Andrew Tate has captivated the attention of Conservative Inc. as his trip to the United States has landed him immediate interviews, refreshing an ongoing conflict on Christless conservatism. Despite popular myth, pastors are not embracing Andrew Tate, who made his fortune, and appearance thereof, through smut and scams, with only two prominent professing Christians supporting him in Candace Owens and Patrick Bet David, who would land the first major interview with him.
Patrick Bet David is likewise a scammer. He made his fortune primarily through PHP Agency, a financial services marketing organization he founded in 2009. PHP Agency focuses on selling life insurance and other financial products, growing from a small operation into a multimillion-dollar company with thousands of agents across the United States.
This venture, built on a multi-level marketing (MLM) model, has been the cornerstone of his wealth, leveraging recruitment and sales to drive revenue. It’s worth further noting that whole life insurance is largely a ploy to rake in perpetual high commissions, so this is twice the scam of other MLM operations that just sell high margin crap.
While his media company, Valuetainment, and other endeavors, like book sales and investments, have significantly contributed to his net worth, PHP Agency stands out as the primary engine behind his financial success. Valuetainment has since been Patrick Bet David’s attempt to buy his way into the podcasting industry where he once offered Tucker Carlson a 9 figure deal.
Andrew Tate brags about having more kids than pastors, accusing them of envying the number of his bastard children, whom he insists are all supported by him. He subsequently claims that he caught a charge because he’s doing important work and speaking the truth, and pastors are catching charges because they are not speaking the truth like he is.
At this point, it’s worth fact-checking. Andrew Tate has been “catching charges” since 2015 when he was clout-chasing on British reality television. These rape charges were ultimately dropped, but the point stands that in 2015, Andrew Tate was an obscure figure catching charges for what is low impulse behavior.
As critical as we could be about pastors not stepping up, Andrew Tate has largely benefitted from the talking points of others in the packaging of cartoonish delivery.
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