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 uaru
 
posted on September 16, 2002 02:55:42 PM new
club1man In the past 7 months gold has risen app $50 an ounce. So get your facts straight.

Fact: Gold Prices for 2002

 
 club1man
 
posted on September 16, 2002 03:38:20 PM new
Yes this year it has been as low as 277 and as high as 327. What it's called is speculation. My 3000+ customers can see the kitco chart on my site and it's linked back. You keep selling your wares through PAYPONZI and eak out your meager living if that's what you like. If my customers want to buy gold from me, I'll be there to provide them service.
Fact still remains that I did business with PAYPONZI and they stole money from me. The other businesses that I used were honest and I still do business with them. The only company I had steal money from me was PAYPONZI.
[ edited by club1man on Sep 16, 2002 03:41 PM ]
 
 uaru
 
posted on September 16, 2002 03:55:20 PM new


You're a real piece of work. Anyone with any IQ above room temperature can look at the rates for the last 7 months. There isn't any $50 swing.

Now, if I was to have a lobotomy and give you $1,000 you'd take $150.00 as your 'cut.' If you can show me how I'd even make up that exchange rate fee you charge you are really clever. Can show me where I'd make up that $150 outrageous fee you charge and still make $150 profit? If you can show me where I'd make $150 profit with your scheme then you've really accomplished a miracle.

Nope, I ain't getting rich selling on eBay, but then I'm not trying to scam people with some hocus pocus scheme either.



 
 club1man
 
posted on September 16, 2002 04:02:08 PM new
I don't have to scam people they come to me because I provide them a service. Your boring me. I don't do business with companies like this http://www.bidnazi.com/modules/item.asp?action=view&itemid=7851
[ edited by club1man on Sep 16, 2002 04:02 PM ]
 
 uaru
 
posted on September 16, 2002 04:22:05 PM new
club1man Your boring me.



Ah... I guess that means you aren't going to show me how I could have made $150.00 with a $1,000 investment through you? You know what I'll bet you're so bored that you couldn't show me how I'd even make back my original $1,000 over the last 7 months after you took your $150.00 cut.

Yeah... here's this great opportunity, and I'm just to challenged to see it.

 
 capotasto
 
posted on September 16, 2002 07:59:05 PM new
Hey I really loved reading e-gold's user agreement. Looks like once you put money in you'd have a heck of a time getting it out, unless you are entitled to a 400 ounce gold bar. (They won't cut a sliver off for you - no "pieces of eight" from this company.)

And they will charge you account fees (Agio fees) forever. Also transfer fees.

And of course in any dispute you have agreed to arbitration!

e-gold is not an investment, it is some sort of money transfer scheme. (And most of your money gets transferred to e-gold!) If you want to transfer money (make a payment) you are better off sending a money order or (dare I say it?) using paypal.

And if you want to invest in gold, buy Canadian Maple Leafs.

Vinnie

 
 stopwhining
 
posted on September 16, 2002 08:59:55 PM new
south african kruggerand used to be the best buy,what happens now??
i thought this thread is about someone account being hacked .

 
 tomwiii
 
posted on September 16, 2002 10:12:47 PM new
If ever a scheme looked like a PONZI SCHEME, it has to be: eFoolsgold!
http://www.sparedollar.com?ref=260
 
 club1man
 
posted on September 16, 2002 10:55:36 PM new
Fervent gold investors believe the government is desperately trying to squash gold prices and prop up the stock market. "The last thing they need is a gold rush," says Doug Casey, editor of International Speculator, a gold-oriented newsletter. He thinks gold will win out. "Gold is like a coiled spring," he says. He predicts it will top $1,000 an ounce

 
 Libra63
 
posted on September 17, 2002 12:37:22 AM new
When in the year 3,000.

 
 Japerton
 
posted on September 17, 2002 12:39:05 AM new
Anyone with any IQ above room temperature


LMAO!!!!

Thanks Uaru, I don't know if I will ever use it, but I am loving that one!!!

As to the thread topic....I do use paypal.
No credit cards, however.
As if it matters....

Japerton


 
 club1man
 
posted on September 17, 2002 02:44:28 PM new
I just got a fax of the courts ruling and it stated that
"the court concludes that the User agreement and the arbitration clause are substantively UNCONSCIONABLE under California law"
Even better than I thought.

 
 Coonr
 
posted on September 17, 2002 03:44:12 PM new
Stoney,

You could get other people (including your self) into trouble if you continue to mislead them with false posts. I doubt that is what the whole document says.



[ edited by Coonr on Sep 17, 2002 05:18 PM ]
 
 capotasto
 
posted on September 17, 2002 07:38:39 PM new
So I guess e-gold's arbitration clause is unconscionable also?


 
 Coonr
 
posted on September 17, 2002 09:09:03 PM new
Yea, but he makes money there, so in his mind it is alright.

 
 slabholder
 
posted on September 19, 2002 12:18:21 AM new

 
 meadowlark
 
posted on September 19, 2002 03:54:42 PM new
ROFLMAO! You guys are quite hilarious.

And now a word from our sponsor, or at least back to the subject at hand!


Dear Kinmartin,

Did you at some time before the theft occurred, recieve an email that LOOKED like it was from PayPal saying there was an investigation going on concerning fraud on your account, or some other alarming statement? The email would have asked you to click on the provided link, and log on to straighten it out quickly and easily. But though the link provided in the email might Have said "www.paypal.com", it went to a fake website that LOOKED exactly like PayPal's login page. But it was a thief's page and your login and password would have been harvested. It happened to me. After I entered ny login data, I was taken to the real PayPal login page. I smelled something fishy. I figured it out within less than a minute, and went to my Paypal account as fast as I could and changed my password. I have changed it again since then.

I went back to the original email, looked at the expanded source and saw it was from some boy hacker in the UK with an automated hotmail inbox to redirect the data to. He is a theif. He got my email address from an Ebay auction I was running (with a PayPal logo in it of course) because I have an old user name from back when email adrresses were allowed as user names. I changed my Ebay ID then as well. My email address had been harvested by spammers as well that cruise Ebay for such, but that's another story.

Anyway, I feel your pain. I almost had it happen to me as well. I'm sure you didn't knowingly give out your password.


TheWiseBuys
[ edited by meadowlark on Sep 19, 2002 03:58 PM ]
 
 flowerj1
 
posted on September 20, 2002 07:34:45 PM new
Who in the heck is PAYPONZI ????

 
 meadowlark
 
posted on September 20, 2002 09:08:15 PM new
All I cud figger wuz that's whut he wuz callin' PAYPAL. Ignurant s***!
[ edited by meadowlark on Sep 20, 2002 09:09 PM ]
 
 Libra63
 
posted on September 20, 2002 10:02:11 PM new
fowerj1- please never ask that question or you will be sorry because that is all we see in here. Be thankful that you don't know it.

 
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