Monday, April 6, 2020

Is It Wrong To Cheat A Sucker Essays - Fraud, Telemarketing Fraud

Is It Wrong to Cheat a Sucker? The Gloucester County Office of Consumer Affairs, in partnership with the Federal Trade Commission, is launching a new onslaught against telemarketing fraud and other means of solicitation tomfoolery. Individuals are contacting people on the telephone claiming to represent a charity or fund-raising organization, when they either do not represent a charity at all, or only a small percentage of the money will actually go towards the charity. Other scams involve 900 lines, dating services, and travel packages. The telemarketers use a variety of tactics to persuade the consumer to purchase the goods they are trying to sell, ranging from slightly sneaky to undoubtedly unscrupulous. The question of ethics comes in to play here when one must ask himself whether or not it is all right to cheat someone not smart enough to check all the facts and educate themselves against being cheated? Looking at today's society, people tend to marvel and sometimes even cheer at those who are able to take advantage of the intellectually challenged and turn a profit. One of the most successful businessmen in the world, Bill Gates, sits at the top of his throne only because he was smart enough to steal programming ideas from his peers. Microsoft's Windows is based on technology created by Xerox, yet Gates is hailed as the genius who created the program. Was it wrong for Bill Gates to exploit what he saw was an opportunity to skyrocket to the top? It was not wrong if he looked at the example set forth by our forefathers. When Christopher Columbus first sailed to the New World, he found it inhabited by a race of people who had been here for many, many years. The Native Americans held claim to and inhabited the land that would soon be taken over by Europeans and changed completely forever. The Europeans cheated and swindled the Native Americans and used many means of trickery to obtain the land. Soon the Native Americans had no land and nothing to show for it. This has come to be the example on what America has stood for over the years. The old line of "survival of the fittest" still manages to ring true today. If one man is smart and another is not, then it seems only proper that the smart man would try to educate the man who is not smart. Sometimes words are not enough, and lessons can only be learned by experiencing consequences. There is an old proverb that says: "A fool and his money will soon part." A dumb man who is swindled out of his money may be broke, but in the process he gains something more valuable than cash ? knowledge. In essence, the smarter man who cheated him actually earned whatever money he received as a teacher to the other man, because the next time that man acquires money, he will be a little more careful with what he does with it. Another proverb says: "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." Only by making mistakes can people learn about life and how to be better people. The solicitor often will give the consumer the hard sell and try to pressure him into making an on the spot decision. Peer pressure and pressuring people into taking advantage of "one time only" opportunities may not be looked at as the most ethical methods of salesmanship by all, but the fact remains that if a person is too weak to say "no," then it is no one's fault but his own. If anything, experiences with telemarketers such as these will act as exercises in building a strong will and in the future will enable a person to either refuse the offer or simply hang up the phone. No one is holding the consumer's first born child hostage, but instead simply makes his or her offer seem like a better deal than it may in fact be. Rash judgments are dangerous, and telemarketers are doing a good job of helping those ignorant of this to finally become aware. Certainly it would nice to live in an ideal world where no corruption and no evil existed. In a perfect society, people would