Another self help guru turns out to be a fraud
Some highlights from the investigation:
– Shetty did not spend three years in a temple in India, as he often claims. He spent the majority of that time in Watford, a town just outside of London.
– Shetty's origin story, about how his life was changed at age 18 by a lecture given by a monk, appears to be entirely false.
– Shetty's life coaching school functions like a multi-level marketing scheme, and the school has made false claims in its marketing materials about being affiliated with several universities in the UK.
– Shetty continues to use other people's content on his social channels without their consent or without compensating them, even after being exposed early in his career for plagiarizing more than 100 posts.
Man there are so many fakes that I no longer know whom to trust. Like every public/influencer will have negatives posted about them, some with truth and some baseless. I think it’s best to just take in the words regardless of whom it’s coming from and then make ur own judgement based on ur own reality.
D0nkey05
Stealth
7 months ago
Trust, but verify :)
Nah don’t want to waste time going into social details. What my point is that, they maybe fake but the words or wisdom they are outpouring could have weight. If it truly travel from wise person to them. If it’s their own creation then u just make ur own judgement
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Node
Stealth
7 months ago
Him plagiarising posts came out a long time ago. Also even if he was a Hindu monk, what does that mean? There are too many frauds like that already .
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