Graham Frame is back with another scheme to prop up his failing WESA token.

MultiplyWESA is the second attempt to breathe life into We Share Abundance's Ponzi operation. The first version promised returns of 50% per month. When that collapsed under its own weight, Frame stripped away the token value guarantee and relaunched. Now he's trying again with a matrix cycler structure designed to extract fresh cash from existing investors desperate to recover losses.

The mechanics are straightforward: there are no actual products. Affiliates buy positions in a ten-tier 2×4 matrix cycler. The entry price for tier one is $3. The remaining nine tiers cost an undisclosed amount, with the total hitting $165 across all ten levels. Affiliates funnel money into a structure where half goes to pay commissions and half props up a revenue share pool.

The commission payouts follow the same pattern across all ten tiers. The first level generates zero commissions. Level two pays 10% per position filled. Level three pays 15%. Level four pays 25%. As positions get filled by newly recruited affiliates, money flows upward to earlier participants. This continues until the structure inevitably collapses when recruitment dries up.

The revenue share component operates as a side attraction. Every cycler position purchased creates a corresponding revenue share position. Half of all cycler purchase funds get dumped into a revenue share pool. Positions receive an equal daily share of 2% of that pool until they hit a 300% return. After that, affiliates must reinvest in more cycler positions to keep collecting.

Frame's pitch is a lie dressed up in mathematics. MultiplyWESA promises that "EVERYONE EARNS NO MATTER WHEN YOU START!" This is impossible. Ponzi schemes cannot pay more than what flows in. The math doesn't work. It never works. Frame knows this. He's watched We Share Abundance investors lose money before. He's now asking them to throw good money after bad into a structure that's mathematically identical to the one that already failed.

The WESA token itself is the real con. Inside the We Share Abundance bubble, the token's internal value gets wildly overstated to justify the returns being promised. Outside observers see a token with no utility backing claims that defy reality.

What Frame is running is a shell game. Strip away the matrix terminology and the revenue share language and what remains is the same recycled Ponzi template: early money funds payouts to earlier recruits, recruitment slows, the scheme implodes, and most participants lose.

Frame keeps launching new iterations because the previous ones have failed. MultiplyWESA is not innovation. It's desperation.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is MultiplyWESA?
MultiplyWESA is a matrix cycler structure associated with We Share Abundance, designed around a ten-tier 2×4 system. Entry begins at $3 for tier one, with subsequent tiers carrying undisclosed costs totaling approximately $165 across all levels. The structure generates revenue through affiliate recruitment rather than product sales.

Who is Graham Frame?
Graham Frame is the operator associated with We Share Abundance and MultiplyWESA. He previously launched an initial version promising 50% monthly returns. Following its collapse, Frame restructured the scheme by removing token value guarantees and relaunching with modified mechanics.

How does the compensation structure function?
The system operates through a matrix cycler where affiliates purchase tier positions. Revenue distribution involves directing portions toward commission payments to existing participants. The structure relies on continuous recruitment of new investors to generate returns for earlier participants.


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