Is the entire clinic, including doctors and nurses, caught up in a scam?

Today I went to see a dentist, and since I waited a long time, I casually chatted with the nurse.

As soon as the nurse found out that I knew a little about cryptocurrency,

she immediately asked:

"Is this thing real?" I saw her nervously show me a contract.

Because the entire clinic went to listen to some kind of investment briefing,

the content was basically a fund disguised as "virtual currency."

It was like a 30% annualized return in USD, with a bunch of offline seminars, a lot of teachers explaining, and a crowd of older women in those briefings.

There was also a purchase of a coin that wasn’t even on the blockchain, without even a smart contract.

Then they said something about staking and restaking, claiming that if you invested a certain amount, you could recoup your costs in a certain time.

One older sister even invested several million and is currently waiting to recoup her investment...

"So it's this kind of offline fund that confuses so many people about what's real and what's not," I thought to myself.

I spent over an hour helping them understand,

and also introduced Binance, Max, and how to buy coins through legitimate channels.

After the dental appointment, the doctor also kindly gave me a box of toothpaste.

Honestly, there’s really no way to manage these large investment gatherings; as long as they haven't run off, it doesn't count as fraud.

I often heard about such briefings a few years ago,

and now they have reappeared; no wonder now, as soon as someone slightly steps out of line,

people become super sensitive to hearing about virtual currencies and Bitcoin.

It's even escalated to the point where keywords can lead to large-scale account bans on Facebook, IG, and Threads.