.twitter.com/bFXA4UhQZM
— Scope Report (@ScopeReport_) June 9, 2026
Stupid, patronizing, deflective statements like this are only going to make it worse.
Northern Ireland Minister blames Tommy Robinson and Elon Musk for the Belfast riots — completely ignoring the illegal Muslim migrant’s attempted beheading that sparked it all. Total disconnect from reality. https://t.co/Ur4ZmL19J0 pic.twitter.com/rXCOSUMGqA
— DDF NEWS (@ddfmarketing1) June 11, 2026
Houses have been burning for two days now, in orchestrated rioting in East Belfast.
Houses are being burned down in Belfast in response to yesterday’s attempted beheading of a man by a Sudanese migrant.
Videos are surfacing of several HMOs (Houses in Multiple Occupation — properties frequently contracted by the UK Home Office to accommodate asylum seekers)… pic.twitter.com/X7kD94nWX9
— Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) June 9, 2026
And I say ‘orchestrated’ because there were printed flyers alerting to road closures around the city and telling Belfast businesses to be closed by 5:30 last night, ‘no excuses.’
Which is somehow to be blamed on Nigel Farage.
They set a bus on fire in Belfast. Scum.
Black and brown folk probably sat locked up in their homes petrified to leave!
This is all down to Farage and Yaxley Lennon. pic.twitter.com/mBswzCQhw3
— Narinder Kaur (@narindertweets) June 9, 2026
That is the classic reaction from British authorities in any circumstance. Never look to the perpetrator or the cause, but to who irritates you the worst.
The inimitable Douglas Murray pointed that very thing out in his piece for The Spectator this morning. It’s so much easier to point accusing fingers at the gadflys than the imported diversity holding the knife dripping blood.
I get the sense that the political and media class badly miss Katie Hopkins. Back when the reality TV star was still a regular on Britain’s screens and in our newspapers, she could be relied upon to be the focus of attention whenever the people in charge didn’t want the public’s attention to be focused where it ought to be.
So when a British soldier was decapitated on the streets of London, or a suicide bomber went off at a pop concert packed with teenage girls, Ms. Hopkins could be found saying something that a lot of people were thinking – only in a more colorful or unwise way. A pattern emerged whereby, within 24 hours of any atrocity on the streets of Britain, the political and media class would be talking about how inappropriate Hopkins’s comments were and how forcefully we must all condemn them. Her comments were generally said to be “divisive,” “hateful” and “have no place in public life.” It was a comfortable place to be, because everyone could then avoid talking about the atrocity itself.
To some extent, Nigel Farage appears to have filled the deep need for such a figure. After Vickrum Digwa’s conviction for the murder of Henry Nowak – and the release of police bodycam footage showing officers handcuffing the victim as he lay dying – the leader of Reform said we should feel “pure, cold rage.” Keir Starmer described Farage’s words as “unforgivable” and declared that this is “a time for serious work, not rage,” while the BBC and other media focused their discussion on the question of whether Farage should have spoken at all – and promptly also misrepresented his words.
Speaking of the BBC being a complicit party to this diversionary game, the victim of the unhinged Sudanese beheading attempt had been, in fact, helping his attacker and another man move into their new flat nearby.
For his trouble, the asylum seeker not only attempted to saw Mr. Ogilvie’s head off, but managed to slash and gouge one eye and socket completely out while doctors are trying to save the sight in his other eye. My understanding is that he’s had to have his nose sewn back together as well.
Update on Stephen Ogilvie.
Please say Prayers for Stephen and his Family at this time ❤️🙏🏻 pic.twitter.com/5Tw5C5TZQI
— IRISH PATRIOT (@irishpatriot91) June 10, 2026
The BBC, mind you, has reverted to the form they all take when there’s been another one of those autonomous ‘car rams pedestrians’ incidents, implying the car did it all on its own.
Mr. Ogilvie ‘lost’ his eyeball.
Katie Hopkins herself weighed in.
The white victim did not lose an eye.
He did not inadvertently leave it somewhere.
The standby bastard illegal gouged it out with a f*cking Stanley knife. @BBC YOUR LIES ARE FUELLING FIRES.
British Establishment media are torching white Brits. pic.twitter.com/zcLK0I1s4Y
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) June 10, 2026
British leaders and those in other European countries who are causing their citizens immense suffering in the name of diversity have lost their collective minds.
These are, as distasteful to the elite globalists foisting them on their countries as it might be, ‘alien cultures,’ who have no interest in assimilating or participating in a Western society with any more effort than it takes to receive what that society is freely offering them.
As Murray says, Britain has imported a problem it refuses to name.
…The term “alien cultures” is a completely appropriate one. It would include the sort of cultures in which it is not uncommon for people to go around trying to behead others. This certainly doesn’t mean that everybody from any particular community should be accused of crimes they have not committed. But it also doesn’t mean we should all have to pretend to be completely ignorant of what an MP like Jim Allister is referring to.
Different cultures have different traditions, customs, habits and proclivities. They include different attitudes toward women, violence, gaming the system (including the asylum and welfare systems) and much else. The problem with this pretend ignorance is precisely that: it is a pretense. Everybody knows what people are getting at when they worry about the negative sides of their own culture, so why do we have to pretend to be completely befuddled when someone raises the negative sides of other cultures?
We all know the answer. Which is that generations of politicians and pundits have given us a problem that they do not know how to solve. But people have noticed the problem. And no amount of pretended bewilderment or deflection will cover that fact over for ever.
The problem now for those who have so much invested in pointing at others for the problem they’ve created is that it seems as if the hour of polite play-along is over.
The folks in Northern Ireland are not the easily cowed and embarrassed Brits of the Cotswolds. They also have ancient axes to grind of their own that will fold ever so nicely into a vengeance war using the imported irritants that have flooded their cities as the kick-off excuse.
All they needed was a spark.
What the NI government and, by extension, Starmer’s own administration pour on this now will determine whether it subsides or it blows bigly.
I honestly don’t know that any of these elected officials are up to it.
So far…
Labour launches social media crackdown ‘in times of crisis’ https://t.co/AY9xwVf1Ea
This is censorship & people need to know what this corrupt government (& I use that word loosely) is truly all about.
We are becoming a dictatorship.— Megthecollie (@megthecollie13) June 10, 2026
…oh, boy.
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