Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Scams


Scams.
I have been getting an education on various scams out there and would be remiss if I didn’t pass some of the information along.
I am trying to keep this short, however.  Many scams share a few features that serve as red flags.
  1. Anyone can get scammed.  It doesn’t matter how smart you think you are.  Though many times, scammers are looking for people in a vulnerable state.  Death of spouse, illness, loss of employment, when your emotional side is overruling your logical side.
  2. Scammers create a sense of urgency.  “This must be done now!”  This is to reduce your time to think.  (Except for romance scams, which they will let marinate for up to a year)
  3. Scammers will try to keep you from communicating with your support groups, I.E. Saner heads.  Excuses include “there are those trying to stop our good work”, and “only we understand.”
  4. They will ask for money and ask for it to be delivered via non-standard and untraceable methods.  Like with gift cards and wire transfers.
Rules of thumb:
                Don’t give money to anyone that you haven’t met.
                Don’t give anyone money without sleeping on it.
                Talk to a friend or family.  

If you think it’s a scam, there is a network to call, 877 908 3360, it’s sponsored by AARP, but anyone can call.  Don’t engage the scammers any further.  They are well practiced at getting you back in their clutches if they realize you are suspicious.  

Examples:
Psychic scams.  They’ll claim you are cursed in a past life, or through a parent, and the curse has now come to you and will be transferred to your children. They will need to cleanse your money of the curse.  Also, they will claim that they are doing God’s work, and the devil will try to stop them, so don’t tell anyone!  They promise return of your cleansed money, but it won’t happen.  
 
Romance scams.  You are in contact with someone online.  Eventually they will bring up some heart rending money problem.  Usually involving a sick child.  But you will never meet them despite providing airline tickets etc…  There is always a reason they can never meet with you.  Medical excuses, sudden accidents, military deployment.  
 
IRS/Social Security office calls claiming there is already an arrest warrant for you if you don’t act now.  They are sure you didn’t really do anything, but this problem must have been caused by you or someone you know, so don’t talk to anyone.
 
Calls from a niece or nephew claiming they are in an accident/ jail in a foreign country and need money now.
 
You have won! But we need you to pay taxes up front before we can release the money.
 
And the most insidious.  You have been scammed, and you know it and are kicking yourself for you stupidity, but suddenly you get a call from an investigator of these scammers, and he will work to get your money back!  This is a follow up scam.
 
Yes there are investigators of these things, but it is on you to call them, not the other way around.

New Updates:
Scammers are improving their craft.  Gone are those poorly worded requests for cash from Nigerian princes.  Now the letters are indistinguishable from authentic letters.  
 
Worse, they are going real time.  They know where you are via programs like Creeper, and consult your social media and will know all kinds of personal information before they contact you.  “Saw you at Ruby Tuesdays a couple of hours ago, Is that Susan?  My how she has grown.  Let’s have lunch.  By the way, here is an interesting article on xxx.”
 
People who know they are scammed, and break contact have been hounded by the scammers.  In some cases, the scammers called the police claiming to be a relative that is concerned about their victim’s wellbeing to see if the victim was ok and handing the victim a phone.

Current What to Do’s:
Don’t answer the phone from unknown callers.  It just puts your number on a list of someone that answers.
Don’t engage the scammer.  Just hang up.  They do this all the time, you but once.  They are better at this than you.  
 
Talk to friends and family.  
 
If someone is telling you to keep a secret, it’s for their benefit, not yours.
 
You are not cursed!  Yes, shit happens, but it’s not due to a curse.
 
Official government organizations do not call you to warn you of arrest warrants.
 
Just because the caller knows a lot about you, they are still strangers.

Bitch to your Federal Representatives.   This is an international problem, and therefore up to the Federal Government to protect it's citizenry.    They so far have done next to nothing, and the current efforts are inadequate.  Once again, they have sub contracted the problem to our local phone providers who, at best can block the calls.  And considering I got 3 yesterday, are doing a piss poor job.  I am thinking missile strikes here.  That may be overkill, but far more lives have been economically destroyed than at 911. 

What is being done:
Our government has done very little to protect us from these fraudsters.  At first this was up to the FCC , which gave up and surrendered the responsibility to the telephone companies, which did nothing.  But now there is finally some efforts, as voters are calling their congressmen.  Polls show that it robo-call scams are in the top five lists of concerns very often, regardless of your political leanings.

There have been products like NoMoRoBo to reduce your robocalls.  My experience after signing up is neutral at best.

Telephone companies are now coming up with schemes to stop the more voluminous calls from crossing their systems.  Many of you will currently get notification of probable scam with the call. 
As much as we would love to crucify the offenders, that is not going to happen.  They are making the calls from foreign countries that cannot/will not do anything about it.  

How bad is it?
50% of all phone traffic is now robocalls.  A very significant percentage of them are attempts to commit fraud.  With off the shelf programs, you can set up a system that will make a million calls a day.  It is estimated that .2% of those calls result in a success for the con-men.  That’s about 2,000 a day.  An estimated 600 Billion dollars has been lost.  911 has an estimated cost at 180 Billion. 

Epilogue.
Do you have children? And do they have a social security number.  Check their credit score.  It should be none, but if not, then someone is using their number until they grow up.


Sunday, August 25, 2019

Whole Life Insurance (What a Deal!)

Whole Life Insurance,  
<dripping with sarcasm>What a Deal!</dripping with sarcasm>

Short form (to save you from reading the explanation): Whole Life Insurance is a rip off.  Don't buy it!
Long form:

When you acquire a family, insurance becomes a mandatory obligation.  It's part of the deal to try to provide if you cannot any more.  Most employers provide some kind of life insurance, and in my experience, at a good price.  Far better then what you can get on your own.  This is what is referred to as "Term" life insurance.  You pay monthly, and are insured monthly against various "perils".  

Term life insurance is very cheap through your employer for a number of reasons.  The main two reasons are, they buy in bulk against a median age of the company, and the insurance companies almost never pay out.  The vast majority of employees leave the company long before death, so this is all profit for the insurance company.  Privately bought term insurance also rarely pays out because the customer often cancels or reduces the policy long before death as well.  

Then there is "Whole Life" Insurance.  This is sold as an investment.  "Give your family the the gift of better financial security" and "more secure financial future" are quotes from one brochure.  

Why?  Because these articles look better with an image embedded.
The accrued value is pathetic compared to any investment you can make, and that includes lottery tickets, which pay out approximately 45 cents on the dollar.   

My first encounter was with a Whole Life policy, issued by Gerber, yes that Gerber.  I was 24, and my grandmother gave me the policy that she had bought when I was born.  She was sold this thing and paid the policy for 20 years, on the idea that it would be worth something.  

The policy was for $1,000, which to be fair, was the price of an expensive funeral in the 50's.  And over 20 years she paid almost $1,300 into it.  The total cash value after 24 years was $360.  I was told by the insurance agent that they sold a ton of those policies way back then.  And, if you watch MeTV right now, they are still selling these policies.  "Help your child get off to a good financial start" is their catch phrase.  I don't know what the accrued value is but I am sure it's pathetic as well.  If anyone has applied for this "Protection", let me know.

I just opened a mailing for a whole life plan from United of Omaha.  I won't boor you with the verbiage extolling it's virtues.  Here are the numbers.  
For a coverage value of $10,000, the premium for a 60 year old male is $660/per year.
Cash value at 65:    $800
Cash value at 70:   $1,950  (God, these numbers are depressing)
Cash value at 80:    $4,200 
Investment paid in: $13,200

So, you would think that if I die tomorrow, my beneficiaries are up $9,340, a fair amount of which would go to a funeral.  But no, there is a caveat on page 2, "If you die from natural causes in the first or second policy year, the modified death benefit is 110% of premiums paid.  So the insurance payout will pay out $720 and $1,440 respectively.  Just enough for the widow to think, "He was an idiot, but at least we didn't lose money."





Wednesday, March 13, 2019

College Admissions Scandal, 2019



College Admissions Scandal, 2019

Off of my normal lighthearted postings.  Concerning this University admission crisis.  No University has been accused as complicit in this scheme.  But, from my recent experience in dealing with college entrances, they set themselves up for this to happen a long time ago. 

I was under the delusion that upper education was a simple business exchange, I give you money, you give me an education. If I had a lot of money, that credential will have a prestigious name on it.  Is it fair, no, but I cannot give a car dealership enough money for a Lamborghini either.
Image stolen from New York Times.

I was aghast at the information that upper education would require for admission.  Things that had no bearing on learning and education like what social clubs did you join?  What events did you participate in?  It finally hit me what their business model truly is.  They do not want to educate students, they want to create alumni.  Rich graduates that can donate on regular basis. 

The signs were all around me, but I was ignoring them.  My wife gets regular requests for cash at least seasonally.  (The Navy doesn't send me letters for fund raising the latest destroyer)  I was denied a course once that I was willing to pay cash for, but did not meet their requirements.  Life experience didn't matter.  

With this change in the business model, which happened many decades ago, the colleges left the path into madness.  And set themselves up for the fraudulent activity now being reported.  Parents paying professionals to create fake histories of their children, so they can have the best credentials life has to offer.  This probably started as simple exaggerations in the past, but the arms race kept scaling up the lies to photo shopped entries for participation's that never occurred, along with forged corroborations.  

I found it interesting to read, that the colleges "Don’t have consensus in the United States about what is a fair system of selection."  Perhaps they should require their admission people to take courses in ethics.




Saturday, February 23, 2019

My Favorite Movies

My goal was to have a list of 100, but so far, my list is far short of that.

Favorite Movies:
Addams Family
Airplane
Aliens
Apollo 13
Avengers: Endgame

Back to the Future
Back to the Future 3
Battleship
Big Hand for the Little Lady
Big Trouble in Little China

Blazing Saddles
Cannonball Run
Captain Marvel
Christmas Story
Despicable Me

Dr Strange
Fantasia 2000
Fellowship of the Ring
Ferris Beuller's Day Off
GalaxyQuest

Ghost Busters
Howl's Moving Castle
Jurassic Park
JurassicWorld
Labyrinth

Ladyhawk
Lawrence of Arabia
Mary Poppins
Midway (both versions)
Mom and Dad save the World

Monty Python and the Holy Grail
My Favorite Year
National Treasure
Patton
Pirates of the Caribbean

Pirates of the Caribbean II
Princess Bride
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Return of the King
Seven Samurai

Spirited Away
Superman 2
The Avengers (not Steed and Emma)
The Great Race
The Hunt for Red October

The Incredibles
The Lion in Winter
The Longest Day
The Thin Man
The Two Towers

Tootsie
Wrath of Khan
Yamato
Young Frankenstein

Movies I hated but other people seem to love:

Clockwork Orange
Blade Runner
Brokeback Mountain
The Big Lebowski
Gone With the Wind (Sorry Mom)

Hawk, the Slayer
Fight Club
Citizen Kane.  (After about 90 min, I finally had to just fast forwarded to the end)
This is Spinal Tap
Austin Powers (any of them)