Martial Arts Now in a Rubber-Head, Hoodie, and Gloves


NOTE: This piece first appeared on FrankReport.com

WoW ! Nobody showed up again.  No Dugas,. no Attorney for Dugas.


Listed as Defendants in the lawsuit are 12 John Doe(s) besides the two secret squirrel  martial arts influencers brand of “King of all the Monkeys Around Here,” as a self-promotion of the Lordus Sapiens book for sale.  All twelve under-the-table John Doe(s) are actually martial arts shell company owners and book authors.  Everybody involved all know who each other is but won’t say.  There are NO REAL NINJAS in the marshmallow peanut gallery in America..


December 30th, 2025 when the Lake County, Florida Judge views and listens to Dale Dugas himself in the Defendants secret disguise Gerald J. Greysmith full rubber head mask under his long sleeves' hoodie sweatshirt covering his remarkable arm tattoos and gloves hiding his full set of ten knuckle tattoos.


Spoof social media has indeed been weaponized in martial arts circles — both to prop up fraudulent instructors and to suppress or discredit legitimate practitioners. The best defense is careful verification, transparency, and community vigilance.


Have martial arts instructors using spoof social media to quelch other martial artists in competitive businesses?  ANSWER IS Yes — there are documented cases where martial arts instructors (or self‑proclaimed “masters”) have used deceptive online tactics, including spoofed social media accounts, to discredit rivals or inflate their own legitimacy. While the practice isn’t universal, the martial arts community has repeatedly dealt with fraud, impersonation, and online smear campaigns aimed at silencing or undermining another practitioner.


 Dr. Dale “Belt Collector” Dugas: The Legend in His Own Mind

"Dr. Dale Brian Dugas loves to parade himself as the real-deal martial arts master, healer, and guru — but let’s be honest: if overinflated ego were a martial art, he’d be a 20th-degree grandmaster with a gold-plated participation trophy."