Hello Momil, thank you for your message.
While I acknowledge your request, I find the description of this matter as an 'overly ambitious marketing approach' to be a glaring mischaracterization. To frame the promotion of illegal activities as a 'marketing oversight' is not only a misrepresentation of facts but a transparent attempt to evade the professional and ethical responsibilities inherent in your role. The damage caused by these actions—the devaluation of Dominica's sovereignty and the long-term harm to its citizens—cannot be rectified by simply deleting a social media campaign.
In my recent analysis of the 'Untouchable Facilitators' within the CBI industry, I have detailed exactly how agencies and vendors act as the engine of these schemes by promoting illegal discounts and distorting the truth to attract investors, and why they must be held fully accountable.
https://rijock.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-untouchable-facilitators-why-rcbi.html?m=1
The long-term consequences—where citizens of Dominica bear the brunt of a devalued passport, and investors are exposed to travel bans, financial loss, and the potential revocation of their citizenship—cannot be erased by the removal of a post.
True corrective action requires more than deleting a post; it requires a commitment to ending the culture of impunity that allows facilitators to operate outside the law while claiming ignorance. The evidence, including the images, serves as a public record of these practices. For these reasons, and in the interest of transparency and accountability, the article and its accompanying evidence will remain for now. They will eventually be deleted.
I hope you and your organization will consider the real impact of these 'marketing' choices on the people of Dominica. I encourage you to move beyond 'corrective actions' on your own platforms and instead advocate for a transparent, legal, and ethical CBI process that respects both the laws and the people of Dominica.
Hello Momil, thank you for your message.
While I acknowledge your request, I find the description of this matter as an 'overly ambitious marketing approach' to be a glaring mischaracterization. To frame the promotion of illegal activities as a 'marketing oversight' is not only a misrepresentation of facts but a transparent attempt to evade the professional and ethical responsibilities inherent in your role. The damage caused by these actions—the devaluation of Dominica's sovereignty and the long-term harm to its citizens—cannot be rectified by simply deleting a social media campaign.
In my recent analysis of the 'Untouchable Facilitators' within the CBI industry, I have detailed exactly how agencies and vendors act as the engine of these schemes by promoting illegal discounts and distorting the truth to attract investors, and why they must be held fully accountable*.
https://rijock.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-untouchable-facilitators-why-rcbi.html?m=1
The long-term consequences—where citizens of Dominica bear the brunt of a devalued passport, and investors are exposed to travel bans, financial loss, and the potential revocation of their citizenship—cannot be erased by the removal of a post.
True corrective action requires more than deleting a post; it requires a commitment to ending the culture of impunity that allows facilitators to operate outside the law while claiming ignorance. The evidence, including the images, serves as a public record of these practices. For these reasons, and in the interest of transparency and accountability, the article and its accompanying evidence will remain for now.
I hope you and your organization will consider the real impact of these 'marketing' choices on the people of Dominica. I encourage you to move beyond 'corrective actions' on your own platforms and instead advocate for a transparent, legal, and ethical CBI process that respects both the laws and the people of Dominica.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.