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Victim blaming vs Accountability: Raja Jackson attack, & Scams image

Victim blaming vs Accountability: Raja Jackson attack, & Scams

E255 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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Dive into this explosive episode of Unsolicited Perspectives as Bruce Anthony unpacks a viral wrestling incident involving Rampage Jackson’s son, exposes the harsh realities of scams and fraud, and shares a hilariously disastrous high school homecoming story. With a sharp focus on personal responsibility and accountability, Bruce explores the fine line between victim blaming and self-growth, offering real-life lessons from the ring, the business world, and his own dating misadventures. Whether you’re a fan of wrestling drama, true viral stories, or just love authentic, thought-provoking commentary, this episode delivers laughs, insights, and plenty of moments that will make you question your own red flags. #rajajackson #accountability #responsibility #prowrestling #redflags #baddates #unsolicitedperspectives 

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Chapters:

00:00 Violence, Fraud & High School Drama! 🚨💔

00:19 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives 🎙️🔥💥

03:09 Rampage Jackson's Son: The Shocking Truth 👊💥

04:26 When Wrestling Gets TOO REAL 😱🤼‍♂️

09:07 BRUTAL Attack Caught on Camera! 📹😨

13:05 Who's REALLY Responsible? The Truth Revealed! 🤔💡

20:47 The Humble Beer Request Story 🍺😅

23:15 Controversial Take: Are Victims Responsible Too? 🎯💭

27:45 Red Flags & Warning Signs You Can't Ignore! ⛔️🚩

32:17 Dating Horror Stories: My Toxic Truth 💔😤

41:24 Business Fails: What NOT to Do! ❌💸

49:21 Story Time! My Wild Homecoming Story🎭🌟

54:58 The Dance Floor Drama You Won't Believe! 💃😳

59:46 Late Night Confession: What Really Happened! 🌙🤫

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Transcript

Introduction and Episode Preview

00:00:00
Speaker
violence in the ring, fraud in the streets, and emotional damage at a high school dance. We gonna get into it. Let's get it.
00:00:19
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Unsolicited Perspectives. I'm your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation in important events and topics that are shaping today's society. Join the conversation and follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for our video podcasts, YouTube exclusive content, and our YouTube membership.
00:00:39
Speaker
Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your enemies. On today's episode, we're going to be talking about Raja Jackson.
00:00:53
Speaker
We're going to be talking about accountability. And then we're going to be talking about me at my senior homecoming dance. That's a story.
00:01:05
Speaker
But that's enough the intro. Let's get to the show.

Bruce's Wrestling Journey

00:01:15
Speaker
You know, i often talk about the time that I owned a professional wrestling company, and I talk about it fondly, even though it went under shortly after I bought into the company.
00:01:28
Speaker
But I love professional wrestling. I still watch it today. My brother and sister were joking on me couple of weeks ago about how It was very, very tough for me to give up my wrestling men, the action figures, even into high school. I was still secretly playing with them, putting together matches and and events and the whole nine and making my brother watch them. a love professional wrestling. Wanted to be a professional wrestler.
00:01:55
Speaker
One of my greatest regrets is that after my freshman year college, I went to my father and I said, hey, dad, you think it would be cool if I didn't work this summer, but instead I went to wrestling school?
00:02:12
Speaker
My father, even though he oftentimes told me some of my ideas were stupid, he never, ever shot down my dreams. And he said, son, if you want to go to wrestling school, I will pay for you to go to wrestling school.
00:02:25
Speaker
And I didn't follow through with it. Let's just say if I ever had to go to court as a transition to heaven or to be reincarnated and I had to answer for regrets,
00:02:38
Speaker
Yeah, that would be one of my regrets. I don't have too many now in my ripe old age of 45. You know, I pretty much do what I want to do and I don't let things hold me back. But that's one of my regrets is that I didn't go to wrestling school in 1998, 99.
00:02:53
Speaker
eight ninety nine And who knows? I could have been the first rock or the next rock or the next Stone Cold Steve Austin. Definitely wouldn't have been the next Hulk Hogan because I'm not racist. But anyway...
00:03:06
Speaker
We're not going to speak ill of the dead. Why am I bringing all this up?

Raja Jackson Incident

00:03:10
Speaker
Because recently there was an incident at a wrestling event. And the incident involved Rampage Jackson's son. Now, for people that don't know who Rampage Jackson is, you do know him.
00:03:24
Speaker
You just don't know him by name. He was a UFC fighter, a major fighter, and his head looks like a pit bull. Like you would know him if you see him.
00:03:35
Speaker
Okay. He is, I don't know, C list celebrity, maybe, maybe even B list. He was, he played BA in the remake of the 18 movie.
00:03:45
Speaker
Right. So like he's, he's somebody and he has a son That's M-M-M-A. So, Raja Jackson is 25-year-old professional m MMA fighter and the son of the legendary Quentin Rampage Jackson.
00:03:59
Speaker
He's compiled about a 4-0 record in amateur and MMA and was seen as a promising talent basically because of his skill set and his lineage. However, Raja has struggled to transition That promise into a stable MMA career reportedly due to personal issues and the tendency for self-sabotage.
00:04:18
Speaker
He also explored crossover opportunities in entertainment wrestling, attempting to leverage his m MMA pedigree. So that leads us to the Knock X Pro event.
00:04:31
Speaker
So Roger Jackson was invited to a Knock Pro wrestling event in Los Angeles, which attracts independent wrestling and m MMA talent for crossover segments. The event was meant to feature a scripted encounter, a spot between Raja and a wrestler known as Stu Smith, Psycho Stu, blurring the lines between real combat sports and stage wrestling drama.
00:04:55
Speaker
Okay, before I continue on, I have to break this down. Yes, professional rep wrestling is scripted, meaning that You know who's going to be the winner and the loser the majority of the time. There has been some instances where they walk out there. They don't know what the hell is going happen.
00:05:12
Speaker
But it's scripted as far as the storyline of the match. When I ran a wrestling company, I did not tell them what to do in the ring. All I did was give them the finish.
00:05:26
Speaker
Who was going to go over? You know, the finish being the finish of the match. So... Who was going to win, who was going to lose, and how they were going to win or lose. Most of the time, they call that in the ring.
00:05:38
Speaker
They want to feel the essence of the crowd. So most professional wrestlers do not script out the match. Some do. Some don't.
00:05:49
Speaker
But the finish, the end of the match and how it's going end is always scripted. Now, what they're talking about with Roger Jackson and Psycho Stu was there was going to be a spot, which meant that it wasn't a wrestling match that he was going to be participating in.
00:06:06
Speaker
It's a certain sequence that happens. Sometimes a spot is powerbomb through a table. Sometimes a spot is a wrestler being interrupted as they're walking down the aisle to start at the ring. that It's a spot. It's this particular moment and the overall story of a match.
00:06:26
Speaker
So he was supposed to participate in a scripted spot. Now, why am I bringing all this up? Tension reportedly existed backstage after an incident involving Smith and Jackson, which may have contributed to Raja breaking script and attacking Smith for real during their segment.
00:06:47
Speaker
So what does all that mean? Breaking script. The script goes, this is what we're going to do. So you're going to come out.
00:06:58
Speaker
We're going talk a little trash to each other. I'm going to push you. You're going to push me. I'm going to try to tackle you. You're going to slam me. That's the script, right? You know beforehand, that's what's going to happen. Y'all go over it.
00:07:13
Speaker
You push me, I push you. I attempt to tackle you. You slam me. That's all that's supposed to happen. right? That is the script. When somebody breaks the script or goes into business for themselves, these are all terms that are used in wrestling.
00:07:29
Speaker
It goes into business for themselves. This means that they've broken the script So no longer is it gonna be push, you push me, I push you, I attempt to tackle you, you slam me.
00:07:41
Speaker
Now it is, you push me, I'ma punch you, slam you down to the ground, go grab a chair, hit you with a chair. Not saying that that's what happened in this scenario, I'm gonna get to that in a minute, but that's breaking the script. So supposedly, Raja and Smith had an altercation before the match.
00:07:58
Speaker
Now this was supposed to lead up to the match or that spot that they had scripted earlier. Something got mistangled and there's tension there.
00:08:12
Speaker
And then Rampage Jackson's son goes into business for himself. hist His presence was intended to capitalize on his m MMA reputation and bring a spectacle to the wrestling event, but it went disastrously off course where Roger lost control and administered a violent, um this unscripted assault.
00:08:32
Speaker
Raja violently attacked wrestler Stu Smith during that wrestling event in Los Angeles, leaving Smith unconscious and seriously injured. The incident caught live on video do and video and widely shared online was supposed to be a scripted wrestling segment. Like I said, it was supposed to be scripted, but quickly escalated into a real and brutal assault with Jackson slamming Smith down on the mat and throwing over 20 shots.
00:09:00
Speaker
winnie uncontested punches at Smith and he laid motionless. Jackson's actions are under active police investigation and many in the wrestling community have condemned the attack as selfish, irresponsible act of violence calling in among one of the worst ever seen in the ring.
00:09:21
Speaker
So let me repeat this. They have a scripted spot that they're supposed to do.

Consequences and Industry Reflection

00:09:26
Speaker
Supposedly what happened before scripted spot is Psycho Stu hit Roger Jackson with a can, like a soda can, beer can or whatever.
00:09:36
Speaker
Roger's like, what are you doing? And he was like, hey man, you know, don't break kayfabe. This is in a crowd. So this is all before Psycho so psycho Smith, Psycho Stu's match.
00:09:50
Speaker
As Psycho Stew is in his match, this is before the planned spot. As Psycho Stew is in his match, Rajai Jackson, who is also a streamer, is streaming online saying, hey, everybody thinks this is going to be fake.
00:10:05
Speaker
I'm about to go in there and beat his ass for real. He's saying that ahead of time. He proceeds to go along with the planned script spot. He goes in the ring.
00:10:17
Speaker
He picks up Psycho Stu. Psycho Stu gives him his body. So when you're in professional wrestling, you give somebody your body. That means that they're going to perform a ah move on you.
00:10:27
Speaker
And you're kind of helping them along with it as a grown man. who lifts a ton of weight, let me tell you, it is very difficult to pick up dead weight. It is extremely difficult. Grab a kid, grown adults out there, grab one of your kids when they fall out and they're not allowing you to pick them up and it's just dead weight. It's hard.
00:10:46
Speaker
It's hard to do it. So Smith gave him his body because that was part of the planned script. Raja broke script by slamming him down so violently that he knocked him unconscious and then stood over top of him in that UFC m MMA mounting position and started throwing wild, wild punches, 20 of them, that it looked like they it it looked like he was legitimately trying to kill him.
00:11:16
Speaker
Regardless of any prior misunderstandings or tensions backstage, Jackson bears a lot of responsibility for failing to respect the boundaries and safety protocols of professional wrestling.
00:11:31
Speaker
Not only that, the professional protocols of being a human being, he at attacked an unarmed man and tried to violently hurt him. How violently did he hurt him?
00:11:45
Speaker
Supposedly, per reports, Not only was Psycho Stu unconscious, he was literally choking on his blood and teeth.
00:11:58
Speaker
They finally got him in stable condition, but he's still critical. That's how badly this kid beat him. Now, his dad started defending him. by saying, hey, look, he had just got a concussion a couple of days earlier.
00:12:13
Speaker
I didn't know that he was going to be doing this event. I don't think he should have been doing this event. That was an initial response. The second response is always, up It's supposed to be better because typically the initial response to anything is emotional.
00:12:28
Speaker
Then when you see the reaction, you're like, hold up. I got to do some PR work. So then Rampage Jackson was like, no, my son was totally wrong. I don't understand why he did that. We have to have a discussion.
00:12:39
Speaker
There's a rumor floating around now that Rampage has turned his back on his son and said, I can't do nothing with him. Like he has these temper problems. He has these anger issues. This is part of the reason why his MMA career hasn't taken off the way it should have.
00:12:51
Speaker
But Yes, it's under police investigation because this is this is a brutal, brutal ah assault.
00:13:03
Speaker
And I hold Raja completely responsible for this. I don't, I'm not going to victim blame. This show, today's show is going to be, going to Bruce, you're doing a lot of victim blaming. I'm not doing victim blaming.
00:13:19
Speaker
I'm gonna explain in the next segment what I'm doing. But what i'm what I'm doing is is laying out everybody's responsibility in certain situations.
00:13:34
Speaker
And everybody's responsibility in this situation was, one, for Psycho Stu, for Smith, to pull Jackson aside and say, hey man, I know we got this planned spot going on in the ring to lead up to that, to draw attention to that.
00:13:55
Speaker
I'm going to do something outside where the crowd will see it. So that'll lead to anticipation for whatever we do in the ring. I'm gonna hit you with a can.
00:14:07
Speaker
Is that cool? No, I just had a concussion couple of days ago. Don't hit me with a can. in the head okay so what can i do you can punch me in the stomach that could lead to something so there was a responsibility of stew to have that conversation so that there isn't any tension there's also responsibility of stew to realize after he did that when there was tension to then talk to the booking agent that's the one who lays out the match that lays out the match
00:14:38
Speaker
Talk to the booking agents and be like, hey, there's a little bit of tension. Are we sure everything is cool? Somebody probably needs to talk to our special guest.
00:14:48
Speaker
But Stu is still absolutely the victim because even if you think you have some tension, he went in to do a job.
00:14:59
Speaker
Stu or Smith went in to do the spot as they had talked about. Raja, there is no defending you, brother. You are absolutely wrong. wrong And you probably should end up going to jail because this is almost attempted murder. And if anybody can go out there, watch the video, I think they haven't taken it down. You can still probably find it on a lot of sites.
00:15:23
Speaker
It is brutal. It's attempted murder. Okay. It's attempted murder. Who else bears some responsibility in this? The owner of the wrestling company.
00:15:34
Speaker
This is why I say this. The owner of the wrestling company, remember, I was one, their job is to make sure the show is running smoothly.
00:15:48
Speaker
They're supposed to be in the back, checking on the segments, what's supposed to come next, talking to the individuals who are going to be interacting with the segments, talking to the booking agents, talking to the wrestlers, talking to the ring announcers, talking to the timekeeper, talking to any commentators to further along any stories that they're trying to do.
00:16:08
Speaker
They are the director of the entire show. All they had to do was jump on this young man's stream, which they should have been following anyway if he's their special guest and he's supposed to be taking part in a spot later on in the evening.
00:16:25
Speaker
They should have been watching this stream. And if they were watching this stream, they would have realized that this young man was about serious business.
00:16:36
Speaker
The wrestling company bears some responsibility. Wrestling company bears responsibility.
00:16:42
Speaker
as much responsibility as probably Roger Jackson. And the reason why i said that is because they dropped the ball by not monitoring, checking in on their guests.
00:16:55
Speaker
Now, saying all that, that does not excuse or give any explanation that's reasonable for what Roger did. All I'm saying is, is that no matter what situation you are in in life,
00:17:12
Speaker
Everybody has a responsibility and accountability to that particular situation. Your actions and decisions have consequences.
00:17:25
Speaker
For every action, there's a reaction. And there were too many people in this situation who dropped the ball. Most importantly, the person who dropped the biggest ball is the soon-to-be felon Roger Jackson, who looks like he needs serious therapy.
00:17:50
Speaker
Serious therapy. And this brings a bad light to the sport I love. Yes, I called it a sport because you have to be an athlete. To the sport I love, professional wrestling.
00:18:05
Speaker
Whenever... you are running a business or making decisions for other people, try to look at the entire board and no matter what decision you make,
00:18:19
Speaker
bear the responsibility of whatever outcome that comes from that decision. Responsibility isn't just about causing harm. It's about creating and enforcing and respecting systems that keeps everyone safe.
00:18:31
Speaker
When failures occur, it's important to look beyond blaming one person and ask a simple question. What went wrong with the checks, protocols, and supervision? How could the organization better protect its talent, especially from out-of-control, real violence?
00:18:49
Speaker
True accountability means taking steps after incidents to fix systematic weaknesses and prevent future harm. Victims need support and organizations must be protective in their responses.
00:19:03
Speaker
The story isn't about one person losing control. It's a wake up call for the wrestling industry to prioritize safety and accountability on every single level. And I'm not talking about the WWE. The WWE does a really good job of maintaining safety on every level.
00:19:22
Speaker
Booker T, a famous wrestler, five-time, five-time, five-time, five-time world heavyweight champion, was on a podcast expressing this very thing because he runs a wrestling company.
00:19:35
Speaker
And he said, look, yes, Jackson, absolutely responsible. No, there's nothing that we can do to give him grace in his actions.
00:19:47
Speaker
Can't do it. but company bears some responsibility. And that's all I'm saying is that everybody has a hand in this thing called responsibility.
00:20:06
Speaker
One time, and I've told this story before, I was at my parents' house and it was some holiday. And it was the five of us, my mom, dad, me my brother, and sister, we were all adults.
00:20:19
Speaker
We were drinking, was having a cookout or something like that. And the way I was sitting at this table, I couldn't really maneuver around. Like I was kind of trapped in this little corner. So with all earnest and humility, I asked my brother if he could grab a beer out of the fridge for me.
00:20:39
Speaker
Now I say it in a way that's kind of ridiculous. I go on and I say, hey, bro, you know, i respect you as a grown man. I respect you as an individual.
00:20:50
Speaker
I love you. ah just want to ask you one thing. He was like, yeah, man, what is it? He thought it was going to be, you know, can I get a kidney? Because with with the way that I was presenting it, and was like, can you grab me a beer out of the fridge?
00:21:02
Speaker
He was like, are you kidding? Yeah, I can get that. It was like, why did you do this whole big dramatic preamble? The reason was, is because I wanted to make sure that I showed him absolute respect.
00:21:15
Speaker
And that even though i'm asking him to do something for me, that in no way do I take it lightly that he is doing something for me. I say all that to say this.
00:21:27
Speaker
Y'all need to hear me out. Please give me the space to say what I need to say in this next segment. Because what I'm going to say is going to challenge some thoughts that out there and you might think in the middle of it, Bruce, you crazy, but there is an overall arching point to what I wanna say.
00:21:53
Speaker
And I ask a simple question, does the victim have some responsibility?

Understanding Accountability

00:22:00
Speaker
Now,
00:22:03
Speaker
I'm trying to bring to attention that I'm emphasizing acknowledging personal responsibility. That doesn't mean that I'm blaming victims.
00:22:13
Speaker
I'm not victim blaming, okay? It's about understanding patterns and choices while keeping empathy front and center. I'm talking about accountability versus victim blaming.
00:22:27
Speaker
Okay? Accountability is about recognizing when someone's choices create vulnerability, but it's never an excuse for an actual harm done by others. Victim blaming shifts the responsibility away from the perpetrator and unfairly puts it on those who were harmed. I just want to ask this question.
00:22:48
Speaker
It's a delicate question. It's a complicated question in thought. But it's actually a simple question to be asked as far as just the language is concerned.
00:23:01
Speaker
And the question is, does the victim have some responsibility? Now I asked y'all to give me a little bit of grace and hear me out.
00:23:11
Speaker
I'm emphasizing personal responsibility, acknowledging personal responsibility. That doesn't mean that I'm blaming victims. It's about understanding patterns and choices while I'm keeping empathy front and center.
00:23:29
Speaker
I'm talking about accountability versus victim blaming. The two different things. Okay. Accountability is about recognizing when someone's choices create vulnerability, but it's never an excuse for the actual harm done by others.
00:23:45
Speaker
Okay. Victim blaming shifts responsibility away from the perpetrators and unfairly puts it on those who were harmed.
00:23:57
Speaker
Case in point. Accountability is psycho stew, Mr. Smith, checking in after their altercation to make sure everything is good for their planned spot.
00:24:13
Speaker
But that does not mean Just because he did not do that, that is his fault, what Roger Jackson did to him.
00:24:25
Speaker
No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying there's accountability and responsibility that you must take when you're giving yourself up and making yourself vulnerable in life in general.
00:24:40
Speaker
That does not mean that just because you make yourself vulnerable, that it's your fault for though for something happening to you.
00:24:53
Speaker
When somebody says, oh, you did this, that's the reason why that happened to you, that's victim blaming. That's not what I'm saying. What I'm saying is everybody has some accountability and responsibility for themselves for the decisions that they make that can make them vulnerable.
00:25:13
Speaker
Why am I bringing this up? I was at a gathering yesterday for my building. A little light party.
00:25:24
Speaker
And the topic of discussion was the story of the young man that ran from the FBI agents and jumped off the balcony.
00:25:34
Speaker
And this is, I knew it was going to be a topic of conversation because it happened really close. I've already given you guys a story. And basically the FBI was serving him a warrant because he has scammed women out of money.
00:25:50
Speaker
And in one of those situations, he had scammed a woman $15,000 on their, on their credit card. So basically he was getting their credit card numbers. They knew that he had their credit card numbers.
00:26:02
Speaker
They can see the charges that he's making. And one woman said,
00:26:09
Speaker
said he ran up $15,000 credit card. His scam was that he was, he said that he was a government employee and it was going to be reimbursed. And so they, they fell for the scam, which by the way, I knew this guy.
00:26:25
Speaker
He told me some things that i later found out weren't true, but at face value, they made sense to me. Why would I expect for him to lie? Why would you expect somebody that you're involved with to immediately lie?
00:26:36
Speaker
That doesn't mean that, This is their fault. It's not their fault. This guy was a scammer. However, at the party, it was a table of about five of us sitting down, drinking, chopping it up, having ourselves a good time.
00:26:53
Speaker
And of course, being me being who I am, I had to voice my opinion about it. And we're all agreeing that what he did was horrible.
00:27:05
Speaker
I, just like when I reported it on the podcast, remain steadfast that the truest victim in this entire thing was his daughter.
00:27:16
Speaker
Little baby girl, beautiful little baby girl. And that's what I kept saying because I saw him pushing a stroller and the daughter and all that stuff. You know, maybe the baby mom, wife, girlfriend. I can't remember what she was.
00:27:28
Speaker
Maybe her as well. I mean, she's definitely a victim. I don't think she I don't think that she was a part of all of this stuff. She wasn't in an investigation. So she's definitely a victim as well. The women who were scammed were also victims.
00:27:43
Speaker
They were also victims. But I made the point of saying, at what point does your personal responsibility and accountability have to be brought to question?
00:27:58
Speaker
I said, once it got to a comma, meaning once it got to a thousand dollars, I have more than just serious questions and questions. And none of the the documents from the arrest warrant investigation, anything but of that nature, did it come off as a Ponzi scheme?
00:28:18
Speaker
Did it come off as he was making payments on the credit card and he kept charging it up? No, he was charging it up and never made payments. So my question was, at what point Is it, all right, now you're just being dumb and not handling your business. And it pissed some people off.
00:28:41
Speaker
It pissed some people off. It pissed some people off so much to the point they stopped talking to me. And when they left, they didn't even say goodbye to me. Okay.
00:28:52
Speaker
And i'm I'm cool with that. Like, I don't really give damn. I don't. But I think it's a fair question to ask. I think it's a fair question. When does your responsibility to yourself come into effect here? ah where Where was the dollar amount?
00:29:13
Speaker
Was it only when the person stopped contacting you? Once again, I'm not saying it's her fault she got scammed. She was filling a dude, you know, gave him credit card. He gave a smooth line.
00:29:27
Speaker
He had game. He's the scam artist. He's the criminal. He's the one who did something wrong. She didn't deserve that.
00:29:39
Speaker
None of those women deserved that. I'm not saying that they did. I'm saying they are victims. But at what point When we're acknowledging you have vulnerability here, right?
00:30:01
Speaker
We acknowledge it at the top. I said, acknowledging personal responsibility doesn't mean blaming the victims, but we have to acknowledge personal responsibility.
00:30:14
Speaker
At what point is it that person's personal responsibility to be like, you can't use this card no more. What's the number? What's that point?
00:30:28
Speaker
Once again, I have to stress, I'm not blaming the women for giving him their credit card numbers, for allowing him to charge some stuff, because, I mean, he was a smooth talker.
00:30:41
Speaker
He was smooth when I met him. The victims deserve compassion and support. not only because of the emotional fallout, but also because of shame that goes along with being scammed like that and him preying on their kindness and their trust.
00:31:00
Speaker
However, it's still possible to discuss the role of ongoing decisions, such as not asking questions, ignoring the red flags, and continue to trust after warning signs.
00:31:12
Speaker
ah Acknowledging that while responsibility for the crime lies solely on my man, who's the scammer,
00:31:20
Speaker
Repeated choices by these women extended the vulnerability.
00:31:27
Speaker
This is not blame.
00:31:30
Speaker
This is not blame.
00:31:33
Speaker
This is just looking at when are you going listen to that third eye? At what point do you listen to that third eye where things don't make sense?
00:31:46
Speaker
You know it. You feel it. You feel it, but you ignore it. You ignore it for various reasons. I've done it. I've done it. That's the reason why I'm not blaming them.
00:31:57
Speaker
I'm saying, when does your personal responsibility kick in?
00:32:05
Speaker
When do you ask these questions? When do you stop ignoring the red flags? I have dated women. Red flags galore. I'm attracted to red flags.
00:32:17
Speaker
I'm a little toxic. I can admit that I'm a little toxic. Red flags. Give me all of that.
00:32:26
Speaker
Completely unhealthy for me. come Completely. I know this. But give me them red flags. That's exciting. Toxic. I know I am. I'm trying to grow and get better.
00:32:37
Speaker
So when I get into these situations and no red flags start red flagging and I ignore them. Kind of on me after that point. Yeah, it's kind of on me because, yeah, I've trusted somebody. I've opened up my vulnerability.
00:32:56
Speaker
But when those red flags is red flagging and I'm ignoring them, I bear some personal responsibility for how ah for how the outcome comes out.
00:33:09
Speaker
Because I could have made some decisions that could have changed the potential outcome. Not the initial target. These women were targeted.
00:33:23
Speaker
I'm not blaming them for anything. Damn sure not that. All I'm asking is, come on now, Wendy, when is your personal responsibility kick in?
00:33:35
Speaker
Now, the women at this party, at this table, not happy with that. not happy with that statement. And I know it's kind of, it's kind of like a, a male-ish statement generalizing here. Obviously some women absolutely agree with me, but it's kind of just like it where there's more stuff that goes into that and and they're right.
00:33:56
Speaker
There is a lot of emotions that go into that. But once again, When do you stop focusing on the emotions and listen to that third eye, your intuition? you're in Those people that are out here listening and watching right now, you have been in a situation where your intuition says, this ain't good.
00:34:15
Speaker
I need to take this left and exit from this situation. And you don't. You don't take the left and exit. You keep on down that road despite all the warning signs.
00:34:26
Speaker
You keep on going.
00:34:28
Speaker
If you ignore your intuition and the warning signs, don't you hold some personal responsibility to the outcome? That's all I'm saying here. The people at the party didn't agree that things are involved and you just never know.
00:34:47
Speaker
And I said, okay, all right, then we'll agree to disagree. That's fine. I don't need everybody to agree with me, but I think I make a valid point that at a certain point,
00:34:59
Speaker
You have to look in the mirror. I'll give you another example. I got a friend who's got a service, not a business. And I'll explain the difference between what a service and a business is. If you do hair,
00:35:13
Speaker
that's a service. It becomes a business when you start doing hair on a professional level. When you've got invoicing, you've got clients, and you've got appointment scheduling, and things are on point,
00:35:28
Speaker
That's a business. You're not just a service anymore, you're a business. This person I'm talking about has a service, not a business. They keep saying that they have a business, but they don't.
00:35:42
Speaker
So they have a service where they service individual, not on some old, that came off as kind of creepy, but I don't wanna give too much detail because they're listening to this podcast, even though i've told them this personally, but other people,
00:35:56
Speaker
know them and I'm not trying to put their business out there like that. So not going to specifically what they do, but they're good at that service. They're really good at that service.
00:36:07
Speaker
So They asked me because even though I don't have any degrees in business, I've started several businesses. I am running the day-to-day operations of the company that I work for. I'm the president.
00:36:22
Speaker
Okay. So I do everything. I oversee everything and I answer to board. So yeah. I run the company. I've run several businesses before. Some succeeded.
00:36:34
Speaker
Some haven't succeeded. Sometimes they succeed and I've decided I don't want to do it anymore. Like my dog walking business. know, within the first couple of weeks, I was making a G a week.
00:36:45
Speaker
on that dog walking business. I could be killing right now. I don't like walking dogs. And then somebody said, won don't you just start hiring people? And I'm like, that's a bigger headache than I want because I'm already running the day-to-day operations for the company that I work for. I'm already doing the podcast, which is a business.
00:37:01
Speaker
Now it's no longer service. It's a business. I don't have time. I'm being stretched too thin. It's not worth it.
00:37:08
Speaker
So this person comes to me and they want to improve their business. The very first thing that I say to them is you have a service, not a business. If you want a business you need to start hiring people, I don't want to lose money.
00:37:20
Speaker
That was their response. Their response was, I don't want to lose money because I initially told them that you've got so much business right now that you need to hire somebody to take over that business. Well, I have to pay them. And then that's taking money out of my pocket.
00:37:34
Speaker
Yes. Yes, you take an initial hit, but this is what's needed to expand. Because when it's just yourself, if something happens to you, you're not making money.
00:37:47
Speaker
When you employ people or even have independent contractors, which is what I typically suggest to companies starting out, we'll try and hire... Independent contractors, not employees.
00:37:57
Speaker
It's going to cost you less money. And takes that, the taxes burden, puts it on them, not you. You still got to pay taxes on the company, taxes on what you pay them, but they have to handle their own taxes from what you pay them. You don't have to deal with that.
00:38:11
Speaker
And in certain states, you don't have to pay into the employment the unemployment tax benefit, certain states. So there's more money in your pocket. So i I told this person, I was like, hey, you need to hire people.
00:38:24
Speaker
Told them this for a year. Finally, they said, can you help me? Can I hire you to help me run the business side?

Business Advice and Personal Responsibility

00:38:33
Speaker
Because I'm not good at that. And I said, no, you can't afford me.
00:38:37
Speaker
But what I can do is I can write a strategic plan for you, a business strategic plan for this upcoming year. It was the end of 2024. So I was going to, I wrote it for 2025.
00:38:50
Speaker
You know, it'll be a couple of pages, but it's going to outline benchmarks that you need to hit each quarter and how to get to those benchmarks. One of the most important things is hiring people, but you don't want to do a mass hiring right away because you can't put them through the proper probation period and really set them up for success.
00:39:13
Speaker
So I said, here's the amount of people that you need to hire each quarter. And then by the end of the year, you'll have a staff of this to match along with your growing business. Because I gave her marketing stuff. I gave her the whole package.
00:39:29
Speaker
Did not use it. Paid for. Did not use it. This person got into car accidents. This person's had some health issues. This person's had some personal issues to the point where she hasn't been able to work and she's kind of in a financial bind.
00:39:50
Speaker
And I said, if you had followed the plan, wouldn it wouldn't have been issue. Where does personal responsibility and accountability come in? Because I'm not blaming her for getting sick and getting car accidents. That's beyond her control, right?
00:40:03
Speaker
I'm not blaming her for that. She's a victim in those situations. I'm talking about something else.
00:40:13
Speaker
This person took a big job. big job that was going to take them away to another state where they wouldn't be able to provide the service that they typically provide to their clients. They made this decision without talking to me.
00:40:27
Speaker
Had they told me about this decision beforehand, I would have said, I understand that's a lot of money, but you have regulars here. And if they're not taken care of, you can make a lot of money over here and come back to nothing.
00:40:44
Speaker
You're thinking short when you should be thinking long because this person didn't have any employees, no staff.
00:40:53
Speaker
This person decides to hire people on a whim, goes away to another state for three weeks and has nothing but chaos at home. When this person comes home, she's let go by three of the clients.
00:41:10
Speaker
Lost on money. It was a complete and utter. um'm I'm a cuss. So cover your ears, kids. Complete and utter clusterfuck. Right.
00:41:22
Speaker
People not showing up to where they were supposed to be showing up, things not doing. So she's telling me these things as they're I'm I'm hearing this in real time.
00:41:33
Speaker
And I'm saying, OK, well, wait a minute. How did you set them up? Before you left, what was the training? What was the breakdown of what they're supposed to be doing? Oh, I told them, I said, wait a minute.
00:41:45
Speaker
You didn't even write it down on a piece of paper. You didn't even send them in the email what the steps were for the job. Should I have done that? Yep. You didn't even properly vet these people.
00:41:56
Speaker
You just hired them. They don't do what this service is. It's the first time they're doing this service. And you just hired them. You didn't prep them. You didn't set them up for success.
00:42:10
Speaker
You just hired them. Yeah, but you can't get good people. I'm not hiring anybody anymore. The person didn't take accountability. I explained to them, this was all your fault.
00:42:24
Speaker
You hired people on a whim. You didn't properly train them.
00:42:29
Speaker
And it became a shit show. And it became that because of your decisions. Yeah, but you know, the good people, people don't just don't want to work. People that you hired just don't want to work.
00:42:42
Speaker
But there are people out there that want to work. And I said, i gave you the blueprint on how to hire people in that package that I gave you at the beginning of the year.
00:42:54
Speaker
Your choices, your choices led to this outcome. You need to take personal responsibility for the choices that you made.
00:43:06
Speaker
Yes, these people didn't show up a time or didn't show up at all or just did a crappy job. Yes, you can't control people's actions.
00:43:19
Speaker
You can't. You're a victim in the standpoint that they didn't do what they said that they were going to do, but you hold some responsibility and accountability for the fact that you didn't properly train them, didn't properly vet them, didn't set them up for success.
00:43:40
Speaker
Don't blame them for losing clients. You lost those clients because of decisions that you made. And ah accountability means reflecting on the decisions and the systems that you can't control.
00:43:57
Speaker
Rather just pointing the fingers at things when they go wrong. This is for all walks of life. Right? We all make mistakes, but growth comes from an examining what could have been done differently.
00:44:12
Speaker
Not just blaming outcomes on others.
00:44:16
Speaker
This person acknowledged, yeah, I could handled that differently. Yeah. And now you're going to have build back up. And I expressed to them, you can still hire people.
00:44:27
Speaker
You have to. Or else you're going to run into serious trouble because you have a service, not a business. You need to have a business.
00:44:39
Speaker
That's the most important thing. And you have to hire other people. But there are steps to take when you hire people. Look, everything that I'm talking about, last segment with Roger Jackson and the wrestling company, this segment with the the victims of that scam artist, my friend that was running the business, all this discussion is about learning and preventing future situations.
00:45:11
Speaker
This is not shame. This is not reactive blame. This is about learning.
00:45:19
Speaker
We all have personal flaws.
00:45:23
Speaker
We all do. But acknowledging those flaws and acknowledging ways in which we can act differently isn't blaming ourselves for what happened, but it's also taking accountability and responsibility.
00:45:41
Speaker
And in doing that, we can reclaim agency and move forward stronger. Those women that got scammed, they shouldn't fall for it a second time.
00:45:53
Speaker
It's a lesson, right? It's a jacked up lesson that comes with lost money and emotion. And I was wrong. I was informed yesterday that there's no guarantee that these women are going to get the money that was used on their credit card.
00:46:10
Speaker
I assume because my credit cards, but I've never been scammed out of ah a lot of money. I assume because of my credit cards and I've got like theft prevention, that you know that stuff would be covered but i guess that's any lawyers out there credit card company people like they're explaining to me reach out to me because i would love to understand that aspect i thought that the credit card companies would reimburse these people but maybe not that's what found out yesterday there's no guarantee that they're going to be reimbursed they are absolutely victims
00:46:47
Speaker
I'm not taking that away from them. They are victims.
00:46:54
Speaker
My friend is a victim of people who are poor employees.
00:47:03
Speaker
But in all of these scenarios, each person needs to claim some personal responsibility for their actions and the outcomes that came from their act from their actions.
00:47:17
Speaker
look
00:47:19
Speaker
Accountability in tough situation is not blame, but it's a way to understand what can change next time. It's easy to fall into a trap of saying, why did you or I let this happen?
00:47:36
Speaker
It's easy to say that type of stuff, but real growth comes from asking what we can learn from this pattern or system.
00:47:46
Speaker
You're not responsible for anybody's crime against you. But knowing the signs can help you protect yourself moving forward. And this isn't just about crimes.
00:47:58
Speaker
This is about relationships and interactions. It's about life. And all I'm asking is when does responsibility come into effect when we talk about Real victims.
00:48:25
Speaker
All right. Those last two same segments ran long. I was pontificating and preaching. I've been doing that a lot lately. don't know. Something must be going on with me in my older age where I just feel like preaching. My uncle used to say, I think going to preacher.
00:48:43
Speaker
I was like, no, ain't going to be no preacher because I'm a heathen. But I damn sure going to stand up on my soapbox and lecture. And I don't think that I'm always right. But I think I bring up valid arguments that make you think.
00:49:00
Speaker
If you want to, make you think. But that's enough of all that thinking. Now it's time for some silly fun and story time with Bruce.

Homecoming Reflections and Social Awareness

00:49:10
Speaker
And this is the story of my senior year homecoming.
00:49:14
Speaker
Now, for people that have watched and listened to the show and understand the backstory, you understand the story about the woman that called me gay.
00:49:25
Speaker
And this was in high school. That was junior year in high school. The next year, that same woman still had a crush on me and was best friends with my family who is one of my best friends right now, but was becoming a really good friend of mine back then.
00:49:48
Speaker
She was best friends with my boy's girl.
00:49:55
Speaker
And me and my boy, we were hanging out every single weekend. Homecoming is coming up. I have this particular girl that I want to ask. I like her. She likes me.
00:50:07
Speaker
But we're from different sides of the track. It's not an old Romeo or Juliet situation. She just didn't fit in my high school group. And I necessarily didn't fit in her high school group.
00:50:19
Speaker
But we dug the hell out of each other. Just it was young romance, even though we never dated or anything. Just that flirtation and the energy was there.
00:50:32
Speaker
And I wanted to ask her to homecoming. So I bring this up to my boy. My boy was like, don't ask her. He's selfish, by the way, or was, and self-centered. He the only child.
00:50:43
Speaker
It's like, don't ask her, man. She doesn't fit in the group. I was like, well, don't I don't have to like go with y'all. We all go into the same spot. I don't have to go with y'all. I can go with her and her group.
00:50:54
Speaker
But you don't even know anybody over there. Why don't you just ask my girl's friend? I was like, the one that spread the rumor that I was gay? Yeah, I mean, i mean she said she was sorry. Y'all can make amends and that'd be perfect because that's her homegirl and you my homeboy and we could all be in a group together and it'll be fun.
00:51:15
Speaker
I don't want to do that, man. What changed my mind, because I did end up going to homecoming with this young lady. What changed my mind is that she had certain assets that appealed to me.
00:51:29
Speaker
I don't know what happened over the summer. But good God, she came back looking damn good. How good does she look?
00:51:41
Speaker
One time I saw her walking up the stairs and I said, maybe I can ask her to homecoming. So I do. And there's, I don't know, a month leading up to homecoming. So we're hanging out and And I'm like, she's all right. You know, she's attractive. And I'm i'm somebody to my fault. When somebody apologizes to me and is sincere, i immediately just let things go.
00:52:07
Speaker
That's not the greatest way to live. And I've been working on that. But Shorty apologized and she was looking good. And my boy's making valid points to go to homecoming together. And I was like, all right. And we were hanging out and we're vibing and everything is okay. And I'm like, all right. And...
00:52:27
Speaker
She's talking about, I'm going to get some special treatment on homecoming night. and I'm really looking forward to that. Really looking forward to that. So I'm going to go ahead and and see this through.
00:52:40
Speaker
So homecoming comes. I go to pick her up. I forget the corsage. So I've got to draw pick her up. Got to drive back to my parents' house.
00:52:52
Speaker
get the corsage, put it on, and my parents meet her. My dad was like, damn. um Like, okay. I know how to pick them. We drive to the restaurant. It was a regular restaurant, homecoming.
00:53:04
Speaker
We had a big table. It probably about eight to 10 of us in this group that were all going homecoming together with the limos and everything like that. At the restaurant, the waiter spills Sprite on my tan pants.
00:53:19
Speaker
It's absolutely the waiter's fault. Spills Sprite on my tan pants. Sprite is clear, but super sugary. And my pants are tan. I cannot stress that enough. They're tan, which makes it looks like I have peed myself.
00:53:38
Speaker
And it is all over my waist, like the entire area. It looks like I had an accident for a couple of days. That's how bad it was. The restaurant was at fault so much.
00:53:50
Speaker
They comped the meals for the entire table, sent somebody over to like a CVS type store to get a hairdryer for me to use the hairdryer to try and dry my pants.
00:54:03
Speaker
Didn't work. Big stain. Looked like i peed myself. I untucked my shirt, pulled out, pulled out my shirt. Cause doesn't matter. Cause I'm going to pull it out anyway. When we get to homecoming, start dancing.
00:54:14
Speaker
But didn't matter. Looked like peed myself. And I look at my boy and I'm like, this is not a good sign. This is not a good sign for the evening. He's like, man, you know, everything day happened. It's not that big deal. You know, it's going to be okay. I was like, this ain't a good sign.
00:54:28
Speaker
All right. What else happened? We get in that limousine. We head over to the school. They had a homecoming dance at the school. We head to the cafeteria where everybody's going to be dancing. The music going to playing.
00:54:43
Speaker
Mind you, this woman's been obsessed with me. up Obsessed with me for almost a year. We're finally dating. She finally has what she wants.
00:54:56
Speaker
Okay? Okay. We get on the dance floor. She dances with everybody else but me. To the point where I'm like, yo, are you my homecoming date or not?
00:55:09
Speaker
Why are you dancing with everybody else but me? Why are you not showing me any attention at all? When this was your idea for us to get together. You've been wanting to get together for a long time. Now we finally here and ain't show me no love. This is after i look like I peed myself.
00:55:31
Speaker
So I would think that you would give me a little sympathy, a little sympathy, just a little bit. Didn't dance for me. I pull her aside. I'm like, yo, what's going on? She said, don't worry. Tonight, I'm going give you that special gift.
00:55:43
Speaker
A special gift with sex, y'all. Anyway, but anyway. We're all heading over to my boy's house at their homecoming. We're just going to vibe out and chill. Me and my boy already got the drinks down in the basement because we we we always looked older.
00:56:00
Speaker
So we were the ones that got the liquor. So we already got the drinks down in the basement. So we go to the house. We all chilling, playing games and stuff and like that.
00:56:12
Speaker
Most of us are sleeping downstairs in the basement. I go down there, get a cup of drinks, come back upstairs. Once again, she ain't showing me no attention.
00:56:24
Speaker
This proceeded all night long. Mind you, my boxes are sticking to me. Why? Because I got Sprite in my lap. I don't have no change of clothes.
00:56:37
Speaker
I just got to deal with that all night long.
00:56:41
Speaker
So finally, i get fed up. Cause she ain't showing me no attention. None. I go downstairs. I go to sleep.
00:56:51
Speaker
About three o'clock in the morning. I feel this little push on my arm. Bruce, Bruce, wake up. I'm like, yeah. You ready for that special treat? Nah, don't even want it.
00:57:04
Speaker
What? Nah, I'm good. I'm tired. I'm gonna go to sleep. Cause I'm pissed. I'm pissed at the woman that spread a rumor the previous year that said I was gay.
00:57:15
Speaker
I take to the homecoming, my senior homecoming, my last homecoming.
00:57:23
Speaker
All because my boy done pressured me in this situation.
00:57:28
Speaker
I got sticky draws and not, you know, not the way I want it. Pardon me, but not the way I want it. It's three o'clock in the morning.
00:57:42
Speaker
You have ignored me all night. but you've been giving me appetizers for what was going to happen weeks prior to homecoming. She wasn't ignoring me all those weeks. On this particular night, she's ignoring me.
00:57:57
Speaker
And yeah, I could have been selfish and said, you know what? You ignored me, but I'm still going to go ahead and done this. I could have ignored all the red flags and not had any personal accountability or responsibility to myself.
00:58:17
Speaker
Because I had opened the door to my vulnerability by forgiving her, taking her to homecoming, drink spilled, being ignored on the dance floor. I've had a horrible time.
00:58:29
Speaker
This has been horrible. So why shouldn't I get a treat at the end? I'd have gone through all this, but I refuse. Next morning, I drive her home.
00:58:42
Speaker
Because we all spent the night at my boy's house. So I drive her home the next morning. In that car, I had a very adult, hey, as a 17 year old kid that is furious, I can look back and even say this was a very, very adult conversation.
00:59:01
Speaker
And I said, hey, look, I don't think it's a good idea for us to hang out like this anymore. Like we can be cool, we can be friends, but I don't think it's a good idea.
00:59:13
Speaker
Why? I just feel like we're just really different. And I didn't really have a great time last night. And this was like a first, like official date.
00:59:27
Speaker
And for me, it was horrible. And I didn't, I let you know throughout the night that I wasn't having a good time and you didn't care.
00:59:41
Speaker
If you were not having a good time as my date, I would have tried to do something to help you have a good time. Pay you to little attention. Do whatever I needed to do to bring a smile to your face because this is both of our night.
00:59:56
Speaker
You didn't really show any sympathy for me having a drink spilled on me and having to go through that whole ordeal. I'm not trying to say this is all about me, but there's got to be a little bit about me.
01:00:08
Speaker
and And you showed to me in this instant, the most important thing to you was having me be your date at homecoming.
01:00:19
Speaker
Having me be my, be your date to homecoming, but not be your date. And, you know, I just think that we think differently in this regard. And I think it's best that we just be friends now.
01:00:36
Speaker
one of the reasons why i was so gentle in this conversation is because the last time this woman got some information that i didn't want to be with her it was brutal and she decided to spread a vicious rumor and now she could spread a rumor that i turned her down for sex that That guarantees that I'm gay.
01:00:59
Speaker
Right? Because who, to what 17 year old boy turns down this voluptuous woman for sex? I turned it down because look, I'm better than that. That's the reason why I turned it down.
01:01:14
Speaker
She cried. And there was no real beef. She said some slick stuff behind my back, but there was no more rumors, you know. And she got her ass beat later on that year from a ah a woman that I called Ghetto Godzilla.
01:01:32
Speaker
And she got the brakes beat off of her. And I was laughing because she had said some things that was mean. I thought it was karma. I thought it was karma. But that was not the worst day that I ever had in my life because I didn't get punched.
01:01:48
Speaker
But it was the worst day that I ever had in high school. And it was homecoming. It was my last homecoming. Don't get me started on what happened to prom. Prom was even worse. I didn't even get to go to prom. Look, let me tell you something. It's one thing that I had issues with from eight years old to my current age of 45 is I always got some issues in my dating life.
01:02:08
Speaker
But all the issues in my dating life is because of me. I take personal responsibility and accountability for the decisions that I make. I made the decision to go to homecoming with this young woman because I saw her booty.
01:02:23
Speaker
despite the fact that she had consistently showed me who she was. i don't think she was a bad person at all. I just don't think that we were good people for each other. That happens in life.
01:02:35
Speaker
All these things that happened to me, even though I am the victim in these situations, freedom I still hold some personal responsibility. fame That's all this show has been about.
01:02:49
Speaker
personal responsibility. Just think about it. But on that note, ladies and gentlemen, and I want to thank you for listening. I want to thank you for watching. And until next time, as always, I'll holla.
01:03:09
Speaker
That was a hell of a show. Thank you for rocking with us here on Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Now before you go, don't forget to follow, subscribe, like, comment, and share our podcast wherever you're listening or watching it to it. Pass it along to your friends. If you enjoy it, that means the people that you rock will will enjoy it also.
01:03:28
Speaker
So share the wealth, share the knowledge, share the noise. And for all those people that say, well I don't have a YouTube. If you have a Gmail account, you have a YouTube. Subscribe to our YouTube channel where you can actually watch our video podcast and YouTube exclusive content.
01:03:42
Speaker
great a moment But the real party is on our Patreon page. After Hours Uncensored and Talk is Straight-ish. After Hours Uncensored is another show with my sister. And once again, the key word there is uncensored. Those are exclusively on our Patreon page. Jump onto our website at unsolicitperspective.com.
01:03:59
Speaker
dot com for all things us that's where you can get all of our audio video our blogs and even buy our merch and if you really feel generous and want to help us out you can donate on our donations page donations go strictly to improving our software and hardware so we can keep giving you guys good content that you can clearly listen to and that you can clearly see so any donation would be appreciative most importantly i want to say thank you thank you thank you for listening and watching and supporting us and i'll catch you next time outie 5000 peace