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221.8K posts

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@SteadyMindset1
♒️ | #LSU16 🐯| I make 💰 & stay out the way





Reebok ICECREAM Board Flip "Watermelon" and "Pink Lemonade" 🍋🍉 🗓️ May 1st 💰 $150

⚖️NEW FILING⚖️The FTC has sued Stormy Wellington in federal court in South Florida over alleged deceptive income claims tied to two MLM companies — and, at the same time, filed a proposed stipulated settlement. In its complaint, the Federal Trade Commission alleges Wellington repeatedly told recruits in Total Life Changes and Farmasi they could make six, seven, or even millionaire-level income, while public income disclosures from those companies showed the overwhelming majority of participants earned little or nothing. According to the FTC, Wellington promoted TLC and later Farmasi through videos and social media posts claiming things like participants would earn “no less than six figures” and that she would create “60 new millionaires in 2026.” The agency says those claims were deceptive because TLC’s own disclosure showed 76.8% of active participants earned no compensation in 2023, and that only 0.4% earned more than $5,000 that year. The complaint also says Farmasi’s own figures indicate fewer than 1% of active participants earned income in the six-figure range. But the story moved even faster than that: alongside the lawsuit, the FTC filed a notice of a proposed stipulated order for permanent injunction, saying the agency and Wellington had already agreed to resolve the matter. Under the proposed order, Wellington would be permanently barred from misrepresenting or helping others misrepresent likely earnings in any business venture, including MLMs, and would need written substantiation for any earnings claims she makes. The proposed settlement also requires Wellington, within 7 days of entry of the order, to email a notice to everyone in her downline with the subject line: “Important Notice Regarding Deceptive Earnings Claims from Stormy Wellington.”That notice would tell recipients that the FTC alleged she made unsupported earnings claims and that she can no longer make misleading claims about the TLC opportunity, the Farmasi opportunity, or similar ventures. Notably, the proposed order says Wellington neither admits nor denies the allegations, except for jurisdictional facts, but waives her right to challenge the order if entered. It also imposes long-term compliance obligations, including reporting, record keeping, and monitoring provisions that could remain in place for years. FULL DOCUMENT BELOW👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾 COMPLAINT - drive.google.com/file/d/1A2fUnV… PROPOSED SETTLEMENT - drive.google.com/file/d/1Ev1KUw…





When me and Booker start drinking not only don’t we know how to stop but we mix our liquor 😂




Next year MK, Lay, and Jada better go first round pick.








