A viral clip circulating on crypto Twitter has reignited one of the most divisive arguments in digital assets: is Ripple building the future of finance, or is it running the most sophisticated wealth transfer in crypto history?
The Accusation That Started It All
The controversy centres on comments made by Bitcoin advocate Robert Breedlove in a YouTube video where Ripple and CEO Brad Garlinghouse were accused of running what he described as a coordinated scheme against retail investors.
His framing was deliberate. He opened by drawing a distinction between two types of wealth: wealth that is made and wealth that is taken. “Did you make it or did you take it?” he asked. “Did you go out and solve problems for customers, made the world a better place and earned a fortune? Or did you go and steal wealth from other people rather than create wealth for consenting customers?”
Accuses @ripple and @bgarlinghouse of theft.
— Digital Asset Investor (@digitalassetbuy) March 14, 2026
The social media children have gotten way too comfortable with slander and libel with no consequences. pic.twitter.com/dydDBZDLAD
He then placed Ripple firmly in the second category, comparing it directly to BlackRock, Blackstone, and Vanguard as part of what he described as giant centralized pools of wealth transferring purchasing power from the poor and the middle class to themselves.
“Ripple is one of these giant scammers,” he said. “They’re literally selling their $XRP to ignorant retail investors. They’re mobilising a bot army on social media to pretend like $XRP is the next Bitcoin, and people are just getting taken to the cleaners.”
The numbers he cited were specific: “They’ve been selling $500 million of $XRP tokens, dumping them on retail investors, $500 million per quarter for about the past ten years.”
He went further, pointing directly at Garlinghouse’s personal wealth. “That guy’s not creating. He’s not solving any problems in the world. He’s solving zero problems. He’s just stealing your money. People went and bought the $XRP token believing all the marketing hype and the social media bot army, and they basically gave their wealth to Brad Garlinghouse who goes and buys a $100 million home in Miami.”
Digital Asset Investor, one of the most followed $XRP voices on the platform, reposted the clip with a sharp response: “The social media children have gotten way too comfortable with slander and libel with no consequences.”
The Community Fires Back
The reaction across crypto Twitter split immediately. On the sceptical side, one user wrote: “The $XRP dream is mostly hopium, fuelled by Ripple itself. For the cross-border narrative, maybe 5% of $XRP would actually be needed. The rest looks like supply to sell to retail. The real play seems to be RLUSD, which gives retail nothing. Brad, prove otherwise.”
Another long-term holder expressed frustration that had clearly been building for years: “While I’m not a fan of how $XRP has made the Ripple board exponentially wealthy while investors have been strung along for 15% of the human lifespan and counting, the chosen path couldn’t be clearer to those who investigate the space without bias.”
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