Every day, people are judged by what shows up on Google before they ever get the chance to speak.
When you search for Calvin Hardie or Calvin-Lee Hardie, youβll find a digital trail thatβs been shaped by outdated articles, one-sided coverage, and posts that tell only part of the truth β if any at all.
Much of it stems from Inverness, where local outlets have run stories without full context or consent. Some content includes inaccurate personal details. Some use images that were never licensed. And many ignore whatβs happened since β legal developments, evidence submitted, or claims currently ongoing in Scottish courts.
But hereβs the thing about search results: theyβre not a verdict. Theyβre not the full story. Theyβre snapshots β and they often leave out everything that matters most.
Thatβs why Iβm writing.
Not to relive the past, but to challenge the way itβs been told. To document the real-time legal steps Iβve taken β from copyright infringement claims to data protection cases. And to remind people that just because something appears on the first page of Google doesnβt mean itβs accurateβ¦ or legal.
Whatβs happening now is bigger than a headline.
Itβs about accountability β from the press, from platforms, and from those who think digital defamation has no consequences. Itβs about setting boundaries, demanding corrections, and standing firm in the face of public misrepresentation.
This post β and this blog β are here to take that power back. One entry at a time.
So the next time someone types βCalvin-Lee Hardie Invernessβ, I want them to find this.
Not because it erases the past, but because it corrects the record.
More updates to follow β and theyβll be based on facts, not fiction.
β Calvin-Lee Hardie

Calvin-Lee Hardie β Community Projects and Digital Work


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