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What happens when big promises meet bad math? In this video, I break down a real estate syndication deal tied to Grant Cardone’s playbook that was pitched to a friend of mine — and why I believe it’s a terrible investment. I’m a part-time real estate investor, full-time legacy airline pilot, and military instructor pilot. I’ve built my portfolio slowly and locally, and I’ve seen firsthand how dangerous it can be when inexperienced operators chase unit count and “assets under management” instead of real ownership and fundamentals. This deal promised to “double your money in five years” on a 65-unit apartment complex in Kingsville, Texas. Sounds great — until you actually look at the numbers. In this video, I cover: Why syndications attract inexperienced investors The red flags in this 65-unit Texas deal How GP/LP structures can dilute real ownership Why “assets under management” is often a vanity metric Understated expenses and fantasy pro formas The dangers of GP-owned property management Why going slow beats chasing unit count How Grant Cardone’s model targets non-accredited investors Why closing the deal is the easy part — operating it is everything This video is NOT about attacking anyone personally. It’s about protecting young investors — especially military members and W2 professionals — from deals that look great on paper but fall apart in reality. If you’re considering real estate syndications, private equity real estate funds, or investing with internet personalities, watch this before wiring a dollar. 📌 Like, subscribe, and comment — I read and respond to every comment. Disclaimer: This is my opinion based on my experience. Not financial advice.