
BCA
1.1K posts

BCA
@lucentlackey
Child of God - Father - Husband - United States Marine, in that order!






PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT: A reality check for the "Customer is Always Right" crowd. Let’s talk about something that shouldn’t need to be said, but judging by the daily chaos on our timelines, it desperately does: Walking into a place of business does not give you a temporary license to act a fool. We need to completely dismantle this toxic mentality that because you are you, because you are paying for a service, or because something didn't go exactly your way, you suddenly have the right to cause a scene, throw a tantrum, and treat workers like they are subhuman. The "Rules for Thee, But Not for Me" Delusion Some of y'all have gotten entirely too comfortable throwing adult tantrums in public. Let's break down the facts: Paying for a service is a transaction, not an ownership stake. Buying a $7 coffee or a $50 dinner doesn't mean you bought the soul of the person serving it to you. Minor inconveniences are part of life. Delays happen. Mistakes happen. Out-of-stock items happen. It is called reality. Throwing a fit won't magically spawn a missing item from the back, but it will make you look entirely unhinged. The Golden Rule still applies: If you wouldn't tolerate a stranger coming into your home or your workplace, screaming in your face, and disrupting your peace, why on earth do you think it's acceptable to do it to someone else? Employees Are Not Your Emotional Punching Bags Frontline workers, retail staff, and service employees are out here trying to make a living, pay their bills, and survive in an already stressful world. They are dealing with understaffing, corporate pressures, and supply chain issues they have zero control over. The bottom line: Employees shouldn't have to add "managing a grown adult's emotional meltdown" to their job description. They deserve a safe, peaceful environment to do their jobs. They are human beings first. Respect Is a Two-Way Street If you walk into an establishment demanding respect, you need to look in the mirror and ask yourself if you’ve actually earned it. Respect isn't something you get to demand while acting like a tyrant. Next time you feel a public meltdown coming on, try this simple thought experiment: Conduct yourself in the exact same manner you would expect someone to conduct themselves if they were walking into your business, your office, or dealing with your family. Let’s Normalize This: If you see someone treating staff like garbage, don't just look away. Support the workers. And if you are the one who thinks the world revolves around you—do better. Grow up. The entitlement is exhausting, and frankly, nobody has the patience for it anymore.











Reportedly a man opened fire with a handgun today on the perimeter of the White House and Secret Service agents returned fire. A USSS spokesman stated they are “aware of reports of shots fired near 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW and are working to corroborate the information with personnel on the ground." Plan accordingly... #CityLife #WhiteHouse #WashingtonDC #USSS #SecretService #urban #trump





At 17, Fred Weatherspoon was sentenced to life without parole. Today, he is a community leader managing youth mentoring programs on Chicago’s South Side. His secret to reaching kids? Radical listening. He quickly realized that changing lives isn't about lecturing people on your past mistakes. It’s about pulling up a chair, sitting in the circle as equals, and building real relationships. True accountability looks like healing, not just locking people away. The detailed story of Fred Weatherspoon is a profound look at the reality of juvenile sentencing in America, the trauma of long-term incarceration, and the power of grassroots restorative justice. His life essentially splits into three distinct chapters: his youth and conviction, his 25 years inside, and his modern mission as a mentor on Chicago's South Side. Chapter 1: The Making of a "Lifer" at 17 Growing up in Chicago, Weatherspoon was an intelligent kid who did well in school and loved baseball—especially the Chicago Cubs. However, by his late teens, he became deeply entrenched in the street economy, eventually turning to selling drugs. In 1993, at just 17 years old, he was arrested and charged with a double murder and kidnapping. Facing the reality of the legal system, he accepted a plea deal. The sentence handed down was staggering for a teenager: natural life in prison plus an additional 30 years. At 17, his path was legally locked in; he was fully expected to die behind bars. Chapter 2: 25 Years on the Inside Weatherspoon spent 20 of his 25 years at the Menard Correctional Center, a notorious maximum-security state prison situated on the banks of the Mississippi River in southern Illinois. While serving his time, Weatherspoon began notice a deeply troubling trend: the incoming inmates were getting younger and younger. He spent years sitting down and listening to these young men. In hearing their backstories, he realized that their paths to prison weren't just random acts of delinquency; they were "one long, trauma-fueled ride" from the day they were born. Listening to these younger inmates planted the seeds for his future calling, giving him a massive, raw education on how systemic trauma impacts kids. Chapter 3: An Unrecognizable Home & Finding PurposeFollowing landmark legal changes regarding the unconstitutionality of mandatory life sentences for juveniles, Weatherspoon was able to successfully appeal his case. In 2018, at the age of 42, he walked out of prison a free man. Returning to Chicago after a quarter-century was a profound culture shock: Family Decoupling: Having had very limited communication with his family while locked away, he returned to find them struggling emotionally, mentally, and financially. The vibrant elders and father figures he remembered had succumbed to severe illness, aging, and substance abuse. Financial Pressure: Needing immediate income, he initially took a grueling job in construction. His life pivoted a year later when a friend he met while incarcerated invited him to an event hosted by a local non-profit. That organization was the Precious Blood Ministry of Reconciliation (PBMR), located in Chicago’s Back of the Yards and Englewood neighborhoods—areas heavily impacted by poverty and systemic gun violence. His Impact Today: Restorative Justice Today, Weatherspoon serves as the Mentoring Program Manager at PBMR, working with vulnerable youth and young adults aged 12 to 24. Admittedly, he started the job naively, assuming he would just lecture kids about his mistakes and they would listen. He quickly realized that lecturing doesn't work. Instead, he deployed the skill he mastered at Menard: radical listening.


In addition to my normal body cam videos, I will be sharing true crime body cam stories from time to time. These are usually long body cam videos that I will be editing down to a manageable size that won't lose too much detail for the story. As alway as the body cam can't show the entire story, I'll research case info to share in the caption. These are for entertainment and educational purposes.














