# Are There Really All "Rich People" on Little Red Book?



It's not that there are more wealthy people—it's that the cost of packaging is low and the threshold for faking is low.

The "white, rich, and beautiful" women you see might be calculating their Huabei payments next month, just like you.

Women package themselves as white, rich, and beautiful to catch rich, handsome men.
Men package themselves as rich and handsome to catch white, rich, and beautiful women.

## Why Is Little Red Book "Per Capita Millionaires"?

**First, what's displayed is the highlight, not daily life.**

Travel, luxury goods, afternoon tea.
This content is easy to photograph and gets likes easily.
But good photos don't equal wealth, and likes don't equal reality.

**Second, the cost of faking is extremely low.**

Renting bags, group buying, photo bombing, filters.
After this whole operation, your friend circle looks like a wealthy family's, but your bank account looks like a refugee's.
The platform doesn't audit assets—it only audits content.

**Third, the algorithm favors "beauty."**

The more luxury cars and mansions you watch, the more the platform pushes luxury cars and mansions.
Once an information bubble forms, you start thinking "everyone has money."
Actually, it's just "everyone is showing off."

Men use fake watches to pose as rich and handsome; women use fake bags to pose as white, rich, and beautiful.
In the end, the man takes his fake watch to a pawn shop to pledge it, gets exposed, and gets arrested.
Liars lie to liars, and in the end, reality hits them all in the face.

## A Few Life-Saving Tips for Little Red Book Scrollers

**First, don't mistake "display" for "strength."**

Some people show off bags, some show off cars, some show off travel.
Showing off doesn't mean having it, and having it doesn't mean showing it off.
Don't use someone else's highlight to deny your own everyday life.

**Second, be wary of "quick matching" temptation.**

Chat online for three days, meet in person the next day.
Before even verifying identity, already invest emotion or money.
Scammers love this pace.

**Third, verification is more important than feeling.**

If the other person says they're an executive, go check the company's business registration.
If they say they have assets, ask for real proof.
Don't fear awkwardness—awkwardness beats being scammed.

**Fourth, don't trade "packaging" for "opportunity."**

You want to catch a rich, handsome man; he wants to catch a white, rich, and beautiful woman.
Result: two liars collide, and nobody gains anything.
Shortcuts are often the longest route.

**Fifth, accept the identity of being "ordinary."**

Most people are ordinary and live ordinary lives.
That's not shameful—what's shameful is being exposed after pretending.

## The Bottom Line

You lie to others, and others are lying to you too.
In the end, nobody wins—only risks accumulate.

Little Red Book is not a millionaires' club.
It's a place where ordinary people showcase a beautiful life.

Don't be fooled by filters; don't be swept away by rhetoric.
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