$Jager Listen carefully, I’m tired of repeating it, but I want to talk to you seriously about this cryptocurrency called Jager.
The principle is simple but dangerous; with every purchase, they take 6% in tax, and with every resale, another 6%. A portion of this money is redistributed to the early holders, which means that those who arrive early benefit from those who come later.
This is exactly how a Ponzi scheme works: the old ones receive a passive income funded solely by the money of new entrants. The project itself creates no real value; it only feeds on the flow of buyers.
The higher the price goes, the heavier the tax becomes, discouraging latecomers. And when too many people want to sell at the same time, the system will collapse: the early ones will still come out winners, but the majority will be trapped with a token drained of its value.
Be clear-headed: Jager is not a currency; it’s a trap that benefits a handful of people at the expense of everyone else.
And when the house of cards collapses, small holders will be trapped; that’s exactly what a Ponzi scheme is.