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Pursuit of Jade Is Not a Drama — It’s a Mathematically Impossible Scam-Expose scammer
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Pursuit of Jade Is Not a Drama — It’s a Mathematically Impossible Scam

Do you know what 0.5% daily compounded actually means?

Not ‘sounds nice.’ Not ‘a little extra.’ Not ‘maybe they’re onto something.’ I mean: what does it *do* to numbers, over time, when you run the math — no fluff, no marketing, just exponents and multiplication?

Let’s start with $1,000.

At 0.5% per day, compounded daily, that $1,000 becomes:
$1,000 × (1.005)365 = $6,168.

That’s a 517% annual return.

At 1% per day? $1,000 × (1.01)365 = $37,783. A 3,678% annual return.

Now — and this is where your stomach should drop — at 3% per day?
$1,000 × (1.03)365$142,000,000.

One hundred and forty-two million dollars.
From one grand.
In one year.

That’s not growth. That’s magic. Or fraud.

Let’s compare reality:

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has averaged ~20% per year over 50+ years. The S&P 500 averages ~10%. Even the best hedge funds — with armies of PhDs, supercomputers, and insider-grade data — rarely crack 30% annually after fees. And those returns are volatile, often negative in down years.

So ask yourself: if Pursuit of Jade could *actually* generate 3% daily — that is, 1,095% annualized, before compounding even kicks in — why would its operators beg for your $100, $500, or $5,000?

Why not invest $1 million themselves? Let it compound for 5 years at just 3% daily:
$1,000,000 × (1.03)1825not a number — it’s incomprehensible. It dwarfs global GDP. In year 4, they’d own every listed company on Earth. By year 5, they’d need to buy *planets* to deploy more capital.

scam warning

They wouldn’t be running a crypto platform.
They’d be rewriting physics.

Yet here we are — reading about Pursuit of Jade like it’s a TV show, while real people wire money into black-box wallets, chasing those impossible curves. They see ‘daily returns,’ ‘staking rewards,’ ‘VIP tiers’ — all dressed up like finance, but built on arithmetic that violates conservation of wealth.

There is no business model, no trading strategy, no AI, no ‘quant team’ that survives 365 days of 3% daily payouts. Because payouts must come from somewhere. Either new deposits — which makes it a Ponzi — or miraculous alpha that doesn’t exist outside spreadsheet fantasies.

And let’s be brutally clear: if you deposit $2,500 expecting 1% daily, you’re not ‘investing.’ You’re feeding a machine calibrated to collapse — and you’ll be last in line when it does.

The investor’s chief problem — and even his worst enemy — is likely to be himself.
— Benjamin Graham

Graham wrote that in 1949. He wasn’t warning about blockchain. He was warning about *hope dressed as math*. About ignoring the denominator while worshiping the numerator. About believing a curve because it points up — without checking whether the paper it’s drawn on is toilet paper.

Pursuit of Jade doesn’t need your trust.
It needs your inability to calculate (1.03)365.

Open your calculator right now.
Type: 1.03 ^ 365.
Hit =.
Then ask: Does *anything* in human economic history — war, innovation, empire-building, moon landings — produce returns like that?

No.

What *does* produce them? A countdown timer. A withdrawal freeze. A vanished website. A Telegram group turned to silence.

If you’ve sent money to Pursuit of Jade: stop sending more. Document everything. Report it. Talk to someone who’ll do the math with you — not hype you.

You didn’t get fooled by a clever lie.
You got fooled by skipping the arithmetic.

Do the math first. Always.

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