New York Post

Fool or not, he’s a bad influencer

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AS if we needed more proof that TikTok is a pernicious force. Meet Leonel Moreno, a self-proclaimed Venezuelan migrant espousing the good old-fashioned virtues of leeching off government resources — not to mention panhandlin­g, scamming businesses and, most recently, seizing homes using squatter’s rights.

With more than 502,000 followers on TikTok, 16,000 on Instagram and his own YouTube channel, the “influencer” is a veritable guru of grifting.

What a great country, this America, where you can become the Tony Robbins of layabouts.

In his videos, a shameless Moreno, who reportedly arrived in the US in September and now lives in Ohio, puts some real oomph into his performanc­es. He’s screaming, ranting and baring his teeth like a snarling predator.

And he’s prolific in the variety of advice he offers.

In one video aimed at aspiring beggars, he recounts panhandlin­g for money on the highway. In another, he uses his baby, an essential-influencer prop — adorning her with a sign to ask for cash. Also in his repertoire: WIC scams and how to get a free phone from the government.

“I don’t like to work. Work is for slaves, kids . . . . Don’t humiliate yourself,” Moreno says in a video.

“I confess that I don’t like to work because it gives me allergies,” he claims in another. “You work, I don’t, but in the end, neither of us have money. They keep criticizin­g us because I live off of taxes that you pay monthly.”

He has railed against the possibilit­y of TikTok shuttering and, despite many love letters to Joe Biden — whom he calls “mi papa” — Moreno warns that he will mobilize Latino voters away from the candidate if his precious platform is restricted.

Predictabl­y, he’s not a fan of Donald Trump.

I’m convinced Moreno’s real job is simply being a provocateu­r.

He certainly is skilled at getting our attention and getting under our skin. Since he last month urged his countrymen to unite behind a 15-year-old Venezuelan migrant who allegedly fired at cops and blasted a Times Square tourist in the leg, his TikTok following has swelled by more than 200,000 followers.

Somehow, Moreno manages to embody every trope collective­ly ascribed to interloper­s pouring across the border — a “bad hombre” straight out of central casting.

Is he a conservati­ve plant designed to expose the idiocy and impact of Biden’s disastrous border policies?

Or is he a charmless Ali G performing grand satire by seizing on a fraught political moment?

Venezuelan immigrant Daniel Di Martino, now a fellow at the Manhattan Institute who came to the US in 2016, believes Moreno is a wannabe: a world-class opportunis­tic “clown” making his mark by antagonizi­ng.

“People will comment, share and quote when they are angry,” Di Martino told me. “He finds whatever will outrage people. He has created the perfect character to be hated. He steals, he teaches people how to become dependent on the government.”

Whether Moreno is a Latino Robin Hood, a skilled comedian or an agent of chaos, Di Martino said, “It’s bad because he’s promoting terrible things.”

Whatever the case, there’s no doubt that the joke is on all of us and our lax policies. The rest of the world is laughing.

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