bluewolf wrote: » That's not gonna help me lift though
AlphaRed wrote: » I'm going to say energy saver light bulbs and gyms. Energy saver light bulbs because they have never made a difference to my electricity bill, they don't last longer and they are way more expensive. They perfected the light bulb a long time ago, leave it at that. The gym because so many gyms are filled with machines and machines do not built muscle, and in order to do muscle building compound movements you have to be trained on how to do these and the instructors don't do this. They only give you crappy programs that don't help you in achieving your goals It is in the gyms interest for you to fail. A gym has a theoretical limit to how many members it can hold, which means it has a limit to how much money it can make. However, if the gym is signing people up but those people are not attending, there is no limit to how many people the gym can sign up and so no limit to how much money it can make. How many people attend a gym for 3 months and then give up because they don't see any results? And then they have to keep on paying the membership fee. This is what the gym wants. This is why they don't show people how to diet properly or how to use the equipment properly to get results. The gym is a scam.
The Diabolical Monocle wrote: » No. Ireland. Rain.
Graham wrote: » Spreadable butter - straight from the fridge. It's a lie.Resealable pack - who are you kidding? It's specifically designed not to seal just to make sure the ham dries out and curls up at the edges and has to be thrown out!
emeldc wrote: » Nope, spoke to a customer the other day who was 'skimmed' at an airport. The scam artists are walking around with mobile wireless terminals and anyone with a contactless card gets hit for €15. Think about it. It's simple.
Graham wrote: » Resealable pack - who are you kidding? It's specifically designed not to seal just to make sure the ham dries out and curls up at the edges and has to be thrown out!
Boom_Bap wrote: » Nah, it doesn't work like that.
Saipanne wrote: » It's only rain. Man up.
Akrasia wrote: » Biggest scam ever is IMRO I used to work in a shop and play cds to keep myself entertained. I don't think Tom Waits, Sigur Ros, Alphastates, Lamb or any of the other non mainstream bands I was listening to ever saw a cent of the fee IMRO extorted out of the shop. They never asked us what music I was playing. I bet yer man from boyzone got most of the money.
LadyFenghuang wrote: » Yuri Bezmenov: Psychological Warfare Subversion & Control of Western Society (Complete) for one!
Youngblood.III wrote: » Prepare for another mass scam, 1c and 2c are to be withdrawn, watch everything get 10% more expensive due to profiteering i.e. rounding off. Just like the Euro rollout.... :-(
jimmii wrote: » Been hearing stories about it for years there must be some truth to it there was even one from Forbes.
osarusan wrote: » Dog licences.
bladespin wrote: » Huge parts of the civil 'service'.
AlphaRed wrote: » Yeah? Where's the scam?
Collie D wrote: » Have had dogs pretty much all of my life and not one was licensed. Wouldn't even know where to get one or how much they cost.
LadyFenghuang wrote: » Deception was his job. Soviet Subversion of the Free-World Press. The scam. Deception was his very job.
LadyFenghuang wrote: » PLEASE get one!
osarusan wrote: » I cannot understand what even the concept of a dog licence is - licence for what? Where does licence money go? It seems a particularly blatant 'lets tax that' scam.
Boom_Bap wrote: » The interesting thing there is that there has been 0 reported cases of fraud from this. What they say is true, but how it's used is the more difficult thing. Encoding the data onto a mag card is all they can do, and they dont get the full track data. So a fairly useless bit of plastic. They can't create an Chip/EMV card from it either. Now if the fraudsters set themselves up as a financial institution and had mobile Contactless terminals and allowed to take transactions from all IMDs, then they would be onto a winner.