A serial operator who launched one failed scheme is now running another one designed to siphon victims into a collapsing cash gifting operation.
Amos Brazan owns NWC Living, registered on June 22, 2016, though his name appears nowhere on the company's website. His Tennessee address shows up only in domain records. Brazan's track record tells the story. He previously ran The Rush Opportunity, a feeder scheme for All In One Profits, a cash gifting scam. That site now sits suspended by its hosting provider. Before that, Brazan was an affiliate with World Team Builder, a downline builder that funneled people into MLM schemes.
NWC Living has no products. No services. Affiliates simply buy and sell memberships to each other while purchasing $2.50 positions in a compensation plan. Each position comes with advertising credits displayed on the NWC Living website—credits with zero real market value.
The mechanics are straightforward. An affiliate pays $2.50 to join. That payment qualifies them to receive four $2.50 payments from other affiliates they've recruited or who joined after them. Once they've collected $10, they pay another $2.50 to stay in the game and chase the next $10. Rinse and repeat until the scheme collapses.
The math breaks fast. To pay out $10 at the top, four people must purchase new positions at the bottom. As recruitment slows—and it always does—the queue stretches. People wait longer and longer for their $10 payouts. Eventually, they stop coming altogether.
But Brazan's real play isn't NWC Living itself. It's a feeder operation. The marketing material admits it: NWC Living exists to funnel members into National Wealth Center, a larger cash gifting scheme launched by Peter Wolfing. Traffic data shows National Wealth Center has cratered since October. It's a dying scheme, and Brazan is actively recruiting people into it.
This isn't his first rodeo with this strategy. He used identical tactics with The Rush Opportunity, which also fed recruits into a failing scheme. Brazan has found his niche: identify a struggling cash gifting operation and build a smaller one designed specifically to feed it victims.
For the people buying into NWC Living, they're not investing in a business. They're gifting money to whoever recruited them, hoping four other people gift money to them before the whole structure collapses. Statistically, most will lose their initial investment and never see those four payments. The ones who do profit are the people at the very top during the window of rapid growth—a window that closes quickly in schemes like this.
Cash gifting is illegal in most jurisdictions precisely because it's unsustainable. NWC Living operates in that gray area where it claims to be selling advertising credits and memberships rather than explicitly calling itself what it is. The outcome remains the same: money flowing upward, dreams flowing downward, and Brazan running the same playbook that failed before.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is NWC Living and who operates it?NWC Living is a scheme registered in June 2016 by Amos Brazan, whose name does not appear on the company website. Brazan has a documented history operating feeder schemes, previously running The Rush Opportunity for All In One Profits and working as an affiliate with World Team Builder, directing participants into MLM operations.
How does NWC Living generate revenue?
NWC Living operates without products or services. Affiliates purchase memberships and buy $2.50 positions within a compensation plan, exchanging memberships among themselves as the primary revenue mechanism rather than selling legitimate goods or services to external consumers.
What is Brazan's previous involvement in similar schemes?
Brazan previously operated The Rush Opportunity, a feeder directing victims to All In One Profits, a cash gifting scam subsequently suspended by its hosting
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