‘The Young and the Restless’ Spoilers: Is Victor a Hypocrite for Going After Cane and Phyllis When He DESTROYED Arabesque and Went Back on His Deal with Phyllis?

Victor used the AI program Phyllis Summers (Michelle Stafford) gave him to destroy Cane Ashby’s (Billy Flynn) company, Arabesque, and reneged on his deal with Phyllis for Jabot in exchange for the detrimental software.

Victor eviscerated the very company that his father, Colin Atkinson (Tristian Rogers), built from the ground up. If Victor weren’t such a total a**, people wouldn’t want revenge on him. So, Cane and Phyllis used the AI software to destroy Newman Media.

 

The reason Damian was killed scared Amy - he was about to reveal Dumas'  secret CBS Y&R Spoilers

 

Victor brings a lot of stress and anguish on himself. His incessant need to best his sworn enemy and business opponent, Jack Abbott (Peter Bergman), has led him to make one poor decision after another.

Not to mention, he always screws people over. It’s a wonder why anyone in that town ever tries to make any deals with him. He never keeps his word, and his only goal is to prove he’s undefeatable.

Anytime Victor makes a deal with someone, he predictably double-crosses them. It happens literally every single time.

Now, Cane and Phyllis have outdone him, and he’s all offended and angry. He acts like they crossed some impassable imaginary line, and how dare they? The Newmans’ whining about their gazillion-dollar empire crumbling is irritating.

Truthfully, Cane and Phyllis were only doing the same thing that Victor had been doing for decades. It’s ridiculous that he thinks that he’s the most powerful person on earth.

Plus, the Newman family, in general, is behaving as though they are the only ones entitled to keep their family’s business and have their company remain intact.

Victor loves to point the finger at everyone else, but never takes the time to look in the mirror and realize that he’s the one making trouble for everyone.

The mustache must always win, no matter what, and it’s the most redundant storyline that’s been played out for decades.

We enjoy the historical context that Victor and Jack’s feud provides, but Victor is the one who constantly tries to steal from the Abbotts solely to get revenge on Jack.

Also, we predict that Cane will make Billy Abbott (Jason Thompson) a very sweet offer, and give him Chancellor Industries. He’ll probably hand it over to him with no strings attached.

Cane is all about helping Billy, whom he considers a brother. He recently told Phyllis that he wants to do something for him because Cane can see that his heart is broken.

Cane’s desire to help Billy, whom he knows is always the odd man out, is admirable. We never see Victor help anyone but himself.

Victor is truly a narcissistic bully and can’t stand it when someone else teaches him a lesson, which is what Cane and Phyllis were trying to do. Victor can’t accept anything other than world domination.

Even though we all know Cane and Phyllis’s victory won’t last long, it’s definitely a welcome change for all of five minutes.

Victor used the AI program Phyllis Summers (Michelle Stafford) gave him to destroy Cane Ashby’s (Billy Flynn) company, Arabesque, and reneged on his deal with Phyllis for Jabot in exchange for the detrimental software.

Victor eviscerated the very company that his father, Colin Atkinson (Tristian Rogers), built from the ground up. If Victor weren’t such a total a**, people wouldn’t want revenge on him. So, Cane and Phyllis used the AI software to destroy Newman Media.

Victor brings a lot of stress and anguish on himself. His incessant need to best his sworn enemy and business opponent, Jack Abbott (Peter Bergman), has led him to make one poor decision after another.

Not to mention, he always screws people over. It’s a wonder why anyone in that town ever tries to make any deals with him. He never keeps his word, and his only goal is to prove he’s undefeatable.

Anytime Victor makes a deal with someone, he predictably double-crosses them. It happens literally every single time.

Now, Cane and Phyllis have outdone him, and he’s all offended and angry. He acts like they crossed some impassable imaginary line, and how dare they? The Newmans’ whining about their gazillion-dollar empire crumbling is irritating.

Truthfully, Cane and Phyllis were only doing the same thing that Victor had been doing for decades. It’s ridiculous that he thinks that he’s the most powerful person on earth.

Plus, the Newman family, in general, is behaving as though they are the only ones entitled to keep their family’s business and have their company remain intact.

Victor loves to point the finger at everyone else, but never takes the time to look in the mirror and realize that he’s the one making trouble for everyone.

The mustache must always win, no matter what, and it’s the most redundant storyline that’s been played out for decades.

We enjoy the historical context that Victor and Jack’s feud provides, but Victor is the one who constantly tries to steal from the Abbotts solely to get revenge on Jack.

Also, we predict that Cane will make Billy Abbott (Jason Thompson) a very sweet offer, and give him Chancellor Industries. He’ll probably hand it over to him with no strings attached.

Cane is all about helping Billy, whom he considers a brother. He recently told Phyllis that he wants to do something for him because Cane can see that his heart is broken.

Cane’s desire to help Billy, whom he knows is always the odd man out, is admirable. We never see Victor help anyone but himself.

Victor is truly a narcissistic bully and can’t stand it when someone else teaches him a lesson, which is what Cane and Phyllis were trying to do. Victor can’t accept anything other than world domination.

Even though we all know Cane and Phyllis’s victory won’t last long, it’s definitely a welcome change for all of five minutes.