Pressure Beyond the Courtroom
Parallel to what was happening with the judge and the lawyer, another pressure technique was unfolding—this time through his personal circle.
Whether his friends were aware of it or not, they were being used as a weapon against him. A weapon designed to apply additional pressure and subtly distort his perception of reality.
The objective was simple: make the individual lose hope, abandon his right to a fair trial, and accept whatever scraps were thrown his way.
Planting Doubt Through Familiar Voices
Friends began dropping hints here and there, such as:
- Be careful, ChatGPT won’t be with you in court.
- If someone has a problem with a previous employer, they should contact them and communicate better.
This conveniently ignored the fact that he had already tried to communicate with his employer—and that the employer had refused to respond.
Despite a legal framework that clearly pointed to him as the victim with enforceable rights, not a single word of support was offered. Instead, the focus shifted toward planting doubt, confusion, and second-guessing in his mind.
When Misunderstanding Turns Into a Scheme
At this point, the individual began to recognize something crucial: this was no longer a misunderstanding.
It was a scheme.
A scheme far beyond the capabilities of ordinary civilians. It had to involve people with real authority.
If they could reach his lawyer, influence the judge, and mobilize his friends, then that authority was substantial.
The Illusion of Credible Authority
If none of the people around him questioned that authority or asked for his side of the story, then the authority must have appeared credible.
If his friends obeyed it without hesitation, then either they believed it was “for his own good,” or they were led to believe he had committed something seriously wrong.
And yet, a simple question remained unanswered:
Why did not a single one of them confront him directly with the accusations they had supposedly heard?
Judgment Without a Trial
What kind of credibility allows an unseen authority to be trusted without question?
What kind of power enables judgment and execution behind the scenes?
And if verdicts can be reached that way, one must ask:
Why do we have courts at all?
What Comes Next
In the next part, we will examine the third side of this dark triangle—designed not only to force the individual to give up, but also to make him appear unstable.