So, I want you to be now super uncomfortable and watch this video of an interaction between him and none other than Diddy.

Take a listen.

Justin, he’s in You ever seen the movie 48 hours? Right now, he’s having 48 hours with Diddy, him and his boy.

Um, they’re having the times of their lives like like like the you know where we hanging out and what we doing.

Um, we we can’t really disclose.

But um it’s definitely a 15year-old’s dream.

Um you know I I have been given custody of him.

You know he signed to Usher.

He signed user.

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I I had legal guardianship of Usher when when you know he he did his first album.

I did Usher’s first album.

I don’t really I don’t have legal guardianship of him but for the next 48 hours he’s with me.

So um and yeah and we going to go full buck full crazy.

Going crazy.

So, young Justin Bieber, who was signed by Usher involved with Scooter Braun, now all of a sudden he’s being put in the hands of Diddy, who it is true, he became the legal legal guardian for Usher.

You can look up all of the allegations of what Diddy did to Usher.

a lot of this coming out via multiple lawsuits that um essentially if we were to put it in a nice context um or at least use a euphemism for something that’s really disgusting.

The allegations are essentially that Diddy very much initiated Usher into Hollywood.

Candace Owens didn’t begin speaking with her usual sharp edge.

There was a pause before she even addressed the topic.

The kind of pause that signals discomfort rather than confidence.

When she finally spoke, her voice was lower, slower, and noticeably restrained.

This wasn’t outrage.

This was disappointment mixed with sadness.

What she had been reviewing about Justin Bieber’s teenage years had clearly affected her.

And she admitted she struggled with how long it took for the truth to become visible.

You know, Diddy bought his son a Bentley.

Maybe, you know, he could buy you one also.

He got me a Lamborghini.

It’s nice.

I haven’t gotten it yet, though.

Yeah.

[laughter] When is that coming? that Lamborghini.

We talked about this last time.

He had the Lamborghini for a day or two and he had access [laughter] to the house and he knows better than be talking about the things that he does with Big Brother Puff on national television.

[laughter] She explained that people often talk about Justin Bieber as if he entered fame fully formed, ready for everything that came with it.

But that image is false.

Justin wasn’t a man when his career exploded.

He was a 15year-old boy, a child.

Candace emphasized that at that age, judgment is still developing, boundaries are still being learned, and trust is easily misplaced.

That’s the part people skip, she said quietly.

They talk about success, but they ignore the cost paid by someone who was too young to protect himself.

Candace reflected on how the entertainment industry framed Justin’s rise as a dream story, a kid from nowhere becomes everything.

But behind that story, she said, was a teenager carrying adult responsibility without adult protection.

He was making millions for people around him, yet had very little say in the environments he was placed in.

When Diddy entered Justin’s orbit, Candace said the power imbalance became impossible to ignore.

What was sold to the public as mentorship now looks very different when examined closely.

He did an interview back in 2020 with Zayn Low.

Uh I think this was on Apple Music.

And he was speaking about another young artist that was coming up, Billy Alish and um Isish Alish.

And he was basically speaking about how he wanted to protect her because she was now another young person, a rising artist in the industry.

And sort of out of nowhere, he became quite overcome with emotion.

Take a listen.

Did you feel protective of her? Yeah, I definitely feel protective of her.

Um, it was hard for me being that young and being in the industry and not knowing where to turn and everyone, you know, telling me they love me and, you know, will just turn their back on you in a second.

Um, so yeah, it’s it’s hard because I want her to know that, you know, she can count on me, but at the end of the day, I don’t want to never going to force myself to be in relationship with her.

It has to be natural, right? So, I just kind of, you know, let her do her thing and if she ever needs me, I’m going to be here for her.

But, um, but yeah, just protecting those moments because people take for granted, uh, encounters and, um, [sighs and gasps] [snorts] yeah.

So, um yeah, I just um I just want to protect her, you know.

[snorts] I don’t want her to to to lose it.

I don’t want her to, [snorts] you know, go through anything I went through.

I don’t wish that upon anybody.

So, um yeah, if she ever needs me, I’m I’m just a call away.

I’m not even kidding.

Watching that clip makes me emotional be because he is saying so much without really saying anything.

And in this one video, it looks like whatever Justin is doing, and I’m not going to show it out of just respect for the fact that I truly believe that Justin Bieber is a victim, but whatever he is doing in this video with Trey Songs and Odell Beckham Jr.

looks highly suspicious.

I can show you a still from that video.

Uh because I think the relevant part is uh Justin Bieber is not sober.

He has is clearly very heavily under the influence at this party.

And if you remember that lawsuit that the producer Rodney dropped against Diddy, he said that unbeknownst to all of these people, they were being drugged at Diddy’s parties.

That they were pouring out the liquor bottles and replacing it with other drugs.

He kept I got I got to feel that experience.

I’m coming back.

It’s all good.

Happy New Year.

She revisited old footage of Diddy speaking publicly about spending time with Justin.

At the time, it was treated like a light-hearted celebrity moment.

Candace said, “Watching it now feels unsettling.

the way Justin was spoken about, the confidence with which boundaries were dismissed.

Candace shook her head as she explained how easily the moment passed without scrutiny.

“That wasn’t guidance,” she said softly.

“That was control being normalized.

” What troubled Candace most was learning that Diddy allegedly had temporary authority over parts of Justin’s life during those early years.

Not just casual influence, but structured access to his schedule and presence.

Candace slowed her speech here, clearly weighing her words.

When a powerful adult has that level of access to a teenager, she said, “The responsibility is enormous.

And when that responsibility is abused, the damage doesn’t disappear just because the child grows up.

” Unearthing videos of Justin Bieber, Justin Bieber at Diddy Parties.

Now, Justin Bieber was obviously extremely young when he entered the industry, extremely innocent when he entered the industry, an industry that he did not quite understand as a boy who just knew how to sing and play the guitar and just did both of those things on YouTube.

Then he was scooped up and suddenly he was a part of people like Diddy going after him and saying, “Hey man, why don’t you pick up my phone calls?” There’s actually a video of that.

Diddy and Justin Bieber looks to be like 15 years old and said, “Why don’t you pick up my phone calls?” And he’s like, “Oh, I know you were trying to contact me through people and I don’t have your number.

” And the next thing we know, Justin is at Diddy’s parties.

What’s up, man? You good? I’m good.

How are you? Hey, young brother.

Everything’s good.

Selling out arenas and everything.

Starting to act different, huh? You ain’t been calling me and hanging out the way we used to hang out.

Well, I mean, you haven’t I mean, you tried to get in contact with me, you know, through all my, you know, business, you know, partners and whatnot, but you you never really got my number.

So, direct my number.

Yeah.

Yeah, my number.

As she continued, Candace referenced accounts from insiders who described private environments Justin was reportedly brought into.

These were not places designed for a teenager.

They were closed off, controlled settings where Justin appeared uncomfortable and out of place.

Candace avoided sensational language, but the sadness in her voice made the point clear.

She described Justin as quiet, withdrawn, and visibly uneasy in spaces where he should never have been expected to feel normal.

“That image stays with you,” she said.

A kid trying to disappear in a room full of adults.

She then spoke about the years that followed when Justin’s struggles became public.

Emotional breakdowns, exhaustion, moments that tabloids turned into mockery.

Candace admitted that many people, herself included, once saw those moments as evidence of immaturity or entitlement.

Looking back now, she said that interpretation feels unfair.

Those weren’t tantrums, she explained.

Those were cracks forming from pressure that started too early and went unchecked.

Candace referenced old interviews where Justin seemed guarded or uncomfortable.

When certain names or periods of his life were mentioned, his body language told a story his words never fully did.

People underestimate how much the body remembers, she said.

You can smile and still be bracing yourself inside.

The sadness in her voice deepened as she acknowledged how many signs were visible long before people were willing to interpret them honestly.

What weighed on Candace the most was not just Diddy’s role, but the silence of everyone else.

Managers, executives, industry veterans, adults who had influence and chose not to intervene.

She didn’t accuse them of cruelty.

Instead, she described absence, a failure to step forward.

Sometimes the harm isn’t just what happens, she said.

It’s what people allow to continue because it’s easier not to get involved.

She spoke about fear and reputation, about how Diddy’s power made people hesitant to challenge him.

But Candace made it clear that the cost of that hesitation fell on Justin.

“He was the one who lived with the consequences,” she said quietly, not the adults who stayed comfortable.

As the discussion continued, Candace shifted to Justin’s efforts to rebuild himself later in life, stepping away from chaos, seeking stability, leaning into faith and personal growth.

She spoke respectfully about how difficult it is to heal from experiences that happen before you fully understand what’s being taken from you.

Healing doesn’t erase the past, she said.

It just gives you a way to keep going.

Near the end, Candace addressed Diddy directly, not with fury, but with disappointment.

Power comes with responsibility, she said.

And when that responsibility is ignored, the truth eventually surfaces.

Her tone was steady but heavy.

She didn’t raise her voice.

She didn’t need to.

The weight of the words carried their own force.

She closed by returning the focus to Justin.

She made it clear that this story is not about defining him by what happened, but about recognizing what he survived.

Struggle doesn’t make someone weak.

She said surviving it makes them strong.

Candace emphasized that Justin’s willingness to speak openly about pain, faith, and healing matters, especially for others who went through similar experiences in silence.

The segment ended quietly.

No dramatic music, no triumphant note, just reflection.

Candace’s final thought lingered.

“We can’t undo what happened,” she said, “but we can finally stop pretending it didn’t matter.

” And with that, the conversation ended, leaving behind not outrage, but understanding and a long overdue acknowledgement of a child who deserved