You’ve Been Legally Cheated—and This Book Proves It - Legal Trap by Neil Stephen | Review Article by Yagnesh Suthar 2025
Recently, I was reading a controversial book written by Neil Stephen, Legal Trap, and what I learned from it completely blew my mind!
His claim was that if we are poor or middle class, it’s not entirely our fault — it’s also the fault of the government and the banks.
At first, I thought, “Maybe he’s just blaming someone else for his misery,” but after reading the full book, I realized he was right.
And that’s what I’m going to share with you today.
But before we get into that, let me give you one example about standards:
If you have to give me a 1 ft steel rod, you will measure it, right?
Now, if I ask for the same thing two years later, will the length change?
No.
If it does, then what’s the point of having a standard at all?
So anything that has a fixed standard of its own can be trusted — otherwise, it cannot.
In the same way, we have standards of measurement for everything: length, weight, speed, temperature, time, etc.
That’s why we trust these values, even if the measurement is done by our enemy or our friend — it doesn’t matter, because the standard is constant.
But here’s the shocking part: 😯😯
What you call your “wealth” has no standard value of its own.
It has no intrinsic value.
Let me explain:
Suppose I work for you continuously for one month, and in return, you pay me ₹10,000.
Does that mean my one month of labor is worth ₹10,000?
Okay.
But what if the value of that ₹10,000 is silently reduced every year by ₹600 — without my knowledge?
That means: ₹10,000 / 30 (days) = ₹333 per day.
But after a year, that ₹10,000 now buys only ₹9,400 worth of goods.
Which means two days of my labor are wiped out — silently.
In other words, I’ve been cheated quietly.
I’ve been betrayed in the name of honesty.
Because if I give you a 1 ft steel rod today, it will still be 1 ft even after 100 years.
But in just one year, my money loses value by 6% on average.
That means: money has no intrinsic value.
But here’s the twist:
If you look at the currency note, it carries a promise from the Governor:
“I promise to pay the bearer the sum of five hundred rupees.”
But if the Governor is promising ₹500 — what is the standard that defines the value of ₹500 itself?
What is it truly backed by?
When I dug deeper... my mind was blown 🤯🤯
We are being legally betrayed — by the very government and banks we blindly trust.
Now, if you want to save yourself and your family, I highly recommend you read this book to understand the full truth:
👉 Legal Trap by Neil Stephen: https://amzn.in/d/0QKuX2J
or just search on Amazon kindle: "Legal Trap by Neil Stephen"
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