I've seen quite a bit about this topic lately, and honestly, I think it's important to talk about it. There are people in crypto who built an empire on empty promises, and Enrique Moris's complaint is just the tip of the iceberg of what's happening in this space.



Look, the pattern is always the same. First come the miracle courses that promise to turn you into a millionaire trader in 30 days. Then they offer "financing" to trade with their money (spoiler: it never works that way). Now they sell trading signals that are supposedly gold. What's the problem? The real business was never trading. The business has always been selling.

They make millions in advertising. They are everywhere: TV, social media, Instagram, Forbes, all designed to sell the image of success. But when you look more closely, you see thousands of students with similar stories: abusive payments, no real access to content, lost capital, and harassment if you stop paying.

Industry professionals classify them more as smoke sellers than real traders. I’ve seen their ads myself, and it’s obvious: they’re not traders. They’re marketing specialists disguised as mentors. In more serious cases, there are reports of reputation manipulation, systematic removal of negative reviews, and questionable tactics to hide failures.

What happened with Enrique Moris’s complaint teaches us something fundamental: there are no shortcuts in trading. No matter how much noise you make or what lifestyle you showcase on social media. The true path requires learning from solid fundamentals, asking questions before risking money, and understanding that ego doesn’t pay for your losses.

In the end, this guy managed to leverage the hype better than many. He had more visibility than real traders. But the true measure of success isn’t what you earned… it’s how you impacted the people who trusted you. An excellent marketing entrepreneur, a terrible investor in reality. And that’s what people need to understand before following anyone in this space.
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