HOW TO BE AN INTERNET FRAUD OR JUST LOOK LIKE ONE...
The internet has unearthed some of the most imbalanced human beings in a very public way — and handed them a microphone loud enough to fool many sane people who believe their rhetoric and agenda.
I’m going to flow very deep in this one, and I want you to hang on for the ride because my journeys to the darkest corners of cyberspace have given me a viewpoint that many haven’t experienced — and honestly, many wouldn’t survive.
First off, let me share with you a concept from a conversation that I had with a very close friend of mine — whose name will remain unknown — whose opinion I respect wholeheartedly because of her lifetime dedication to ascending the ranks of the medical field, especially in the mental health arena.
She told me that I would be shocked to know how many seemingly “normal” professionals — many with enviable measures of personal success — have extreme mental issues so far off the charts that she’s amazed more public implosions haven’t already happened.
Teachers. Nurses. Religious leaders. Politicians. Every conceivable field you can imagine has individuals who are barely holding it together — yet they sit in positions of influence over lives.
So what does this have to do with the internet frauds that I mentioned a few sentences back?
Simple.
If we have extreme mental health instability among the people we see face to face in positions of responsibility, what do you think is lurking behind screens — unchecked, unverified, and unaccountable — with direct access to your mind?
…and you thought the Jim Jones massacre was terrible? Think again.
Speaking of Jim Jones, he would have thrived in the present day. Social media would have made his “ministry” effortless. His reach would have been global. His indoctrination automated.
Cyberspace is infested with mentally disturbed individuals who are spectacularly articulate, charismatic, and persuasive — capable of drawing in the masses WITHOUT A SHRED OF PROOF that what they proclaim is legitimate or verifiable.
And to add insult to injury, we now have cyber-frauds who lack charisma, lack articulation, lack substance — yet somehow believe they are divinely appointed to shift the planet on the strength of Wi-Fi alone.
Yawnnnnnnnnnn.
These types are everywhere. A dime a dozen. Manufactured messiahs in high definition.
Let me share a few ways you can spot these nutcases faster so your world doesn’t get hijacked by their delusions.
The egos online are astronomical. Since the social media explosion, narcissism hasn’t just grown — it has been given lighting, filters, and algorithms.
And let’s be honest: platforms like Facebook are engineered to amplify comparison, competition, and obsession. Every movement is transparent. Every interaction is visible. Every insecurity gets fed.
It’s almost impossible not to attract stalkers — or in my case, the silent page watchers who get offended by a life they can only observe but never experience.
They sit chained to devices, watching someone else live.
Sad? Yes.
Dangerous? Even more so.
These are the individuals who watch the sun rise and set while scrolling through friend lists of ex-lovers, acquaintances, neighbors, coworkers — building entire emotional realities around lives that are not theirs.
Because deep down, they believe THEY should be center stage.
So they manufacture one.
They construct illusions of greatness and bait others into buying into the performance.
They know they bring nothing of real substance to the table. No body of work. No sacrifice. No receipts.
But they crave the accolades of those who actually earned them through blood, sweat, time, and undeniable output.
They don’t care that their résumé is fictional. That their track record is nonexistent. All that matters is the digital costume they’ve created — polished websites, dramatic bios, spiritual catchphrases — all designed to override your better judgment.
And this is why the religious arena is especially fertile ground.
When you wrap manipulation in scripture, many people won’t question it.
When you mutter holy phrases with confidence, it becomes an express pass into hearts, homes, and pocketbooks.
So when you encounter a so-called spirit-filled, scripture-quoting, tongue-talking, self-proclaimed believer — who avoids the title “Pastor” but prefers softer labels like prophetess or Man of God — do not ignore the red flags.
Investigate IMMEDIATELY.
Because when you trace their digital footprint, clarity won’t increase.
Confusion will.
Some will claim degrees from institutions that don’t exist — or from real institutions they never attended. And they get away with it because most people are intimidated by confidence and would never imagine someone would lie at that level.
Then come the name-droppers.
They flash proximity to celebrities as if proximity equals legitimacy.
In the era of camera phones, Instagram, and Photoshop, it takes five seconds to stand next to someone famous and a lifetime to pretend it meant something.
The fraudulent underbelly of the internet is alive, thriving, and evolving. And if you doubt that, life will eventually educate you.
I’ve seen “charities” that were nothing more than emotional ATM machines. Tear-jerking introductions. No physical address. No verifiable operations.
Homeless shelters. Cancer funds. Food drives.
All digital. All urgent. All cash-only.
And somehow — magically — the DONATE button never malfunctions.
Twenty-four hours a day. Seven days a week.
Isn’t that convenient?
The heartbreaking part is not the scammers.
It’s the sincere, good-hearted people who want to help — and end up funding deception.
But it’s not just the fake organizations.
It’s the attention addicts.
The ones who must dominate center stage just to say absolutely nothing.
They livestream fantasies of spiritual authority. They perform savior complexes. They speak passionately — yet produce nothing tangible.
No legacy.
No receipts.
No impact.
Just noise.
Taking a stroll through certain corners of cyberspace is like walking through a digital psychiatric ward — except the patients run the asylum.
And understand this clearly:
Internet fraud is rarely about money alone.
Sometimes it’s about filling emotional voids. Daddy hunger. Validation deficits. Identity crises disguised as leadership.
But whatever they are lacking, they will attempt to extract from you through deception.
That is the common denominator.
Now don’t misunderstand me.
Technology is powerful. It has elevated humanity in countless ways.
But nothing replaces face-to-face interaction — where energy is felt, inconsistencies are noticed, and intuition has room to breathe.
In person, your natural discernment activates.
Online, it can be anesthetized.
So temper enthusiasm with common sense.
If something feels too magnificent to be true, it usually is.
And when the illusion collapses, you will be the one holding the bag — replaying the warning signs you ignored.
Internet frauds study human nature like a science.
And none of us are too intelligent, too spiritual, or too experienced to be targeted.
Move carefully.
Question everything.
Keep both eyes open — and your ego in check.
Peace, Righteous Love & Revolution Always,
SCURV








