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FS/FT Is — If It Prints Money Every Day, Why Is It Begging You for $500?-Expose scammer
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FS/FT Is — If It Prints Money Every Day, Why Is It Begging You for $500?

Let’s start with the most obvious question — the one nobody asks because it feels too dumb to say out loud:

If FS/FT Is really generating guaranteed daily returns… why does it need you?

Not your trust. Not your ‘enthusiasm’. Not your ‘long-term commitment’.

Your money. Right now. In cash. Or crypto. Or gift cards (yes, they’ll take those too — red flag #1).

Think about it. If someone had a real, working, scalable system that reliably made 1% profit every single day — not some vague ‘average’, not ‘over time’, but every day — what would they do?

They’d mortgage their house. They’d max out credit cards. They’d beg their grandma for her retirement savings. They’d go to banks and pitch hard — because 1% daily compounds to 3,778% in one year.

Let me show you that math — no jargon, just fingers-on-the-calculator real:

You put in $500.
Day 1: $500 × 1.01 = $505
Day 2: $505 × 1.01 = $510.05

After 365 days? $500 × (1.01)365 = $19,390.

That’s not ‘possible’. That’s math. And if it’s real, then FS/FT Is isn’t a business — it’s a printing press.

So why are they posting vague trade offers? Why are they listing baseball cards like McGonigle and Corbin Carroll as bait? Why do they talk about ‘FS/FT’ like it’s a secret club instead of a clear product, service, or platform?

Because there is no product. No service. No platform.

There’s just a funnel — and you’re the next bucket at the bottom.

This isn’t investing. It’s recruitment. Every new person brings in fresh capital to pay the ‘returns’ promised to the people who got in two weeks earlier. That’s not innovation. That’s arithmetic dressed up as opportunity.

And here’s the kicker: real wealth doesn’t recruit. Real wealth doesn’t need your permission. It doesn’t DM you. It doesn’t ask you to ‘trust the process’ while refusing to show audited statements, live dashboards, or even a registered business license.

scam warning

Charlie Munger nailed it: ‘Show me the incentive and I’ll show you the outcome.’

So let’s follow the incentive.

Their incentive? To get your money — fast, frictionless, and untraceable. Their outcome? Your $500 vanishes. Maybe you get a few ‘returns’ — $5 here, $7 there — just enough to feel hooked. Then the withdrawals stop. The support goes silent. The ‘platform’ goes offline. And suddenly, your ‘daily 1%’ is replaced by daily regret.

Worse? They don’t even hide it well. They dangle baseball cards — a hobby market full of passionate, trusting people — as emotional cover. ‘Oh, it’s just a collector trading group!’ Nope. The moment they pivot from ‘I want your Bowman auto’ to ‘I’ll match your deposit with 1% daily returns’, the switch flips. Hobby ends. Scam begins.

Ask yourself: When was the last time a *real* financial product needed to masquerade as a sports card forum post?

Never.

Real businesses have websites with contact info, terms of service, and regulatory disclosures. Real investments have prospectuses, not cryptic acronyms. Real profits don’t require you to ‘bring a friend’ to unlock your next payout.

FS/FT Is isn’t moving away from basketball and football.

It’s moving *toward* your bank account — and it’s already halfway there.

Don’t send them $500. Don’t ‘just try it with $50’. Don’t DM back hoping for clarity — they won’t give it. Clarity breaks the illusion.

You deserve better than mystery wrapped in jargon and sold with nostalgia. Protect your money like it’s your future — because it is.

So next time you see something promising daily gains, automatic payouts, and zero transparency — pause. Breathe. Ask that dumb, vital question again: If it prints money… why does it need me?

Then walk away. Fast.

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