Earl Stringer Says He Was “Just Sharing His BG Wealth Sharing Story”
May 16, 2026•Channel
AI Analysis
Data from YouTube Data API v3•Updated Just now
Video Overview
Video Details
Published2 weeks ago
Duration47:36
Video IDzCKFfa6F60M
Languageen
CategoryEntertainment
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views222
Likes14
Comments3
Engagement Rate7.66%
Likes per 100 views6.31
Comments per 1K views13.51
Video Tags
#crypto ponzi schemes#hypernation collapse#investigating scams#identifying fraudulent projects#unveiling the truth#ponzi scheme avenger#crypto scams revealed#ponzi scheme#case studies#investigative techniques#due diligence in crypto#hyperverse#hypernation#hypernation official#wewe global#novatechfx#stabledao#daoversal#team validus#yieldnodes
Description
In his own words, Earl Stringer openly admits he joined BG Wealth Sharing four months ago and began documenting his entire experience on YouTube.
That wasn’t a private diary.
That was public promotion of a platform now widely exposed as a fraudulent Ponzi-style operation tied to recruitment, fake trading narratives, manipulated “profits,” and devastating financial losses across families and communities worldwide.
Earl now wants sympathy because featured him in her documentary and allegedly “painted him as a scammer.”
But here’s the problem…
While people like Queen of Karma, Danny de Hek, and other Avengers were raising alarms, exposing red flags, warning about recruitment tactics, fake compliance claims, withdrawal issues, and the cult-like environment surrounding BG Wealth Sharing — Earl was uploading “update videos” normalising participation in the scheme.
He even admits he brought four people into BG Wealth Sharing himself.
That matters.
Because every smiling “success story,” every “day 52 update,” every casual YouTube upload telling viewers things were going well helped create social proof for a platform that was already showing major warning signs.
You cannot publicly market a scheme, influence viewers to trust it, recruit people into it, and then later hide behind the phrase:
“I was just sharing my experience.”
That defence collapses the moment other people lose money after watching your content.
THE REAL ISSUE IS ACCOUNTABILITY
Earl spends most of his video attacking Queen of Karma personally instead of addressing the core issue:
Why were people promoting BG Wealth Sharing to the public at all?
He complains she didn’t privately warn him first.
But scammers and promoters don’t get private consulting sessions before being publicly criticised.
The information was already out there:
- Withdrawal complaints
- Recruitment pressure
- Unrealistic returns
- “Copy trading” nonsense
- BonChat control groups
- People being silenced for asking questions
- Endless “just wait” excuses
These weren’t hidden red flags.