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Beware
the Call From the Sheriff’s Department
by
Burton S. Blumert
by Burton S. Blumert
"Sgt.
Preston from the Sheriff’s Department on line 4 for Blumert,"
my secretary trilled. I’d never heard her page me with such joy.
What
could they possibly want?
It’s
folk lore that your entire life flashes before you when faced with
imminent death. Getting a call from the sheriff’s department isn’t
quite that serious, but my brain conjured up every horrible reason
why they wanted me:
Could
it be that parking ticket I got in Las Vegas in 1991 that was "lost"
and never paid?
No,
there is a statute of limitations on old parking tickets and they
must have known that I lost $800 on that trip. Anyway, Las Vegas
would never use the sheriff’s department to collect a debt.
Oh
Lord, now I know, it was the Gore Vidal speech I attended in San
Francisco last year. The creep next to me was surely CIA and, like
a dummy, I spent the entire evening establishing my anti-war credentials.
He
still would never have remembered me, but "old swifty"
Blumert made sure to give him a business card.
No,
this is still America. They don’t drag you away because you listened
to a speech and tried to sell a gold coin to a CIA agent. Not yet.
"Face
it, Blumert," I said to myself. "You know damn well why
they want you. It’s because of LRC and those ridiculous articles
you write attacking doctors, Rudy, and almost every sacred aspect
of contemporary American culture. Well, you’ve finally gone too
far and now they’re coming to get you."
That’s
ridiculous. Why would they want me? I’m too much trouble. I need
a nap every afternoon, and at 3:00 PM there’s a chat group on line
that expects to hear from the "Freedom Stud." They could
never take me away from all that.
This
was false bravado. I was panicked. My fingers quivered as I grasped
the phone.
BLUMERT:
"Sgt. Preston, I would like to serve my time in the federal
prison near Palm Springs. Do you know if an inmate can have a low-carb
menu? And like Martha, I’d like to start this Monday and get it
over with."
SGT.
PRESTON: "Gee, Mr. Blumert, as far as I know the food is better
in San Quentin, but the reason I’m calling is to see if we can count
on you for 4 tickets for the Sheriff’s Department Annual Square
Dance. Can I stop by and pick up a $100 check right now?"
BLUMERT:
"Who is this? Sgt, Preston? You sound like a child. In fact,
you sound like my paper boy, Billy Preston."
SGT.
PRESTON: "It’s me, Billy. I started on the phones as a lowly
Officer on Thursday and I got my Sgt’s stripes yesterday when I
sold 400 tickets to the Square Dance.
"It’s
amazing how frightened people are when I call and how easy it is
to sell them tickets. A few more sales and I’ll be up for Lieutenant.
"When
can I come by to pick up a check?
BLUMERT:
"Billy, I’ll take 8 tickets if you promise not to mention any
of this to my wife when you deliver the paper tomorrow morning."
I
grind my teeth when I take a call from a tele-marketing "slickster."
I suppose they have a place in this world and I oppose any government
restrictions on their activities (unless they’re outright crooks).
But they sure get under my skin.
On
most occasions I won’t take their calls. But sometimes I get trapped
and I’ll decide to challenge them you never win. (See Billy
Preston above.) After all, they have a wealth of experience in overcoming
the lame protests from their phone victims. The longer the conversation,
the weaker my resolve, so I’ve devised an exit strategy.
It
goes something like this: "My wife won’t let me talk to you
anymore."
It
almost always works. Either they have a wife like that themselves,
or they feel so much sympathy that they click off, leaving me to
my miseries.
In
the old days setting up a "boiler room" to sell securities,
collectibles, swamp land, or "worthy causes" was expensive
and time consuming.
Obtaining
"hard-lined" phone equipment and getting on line was a
major project. The phone companies, anxious for new business, generally
managed to push the order along, while remaining oblivious to the
true activities of the "new customer."
Next,
the "boiler-room" needed people to man the phones. Rounding
up an experienced team of "tele-marketers" wasn’t easy.
It often meant scouring cheap hotels and other haunts of the "specialty
salesman."
They
had to get the word out that "here was a new pitch to separate
folks from their money." The salesmen came from all points,
answering the siren’s call.
Things
are different now.
Technology
has altered the world of the tele-marketing scam. No "boiler
room" needed, no phone banks necessary. The tele-marketing
enterprise can be reduced to a series of $49 cell phones, located
anywhere and changed as frequently as underwear.
The
cell phone is the magic key into the land of limitless victims.
The
tele-marketing salesman can be operating from Calcutta, or even
from prison.
There
may be legitimate tele-marketing operations, but how does the consumer
know the difference? I’d like to believe that the "market"
will weed out the bad apples.
Meanwhile,
it’s prudent to avoid ALL tele-marketers, but if one of these phone
slicksters gets you, don’t feel too stupid. It happens to the best
of us.
By
the way, can I interest you in some tickets to the Sheriff’s Square
Dance?
October
11, 2004
Burt
Blumert [send him mail]
is publisher of LewRockwell.com,
president of the Center
for Libertarian Studies,
and proprietor of Camino
Coin. See Burt's
Gold Page.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Burton
S. Blumert Archives
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