Imagine you are a foreign tractor-trailer driver — let’s say you are German — working in the United States. You make a flagrantly illegal U-turn on a path meant for official use only. You have to crawl across four lanes of traffic to do it, and not surprisingly, a car with members of another race slams into your truck. All passengers die. You offer no assistance. You cannot speak English but are allowed to leave the scene without being charged. You immediately flee to another state 2,000 miles away. Unfortunately for you, you are arrested and returned to the state where the collision took place. Incidentally, you are an illegal immigrant.
What would the reaction be from white truck drivers, or whites generally? Can you imagine whites mobilizing in your defense? Would a large organization of Germans demand lenient treatment for you? Would millions of whites around the world sign a petition supporting you? Would thousands mock your victims, because they were not white and therefore, somehow, had it coming? Finally, would you expect the German government to work for you and a German politician to speak up for you?
Most whites would be ashamed to appeal to racial loyalty to defend such a person. Even white advocates believe that racial solidarity should not excuse him.
We must understand that others are not like us. Non-whites overwhelmingly seem to have a tribal morality, in contrast to the “dignity” or even “victimhood” morality of the modern West. Instead of holding to a principled code of right and wrong, for non-whites, admitting wrong means losing face to other, hostile tribes. For that reason, non-whites’ shameless refusal to admit wrong, even in the teeth of the evidence, baffles whites.
The absurd scenario I laid out above is the actual case of Sikh truck driver Harjinder Singh, an illegal immigrant who killed three people.
The alleged semi-truck driver who killed three people while making a U-turn at an “Official Use Only” turn on the Florida Turnpike is an ILLEGAL MIGRANT who was granted a commercial driver’s license by the State of California.
pic.twitter.com/Ky7w9hsojX— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) August 17, 2025
In response, more than 3,200,000 people have signed a petition calling for leniency for the driver. “By granting clemency, you would reaffirm the value of proportional justice, the power of community advocacy, and the potential for rehabilitation,” the “Collective Punjabi Youth” wrote to Governor Ron DeSantis. “We believe this case is not just about one individual — it speaks to the broader principles of fairness and mercy in the justice system.” In other words, they are brazenly hoping to show the power of community advocacy over rules-based justice.
The petition got wide coverage and many Americans are outraged. Some have added their names to the petition only to write about their outrage. There is also outrage over what is on social media. Posts with thousands of likes taunt the victims of the driver, even claiming that the dead drivers were pedophiles, racists, or both.
Wrong U-turn but a right outcome!
pic.twitter.com/WH4wzi6Tvj
—
Sherovic (@Sherovicisfire) August 24, 2025
What’s wrong? He took out 3 pedos https://t.co/mo34KHCTnU
— bakchodreturns (@bakchod1returns) August 23, 2025
At least one member of the Indian government is working to protect Mr. Singh’s interests. Harsimrat Badal said she wants to ensure Mr. Singh’s rights, “including that to wear a ‘dastar’ (Sikh turban), are protected and he is not persecuted as a murderer.” She also said that the accident should not inconvenience other Indian truck drivers “by denying them work visas and making it more difficult for them to drive trucks by bringing in new language proficiency rules.” English proficiency was technically required for years, but the Obama Administration gutted enforcement. President Trump is once again enforcing this requirement, drawing protests from the “Sikh Coalition” among others. Mr. Singh reportedly failed a language exam in Florida after the accident, with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy blaming Washington State and New Mexico for failing to enforce English-language proficiency rules. The Sikh reportedly could identify only one out of four road signs correctly.
Mr. Singh’s village in India is backing him. “His age is 28 years, and if he gets 45 years of jail [the maximum potential sentence], then you can imagine what will be the condition of his family,” said a relative. “Though they acknowledged that Harjinder committed a mistake,” NDTV reported that residents of Rataul “demanded that the US authorities should not award harsh punishment.” [sic] The Shiromani Akali Dal, a Sikh activist group, is also calling for the Indian government to give consular aid. It is especially outraged that Mr. Singh appeared in court without a turban, something it claimed “pained the Sikh community worldwide.”
A Sikh group is also working for Mr. Singh’s legal defense. The Tampa Bay Times published an interview with Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a “human rights attorney and general counsel to Sikhs for Justice.” He claimed that Mr. Singh was repentant and sorrowful, despite reports that he had shown no remorse at all. The lawyer seemed to think we should sympathize with Mr. Singh because he is an illegal: “Harjinder came to America to build a new life with hard work and dignity.”
The Tampa Bay Times skipped over a few facts. Mr. Pannun also appears to be a Sikh separatist whom Indian agents allegedly tried to assassinate. Some in India call him a “terrorist.” Mr. Pannum claimed the incident would inspire hate crimes against Sikhs, while also warning ironically that Mr. Singh’s support for independent “Khalistan” left him vulnerable to persecution in India.
American journalists seem uninterested in the Khalistan movement, but Sikh groups are gaining power here as they already have in Canada. Claims of persecution for supporting “Khalistan” are a way to get asylum, thus feeding the growth of the large expatriate community that supports Mr. Singh.
Khalistan may be why he is even in the country. In 2018, Mr. Singh was arrested as an illegal and processed for removal. He claimed — through an interpreter — that he was afraid to go back to India, and was allowed to stay. Foolish law enforcement, even under the first Trump Administration, has cost three American lives.
Sarah Stock at The Rift found an interesting image that symbolizes the subculture of racial grievance America and Canada have admitted from the subcontinent. A card with a photo of a man with a turban holding a rifle can be seen swinging in the truck during the video footage of the accident.

Sidhu Moose Wala
This man in the photo was Sidhu Moose Wala, a Punjabi-language rapper who lived in Canada. Among his artistic output was a song mostly consisting of boasts about his group and a video in which he beats up white Canadians. He was shot to death in India, allegedly over a gang rivalry in Canada.
Such bizarre Third-World disputes were once unknown in North America. They will be increasingly common as subcontinentals continue to arrive with the fanatical group loyalty that will make them a powerful political force.
Other races operate with a morality utterly alien to the white mind. They rally to even the most unsympathetic of their group, while whites shy away from group solidarity out of misplaced guilt. This poisonous tribalism triumphs over Western individualism. The rot is already deep; what happens with Mr. Singh will show just how deep.
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