The Arrogance of Power, and the Injustice of the state of the Country we call Sierra Leone at 65

The Arrogance of Power, and the Injustice of the state of the Country we call Sierra Leone at 65

Conviction, Sentencing, and the Cost of Standing Outside the Political Circle —

The real problem is not just that power exists, but that it is so often exercised with arrogance. Too many leaders behave as though the state belongs to them, when in truth it belongs to the citizens who sustain it. That is the heart of the matter: power without humility becomes oppression, and authority without accountability becomes abuse.

The injustice of the state is visible everywhere. It appears in the gap between the privileged and the poor, in the weakness of institutions that should protect citizens, and in a system where justice can feel selective. For ordinary Sierra Leoneans, the state is often present when it demands obedience, but absent when it should deliver fairness, opportunity, and protection.

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Why all the noise, Admire? Why the constant spectacle—are you the only Bio who’s hit the jackpot?

Why all the noise, Admire? Why the constant spectacle—are you the only Bio who’s hit the jackpot?

At this point, it is not offensive. It is embarrassing. If self-awareness were currency, Admire Bio would be overdrafted.

What stands out is not the wealth, but the desperation driving it. The relentless need to show, to prove, to be seen—it is everywhere. Luxury is performed loudly and repeatedly, with an urgency that suggests there is nothing underneath it. Strip away the display, and the question becomes unavoidable: what is actually there?

All access. No awareness. No restraint. No off switch. And in a country where so many are struggling to survive, that kind of display does not read as success—it reads as contempt.

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