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2026年7月14日 星期二

The Illusion of Sovereignty: When Wealth Buys a Pause

 

The Illusion of Sovereignty: When Wealth Buys a Pause

The spectacle of the Rose Bay Rolls-Royce crash—a A$1.5 million SUV, a chauffeur to the stars, and a defendant whose bail hearings draw a crowd—is less about a single traffic accident and more about the uncomfortable reality of "flexible justice." When we see the machinery of the law grind to a halt because a defendant has the resources to turn procedural technicalities into a prolonged chess match, we aren’t witnessing the rule of law. We are witnessing the rule of leverage.

History teaches us that justice is rarely the impartial goddess she claims to be. From the Roman Senate to the modern courtroom, wealth has always acted as a lubricant for the wheels of bureaucracy. When a defendant from a powerful family faces serious charges, the system doesn't just judge the act; it calculates the weight of the defendant's connections. We see this in the endless bail reviews and the careful management of a case that, for an ordinary citizen, would have been resolved by a stern magistrate and a swift verdict months ago.

This is the dark side of our social contract. We are told that we are equal before the law, but we are actually sorted by our ability to frustrate it. When a person—or their family’s reach—can stall a judicial process, they are effectively declaring that the state’s time is less valuable than their own comfort. It confirms a cynical biological truth: hierarchies are not erased by democracy; they simply change their armor. Those at the top of the social food chain don't just consume more resources; they consume the time and attention of the state itself, forcing the legal system to bend its own spine to accommodate their privilege. As the case drags on toward its second year, the public stares not at the facts of the crash, but at the stark demonstration that in a world of limited accountability, silence and capital are the only true sovereigns.