Deleted But Documented
It didn’t take long.
The moment I went public, the smear attempts started. Not through formal rebuttals or legal challenges—no.
Just petty, anonymous comments.
One accused me of being a “drug addict,” in response to a craft post featuring cannabis leaves in resin. Another claimed I was “clearly mentally ill.” Both were deleted shortly after being posted.
And interestingly, they were deleted just after I publicly mentioned that there are legal avenues available to identify the source of anonymous online harassment.
These weren’t random internet trolls. Based on the timing, language, and context, I have reasonable cause to believe the comments came from individuals affiliated with the company I filed complaints against.
While posted anonymously, platform records and metadata can be subpoenaed if necessary. If this pattern continues, that option remains on the table.
This is what happens when someone tells the truth in a system built to silence it. They don’t challenge your evidence. They don’t respond to your demands. They go after your character. They try to shame you into silence.
But I won’t be silenced.
These tactics don’t discredit me — they validate me.
Because now, anyone watching closely can see it: I didn’t just expose misconduct. I exposed a culture that deflects, degrades, and deletes.
They deleted the comments.
But I didn’t delete the truth.
I backed it up.
-- K
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