They Didn't Stumble Onto My Blog - I Led Them There

When I first shared my blog on Reddit, it wasn’t random — it was intentional. 

I produced my blog publicly and then used Reddit to lead the right people to it. Every detail was designed to leave digital breadcrumbs. Not just for readers, but for them.

I suspected Venture Forthe was searching:  my name, phrases, and anything tied to the fallout.
Not because of paranoia — but because I’ve been in this field for over three decades.

 I’ve seen what companies do when they want to quietly monitor someone they see as a threat. They start tracking keywords. Watching traffic. Following mentions. It’s subtle, but it’s standard.
The moment someone becomes a liability, the digital surveillance begins — I’ve watched it happen before.

So I gave them something to find.

Because if they were going to watch me, I wanted them to see the truth. Not the version filtered through legal spin or internal email threads. I wanted them to read exactly what I experienced, in my voice, on my terms. No edits or denials. Just truth.

And I wanted them to know I wasn’t afraid to say it out loud.

And they found it.


The proof? It came fast and clear:

  • Instant engagement — always in less than a second — on posts that barely had time to breathe. Not normal curiosity or algorithmic chance.

  • Sudden silence from people who had been previously pushing back. Radio silence is sometimes the loudest admission of guilt.

  • Heavy engagement from supposed “bystanders” trying a little too hard to discredit me. When a true bystander comments, they’re neutral, curious, or at most skeptical. But when someone comes in swinging — trying to discredit you, dismiss your experience, or act like they know your intentions or history? That’s not random. That’s someone with something to lose.

  • Accusations that I was a drug addict — another implying I was unstable — both baseless, both defamatory. And both were deleted almost immediately after I blogged about them. That’s not cleanup. That’s guilt management. And I saved all of it. Every comment. Every message. Screenshotted and archived before they disappeared.

  • Conflicting internal statements started surfacing after I called them out publicly.

  • My Paylocity access was mysteriously restored right after I blogged about being locked out — no password reset, no authentication. Just… flipped back on.

  • I have strong suspicions about who some of those commenters are — but if this goes to trial, I’ll know for sure. And I’ll follow every legal channel available to uncover exactly who’s behind it.

There’s a pattern now:


Post. Reaction. Silence. Then retaliation.
Every time I speak up, they respond — whether it’s through access changes, sudden “clarifications,” or coordinated attempts to smear me online. That pattern tells its own story.

Some might call what I did a “trap.”
I call it legal self-defense.

When internal complaints were ignored, and when silence got me nowhere, I did what I had to do:
I made the truth visible. I gave them something they couldn’t twist or bury.
This wasn’t revenge — this was protection. Of my reputation, my future, and my voice.

This wasn’t some anonymous rant.


It was a calculated move — and they took the bait.

Welcome to the part of the story where I stop explaining myself and start exposing their agenda.

-- K

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