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UK Police Anti-Racism Policy Calls for Reverse Engineering Arrest Rates by Ethnicity

Stay Free with Russell Brand · The Henry Nowak Case: What Nobody is Telling You! - SF727 · June 8, 2026
UK Police Anti-Racism Policy Calls for Reverse Engineering Arrest Rates by Ethnicity
Stay Free with Russell Brand
Stay Free with Russell Brand
The Henry Nowak Case: What Nobody is Telling You! - SF727
"An official police document actually says people should be treated differently based on the color of their skin. The police anti-racism commitment published in March 2025 by the NPCC and the College of Policing urges police forces to reverse engineer the same arrest rates between ethnic groups, even though the offending rates are different, by treating different ethnic groups differently."
A UK MP revealed that official police policy documents from March 2025 instruct officers to manipulate arrest rates to achieve equality of outcomes between ethnic groups, regardless of actual offending rates. This policy, which the MP argued amounts to treating people differently based on race, is now under review following the death of Henry Novak. Brand connects this to systemic problems with centralized authority imposing ideological mandates that contradict on-the-ground reality.

About this episode

Russell Brand hosted a wide-ranging episode examining the intersection of systemic control, community alternatives, and spiritual awakening. The show opened with Brand's analysis of the Henry Novak murder case in the UK, where 18-year-old Novak was arrested while bleeding to death after his killer falsely claimed to be the victim of a racist attack. Brand used body cam footage and parliamentary statements to argue that UK police anti-racism policies—which explicitly call for reverse engineering arrest rates by ethnicity to achieve equality of outcomes—led officers to prioritize responding to racism allegations over recognizing a stabbing victim who said he couldn't breathe nine times before dying. Brand warned that rage over this incident, while understandable, risks fueling further authoritarianism rather than addressing the root problem of centralized government control. The second half featured an extended conversation with Karina Fitch, a midwife who grew up in the Farm, America's largest intentional community founded by 1960s hippies following spiritual teacher Stephen Gaskin. Fitch revealed the US has the worst and only rising maternal mortality rate in the developed world, with Black mothers dying at 3-4 times the rate of white women, which she attributed to overmedicalized hospital births treating pregnancy as crisis rather than natural process. She described how the Farm community—once 1,500 people living communally—experienced mass exodus after crop failures forced a shift from communism to capitalism, and how sexual abuse was covered up for decades because the community held onto a utopian self-image. Brand and Fitch explored how both mainstream culture and counterculture are controlled by the same forces to prevent real change, and discussed the possibility of decentralized, voluntary communities using technology for direct democracy while living according to shared values. The episode concluded with an update from Dean Anderson, who drove a 40-year-old bus 3,000 miles from Montana to Bill Wilson's birthplace in Vermont, raffling the bus and donating property to spread 12-step principles as tools for broader cultural spiritual awakening.

Key takeaways

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