The Daily Signal - Explaining Britain’s ‘Sickly Reversed’ George Floyd Moment | Victor Davis Hanson

Episode Date: June 4, 2026

The facts are not in dispute. Henry Nowak, a young university student was talking home one night when a 23-year-old Sikh immigrant stabbed him in the chest several times with a “ceremonial blade.”... Vickrum Digwa, the killer, told police that Nowak had racially assaulted him. This was a lie. The police handcuffed Nowak, leaving him to bleed out in front of them. "Mr. Nowak, unlike George Floyd, was not a career criminal. He was not being handcuffed because he was passing counterfeit currency and high on fentanyl and resisting arrest as Mr. Floyd was. It's far more egregious for police to handcuff a man bleeding on the ground than to use a standard approved measure to restrain a suspect that was resisting arrest that went south when he stopped breathing.  What was the reaction? The United States blew up for four months.  What was the reaction in Britain to Mr. Nowak? Silence," argues Victor Davis Hanson on today’s edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In a Few Words.” 👉PEPPERDINE: Daily Signal listeners save 50–75% HTTPS://GO.PEPPERDINE.EDU/DAILYSIGNAL     👉 The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers: http://dailysignal.com/donate 👉Don’t miss out on Victor’s latest short videos by subscribing to The Daily Signal today. You’ll be notified every time a new piece of content drops: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/dailysignal?sub_confirmation=1⁠  Also on Spotify: https://megaphone.link/THEDAILYSIGNAL9753340027  👉Want more VDH? Watch Victor’s weekly, hour-long podcast, “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words,” now! Subscribe to his YouTube channel, and enable notifications:  https://www.youtube.com/@victordavishanson7273?sub_confirmation=1👉More exclusive content is available on Victor’s website: https://victorhanson.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Daily Signal podcast, where we provide intelligence for the intelligent. Now, without further ado, here's today's take. America is going through a higher education transformation where students are realizing that what they want and need is a place that doesn't stifle their intellectual freedom. Standing out among the few graduate programs that value viewpoint diversity is Pepperdine's University School of Public Policy, where I've taught the last two years. Their masters of public policy is both applied and practical, preparing the next generation of leaders to participate in government agencies, the business sector, and think tanks. Pursue your MPP at Pepperdine. Daily Signal listeners qualify for an automatic 50 to 75% tuition scholarship and can learn more at go.peperdine.edu slash daily signal. It's go.peperdine.edu slash daily signal.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Hello, this is Victor Davis Hansen for The Daily Signal. There was a murder in Britain in the town of Hampshire that's got worldwide news because it's kind of iconic of the whole problem of immigration and DEI in the Western world. The facts are not in dispute. A young man who was a student, Henry Noak, was walking and encountered another, I think, young person. I think he was 23. Vigrum Digua, who was a Sikh immigrant, either first or second generation, wasn't specified.
Starting point is 00:01:43 And apparently they exchanged words, and they had some confrontation. We'll wait to see what surveillance cameras show. But Mr. Digua pulled out his ceremonial Sikh sword and used it as a weapon and stabbed Mr. Noak repeatedly. apparently fatally in the chest. And when police arrived, Mr. Noak was on the ground bleeding out, clearly bleeding out, and muttering, I'm dying.
Starting point is 00:02:14 What was the reaction of the police? Did they render immediate first aid and restrain Mr. Digwa? No. No. What they did was they acute Mr. Digua then made up a lie, and we'll get to that later, that he had been a victim of racism, that Mr. Nowak had exchanged words that were racial and nature to him that prompted the stabbing.
Starting point is 00:02:40 So what did the police do? They put handcuffs on the dying young Mr. Nook. And, of course, he died with the handcuffs without any medical attention at all. Then Mr. Digwa apparently went back to his home. and his mother, and I guess members of his family, where somebody he and his mother then hid the murder weapon in the house. And at some point, the police finally caught on after Mr. Noak died, or they had surveillance, or they had witnesses,
Starting point is 00:03:14 that there had been no racial taunts, that that was a complete lie, and they had watched, in some ways, abetted the death of Mr. Nook, who was a white male, and was on the wrong side of the oppressor-oppressed binary, apparently. What are we going to make of this British insanity? We've had our version here, too. You know, in a very strange way, it is sort of a George Floyd in a really sick reversal. Mr. Noak, unlike George Floyd, was not a career criminal.
Starting point is 00:03:53 He was not being handcuffed because he was a... passing counterfeit currency and high on fentanyl and resisting arrest as Mr. Floyd was. He was dying. He was bleeding out. It's a little easier to see someone as in extremists when they say, I'm dying and there's a pull of blood around him than Mr. Floyd when he said, I can't breathe. That's not to excuse Mr. Shrovan necessarily. But it's far more egregious for police to handcuff a man bleeding on the ground than to use a standard approved measure to restrain a suspect who's resisting arrest that went south when he stopped breathing. More importantly, what was the reaction of the public in these two different cases? In the case of George Floyd, you had a career criminal
Starting point is 00:04:44 committing a felony passing counterfeit currency, actively resisting arrest and under the influence of drugs, who tragically died when Officer Chauvin put a knee on his neck, which arguably had been a protocol that had been approved in a number of police departments, the United States. What was the reaction? The United States blew up for four months. Four months. Two billion dollars worth of damage, 35 people killed, 1,500 officers, injured, arson, federal house, courthouse, torched. Police precinct torch, iconic church torch, luminaries like Camilla Harris bragging that this will not stop. These demonstrations will go on. They should go on, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Starting point is 00:05:34 What was the reaction in Britain to Mr. Noah? Silence. Silence. What can we learn from all this? We've talked about the problems with DEI. DEI not only destroys meritocracy and promotes people who did not earn that omission or that hiring based on widely accepted criteria that everybody accepts. We are an equal opportunity Western civilization. We are not a mandated equality of result. At least we weren't until recently. But there's another wrinkle to DEI. Once a person is informally or formally identified as a victim or the oppressed, that serves as a get-out-of-jail car. That is the end of deterrence. They feel
Starting point is 00:06:23 if they got into the university with a SAT score that's 200 points lower than someone else, then when they take a class and they don't do well, the same type of exemptions will apply on and on and on. And obviously, Mr. Digwa felt that in Britain today, the fact that he was an immigrant of color gave him an exemption. To lie, to take a knife out, of course, if you have a visible knife, in Great Britain, it's a felony. It's against the law, but an exemption is given because of his, I don't know, immigration status for religious reasons, but he felt that he could use that as a weapon
Starting point is 00:07:05 with impunity. He could stab somebody. Then he could hit the button word racism, and that would direct the police away from him, the perpetrator, to the dying victim, to the extent they'd even put cuffs, not one bandage, no mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Nothing, recitation. All they did was handcuff and make his plight worse, and he bled out. DEI is a very deadly, dangerous phenomenon. Once you identify a group of people, not by active oppression, but by the color of their skin, and you say no matter what their class is, and I would say the Sikh community in Europe,
Starting point is 00:07:48 but especially in the United States, is the, as a member of the, Indian diaspora is the most affluent immigrant group in the United States right now. Mr. Mondami found that out when he said he was going to go after wider neighborhoods, and people pointed out that he is more exclusive if he's going to talk in collective terms and so-called white people. It's also kind of tragic that the Sikh community has been one of the most hardworking, law-abiding communities of immigrants in America, in Europe. And they've had a tendency to look at themselves as individuals, not as collectives. But it would be a shame if the Sikh community did not condemn members of their own community,
Starting point is 00:08:34 if they're going to talk in collective terms. They're under no obligation to single out Mr. Digwa in Britain. But if they talk about the Sikh community, then they are. And they had. One of the Sikh leaders in Great Britain said that now the Sikhs were subject to hate crimes. And so he was trying to take the onus away from the murderer to his community now is victimized, as victimized. Wouldn't it have been better for the Sikh leader to come out and say, Mr. Digwa is not representative of our community. We don't take religious objects and use them as weapons to kill somebody. And when we kill somebody, we don't lie about it to the police and are responsible for the,
Starting point is 00:09:22 his plight and falsely make up charges of racism, much less do we aid and abet a murder by hiding the murder weapon. We don't do that. They're not, again, they're under no compunction to say that. But once you collectively say the C community is suffering from people's threats, then you live and die with collectivism. And if it's going to be that you're collectively victims and you might want to say that you wanted to separate yourself.
Starting point is 00:09:51 as a collective from a murder and people who abetted that murder. The same thing is happening in the United States. Again, the Sikh community, and I have neighbors and some of my closest friends, they're one of the most industrious and hardworking immigrant communities there is. Recently, though, we had an epidemic of Sikh illegal alien truck drivers. Many of them were caught without valid driver's license or with driver's license that were really not legitimate because they did not know the English language, and there was a lot of high-profile horrendous catastrophic accidents
Starting point is 00:10:31 where they were driving semis and killed innocent drivers. Sikh community is no obligation to defend them or to say, but once they think they're going to talk collectively, and they did, they wanted petitions, they said this is unfair. Once you do that, then you, you, lose that moral high ground, it would have been much wiser for people in the Sikh community that say, we are the most law-abiding immigrant community. We do not talk about ourselves in collective terms. We are individuals. These individuals broke U.S. law. They committed a crime, criminal act,
Starting point is 00:11:10 by coming into this country illegally, and they were not qualified to drive semi-trucks in the manner that they did are to drive them at all, and we condemn that. They're not representative of the values of the Sikh community. That message did not get out like that. And so it would be tragic if other ethnic groups have looked at the progression of DEI and the exemptions and deterrence that allows to jump on that DIYagon. Why would it be tragic? Because public opinion is moving in the opposite direction. People are tired of victim, victim, victimizer, victimizer, victim. They want to go back to individual people and not collectives. Thank you very much. This is Victor Davis-Henson for the daily signal. Thank you for tuning in to the Daily Signal. Please like, share, and subscribe to be
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