Sujet : Re: Fake Job Offers
De : jeffl (at) *nospam* cruzio.com (Jeff Liebermann)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 16. Mar 2025, 22:00:58
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <fgdetjdc41khvfrf92kvfmg6s41rh01afi@4ax.com>
References : 1
User-Agent : ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
On Sun, 16 Mar 2025 16:24:05 GMT, cyclintom <
cyclintom@yahoo.com>
wrote:
What appeared to be a job offer from a CEO was really a phony counterfeit in which a company was claiming that if you invested $500 into an AI company they could return you $5,000 in one month.
More likely the job offer never existed and you conjured the incident
to fortify your claims that a college diploma is worthless.
I have told you before that AI is no such thing and this person did a very long and round about conversation about my previous work history etc. before something that stupid was said. So beware of anyone claiming to be Elon Musk etc. because CEO's do not have time to ask personal questions.
True. All but one of my employment and consulting gigs was by
referral from someone in the company. None were the CEO, but all but
one held positions in company management. The only person I know who
was personally hired by the company president turned out to be an
imposter.
Luckily this sort of thing would not happen to Liebermann because he doesn't have any investment capital.
True. I have enough money to live comfortably, but not enough to risk
the capital on investments. Unfortunately, inflation had severely
devalued my savings. Investing might have helped, but I'm not willing
to take the risks involved.
In a way this is good but I would wish that Liebermann had been more successful and with a whole lot more common sense since he would be easily manipulated simply by telling him that I was against this form of investment.
I don't understand what you're trying to say. Are you claiming that
I'm gullible and therefore a poor investor? There's no connection
that I can see.
Likewise with Krygowski who is quite anti-investment as befits people that don't have much excess capital. I would be surprised if Flunky was making enough to put food on the table.
>
As a natural skeptic I am always on the lookout for frauds. The fact that people would insist that a college degreed idiot would be considered more educated than a self trained engineer is so preposterous one has to ask them to prove it by requiring college graduates to pass an SAT to graduate. Most of them couldn't. Most colleges have ceased requiring SATs because public schooled students cannot pass them.
You're not even a self-trained engineer. Over the years, you've
demonstrated a general lack of computational and analytical abilities
in many aspects of engineering, electronics, physics, finance, etc.
Maybe you can program microprocessor firmware, but in engineering,
you're not sufficiently educated. Still pushing your claim that PWM
is used to test cables? Have you fixed your arithmetic for counting
the percentage of votes for each party in the 2024 election?
I like this amazing fact:
08/14/2023
<
https://groups.google.com/g/rec.bicycles.tech/c/kWFZ7_kUImI/m/ASDKnmbMBAAJ>
"the best measure of horsepower is speed"
Horsepower is a measure of power, which is the rate at which work is
done.
Let's remember that Flunky told us that he has an EE but he couldn't understand a simple C program that did nothing but flash lights. And it was explained in the comments! While Frank did hold a useful and necessary position, he too had problems working a real job. Should we say that these people were better educated than someone who became wealthy being asigned jobs by PhD's who managed them?
Ummm... I'm an EE and I don't know how to program in C. Are you
saying that in order to be considered an engineer, C programming is a
required skill?
We cannot deny that education is the key to success but education actually worked for is a lot better than education supposedly received when actually avoiding the draft and paying not the slightest attention to anything that he hadn't already taught himself as a high school student.
Gibberish. I can't decode that mess. Instead of comma splice (with
the commas missing), write something that can be understood.
So I almost fell for a scam but could tell a scam from the real thing as soon as it was p-laced. Don't let yourself be conned in the same manner.
Not a problem. I don't believe anything you say so I'm not likely to
be mislead by someone claiming to rub elbows with CEO's, politicians,
investment brokers and VIP's.
-- Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.comPO Box 272 http://www.LearnByDestroying.comBen Lomond CA 95005-0272Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558