Zelle Scam Epidemic: Meta’s Digital Underworld Bleeding Americans Dry While Elites Look the Other Way
The Dirty Details
The Wall Street Journal just dropped a bombshell: nearly half of all Zelle scams at JPMorgan Chase between 2023 and 2024 have been traced back to Meta’s digital cesspools—Facebook and Instagram. That’s not a fluke, folks. That’s a systemic betrayal of trust, driven by a platform that’s become the backbone of internet fraud.
Leaked internal documents show that a shocking 70% of newly active advertisers on Meta’s platforms are crooks—peddling scams, illicit goods, and knock-off trash. Meta isn’t just turning a blind eye. They’re profiting from it—$160 billion in ad revenue built on the backs of the scammed and swindled. While Americans are struggling to put food on the table, Meta’s boardrooms are fattening their pockets.
A Playground for Crime
These scammers are often linked to Southeast Asian crime syndicates—international parasites who’ve figured out how to weaponize Meta’s “oversight” (or lack thereof). They’re using crypto, AI, and an army of bots to flood Facebook and Instagram with fake ads—puppies that never arrive, giveaways that vanish into thin air, and “bargain goods” that never make it to your mailbox.
And here’s the kicker: Meta’s so-called “strike system” allows up to 32 chances—yes, 32—for fraudsters to rip off honest Americans before the company even thinks about a ban. Who’s this really protecting? It’s sure as hell not you.
A Digital Wild West
Meta’s Marketplace has morphed into a virtual black market—bigger than Craigslist and twice as dangerous. It’s a digital back alley where anything goes, because Meta refuses to require sellers to prove they’re real, licensed, or even in the same hemisphere as you.
Banks like JPMorgan Chase know it’s a scam factory, but they’re still sending your money through Zelle anyway—until, of course, they decide they’ve had enough. JPMorgan Chase recently said it might start declining Zelle payments linked to social media contacts. Translation: too little, too late.
Who’s Really Calling the Shots?
Meta claims they’re “working with banks and tech companies” to crack down on scams—deploying facial recognition and user warnings like digital duct tape over a gaping wound. But don’t be fooled: in court, they argue they’re not legally required to verify advertisers at all. No accountability, no consequences. Just more data mining and cash flow while they sit pretty in Silicon Valley.
The Bottom Line
This is bigger than just another internet scam. This is about a system designed to bleed the working man dry while the elites build their digital fortresses. It’s about Big Tech, Big Banks, and Big Government colluding to keep you docile and distracted—while they steal everything that matters.
It’s time to break free from this digital plantation. Reject the lies. Protect your hard-earned money. And tell the elites: Not one more dollar. Not one more scam. Not one more day of this digital tyranny.
Take Action Now:
👉 Download your free copy of “Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure” by Bill Brocius here: https://offers.dedollarizenews.com/?utm_source=7steps_ebook&utm_medium=ebook&utm_campaign=gsi&utm_term=static&utm_content=sam_clemons.
👉 Join the Inner Circle and stay informed for just $19.95/month (normally $39.95!) here: https://offers.dedollarizenews.com/inner-circle/subscription?utm_source=DedollarizeNews&utm_medium=article&utm_campaign=gsi&utm_term=subscription&utm_content=sam_clemons.
👉 Get your physical copy of “The End of Banking As You Know It” for only $19.95 with free shipping and insurance: https://offers.dedollarizenews.com/eotnews/book?utm_source=DedollarizeNews&utm_medium=article&utm_campaign=gsi&utm_term=static&utm_content=sam_clemons.
Stay vigilant. Stay free. Sam Clemons, signing off.



