abdul
37.5K posts





An 18-year-old was stabbed in the UK. He ran to the police for help. They handcuffed him. He told them he couldn't breathe. He said he'd been stabbed. They arrested him for racism. His name was Henry Nowak. He died. The attacker carried an 8-inch knife openly on his belt. No officer stopped him. The police body cam showed everything. No officer has been fired. No officer has been suspended. The investigation is still 'ongoing' — 5 months later. Elon Musk saw the footage and wrote: “This poor boy was running away from someone who stabbed him. The police attacked him instead of his murderer. Something is deeply wrong.” He then offered to personally fund a wrongful death lawsuit against the officers. A dying boy asking for help. Police chose the accusation of racism over his life. This is what two-tier justice looks like. Do you think the officers should face criminal charges? #TheShift #WorldChangingThings








He wasn't a career criminal. He was a Russel group university student. State authorities assisted a foreigner in stabbing him to death. This is 100x worse than George Floyd.


An 18-year-old kid gets stabbed in the street. He’s running for his life, begging for help, and instead of saving him, the police handcuff him while he bleeds out because the attacker claimed “racism.” They let him choke on his own blood. No urgency. No humanity. Just cold, ideological policing. Months later? Still no names. Still no suspensions. Still no accountability. Meanwhile, the same UK police have arrested over 12,000 people for social media posts. They move at lightning speed to jail citizens for tweets and online comments, yet they can’t even name or discipline the officers who allegedly let a stabbing victim die in handcuffs on the street. This is the definition of two-tier policing: aggressive against ordinary people speaking online, but protective when it comes to their own failures and protecting the narrative. The British people deserve real justice, not another cover-up. Justice for Henry Nowak.



















