Nigerian Scammers Claim Another Victim 600
A Florida newspaper ran a story yesterday about a local retiree who fell hard for a 419 scam. The story goes into depth on the methods used to play on the target's beliefs and gain his confidence - in this case, the target (who lost $320,000) is still having a hard time accepting that they were thieves. Truly remarkable.
It's not a scam (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Insightful)
It's right up there with the lottery.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Interesting)
The lottery is occasionally in your favor, when it has gone several weeks without a winner, so the prize is very large. (Yes, that does attract more players, but not enough more to compensate for the larger prize).
The Nigerian scam is never in your favor. :-)
There is an interesting case included in income tax caselaw books, where a consortium of Australian investors tried to buy one of each possible combination for such a lottery. Buying tickets turned out to take longer than they thought, so they only got about half what they wanted, but still won most of the prizes, including all the big ones, and so made a nice profit. The case is in the books because there was some question over how to tax this.
Tax law cases are often a lot more interesting than other cases, because people put a lot more thought into avoiding taxes than they do to most other things. People who would only devote a few minutes to planning a murder will spend weeks trying to figure out how to deduct the cost of the bullets. :-) (This also makes it hard. I've got a B.S. degree in math from Caltech, and never in my life have numbers so confused as they did when we studied partnership taxation in law school)
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Insightful)
Statistics are funny. Even if it's in your favor, you're still not going to land the sum, so it's still not worth it - unless you're willing to risk a huge amount of money.
As the old saying goes - a variation on what this was started by - the lottery is a tax on those which are bad at math.
I see the 419 scam as a form of social darwinism.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Insightful)
They make some people (other than themselves) rich.
They take few from many to give a lot to few, where sammers take a lot from few.
Apart from these differences, it is the same.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's not a scam (Score:4, Informative)
If the jackpot is large enough, each ticket bought that week will have an average return higher than the cost of the ticket. However, that fact alone does not make it a good bet, because the variance overwhelms the positive expectation.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Interesting)
The real question is not the numerical amount of the winnings compared to the bet, but the value of the money in what you can do with it.
For example, assume the ticket costs $1 and the payout to a single winner is $25,000,000.
What is the real value of that $1 to you? Probably not a whole lot. It's not even a hamburger. Maybe a small coke.
That $1 is just not going to make much difference in your life.
How about $25,000,000? That can make a huge difference in your li
[OT] Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Interesting)
That reminds me of a question. Might make an interesting Slashdot poll. Suppose you've won a free drawing. You have your choice of the following prizes, each of which has an expected value of $1. Which do you take?
Re:[OT] Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Funny)
sigh
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Informative)
Uhm...you aren't familiar with the formula
?You should have got this in the first week of your first statistics course. :-)
Or maybe you aren't familiar with how lottery prizes work? If no one wins, the prize gets added to the next lottery.
The probability of a given ticket winning is the same each week, but the prize goes up. However, more people tend to play as the prize goes up, so the chances of sharing the prize go up, but the net effect is the "prize if you win" term goes up each week.
If a lottery goes a few weeks without a winner, this can push the expected payoff higher than the price of a ticket.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Interesting)
Utility theory is also why it taxing 10% of a blue collar worker's income hurts more than taxing 50% of Bill Gates'. There's a vast difference in value between the utility of 10,000 dollars and 9,000 dollars (it may be the difference between paying rent and not having a home) and less of a relative gulf in utility between 20 billion and 40 billion dollars.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:4, Informative)
If the lottery gives you a 1/N chance of winning the big prize per dollar ticket, and the jackpot is about 3N, then the tickets start getting worth it. Start with the 3N. First, they take away about 40 percent of the money if you pick the "lump sum" (you should consider this important since you pay for the tickets now and don't get to pay for your tickets over 25 years...), then you have taxes which will be about 40 percent of what's left, so you're looking at
P(X=P) = C(2N,P)(1/N)^P((N-1)/N)^P which is approx
(2^P)(N^P)/P!(1/N)^P(K) = (2^P)/P!(K), and the K is essentially constant over all P, so we can ignore it, so the P(X=P) is proportional to (2^P)/P!.
I will ignore the 0 winners case, since then you get a chance to play again next week, But the constants for the other numbers are : C1 = 2, C2 = 4/2 = 2, C3 = 8/6 = 4/3, C4 = 16/24 = 2/3, C5 = 32/120 ~= 1/4, C6 = 64/720 ~= 1/12, and it keeps going down.
Add those numbers up and make the last one a 1/10 or so to take care of the other numbers, and you see that the total is about 6.5 or 7. You have essentially a 2/7 chance of being the sole winner, a 2/7 chance of being a half winner, and so on, so your real expected value will look more like
(2*J+2*(J/2)+(4/3)*(J/3)+(2/3)*(J/4)+(1/4)*(J/5
which is approx ((2+1+4/9+1/6+1/20...)/7)*J ~= (1/2)*J, so you're looking at about half the jackpot being yours (ignoring the 0 winner case which lowers it even more to about
So, on top of the taxes and persent value which eat away about 2/3 of the value of the jackpot, the other winners make your jackpot about half or less of its value beyond that, so we're looking at about a 15-18 percent return on the actual "dollar value" of the jackpot. I tend to play when the jackpot is 3N where the chance of winning is 1/N, since I like poker and this situation only comes up every few years, but to take everything into account, you should wait until the jackpot is about 6N,. The only problem is that I was assuming 2N tickets bought for the current drawing, and if those numbers go way up, then the expected size of the jackpot keeps going down due to more players. So, I guess it will never be perfect, but it's nice to have better odds if you're going to play and the little prizes increase the expected value, as well, so it might be worth playing once in a while. And no I never won except for the little stuff.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Insightful)
Anybody that falls for this is just a thief an served right when they don't get anything.
Jeroen
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Interesting)
What about his wife?
It's also quite possible his mental state is somewhat deteriorated by age. It doesn't happen to some seniors, but it certainly does to others, and it's very likely they'll still have legal control of their assets for some time while in the deteriorated mental state.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah, the spirit of Christmas on Slashdot.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Funny)
Similarly, do not attempt to generate electricity by holding up a lightning rod in a storm, and do not attempt to seem commercially productive by suing for decade-past code publicly authored by someone else.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:4, Insightful)
They're Criminally Stupid.
Evolution... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Informative)
While it's true that standard credit debts cannot force the sale of your primary residence, they instead acquire a judgement lien against your estate, a mortgage can and will be foreclosed upon no matter what the circumstances are.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Informative)
And any wage earner and/or homeowner who's not totally buried in debt gets constant offers of 0% "introductory offer" credit cards where the introductory rate last 6 months or more. If you have a card or two with high interest, get one of those and transfer the balance *with this caveat*: If you are even one day late on one of those special offer deals, you will suddenly stop paying interest and start pay
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Insightful)
We should be careful when we attack people like this. Did he make a huge mistake? Yes. Was the mistake a result of caving into greed? Yes. However, millions of Americans are currently putting themselves into similar situations by getting deeper and deeper into debt by taking loans to buy luxury items: a new yacht, a larger house, a fancy new car, etc. The evils of debt and the mounting interest costs is well documented, but it happens time and time again.
While you may not have fallen victim to this particular scheme, are you certain that you have not fallen victim to the "must-have" commercialization scheme so prevalent (and legal) today? Yes, this was a very stupid mistake, but we are all just as capable of making equally stupid mistakes (an investment in the next Enron perhaps).
Do not be so quick to judge and save a little room for compassion. If nothing else, think of his wife who has lost so much and may have had little to say in the decision. Consider the difficulties that they will both face in their marriage as they approach their final years in poverty. This is a heartbreaking story. Do not become so cynical that we lose sight of this.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:4, Insightful)
But at least with those kinds of debt, you at least have something to show for it (the house, the car, etc..) With this scam, you simply lose the money. At least if you find yourself in great debt, you can sell off the item you bought and cut your losses. Just my $0.02.
And not all debt is bad (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm currently in more debt than I've ever been. I have $100,000 outstanding on a house I got. Before this, I'd never been in debt more than $1000. However, that doesn't mean I'm hurting in a bad way, on the contrary, my mortgage payments are LESS than my rent was, I have one more roomate so I'm paying even less, and now only 5% of what I pay goes to someone else, instead of all of it when I lived in an apartment.
Re:And not all debt is bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Assuming your house is worth more than you owe on it, I don't know that this is truly "debt" in the same sense as someone who owes credit card issuers. A debt that is secured by an asset is a completely different animal.
So right, not all "debt" is bad. But neither would I call you in debt over a mortgage. Our friendly scam victim is not only in debt, he's in the doghouse and all that brown stuff that lies around outside that doghouse.
Great example of endless scam potential (Score:3, Insightful)
Try this out: Multiply your monthly payment times 360 (the number of payments per year, times 30 years -- the typical home loan term). Now divide that amount by the amount you owe the bank. Should be 2.3, more or less, or 230%. And since, on payment, you'll have bought and own 100% out of that 230%, the amount you'll be paying someone else for the privilege is ar
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Insightful)
We're not laughing at this dumbass for getting into debt. We're laughing at him for spending three times his monetary worth on something that police had already told him was fake.
While you may not have fallen victim to this particular scheme, are you certain that you have not fallen victim to the "must-have" commercialization scheme so prevalent (and legal) today?
Not to the tune of a third of a million dollars, not once the police had told me not to, and certainly not to sixteen credit cards, two sold cars and a doubly mortgaged house.
I do feel a bit dumb about my $50 electric razor. That's maybe a different caliber of dumb.
but we are all just as capable of making equally stupid mistakes (an investment in the next Enron perhaps).
Did the police tell you not to invest in Enron? Did you hear about Enron via email? Did you invest triple the amount of money you actually had, risking corporate funds loaned to you, on Enron?
If nothing else, think of his wife who has lost so much and may have had little to say in the decision.
I'm not laughing at her. I feel awful for her.
This is a heartbreaking story. Do not become so cynical that we lose sight of this.
Heartbreaking, yes. Uproariously funny, yes. I wouldn't think it was funny if he hadn't been specifically told by the fucking authorities.
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Insightful)
For my new one, I got a $125 Braun that comes with a cleaning/recharging base; it's nearly three years old and still works like new. I expect it to last
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Insightful)
That's not true at all. People get themselves int
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm tired of everyone saying the people who get scammed are innocent but stupid. They may be stupid, but they're not innocent. They all knew something shady was going on; they just didn't realize it was at their expense.
All of you on Slashdot dissing this old person should be ashamed of yourselves. Most of you are laughing now but wait until something like this happens to you. You people don't realize that these are sophisticated operations. It isn't
Why is this a scam, and televangelism not? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The Role of Religion in All This (Score:3, Interesting)
Or one just needs to look at certain countries where religious "leaders" have the following of
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Interesting)
This guy probably is a runner up for a Darwin award many times over..
No not the darwin awards sadly. (Score:3, Interesting)
I should be more sympathetic? Fuck that. This guy is a criminal. He funded the bribing of officials all in an attempt to defraud a foreign goverment for nothing else then pure financial gain. Rule 1 of being a criminal be aware of bigger criminals. Oh well no doubt a lot
Re:It's not a scam (Score:5, Insightful)
There really needs to be stronger international enforcement on these scams. These scammers deserve to be taken out with extreme prejudice.
perhaps (Score:3, Interesting)
In this particular elderly gentlemans' case, it is probably a combination of that, and denial. It ain't just a river in egypt, folks, and it's a powerful ego defense when you've lost it all due to your own trust, and can't face the reality of your victimhood.
Think that kind of denial can't be real? How hard do you think it is for that old fellow to look himself in the mirror and realize that his own foolishness cost he and his disabled wife their life savings and future?
Truly a
Re:It's not a scam (Score:3, Insightful)
419 Scam Infomercials? (Score:5, Funny)
Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't feel sorry for this guy in the slightest. This guy was a whole lot of stupid. Just insane to fall for something like that and need to spend $320K to get it.
There is a certain personaility type that has to fall for this no matter where it was from. It's not the internet that has caused this, it's just helped people find more idiots to suck in.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:2, Insightful)
You'd figure that after 75 years on this planet he'd develop some common sense - This is not a knock on the elderly. I know a lot of old folks who grew up during some mean times and would never ever get scammed like that because they don't believe in the "free lunch" and they're always on their guard about stuff like this.
Greedy fool.
Wife, children, friends? (Score:3, Insightful)
But his wife couldn't stop him? Does she have the same problem?
Do they have children? Couldn't the children stop him?
Friends? Do they have any friends? Are they all affected with the same deterioration?
Even after he is shown the "black money" scam is fake, he STILL believes that they were legit.
I notice they don't talk to his wife about it.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
He's an idiot, plain and simple. When given documentation showing it's a scam he won't admit it, and won't even file an official complaint. He's a moron.
He lost everything, yep. He's now a burden on society as a whole completely because he will loose his home, bankrupt off his debt and now the banking & mortgage industries will take the hit for it causing interest rates, and credit ratings to be just that much tighter for us non-greedy types to get a loan and/or credit card.
The banking industry let him get *21* credit cards and cash advance all of them and no one blinked. They started blinking when they didn't get their payments though. That could be the only thing that might need to be fixed, the ability for a person to get *that* many credit cards in such a short time, and for no one to notice.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
Or maybe not.
It's always so easy to denounce things from the other side, for example, lack certain beliefs that some other people hold (I'm staying nonspecific here so's not to get into an argument about religion, or whatever).. to me, it seems absolutely staggering that anyone could possibly believe some of the things I don't - but it's never that simple.
This guy is not of the internet generation - he's older. In my experience to many older people the internet is some "magical computery thing" that can do anything. I know people of that kind of age who are every bit as shrewd, bright, and worldly-wise as their years should suggest, but you tell them you can download money from the internet, and they'll believe you.
Secondly, his wife is partially disabled. That's likely to put financial strain on him and his household. Strain = stress, and stress generates emotional rather than rational thinking.
Thirdly, it's often difficult for people to admit they've been taken for a ride - even very smart people. Put yourself in this situation:
You've been offered a bargain.. it all looks legit, and it's something you really don't want to pass up.. A really nice PC/Mac for $100, mebbe.
So, you send off your $100, and after a while you're informed that due to some oversight, the cost is actually going to be $105.
At this point, you grumble.. but what do you do? Risk throwing in the extra $5 for the machine you really, really want, and prove to yourself that you aren't stupid... or prove that you ARE a complete idiot for falling for it in the first place by trying to get your money back?
It's a pretty devious trap. A lot of people would rather spend a little more to get a "good" result.. and will repeat ad infinitum. A little more.. just a little more.. one more bit.. etc. It's an age old con trick, but it's survived this long with good reason.
Anyways, this has turned into something of a long winded rant.. by basic point is - don't be too quick to judge.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:3, Informative)
Yup (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, that's just my opinion and I'm sure a lot of people have good, positive experiences with the studen loan people...
Re:Yup (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Simply Insane (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
What, you think drug trafficking runs at a loss? The evil drug runners need to use scams like this because they sell of drugs at below cost? Yeah, right. That's progaganda, pure and simple - and you fell for it.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
Empathy? If you took all your money and flushed it down the toilet, do you deserve empathy? If you decide it'd be a neat idea to deliberately drive a 6" spike through your shin bone, do you think you're going to get a lot of sympathy?
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for empathy... if unexpected medical bills had cleaned out his nest egg, or he'd lost it in some Enron-type pension plan raiding, I'd be Mister Empathy himself.
But the long and short of the story is that he got greedy, he didn't listen to advice from good sources. Jesus Christ, he handed over $300,000 to these guys without even doing any due dilligence. And now he's in denial. This guy deserves everything he got, end of story.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Simply Insane (Score:3, Insightful)
Suppose the 419 scammers who conned this dude, were caught and punished. Would you feel empathy, since they would also be human beings in a horrible situation?
I guess there's a spectrum of degrees by which people earn their misfortune. Somewhere along that continuum, there's a point where our sense of justice and compassion are equal. One on side of that point, we feel sorry for them. On the other side, we hope they (and
Re:Simply Insane (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, he was a moron.
Re:Simply Insane (Score:3)
Idiot: 'Sure I'll help you rob someone just don't make me do anything illegal'
So when you say 'don't ask me to do anything illegal' when helping criminals it somehow protects you from the law????
Jeroen
And Worse Yet (Score:5, Insightful)
That means he'll default on loans and credit card debt, which means creditors will have yet another reason to fleece good customers to make up for the bad ones.
Re:And Worse Yet (Score:5, Insightful)
somebody should direct him to (Score:5, Interesting)
Golden rule (Score:5, Insightful)
I dont know who came up with that line but it holds true time and again.
On the other hand... (Score:5, Funny)
For the love of... (Score:5, Funny)
Mr. Sessions, meet P.T. Barnum. Mr. Barnum, please smack Mr. Sessions as hard as you can upside the head.
Ouch.. (Score:5, Insightful)
At that age and point in my life, if I were to admit that I were completely scammed out of everything I had worked for my entire life because of a scam that has been around for decades, it would probably make me a broken man.
How long can someone that age live with a broken heart?
Common sense (Score:2)
I feel bad when I hear about these stories, but there's always a bit of "if you can't use even the most basic of common sense, perhaps you had it coming" mentality. Wrong, I know (especially for an elderly man) but come on... my grandmother is more careful with her money and she's dead!
Re:Common sense (Score:3, Funny)
Jeroen
I have no pity for stupid people (Score:2)
Fact: An offer too good to be true, usually is.
Wow (Score:3, Insightful)
Before you start feeling pity for him... (Score:5, Insightful)
Next, we find this line:
He ignored police warnings that the deal was bogus and instead blames his losses on corrupt foreign governments
OK, so even the police told him that this would go bad, he continued to dump his money. So now we have "too good to be true" coupled with warnings from the law that he was going to get fleeced
The actual premise of the transaction doesn't even sound legal. A banker needs to move money that isn't his by using an offshore account?
The account had been dormant for years -- ever since the businessman and his family died in a plane crash, the e-mail read. The "banker" needed help moving the money. Otherwise, the government would confiscate it.
That's where Sessions fit in.
And finally the trump:
Still, Sessions was so mesmerized by the well-spoken West Africans that to this day he does not think he was scammed. "I consider them my friends," he says. "They're not criminals."
If this guy had more money and they asked for it, he would give it up. It goes beyond stupid and trusting to the point of insanity. Yes, he's old, but when you've been warned by police and god knows how many others, lost all the cash you have,and face losing your house then you should know you've been robbed.
This guy has more in common with a gambling addict than a victim. He's still not giving up. I really wouldn't be surprised if he would have given to TV preachers or others who might have fleeced him had the nigerian scammers not caught him first.
Re:Before you start feeling pity for him... (Score:5, Interesting)
Yep. There's an old saying, "you can't con an honest man". Most big cons have some element of dishonesty (beyond the "getting something for nothing") because it helps to discourage the mark from checking on the legitimacy of the scenario in the first place.
Denial's a wonderful thing isn't it. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's easier to blame "corrupt foriegn governments" than it is to blame yourself for being taken in by it. I think the poor guy is just too embarrassed to admit he was swindled.
But did anyone else get the impression off this article like they were really poking fun of him instead of covering a real piece of news. Kinda like, "Look at this stupid old guy, haha"
You know what else is a little odd:
Jim Stratton can be reached at jstratton@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5379.
That just screams, "please send donations." Makes you stop and think, who's scamming who..
A new T-shirt (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A new T-shirt (Score:4, Informative)
I don't think he is a scammer (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
if only (Score:5, Insightful)
This statement is another way to pc package the concept of greed. If only God would let me win the loto I promise I will use it to do the Lords work - after of course making myself "comfortable".
Alive and Well (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd laugh, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't have to be old and retired to be seduced by people promising you 500% returns on $50,000 investments. Twenty-somethings will fall for it if you use enough marketspeak.
Re:I'd laugh, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you do it once and lose your $50,000, you could be a victim of bad luck and market fluctuations. If you do it six times with money you can't afford to lose, you're just dumb.
I do feel sorry for this guy, though. He worked (probably hard) all his life to accumulate his nest egg. He seems like a genuinely caring and overall g
Twentysomethings have higher risk tolerance (Score:3, Informative)
You don't have to be old and retired to be seduced by people promising you 500% returns on $50,000 investments. Twenty-somethings will fall for it if you use enough marketspeak.
There were all sorts of people who lost tons of money in the dot-com bubble, old and young. But here's the thing: when you're young you can risk more in exchange for the potential of higher growth. This is very basic finanical planning: younger people have a much longer horizon and c
TANSTAAFL (Score:3, Insightful)
We're the one's that pay... (Score:5, Interesting)
As the article says, most of that money is in new debt. He'll never be able to pay it back, so it will become the loss of the finance companies. They will raise the interest rates we have to pay in order to recoup that money.
And of course, since the guy will lose his home and has no money, he'll have to go on welfare to get his rent and food money. He won't be able to pay for his health care co-payments any longer, so he'll bail on those bills, making his doctors and hospitals raise their rates for paying customers and insurance companies.
Yes, he was stupid, his life will be crap, but we are the ones that have to pay for his stupidity!
Feel sorry for him (Score:5, Insightful)
What if, 50 years from now, there's a scam going around , today, you won't in your wildest imagination consider possible? Would you fall for it? It is possible some of you would.
Please don't deride this old man, but feel sorry for him. He's ruined, with a disabled wife to take care of.
If anything, us young folks also have to share some of the blame in not spreading the message clearly that such things are scams.
Re:Feel sorry for him (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't buy it. hell the police TOLD him while he was being scammed it was a lie and he disagreed with them.
Re:Feel sorry for him? (Score:3, Insightful)
He's been ruined by his own greed and stupidity, and was apparently quite happy to steal money from the bank account of a dead man. Why should I have any sympathy whatsoever for someone like that?
"What if, 50 years from now, there's a scam going around , today, you won't in your wildest imagination consider possible?"
If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. If you remember that, you'll n
Re:Feel sorry for him (Score:5, Interesting)
Aside from which, said old man was warned by friends, family, even the police. No issue there of failing to spread the word. Just a gullible, greedy, old fool.
Bull (Score:5, Insightful)
So he had 73 years of life experience for him to know better.
"He and his partially disabled wife needed the money"
He had no problem burying his wife and himself in debt and putting everything they had in hock for the sake of a scheme that would have made Ralph Kramden (The Honeymooners) blush.
"He comes from a simpler time, a different era"
Bah, I hate that "Golden Age" bullshit. Life wasn't simpler and people act exactly the same as they always have. Some people are liars and cheats, some are greedy fools; time hasn't changed this. People even had fewer people watching out for them (bank insurance, auto insurance, consumer fraud protection, etc) than they do today.
He grew up with Stalin, McCarthy, Hitler, the Depression, countless scams and scandals, and on and on. He wasn't from some innocent time.
Re:Feel sorry for him (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, you've pushed a particular button of mine with this one.
Ok.
Ok.
No, I strongly disagree with this. There seems to be this all-pervasive myth that you go back 70 years and everything was rosy. People left their doors unlocked. Everybody tipped their hats to ladies in the street. Con-artists didn't exist and policemen had nothing better to do than provide consolation to young toddlers who had temporarily lost their mothers while shopping.
It's a nonsense. Go back 70 years and there are drugs, crime and corruption on an incredible scale. The mafia rules several cities. Drive-by shootings are basically invented. Policemen are murdered in their homes. Con-artists swindle the entire population out of their money leading to a rather well known market crash; makes Enron look like a child's tantrum. Hollywood movie stars are involved in drug scandal after drug scandal. You have street gangs, street crime, etc.
You need to lose this rosy-coloured vision of your history. Simpler time? Don't be stupid.
Hubris (Score:3, Insightful)
desperation (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not all black and white. There are even some companies in the US that have a sort of queezy feel to them in regards to their offers. Pre-Paid Legal [prepaidlegal.com] has an iffy feel to it (see News on Pre-Paid Legal [google.com]. It's a MLM company which sells [slashdot.org]
That was a grey-area example, But offers which promise to make you rich while requiring no work from you are almost invariably scams. There's an easy way to detect a scam: listen to your gut. If something doesn't feel right, you shouldn't go with it.
Re:desperation (Score:3, Insightful)
419 Scams, Ponzis, Insurance, U.S. Debt... (Score:3, Interesting)
Greed.
True believers.
Those that get stuck with the debt.
Nobody thinks they were scammed. The leaders were just good honest men that were themselves misled. When all other justifications fail, try the old "God works in mysterious ways, his wonders to perform."
Don't be so quick to point the finger at the imbecile in the story -- look in the mirror first.
Fight control. Question authority. Rebel. Be free.
Scams on the Elderly (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not quick to blame the victim in this case.
My mother is 88 years old. You would not believe some of the scams that target the elderly. The ones I've seen are, surprisingly enough, quite legal. For example, selling reports on lotteries you may have won or soliciting for charities that keep practically all the money for themselves.
Some of the elderly do have difficulty distinguishing between reality and fantasy. Most do not. For those who do it's partly it's because of problems that happen to people who grow quite old -- and sometimes it's due to having grown up and aged in an era in which normal people were not targeted by frauds.
If the man in this story was, say 43 or 53, I'd be much harsher. But, by 73, he could be suffering from some problems that limit his ability to understand reality.
What should be done? Damned if I know for sure. But I think younger relatives should keep a close eye on their elders. That way you can limit the damage done to Mom or Granddad by this kind of scum.
who uses who (Score:5, Funny)
Mr.Sessions said "I think the Lord uses people to do his work,"
he forgot the devil does as well.
Scam who? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why do I feel like the real idiots in this story were the people willing to lend him the money?
-- this is not a
What would be amusing (Score:4, Funny)
The root of the problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
Trust is a good thing. Common sense is good too, but not encouraged as much. Just imagine a world where everyone had plenty of the latter.
I fell for a scam too. (Score:5, Funny)
419 eater (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.419eater.com/index.htm
Merry Christmas (Score:3, Insightful)
There are people in the world that cannot take care of themselves. Some are retarded or suffer from psychosis or other mental problems. Some suffer from incurable illnesses. Some are too young or too old. Some are disabled and unable to work. And some are just not smart, that is, stupid.
Which of these categories deserve to be broke and homeless? Which of these should we kick to the curb without any assistance or fallback support? Which of these can we laugh at because they're scared about where they're going to be able to sleep or feed their freaking dog?
Tough for me to say that about any of them.
Send them image files...fill their inbox (Score:4, Interesting)
I've also heard of people replying and attaching image files so that they're mailbox quota gets used up. Most of the scammers are using free email services so it doesn't take much to fill their quota. I;ve done this a few times, choosing suitably bizarre images (nothing pornographic, just bizarre).