It all started when some plug-ins I was using in order to make WordPress actually do SEO – these conflicted and set up some sort of loop which was crashing the server. So they very nearly kicked me off.
Then I said, hey – all this stuff about Burt Goldman and his Quantum Jumping product is fine, but it’s not my main line of work. Let me see if I can just move this over to another wordpress host and redirect the traffic there.
Now it worked fine the first day – but by the second, wordpress.com had put in some sort of cancelling script which redirected everything to the front page. A simple work around was to take my most popular Burt Goldman scam post and put it up as the front page.
But the damage was done. My traffic went to nothing, since Google also then figured that these links weren’t worth anything and so I quit getting but maybe a fifth of my daily traffic before.
I’ve been scammed several times, but it took years to get to the point where I’m now pretty-much scam proof. I only get into scams if I want to, now. And I can get out of them any time I want to.
My story goes back to being part of a corporate culture which was suppressing the daylights out of me, or at least I thought so. For all the progress I thought I was making, there would always be a set back, usually a personnel transfer, and I was starting over again. It didn’t matter what my goals were, it was all about the company. People were operating out of fear, not the policies in writing that were supposed to be followed.
And this was a corporation which sold counseling and self-improvement books, classes, and coaching.
After 20+ years, I left to sort out my own head.
I did some research, wrote some books, and started to learn how to promote them.
Then I fell into “Internet Marketing”, and into a scam of paying a lot of money for something that didn’t work. After a year of researching this, I then was able to get my money back.
But this put me into touch with many other people in similar situations. I only told them what I knew and they were able to get their money back.
There was never anything in it for me. And how this is done is pretty easily found on the Internet – but it was just a handful of companies who were doing this. And their relatively small number of people who were “scammed”.
I got more curious as I researched, however, since I found more and more basic premises that these and any scammers used to do their “dirty work”.
The bottom line on this was attitude. The scam victims “knew” they were victims, but the scammers “knew” they weren’t scamming. In both cases they were right – and wrong at the same time.
I found that when scam victims changed their minds, they suddenly figured out how to use what they knew to get their money back. (I was never able to change the scammers’ minds and get them to quit.)
The reason scamming is a mental condition is because scamming is a scale with a high and low end. Plus and minus. Negative and positive.
Like other scales that operate in life, there are ways to deal with this. But the key point is finding the middle path. Equanimity is what you are looking for. Fair dealing and so on.
You are always going to have people who are victims and people who are going to help them give up their money. Governments are good at this, as well as “charity” organizations like HSUS – both take in a lot of money and give little in return, despite their promises. Most of Internet Marketing scams are this way. A few online marketers are ethical and give great value. A rare few.
You have to get to a point of equanimity about the whole subject – to be able to watch the game go on without getting upset, happy, elated, despondent, worried… Without any of those things.
Once you do, it’s simple to get your money back, to get justice, or to do nothing and just learn from your lessons that life just handed you.
While I earlier published a scam-free checklist to help identify scammers in your life, I thought to now tell you the self-help method to get yourself free from these.
It’s a combination of various techniques, each of which will work in and of themselves. Together, they take you to a nice Zen level of existence – at least in this area.
The techniques are Silva Method, Levenson Release Technique, and your own faith in yourself.
While I’ve linked some materials above, you’ll also be able to find the key data as free MP3’s online by looking around.
The simple technique:
Go to “Level” using the Silva Method. This is simply a meditative state of concentration.
Release the thoughts and emotional feelings you have about whatever scam you found yourself involved in.
Find and release the desires you have below that – you’ll find that control, approval, and/or security played a part in getting scammed. Or some combination. Trying to get more ____ , or trying to get away from ____ or trying to change ____ are some ways to look at these desires to release them.
Keep doing this until you can’t find anything else to release.
Now adopt a positive affirmation about how you want to live your life from now on.
Realize this has now occurred and end off your meditation.
You can repeat this whenever you start getting any negative feelings toward the scammers or the ideas coming into your awareness about how you were scammed. You want to get to the point of complete equanimity about this area. You want to get to the point where you “don’t give a hoot” any more. Sometimes, like peeling an onion, you have to take off multiple layers as it’s tied into you in various ways.
Of course, this technique is great for other things as well. And use it however you want.
But you’ll get to the point of real Freedom in your life, and lots of calming peace of mind to go with it. All on top of never being scammed again – unless you want to be.
Cheers!
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This news just keeps coming out on the scams which the Humane Society US perpetrates. Of course, they don’t own a single dog, cat, or pet shelter where these are up for adoption. Meanwhile they are lobbying Congress and are under RICO investigation for fraud. Fascinating stuff to anyone who really cares for animal welfare or makes their living from it.
Here’s some interesting articles and videos, all recent -
New poll shows public unaware HSUS doesn’t operate a single pet shelter
A new national poll shows that 71 percent of Americans, enticed by TV commercials featuring stray cats and dogs, think HSUS is an umbrella group for local humane societies all over the United States. (It isn’t.) Nearly 60 percent of us believe HSUS gives most of its money to needy dog and cat shelters. (It doesn’t.)
In 2008, HSUS gave less than one-half of 1 percent of its operating budget to hands-on pet shelters. And the group doesn’t operate a single pet shelter of its own anywhere.
Where do all those doggie dollars go? Tens of millions are earmarked to support a bloated staff of lawyers and lobbyists, including $2.5 million just for the executive pension fund.
With more than 500 paid employees, HSUS wages expensive animal rights lobbying campaigns – the kind that aim to put meat and dairy farmers out of business, close down zoos and aquariums and allow lab rats to sue cancer researchers.
Charitable giving is one of the most important ways we affirm our collective goodness as a nation. But when ethically challenged groups betray the public’s trust through fraud or misdirection, they risk making us all too cynical to write that next check. Even if the charities we want to help truly deserve it.
Seventy-one percent of Americans questioned in a new opinion poll wrongly believe the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) is an “umbrella group” for America’s local humane societies. Sixty-three percent incorrectly think their local “humane society” is affiliated with HSUS. And fifty-nine percent falsely believe HSUS “contributes most of its money” to local organizations that care for cats and dogs.
The poll, which sampled the opinions of 1,008 Americans, was commissioned by the nonprofit Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) and conducted by Opinion Research Corporation (ORC) of Princeton, New Jersey.
“These numbers indicate that Americans don’t really know what the Humane Society of the United States is all about,” said CCF Director of Research David Martosko. “HSUS intentionally uses those sad dogs and cats in its TV infomercials as props in an animal rights fundraising shell game. Meanwhile, thousands of American pet shelters are underfunded and struggling.” Martosko blogs about HSUS at www.HumaneWatch.org.
According to the federal income tax return filed by HSUS for the tax year 2008, less than one-half of one percent (0.5%) of the organization’s budget consisted of grants to hands-on pet shelters. HSUS does not run a single shelter for dogs or cats anywhere, and it is not affiliated with any local “humane society” organizations.
Martosko continued: “This poll indicates that most Americans think HSUS is a worthy charity. But very few Americans understand what HSUS really is—a super-rich lobbying group that puts more money into its executive pensions than in the hands of local humane societies.”
How HSUS liberated people’s money instead of animals
And here’s a video about how effective HSUS was in liberating peoples’ money rather than animals in Katrina:
Needless Puppy Mill Bill Proposed to get control over Missouri Farming
For us Missouri farmers active in animal husbandry (we probably raised most of the beef you ate this year), HSUS is trying to get into Missouri animal control by starting a nonsense campaign against illegal puppy mills, when we already have a good law on the books – and these mills are being found and handled every year already.
Recently, a ballot initiative was filed in Missouri against our dog breeding industry. Called the “Puppy mill Cruelty Protection Act”, the measure does anything but protect animals. It virtually eliminates our freedom of choice to participate in the free enterprise system and enjoy animals, regardless of the state-of-the- art care they receive. Although the HSUS has targeted other states regarding agriculture and hunting interests, this is the first ballot initiative aimed specifically at dog owners and breeders. Missouri has been extremely strong in killing their proposed legislation at the state capitol since the early 1990’s, and because of that, they are planning to sway the public to vote for their measure in the November 2010 general election. They will stop at nothing to reach their goal.
They have awakened a sleeping giant and we are fighting back! The agriculture groups in Missouri have come together in a massive coalition to fight their proposal and have held numerous meetings to plan strategy. Our organization, MoFed (Missouri Federation of Animal Owners) has formed a PAC (Political Action Committee) to raise funds to fight the ballot initiative put forth by HSUS.
And here’s some recent news from the Missouri Farm Bureau – seems they’ve got a constitutional amendment in the works to preempt anything HSUS can foist on the public. From Brownfield Ag News Mar 21, 2010:
A proposed constitutional amendment has moved forward in the Missouri legislature that would protect livestock care practices in Missouri. A resolution passed the Missouri House last week. If it passes the senate, the measure would go before Missouri voters in the November general election.
CEO Parcelle hiring and speaking for terrorist groups
And here’s a good one, HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle has lectured to terrorists groups and actually hired to his senior executive level from FBI-designated terrorist Animal Liberation Front. In this next video, HSUS is shown endorsing terrorist groups who commit violence against people who raise animals.
More details about HSUS RICO lawsuit
Remember they failed in attacking Ringling Bros. for how they cared for their elephants – and now are under investigation with some other animal “rights” groups under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act? That’s the tip of the iceberg for their legal shenanigans. Per this March 15, 2010 NewTimes article:
In December, federal Judge Emmet Sullivan dismissed the activists’ 2000 elephant suit, ruling that the plaintiffs paid more than $190,000 to a former Ringling elephant “barn helper” in exchange for his completely unreliable testimony.
The judge wrote that the animal rights groups, including the anti-circus Fund for Animals (which is now part of HSUS), cleverly disguised their payola through a nonprofit “wildlife advocacy” charity founded and operated by their lawyers. (These lawyers now have to find their own defense attorneys to deal with the RICO lawsuit.)
The primary purpose of these payments, says Judge Sullivan, was “to keep (the witness) involved with the litigation.” Judges tend to frown on paying witnesses what amounts to a secret retainer.
Anyone who’s seen a People for Ethical Treatment of Animals protest up close will find it utterly unremarkable that animal activists would knowingly fudge the truth. But it’s telling that these groups would do just about anything — including buying themselves a federal court witness — to get their way.
The Ringling case (and its swift-justice RICO fallout) is just one piece of a disturbing trend of animal rights groups replacing public persuasion with courtroom strong-arm tactics.
Since the vegan firebrand Wayne Pacelle took the reins at HSUS in 2004, for instance, that organization has beefed-up its legal department 10-fold, from three lawyers to 30.
Why would the group behind those doe-eyed “save the puppies” TV infomercials need its own mid-sized law firm? Because its leaders aim to completely remove things like livestock, lab mice, and lambskin from society. One particularly efficient way to do that is to repeatedly sue your opponents.
In 2006, HSUS sued a New York duck farm that produced foie gras–not under an animal welfare law, but under the federal Clean Water Act.
HSUS isn’t an environmental group. What was going on?
The animal rights group’s lawyers acted as though they cared deeply about the water quality of the Hudson River. But HSUS had also sued New York’s Empire State Development Corp. to stop it from helping that same duck farm upgrade and expand its water treatment facilities.
Catch the irony? Playing both sides of the environmental lawsuit game was really just a convenient way to bankrupt the farm, one of only a handful like it in America.
HSUS seeks to abolish animal agriculture — Mr Casella, what do your clients typically eat while drinking Yellow Tail wines? Steak, perhaps? Fish? Not only that, but Yellow Tail wines fell for the HSUS rhetoric: HSUS scams millions of …
This investigative news report documents what we’ve always known: the Humane Society of the United States is nothing more than a fat, bloated charade of.
Description: The Humane Society of the United State is one of the richest,and well known animal groups raising billions of dollars, but is it a scam?
Frank worked for over 2 years and has compiled 755 pages of documents and proof of the excessive lobbying activities of HSUS. His call to action for animal owners and enthusiasts to write letters to the tax fraud office of IRS resulted …
The ad explains that HSUS shares only 1 dollar out of every 200 dollars it … Americans have become familiar with HSUS fundraising ads asking for a … WILLIAM on Nigerian Puppy Scams Still Going Strong; Isabelle on A Guide to Wisely … …
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Your own mileage may vary - there are no "typical results" – since metaphysics depends on two things:
1. You get out what you put into it. Expect a scam and you have one.
2. The intention you put behind a technique will determine it’s results. Even real Quantum Physicists agree on that.