Is Obama to blame for Bad Sales people?

August 1st, 2010 | by admin |

Before judging me, please read my entire question. I was going to bed early, when the phone rang.
I answered the phone and they said Mr. Jones, I’m calling from the Gift Center to let you know, you have won a television valued at $179.00."

I said I’m not interested. She said "But don’t you want to claim your television, all you have to do is verify your name and address?" I said okay and said yes to her questions. She said we’ll mail you a pink card to claim your prize. I said okay and hung up.

Several days later I received another phone call from the gift center. She asked, did I receive my pink card, I said no. She said, "I’m calling to set up an appointment for you to pick-up your television, and I’ll send you another pink card."

I asked her what was the value of the television? She said "$179.00, and you also get a $40.00 gas voucher, and a $1000.00 bonus." This sounded okay, as after all- why would they call me if I hadn’t won anything? They claimed I had entered some contest earlier in the year. I drove down with my wife and we signed in and then some guy had us come out with him and talk business by a picnic table. Right away I knew we would have to listen to a sales pitch. Some membership to the resort.

He said a membership, was $6000.00. We couldn’t afford that, so he said a 10 year was $3999.00 and you have 36 months to upgrade to the lifetime membership. $395.00 down & $91.00 a month. Plus $300.00 in maintenance fees per year. They make this seem like part of what you have won. This deal is only good for the day you go. This always happens. Its never "Can we wait a few days". He made it seem like it had to be that day.

We asked, "You mean we can’t go home and think about it, and let you know Monday." He said "Absolutely not, the price then would be $12,000.00."

I asked so what if you pay your down-payment and make some payments and then decide you’re not going to use the facility. He said, "If you’re asking, have we ever sued anyone? No, we have not."

We signed the paperwork, then asked about the television, we had won. The television was black and white, and 5 inches, the $1000.00 bonus was grocery coupons. Wow what a ******* rip off! It was about this time I realized I hadn’t won anything but they refused to tear up my check or the contract, saying it was a binding contract.

I punched the guy in the face and security had to paste me off the asshole while I was cursing. I now face a court date. Good! I can tell the judge what this jerk was trying to do to me. We tried calling Monday to cancel, but the secretary ignored us. Telling us we were going to love it and that we were suffering from "buyer’s remorse". When the head of the office finally called us, he said there was nothing he could do about the contract. And that his sales people did nothing wrong, and that that’s how they do business. What bullshit!

My question is-

Why do they call me and tell me I won when I didn’t? Isn’t that lying? Why does this even happen? And how can they legally get away with this? I don’t understand. And why does this keep happening?
OK I don’t want smarmy, one sentence remarks. I want ANSWERS! Why did this happen? And why does it keep happening, and why can’t the government put a stop to it? WHY would they say "No obligation to buy" when that’s what they wanted us to do in the first place? Why not just say "Look, we want you to purchase a membership?"
And how was I wrong to assault a guy that was lying to my face? And taking my hard earned money?

You really have to be careful these days. There are so many scams, angles, and flat out BS stories that you’re better off assuming you’re being scammed if there is even the slightest doubt or hesitation in your mind. The government couldn’t begin to keep up with all the con games people come up with. In fact in some ways the government itself is a giant con game.

  1. 7 Responses to “Is Obama to blame for Bad Sales people?”

  2. By Lost on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    Rule of life number 54: Nobody gives stuff out for free.
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  3. By SugarBear on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    If you can’t practice intelligence then put your phone number on the no call list.
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  4. By Scott H on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    Your scenario was a classic scam. I can’t believe anyone would walk into such a thing. You need to count it as a hard lesson learned and move on. That is. . after you get out of jail for assault.

    Even so, I think there is a special place in hell for people who pray on the gullible as these scammers obviously do.
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  5. By slykitty62 on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    You have been shown why regulation is a good thing. And why people say ‘Buyers beware". But what exactly does this have to do with Obama? No, shoddy sales practices aren’t Obama’s fault and may I say, you were stupid to sign those papers.
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  6. By Opie Taylor on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    Yeah dude, I think the whole "you won something" should have been a dead giveaway.
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  7. By Lag Indicator on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    You really have to be careful these days. There are so many scams, angles, and flat out BS stories that you’re better off assuming you’re being scammed if there is even the slightest doubt or hesitation in your mind. The government couldn’t begin to keep up with all the con games people come up with. In fact in some ways the government itself is a giant con game.
    References :

  8. By V2 on Aug 1, 2010 | Reply

    You see, answers above say that these people are just scammers, and you’re just stupid.

    However I bet it was a legitimate company with a legitimate business license, otherwise the contract would be not binding. In addition, there are no regulations that would protect you from this type of scamming.

    Why it’s happening? Read poem “Fable of bees”.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fable_of_the_Bees

    The Fable of the Bees: or, Private Vices, Public Benefits consisted of a poem, The Grumbling Hive, or Knaves Turn’d Honest, along with an extensive prose commentary. The poem had appeared in 1705 and was intended as a commentary on England as Mandeville saw it
    A Spacious Hive well stock’d with Bees,
    That lived in Luxury and Ease;
    And yet as fam’d for Laws and Arms,
    As yielding large and early Swarms;
    Was counted the great Nursery
    Of Sciences and Industry.
    No Bees had better Government,
    More Fickleness, or less Content.
    They were not Slaves to Tyranny,
    Nor ruled by wild Democracy;
    But Kings, that could not wrong, because
    Their Power was circumscrib’d by Laws….

    The ‘hive’ is corrupt but prosperous, yet it grumbles about lack of virtue.

    It’s what capitalism is about. Prosperity and corruption goes hand by hand.
    References :

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