08-07-2012, 04:00 AM
Last night & tonight telemarketers have really been bugging us. We had to unplug the phone last night and I just unplugged it again.
Thing is the last one had a phone number that was so similar to a friend of mine that I answered. It wasn't her but she asked for my partner by her first name (so assumed it was a legite call) and I asked who I should tell her was calling and she gave a name I didn't know and was returning her call. So I got her but she said it was some damn telemarketer trying to sell a subscription, and no she hadn't called them at all. To top it off the liar started off saying her subscription was ready, and when she said she wasn't interested the liar then said they had a good sale on it and at that point she pretty much hung up on the liar.
Then about 10 minutes later the phone rings again and I see it's from the same number so I picked it up because I wanted to ask her why she thinks people are going to buy from liars because if she's lying to us she's not only disrespecting us she's discrediting herself and her employer so we're not going to believe anything she says. But this time it was a man who asked for someone who didn't live here. I asked him anyway but he just apologized uneasy and hung up on me. Then I unplugged the phone because we're about to watch a movie and don't want to be disturbed by these assholes anymore tonight.
So I'm asking people here in case any knows anyone who had the shameful occupation of telemarketer or otherwise got ahead by blatantly lying (used car salesmen don't count, everyone expects them to be about as honest as politicians anyway). Just how often do people buy from someone who starts off lying to them and I mean an OBVIOUS lie. How can that possibly work? I presume it does or they wouldn't do it. But I don't get it. If you know a person is lying to you how can you trust them with your credit card information or that they're telling the truth about whatever they're offering you? :confused:
We also got spam in the mail a couple of weeks ago to "our neighbor" (actually AT&T about switching to them and mailed from thousands of miles away) and tried to appear as if our address had been hand written (it wasn't) and then they repeated the faux handwriting that looked as if someone in our home wrote it on the ad (like circling a cash back offer and "writing" "That will come in handy!"). At the bottom the faux writing was "Why wait? I'm calling today!" I guess it must work on SOMEONE...but now that I think about it this was similar to what that telemarketer tried to pull. Is this a new tactic or has it been around for awhile? :confused:
Thing is the last one had a phone number that was so similar to a friend of mine that I answered. It wasn't her but she asked for my partner by her first name (so assumed it was a legite call) and I asked who I should tell her was calling and she gave a name I didn't know and was returning her call. So I got her but she said it was some damn telemarketer trying to sell a subscription, and no she hadn't called them at all. To top it off the liar started off saying her subscription was ready, and when she said she wasn't interested the liar then said they had a good sale on it and at that point she pretty much hung up on the liar.
Then about 10 minutes later the phone rings again and I see it's from the same number so I picked it up because I wanted to ask her why she thinks people are going to buy from liars because if she's lying to us she's not only disrespecting us she's discrediting herself and her employer so we're not going to believe anything she says. But this time it was a man who asked for someone who didn't live here. I asked him anyway but he just apologized uneasy and hung up on me. Then I unplugged the phone because we're about to watch a movie and don't want to be disturbed by these assholes anymore tonight.
So I'm asking people here in case any knows anyone who had the shameful occupation of telemarketer or otherwise got ahead by blatantly lying (used car salesmen don't count, everyone expects them to be about as honest as politicians anyway). Just how often do people buy from someone who starts off lying to them and I mean an OBVIOUS lie. How can that possibly work? I presume it does or they wouldn't do it. But I don't get it. If you know a person is lying to you how can you trust them with your credit card information or that they're telling the truth about whatever they're offering you? :confused:
We also got spam in the mail a couple of weeks ago to "our neighbor" (actually AT&T about switching to them and mailed from thousands of miles away) and tried to appear as if our address had been hand written (it wasn't) and then they repeated the faux handwriting that looked as if someone in our home wrote it on the ad (like circling a cash back offer and "writing" "That will come in handy!"). At the bottom the faux writing was "Why wait? I'm calling today!" I guess it must work on SOMEONE...but now that I think about it this was similar to what that telemarketer tried to pull. Is this a new tactic or has it been around for awhile? :confused: