My two issues with Ronnie, with whom I otherwise have no interaction and/or emotional or mental investment:
1) He's loudly religious and claims that his lifestyle choices and the path he took were all reflections of his covenant with his god. Christianity permeates everything he submits to social media and he unerringly refers to it as his lodestone and moral guidebook. His behavior, whether in the form of his promiscuity, his many illegitimate children out of wedlock, his professionally-necessary but morally bankrupt claims of being a natural athlete (giving kids who worshiped him the wrong ideas and a false idol to admire), all while posing as a figure of authority and law enforcement in his community, is anything but Christian or religious. If anything, it fits the template of a far-left hedonist with little regard for his health or that of others, as well as his image as the chief ambassador of a once-popular "sport."
2) He sells products that are certifiable junk, namely that fat-shrinking cream that gets so pilloried and ridiculed whenever he trots out the contractually-mandated once-a-month posting about it on Instagram, complete with belly rubbing and awkward white stains left on his chocolate torso when the clip ends. Don't sell junk to people. You want to sell supplements, fine, be our guest, make a living. But if they're falsely advertised or fail to deliver results on 100% of users (which seems to be germane to what his followers tell him on IG), you're basically committing fraud and showing your deep contempt for your fans in return for a monthly direct deposit from the snake oil company that makes it.