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THE REAL MONSTER IN THE ROOM

Why the Diddy Trial Is Just the Latest Chapter in a Long, Dirty Book
By Relentless Aaron

Thereโ€™s a monster in the room.

He doesn’t wear fangs or hide in closets. No, this monster wears cologne. He has a title. A platform. A following. Heโ€™s successful, well-dressed, well-connected. Sometimes heโ€™s your favorite rapper. Other times heโ€™s your daughterโ€™s tennis coach.

And as of this week, heโ€™s on trial in New York City.

The Sean โ€œDiddyโ€ Combs trial is many thingsโ€”a media spectacle, a legal chess game, a reckoning long overdue. But more than anything, itโ€™s a mirror. A reflection of a deeper, darker problem weโ€™ve danced around for far too long. Because this isnโ€™t just about one man. Itโ€™s about what weโ€™ve allowed.

Cassie Ventura was 19 years old.
Diddy was 37.
Thatโ€™s not just an age gapโ€”thatโ€™s a power gap. Thatโ€™s manipulation masquerading as mentorship. They have most recently labeled it as “grooming.” Thatโ€™s the fantasy so many predators hide behind: Iโ€™m helping her, Iโ€™m guiding her, sheโ€™s mature for her age.

Weโ€™ve seen it before. Probably since the dawn of time. And weโ€™ll keep seeing it until we face it.


I Saw It with My Own Eyes

Let me make this personal. I watched a situation unfold, right here in backwards-ass Conyers, Georgia.

A local tennis coachโ€”clearly in his mid-30s, maybe 40โ€”would stroll into Starbucks with one of his teenage players. She wasnโ€™t just young. She was vulnerable. Barely 17, maybe younger. They walked in like everything was sweet, like we couldnโ€™t connect the dots. I watched it turn from โ€œpractice sessionsโ€ into something that looked a whole lot more than grooming. And soon enough, they were a couple. Out in public. No shame.

Now, you might ask:
โ€œIf you thought it was wrong, why didnโ€™t you say something?โ€

Because thatโ€™s what most of us say, right?
โ€œSheโ€™s not my daughter.โ€
โ€œHeโ€™s not my responsibility.โ€
โ€œItโ€™s none of my business.โ€

And thatโ€™s exactly how the monster survives.


This Ainโ€™t Newโ€”Itโ€™s Just on Camera Now

What weโ€™re seeing in court today is the culmination of years of silence. Of parents turning blind eyes. Of artists glorifying the very power dynamic that destroys lives.

Listen to the lyrics:
โ€œYoung girl, get out of my mind / My love for you is way out of line.โ€ โ€“ Gary Puckett
โ€œSheโ€™s just 16 years old, leave her alone they say.โ€ โ€“ Benny Mardones
โ€œHey little girl, is your daddy home?โ€ โ€“ Bruce Springsteen
โ€œYouโ€™re 16, youโ€™re beautiful, and youโ€™re mine.โ€ โ€“ Ringo Starr

And probably/arguably the most popular tune. “She Was Only 16” – Sam Cooke

We normalized it. We played it at weddings. We sang along.
The music made it feel OK.
The movies gave it a plot.
And power made it permissible.

But letโ€™s call it what it is: grooming.
A cultural indoctrination.
A poison in the water weโ€™ve been sipping for decades.

And it gets deeper. Only one hand you have the youth taunted in the songs, and on the other? Too Short rappin about head; the same song folks dance to at our backyard barbaques. And then of course, there’s R.Kelly singin about the young girls, barely of age but seeming like their ready, and then waiting outside of McDonald’s where they migrate after school. You just can’t make this shit up, how it happens before our very eyes. Acceptable, the norm, and long overdue for correction.


This Isn’t About One Trialโ€”Itโ€™s About a Pattern

Itโ€™s happening in the shadows, but also in plain sight:

  • Teachers sleeping with students.
  • Pastors seducing minors under โ€œspiritual guidance.โ€
  • Coaches crossing lines under the excuse of mentorship.
  • Celebrities claiming โ€œconsentโ€ when the imbalance of power is undeniable.

And every time it happens, the victim pays the price.
Emotionally. Mentally. Sometimes physically.
Because once the older man has had his thrillโ€”if thereโ€™s no real love, no true accountabilityโ€”he moves on. And sheโ€™s left behind, another name, a different screen name, but still on the long list of forgotten girls who lost time, momentum and possibly their souls.


What Now?

We stop romanticizing it.
We stop dancing to it.
We stop brushing it off as โ€œjust how things are.โ€
And we teach our kids to recognize manipulation dressed up as mentorship.

If we donโ€™t teach them, who will?

Because the monster ainโ€™t going anywhere unless we drag him into the light.

And right now, as the Combs trial unfolds, the spotlight is finally on.

But letโ€™s not waste it.

Letโ€™s talk about whatโ€™s happening in the music, the movies, the neighborhoods, and the church pews. Letโ€™s call it out in our communities, our schools, our homes. Letโ€™s build a new standardโ€”one where consent is real, where age matters, and where power isnโ€™t a weapon.

This isnโ€™t about cancel culture.
This is about correction.

The monster is real.
Heโ€™s been among us all along.
And now itโ€™s time to deal with him.

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