
Chameleon
The Post Office Horizon scandal ruined hundreds of innocent subpostmasters, yet no senior figures have faced prosecution. Delayed compensation isn’t justice—accountability is.
WHERE THE HELL ARE THE HANDCUFFS?
Let’s stop pretending this is a “tragedy” and call it what it really is: a state-sanctioned mugging of integrity, truth, and working-class lives. Hundreds of decent, hardworking subpostmasters had their lives obliterated, while white-collar war criminals in suits are out sipping Chablis and hiding behind non-disclosure agreements. What kind of Kafkaesque hellhole allows an institution to knowingly lie, bankrupt, and imprison its citizens—and then shrug when asked about justice? This isn’t just a scandal. It’s an indictment of the rotting carcass of accountability in Britain.
The government’s foot-dragging isn’t bureaucracy—it’s cowardice in a tailored suit. The people who presided over this disaster knew. They lied. They watched livelihoods crumble and families collapse, and instead of facing criminal charges, they’re getting knighthoods and retirement packages. If we don’t see prosecutions—real, public, televised reckonings—then this country isn’t governed by the rule of law, but by the rule of connections. Until someone in a courtroom points and says, “You—yes, you—are going to prison,” the victims remain betrayed, and British justice remains a cruel joke.
Email: Chameleon.150206052@gmail.com


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