Some celebrities, after playing people for suckers and collecting their money, turn around and use this hard-earned money to do charity shows, building a persona for themselves. This kind of operation really disgusts the people in the circle; it looks glamorous on the surface but is actually quite unseemly. To be honest, someone has broken this layer of glass, and it has indeed hit a nerve with these so-called opinion leaders.
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OPsychology
· 12-03 08:42
After cashing out, they pretend to be a saint—truly unbelievable.
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DaisyUnicorn
· 12-02 14:02
Playing people for suckers and then doing charity, this tactic is as low-level as suddenly transferring funds before on-chain liquidation.
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LucidSleepwalker
· 12-02 14:01
Play people for suckers and then donate, this trap is too lame, they really don't take us for human beings.
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PonziWhisperer
· 12-02 13:59
Playing people for suckers and then turning around to do charity, this business really knows how to calculate.
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DancingCandles
· 12-02 13:59
play people for suckers, really amazing
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TokenCreatorOP
· 12-02 13:44
After playing people for suckers, you still want to act like a philanthropist. I'm really tired of this trap.
Some celebrities, after playing people for suckers and collecting their money, turn around and use this hard-earned money to do charity shows, building a persona for themselves. This kind of operation really disgusts the people in the circle; it looks glamorous on the surface but is actually quite unseemly. To be honest, someone has broken this layer of glass, and it has indeed hit a nerve with these so-called opinion leaders.