There were thousands of victims, poor, white, young, female, vulnerable. And the people who should have protected them? The cops, the 'caring professions', the politicians and others? They were soiling their silks in abject terror of being labelled a racist.
For these so-called do-gooders, naming the twisted monsters who prostituted, raped and tortured thousands of young girls in towns and cities across the UK was an exercise in covering your ass. Victims be damned.
Gangs were Pakistani Muslims
The rape gangs were nearly totally comprised of Pakistani Muslims. But the righteous blew off the countless, harrowing stories of girls — some as young as 11 — who were gang-raped by these dirtbags. Sickos. Usman Ali, Gul Riaz, Banaras Hussain, Abdul Majid were part of yet another sex grooming gang. They operated with impunity because cops and others did not want to be labeled racist. They cited something called 'social cohesion.' We don't want to upset the diaspora, now, do we?
Now, CBC News is trembling with rage and fear that 'Britain's far right' is attempting to stoke a battle over race in the country's latest criminal outrage. The network expressed no such fears about 'America's far left' exploiting the death of George Floyd.
'Long-term white grievance'
Henry Nowak, an 18-year-old university student, was stabbed to death in Southampton on Dec. 3, 2025. But as Nowak lay dying, his killer, Vickrum Digwa, 23, and a Sikh, told the officers that the victim had hurled a racial epithet his way. So the cops handcuffed the dying Nowak and ignored his heartbreaking pleas for help.
And when cops released the bodycam footage, it triggered protests in Southampton, or 'violent protests,' as the CBC framed it. Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage claimed it was yet another example of two-tiered policing. The state broadcaster also cited rabble-rouser Tommy Robinson.
Naturally, CBC unearthed a tweedy academic — who's even Canadian, son of a gun! — who shared the reporter's disdain for 'white grievance.'
A difference between results and causes
'What you've seen … is a long-term 'white grievance' narrative that has really penetrated politics here,' said Aaron Winter, sociologist at Lancaster University who researches the 'far right' and racism. Winter doesn't think 'far right' politicians give a fig about Nowak. CBC laps this up like a kitten with a saucer of cream.
But the academic and CBC have missed one of the greatest maxims ever put to paper that I have cited often. It comes courtesy of John Steinbeck in his masterpiece, The Grapes of Wrath. That is that we must always, always know the difference between results and causes.
Outrage is merely the result. The cause is a young man mortally wounded and then handcuffed because his killer lied and claimed he said something racist. The cause is thousands of girls gang-raped and tortured while the great and the good turned a blind eye.
According to cops (once they got their act together), Nowak was unarmed, walking back to his university dorm when he had a chance encounter with Digwa. His killer was carrying a large Sikh dagger in a sheath. Digwa tried to grab Nowak's phone, leading to a struggle that ended when he stabbed Nowak multiple times.
Here's where the P.C. Police enter the fray. By the time cops arrived, Digwa's brother was there. Digwa is now tearfully telling cops that the kid dying on the ground called him a 'Paki.' So naturally, they handcuffed the dying teen. Nowak told them he had been stabbed and couldn't breathe. A pathologist testified it was unlikely Nowak would have survived even if the idiotic cops had acted immediately.
As for the racist insult? The judge said it was one of many 'wicked lies' Digwa unleashed. His mother also showed up at the scene. She lied too.
What we expect from CBC
Nowak's father said after Digwa was sentenced to life in prison on Monday that his son's treatment by officers stripped him of dignity in his dying moments. Politicians of all stripes have asked for calm.
That young man's murder was a tragedy, police actions a disgrace. But the CBC's main concern being that his death would fuel the so-called 'far right' is wildly loopy. But it's also what we've come to expect.



