Quote:
Originally Posted by AshleyGotAss
"There are a few accurate comments in there, but a lot of just wrong stuff also. As a collection, probably better than nothing, but if anyone thinks it is a guaranteed recipie to make you immune they can wind up in trouble."
"If LE REALLY wants you, you are toast."
And what exactly is your level of expertise? What exactly are you calling 'just wrong stuff', you don't say. So why are you a hater? Someone spends the time trying to help people stay safe and all that you can offer is vague bs that helps no one. Hum, I'd rather trust the person that's trying to help me than some hater.
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Hater? That would make some folks on here howl with laughter. I am usually described in very different terms by some denisons of this realm. In fact I don't recall ever being described that way. Always a first time.
Things I find problematic:
1. $$$ equates to number of holes. Generally that is NOT true, it equates to time. This can lead to serious misunderstanding if a lady thinks the third price means an hour and the guy thinks he has paid for anal. I know a lady who was murdered over that issue.
2. Give only three bits of info and hang up. The issue is not the length of the call but what is said. A few minutes being pleasant a d LISTENING to what a guy does/doesn't say can give you useful info. A lot of the better clients will be turned off by a rushed conversation, potentially driving a lady's client base to a higher risk set of men.
3. Web sites can be faked as easily as phone numbers, as can signature blocks. And more and more companies do not show people's names via a quick public search.
4. Does he hesitate about where he works? Really?
5. Pay stubs and IDs are easilly faked.
6. Cars--addressed by others.
7. Who gets undressed first??? See "cops lie" above--totally useless.
Etc.
As I said, there is some good stuff in among the bad. It should be a lot better advice, that's all. The author sounds like the amateur.
Me, I admit I am not a professioal. Never said I was. But I don't need to be a firefighter to recognize a fire.