I’ve been posting periodically here on Rumor Mill News for a few months now as a new agent.
A company I run makes perhaps the most important health product of modern times, a highly advanced ionic silver complex for human immune support that optimizes the delivery of antimicrobial silver ions.
Rayelan Smith, owner of RMN, wrote an article with her personal testimonial sharing the remarkable results she got from it. In the article, she encourages RMN readers to help me spread this ionic silver widely by either donating to the nonprofit I run or investing in the for-profit I run if we’re the right fit.
You can read her article HERE.
I’ve turned down many millions from venture capitalists predicting a half-billion value or more. I will only work with people who care more about the people we can help save from disease than the profit. I’m now working at influencing wealthy people to use their money in ways that benefit our human family, which happens to also be the ideal way to raise large sums from rich people who care about doing good.
I recently posted an article on RMN entitled “Why rich people should send me money” (that’s not the least bit sarcastic). If you want to learn about the product and my journey you can read the article HERE.
Numerous articles about the ionic silver and about my work in accelerating the use of wealth for good have been posted by me and others on RMN in recent months. An ad for the product runs on RMN.
As a result of this exposure, I’ve spoken with dozens of readers of RMN. Some became customers, some donated, some invested. (A couple were waiting for their Social Security check so they could buy it or could only afford one of the dispenser types, so I sent the product at no charge.)
I got to know quite a few really good people. One after another expressed how much they cared about others and wanted to see things change for the better. They encouraged me to keep working to spread the ionic silver to save millions of people from infectious diseases, and to stick to my principles by only working with sources of capital who care about what we’re doing for others rather than just the money.
What an honor and inspiration to know these people! I even did a post on RMN honoring the good people I’ve met who are readers of RMN and who run RMN! (You can read it HERE.)
Something that has repeatedly occurred during my talks with RMN readers, however, has me concerned about them. Versions of a similar conversation occurred with an alarmingly large number of them.
RMN READER: “Jay, you’re a very good man doing very commendable work, and soon I’m going to have the ability to help fund your work with so much money you won’t need to seek funding ever again.”
ME: Oh, thanks. That’s so generous of you. And how is that going to occur?
RMN READER: “In a very short time, maybe a few weeks and at most a couple of months, I’ll have control over such a huge amount of capital you will not need to seek money again.”
ME: Very soon I’m going to be working to raise $10 million for the nonprofit and $20 million for the for-profit after an initial raise I’m currently pursuing of $1 million for the for-profit.
RMN READER: “Not a problem. You will have it. I will have control over much more than that. That much is nothing.”
Then they explain to me the money will be the result of a financial reset or a release of massive funds. A foreign currency reset in a country like Iraq or Zimbabwe.
Or a super-rich family or coalition will be releasing massive funds for very good people, and the ones releasing the money will be insisting that it must be mainly used for humanitarian purposes.
The redemption center will have the money available in a few weeks. It’s really close now. Few weeks.
My response to all of them has been to wake them up to the fact that it’s all just an elaborate scam.
“I appreciate your good intentions. I’m so sorry to have to be the one to tell you this, but it’s all a scam! This has been going on for well over a decade now. There will be no release of huge money to you. I’m so sorry that you got your hopes up, but this is the reality. Please, whatever you do, don’t put another penny into this. You can remain hopeful if that feels good but don’t hang your hat on it in any way.”
In almost all cases, once I’ve explained things to them, they realized they were duped and that no money would be coming. But some found it hard to let go of their belief.
People can easily be fooled. And I’m sorry to say this but it seems many RMN readers are a prime target for these scams. The nature of the platform and audience seem to lend itself to readers believing things that are not very well-substantiated, and the scammers find this to be a prime target audience.
I’ve spoken to thousands of people throughout my career. The percentage of RMN readers who got sucked into this scam seems very high. I mean, it seems to be roughly one in ten RMN readers I’ve spoken with! It can’t be that high of a percentage but it sure seems like it. It’s a staggering thing. So many of the few dozen RMN readers who I’ve spoken with have bought into this scheme. It’s scary. Given the number of people who read RMN, we’re talking about a lot of people who have been duped by this.
No wonder the perpetrators keep targeting the RMN reader base. It works for them. I don’t know how they find them, but they do. Is it posts that occur on RMN? Ads? Or just targeting the same demographic with social media etc?
Let’s be logical and think about this for a moment:
It’s been going on for more than a decade and no huge avalanche of cash has ever been released. Not to anyone. Not ever. It’s always been “just a few weeks away.” Same status for more than a decade.
That should say it all.
Now, let’s take it a step further and play out the fantasy a bit here just to add another layer of light to it.
If there were indeed going to be some fantasy earth-shattering release of cash due to some financial reset or any other scenario that people have been sold on, don’t you think that in the pathway between the cash itself that’s supposedly going to be made available and the very many very nice, innocent, well-intended little guys who are readers of RMN and are hoping to “win the lottery” so to speak, there would inevitably be very shrewd, very sophisticated, very self-serving bankers, lawyers, politicians, and so forth who will make darned sure to switch the railroad tracks right there at the source so that money goes into their bank accounts and doesn’t go to all those innocent trusting little people?
I mean, come on. Common sense should tell you that.
And here’s yet another simple common-sense reality. We’re talking about little, tiny economies. The value of their currency has become so horrible that it takes billions or trillions of their currency to equal one US dollar. That means the economy itself of that country has gone down the tube. People can barely afford to buy bread and need a boxful of the currency to buy it. In what universe would things just magically change because of a “currency reset” that would make that country’s money worth a fortune? The country would still be a very poor country with a very battered economy, right? How would that country’s economy suddenly be worth trillions of dollars – meaning valued at trillions of “US” dollars?
Makes no sense, right?
Yet good people who are otherwise intelligent people want so much to believe in the possibility of huge money at a redemption center and are especially touched by the idea that it can only be used for good.
I spoke a few years ago with an individual who was very experienced in foreign currency markets and exchanges. He began telling me about one of these scenarios that he hoped to make a killing on. Yet when I pointed out that they’re all scams without exception and the fact that even if it were realistic the bankers, lawyers, and politicians closest to the source would of course redirect all of that money into their own bank accounts and none would get to the people who were expecting he, said, “Yes, I know. You’re right. Of course, you’re right. For exactly the reasons you stated. Sometimes it’s fun to believe.”
And I know a couple more otherwise advanced businesspeople who fell for similar schemes. It’s just so tempting. One person who called me who reads RMN is a lawyer with quite a lot of experience. He commended me up and down about my principles and potential to make a huge difference for mankind. He said that within two months he’ll have access to enormous money and will donate $20 million to my nonprofit. He said he traveled to many countries for years pursuing some obscure inheritance that is not family or anything and that, well -- stop me if this sounds familiar -- it will come with constraints about only being usable for humanitarian purposes. That was early May. It’s now late August. He’s still waiting.
A few months ago someone local to where I live in South Florida bought some of our ionic silver on our website. We got on the phone to discuss the best ways to use it. He said he’d been using our product for 20 years and had heard me interviewed on local radio about it 20 years ago. He’s a plumber by day and works managing an apartment complex in the evenings. Nice family man. And soon he’ll be investing.
Then I got an email from him describing the enormous money he’s going to have access to within about a month, which will come with the constraint that it can only be used for humanitarian purposes, and he’s going to donate a large sum of money to my nonprofit to help widely distribute the ionic silver.
I had to tell him what I’d told others. I don’t enjoy this at all, but my goodness how can I not speak up?
These are all really good people. Some I’ve spoken with are in their 80s and 90s. They’re so disheartened when I wake them up to the facts, and they know right away that, unfortunately, what I’m saying is true.
And it’s been so heartbreaking for me to see so many really good people misled, see hopes that will not be realized, money lost, and I’m showing up and pouring cold water on their dreams by making sense.
One man I spoke with recently is 95 years old and has been working to help build affordable mini-home for people in third-world countries on a humanitarian basis. He was excited and feeling empowered about the money he was expecting. But once we spoke, he was so deflated he said, “I’m 95. I can’t do this anymore. I’ve been trying to do good and I think it’s time for me to just enjoy the time I have left.”
He commended me for my good heart and wished me great success in my work.
He’s such a good soul, and here I’m the one given the task of telling him not to put any more money into this and not to expect anything to be yielded by the money he has already put in. And he knew I made sense. It was heartbreaking for me to see how heartbreaking it was for him to face this realization.
But how can I not do my best to wake them up and wake up the many readers here on RMN?
Check out this article about the Zimbabwe currency HERE. It’s not really about the scheme as much as the fact that one rich guy bought a lot of it and made some money selling it as a collector’s item. That means as a novelty. You see the words trillion and quadrillion. Sounds like a fortune, right? Until you read the whole article and realize that the value was literally not even worth the paper it was printed on.
When I told the person who first introduced me to the people who run RMN about this article that I was drafting, she said, “I know someone who lost a million dollars on a foreign currency reset scam, and a close family member lost $75,000.” She pointed out how many people still insist the paper will yield big returns one of these days despite the obvious facts.
She pointed out that they buy into the belief that they discovered some secret, special source of insider information that happens to be the right source, even though it’s shady at best in every single case.
She said that she once spoke to a banker about these things and asked the validity, and was told, “Think about it. I’m in the banking business. Don’t you think if there was anything to this, bankers like me would be putting a lot of money into it? We don’t put a dime into it, because we know it’s not real. It’s a scam.”
Nothing will make the currency of a poor country turn into a fortune by some magic reset. Nothing will be putting an inheritance of fortunes from strangers into the hands of all the strangers who sign up for it.
-- Jay Newman