đĄ SAME Judge Allows Child Rapist Free, Yet Bangs Up Army Vet As Political Prisoner
How can a soldier suffering from PTSD be imprisoned for online posts while a convicted predator avoids jail due to âovercrowdingâ? Britainâs justice system has lost the plot.
Another day, another political prisoner silenced in this so-called âland of the freeâ!
Daffron Williams, a former soldier who served his country in the hellish conditions of Afghanistan and Iraq, has been slapped with a two-year sentence for posting on Facebook. Thatâs rightâFacebook. For the crime of expressing his rage, his frustration, and yes, even his controversial opinions, heâs been sent to rot in jail.
Now, Iâm not here to defend every word the man wrote. But letâs not pretend this isnât about cracking down on thought crime. Williams is a veteran suffering from PTSD, someone who was broken by wars fought in the name of this nation. His posts, no doubt unfiltered and angry, were made in the heat of a summer marked by social unrest and violent disorderâsparked by none other than the Southport massacre, where little girls were brutally murdered with a blade. While others rioted and looted with little consequence, the courts decided to make an example of a man whose words, however divisive, reflected the deep hurt and anger many feel about the state of our nation.
Ah, and then thereâs the smoking gun the court latched onto: âIâm racist as f***, only to those who disrespect society.â Now, taken in context, this could just as easily mean heâs sick to death of those who flout the rulesâillegal immigrants, thugs, or anyone else who turns up to cause chaos instead of contributing. Hardly a shocking position, is it? Wanting to deport those who come here illegally or abuse our hospitality isnât racism; itâs common sense. Yet somehow, in this twisted climate, itâs become a crime to even suggest that the UK should have standards or enforce its laws.
And letâs not forget the court dragging up his attendance at a Tommy Robinson rally. Yes, the court seriously cited it as though itâs evidence of wrongdoing. I was there myself, alongside thousands of others, covering the day. If we post anything âwrongâ online, does that mean weâre all going to have our attendance at such events used against us in some vexatious charge? Itâs an outrageous precedent, one that threatens anyone who dares step outside the establishment-approved narrative.
But hereâs the kicker: this same judge, Recorder of Cardiff Tracey Lloyd-Clarke, just a few months ago spared a convicted child rapist from prison, citing âovercrowding.â Yes, you read that right. A man who raped a child was let off with a suspended sentence, while a veteran suffering from PTSD is banged up for venting online. What does this say about our priorities? What does it say about a justice system that considers a keyboard warrior more dangerous than a predator?
This isnât justice; itâs political persecution. And donât think for a second this stops with Daffron Williams. Today itâs him; tomorrow itâs anyone who dares to call out the moral decay and chaos engulfing this country. You might not like what he said, but if you donât defend his right to say it, whoâs next?
It seems PTSD isnât the only thing Williams brought back from the battlefieldâheâs now fighting a war at home, one against censorship and a government determined to muzzle dissent. God help us all.
Your move, Britain. Are we going to keep sleepwalking into authoritarianism, or is it time to wake up?
Truly shocking. My heart goes out to the veteran and the victim of the freed rapist.