• Naja Kaouthia
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    608 months ago

    Did they leave the marshal at the door waiting while they made a Facebook post? Inquiring minds want to know.

    • @BonesOfTheMoonOPM
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      458 months ago

      She reached out to a famous sovcit and said sovcit charged her 2K for advice.

      • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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        318 months ago

        Of course there are grifters that prey on these dipshits. How did I not put that together?

        • @BonesOfTheMoonOPM
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          228 months ago

          One of them sells an instruction binder for 350 a pop. And they sell merchandise at conferences.

          • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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            148 months ago

            Wow, so Lionel Hutz is alive and well. How many FBI guys are in those groups lurking just like you.

            • @TexasDrunk
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              138 months ago

              I wonder if they preface it with “This is not legal advice” amongst the front matter if the ones selling it would even get in trouble. Or if they could float by on the “no reasonable person would think this is real, it’s only a game we play like D&D” if they were ever caught up in something.

              And it’s such small potatoes compared to the provable lies the big grifters tell to sell shit. I’m sure there are people infiltrating but unless they’re blatantly planning to blow up a building or kill folks I doubt any three letter agency cares about a few grand as long as the IRS gets their cut.

            • @BonesOfTheMoonOPM
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              58 months ago

              About a dozen or so of my friends lurk with me for the lolz, sometimes we give them benign bogus advice.

      • @TexasDrunk
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        edit-2
        8 months ago

        I have a group of people at my house tonight that I’ve been sharing this particular story with. A question came up after my last reply and I wanted to get your take on it because you lurk out there.

        It’s about the people selling $350 books or $2000 worth of advice. Why is it when none of this works these people aren’t sued the shit out of? Or why doesn’t one of the three letter agencies step in and prosecute the people selling this? I think it’s because it’s small potatoes on the scam scale or because the material is structured in a way that isn’t necessarily illegal (like selling someone a rock that works as a tiger repellant). One of my guests believes it’s because the people paying for it wouldn’t sue the folks giving out advice either due to distrust of the government, belief that the people selling it are legally magic, or some combination of the two so there are no real legal complaints against the scammers.

        What’s your take?

        • @essell
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          158 months ago

          My impression of the people involved is that they would agree with the scam artists advice and believe in it completely.

          As you suggest, when it inevitably doesn’t help they’ll spin that as a judge or lawyer or is ignorant of the truth, corrupt or incompetent.

          People will do almost anything to avoid admitting they’ve been lying to themselves.

        • Flying Squid
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          128 months ago

          Many of them just don’t want to admit they were scammed. You have to admit you were scammed to report it.

        • @BonesOfTheMoonOPM
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          98 months ago

          Here’s the only one I have ever seen who the lights went on for.

        • @BonesOfTheMoonOPM
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          58 months ago

          I only ever saw one complain that he had been duped after paying for some courses of lunacy. He ended up 20K in debt and evicted. I think he was just embarrassed and didn’t bother suing.

          Also they call lawyers liers and I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t hire one to sue someone.

      • Dem Bosain
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        58 months ago

        I’ve heard you can pay for legal advice with Chuck-E-Cheese tokens.