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You Can't Cheat an Honest Man - James Walsh [156]

By Root 617 0
of politically-biased rhetoric. (Most of the writing that’s critical of Social Security is described as politicallybiased...sometimes this is true.)

But, even if the comparisons don’t seem obvious at first glance, consider an interesting bit of analysis—from the SEC itself. In a prepared statement that the agency released for background on Melvin Ford’s Better Life Club Ponzi scheme, the Feds are more candid than you might guess they would be:

Q: Why is a Ponzi scheme any different from Social Security?

A: Social security is a compulsory savings program run by the government. If the social security trust fund runs out of money to pay back retirees, the government can raise money to make the payments through taxes. A Ponzi scheme operator...has nowhere to turn when the scheme goes bust. The last round of investors simply lose their money.

In the 1990s, most investors realize that John Maynard Keynes died a long time ago—and the blind belief that “government” has some kind of power beyond its individual pieces died with him.

The Fed’s promise that the government can enforce a compulsory Ponzi scheme aren’t worth any more than Melvin Ford’s incoherent talk about the velocity of money...or New Era’s larcenous gibberish about a board or high-roller philanthropists. In the case of Social Security, taxpayers are simply the Greater Fools who are forced by law to extend the scheme.

But they can’t keep the scheme going indefinitely. No foolish investor ever can. All Ponzi schemes collapse...the only question is when. Well-run schemes can last a little longer, if the perp manages the money well and takes out his or her cut slowly. But not even a savvy perp can keep prevent the final reckoning..

The questions to ask for context may be: Why are the things so pervasive? Have social welfare programs like Social Security created a lottery mentality in so much of the population that people can’t resist throwing a few extra dollars of good money after bad?

Looking back over the history of Ponzi and pyramid schemes—both recent and not—the answer comes back consistently. Yes.

Your money is a valuable thing. As you age, more of your money will be available for investments. Don’t trust it to any crook who promises big returns with little risk. Anyone making that promise—even if the anyone is a government agency—is lying. They’re just looking for what every Ponzi perp wants...a naive person who’s greedy, gullible and has some money to lose.

A Greater Fool, willing to bet heavily on a Great Idea. Don’t be that person.

PART ONE

How the Schemes Work

PART TWO

Why the Schemes Work

PART THREE

Contemporary Variations

PART FOUR

What to Do if You've Been Scammed

Table of Contents

Introduction Some Background to the Current Situation ...1

Chapter 1: The Mechanics Are Simple Enough ...19

Chapter 2: Location, Location, Location...Then the Money’s Gone ...29

Chapter 3: A Better Mousetrap Makes a Good Scam ...39

Chapter 4: Paying First Class, Traveling Steerage ...49

Chapter 5: 1040-Ponzi ...61

Chapter 6: Sure-thing Investments and Sweetheart Loans ...71

Chapter 7: Precious Metals, Currency and Commodities ...87

Chapter 8: Affinity Scams ...101

Chapter 9: Trust ...117

Chapter 10: Greed ...131

Chapter 11: Family Ties ...141

Chapter 12: Secrecy and Privacy ...155

Chapter 13: Loneliness, Fear and Desperation ...167

Chapter 14: Multi-level Marketing ...183

Chapter 15: Faith, Religion and New Age Gurus ...203

Chapter 16: Charities and Not-for-Profit Organizations ...217

Chapter 17: www.ponzischeme.com ...231

Chapter 18: Make Friends with the Regulators ...243

Chapter 19: Go After the People Who Got Money Out ...257

Chapter 20: Go After the Lawyers and Accountants ...273

Chapter 21: Go After Banks and Financiers ...287

Chapter 22: Fight Like Hell in Bankruptcy Court ...305

Conclusion The Mother of All Ponzi Schemes ...319

Index ...331

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