There will always be thieves who think they’re smarter than everyone else and try to rob us of our money. Thanks to the internet and social media, they can even do it remotely while the whole world is locked down, going through a pandemic.
And while we try to calm ourselves down by saying that sooner or later they will get caught and punished, as one Reddit post shows, some won’t. Because we’re not even chasing them!
Сreated by user u/F1yff, it asked people the question: “What is a legal scam that is still happening in 2022?” and has received plenty of real-life examples that are still thriving. Here are some of them.
#1
Churches not paying taxes. It’s completely unacceptable and really disgusting. I cannot imagine tithing to a church with a pastor who has big houses and a private jet and luxury cars.
Image credits: youretheweird1
#2
Televangelists like Joel Osteen.
Image credits: i_tune_to_dropD
#3
Charging for parking in Hospitals and Clinics.
Image credits: P13r15
#4
American restaurants forcing the burden of employee wages onto their customers.
Image credits: Ky200028
#5
Charging people money to withdraw money or because they have small (positive) balances in their bank accounts.
Image credits: P13r15
#6
Insider trading within Congress.
But if WE do it, we end up in prison.
Image credits: vabeach23451
#7
Having to file your own taxes then being fined if you don’t do it right.
Image credits: DestroyingAwesome
#8
“News” which isn’t useful or objectively true, and therefore not news, but propaganda.
Image credits: Dude_With_A_Truck
#9
Civil forfeiture. You’re going to tell me that a cop thinks that my property might be used for illegal activity, and that cop is going to steal it from me and pad their departments bottom line? What the actual f.
Image credits: MYule90
#10
Sadly overplayed, but health insurance. Just yesterday there was a post about a guy who had medically necessary surgery and the insurance didn’t want to pay the hospital.
Image credits: ForkShirtUp
#11
“Printing” fee for digital tickets.
Image credits: eastherbunni
#12
MLMs (multi-level marketing companies). ‘I’m my own CEO.’ No, you aren’t. You literally have a company telling you what you can and can’t do.
Image credits: Ok-Act-6869
#13
Printer ink.
Image credits: NoGameNoLifeOfficial
#14
Cable company making you “rent” a router for 10$ a month.
Image credits: xmuskorx
#15
Education prices.
Image credits: seth_dlewis
#16
Insane rent prices for houses even squatters wouldn’t stay at.
Image credits: highangler
#17
Super-high interest, predatory rent-to-own furniture rental/loan things — where you end up paying, like, $3,000 in the end for a $500 laptop.
Image credits: codenameZora
#18
Charging patients in hospitals for TV service. Their bills are high enough, but you want to add $8/day to not have to sit in silence for 23 hours a day?
Image credits: angryguido69
#19
The troubled teen industry. It doesn’t work. It traumatizes children. It’s legal kidnapping.
I hope more attention comes to it and something happens. They’re a business and the goal is to make money, not help troubled teenagers. Ffs, half the time the kids aren’t even troubled!
E.T.A.: The “Troubled teen industry” refers to for-profit organizations aimed at steering rebellious and at-risk youth onto a better path through reform camps. But their methods are “tough love”, negative/positive punishments and physical labor.
Because it’s a business meant to make money, a lot of corner-cutting happens. They hire young and untrained staff for less pay rather than therapists and certified nurses & teachers. It’s also not regulated at all so they can effectively do whatever they want with little recourse.
They use “scared straight” tactics and beat kids into obedience. They claim the best way to send a kid there is by surprise “so they don’t try and run beforehand” – AKA burst into their room at 2AM and drag them into a van with very few belongings.
Look up “Elan School” for a notorious one.
Paris Hilton was kidnapped at 2AM and sent to Provo Canyon when she was 16. Look at how well that worked.
Go through this thread for some horror stories.
Image credits: st0dad
#20
Extended warranties, so many promises made, but when time comes for a claim, almost all are denied.
Image credits: ggs_golf
#21
If you’re a personal business owner, you may receive what looks to be a bill in your mail from the US Domain Authority. At first glance, you’re under the impression that you need to pay 289 dollars to renew your website domain name… HOWEVER. There is very fine print stating that you are not legally required to pay the listed amount. It’s actually an ad requesting you pay that amount in order to have your website listed on the US Domain Authority site. I can’t imagine how many people have been tricked by this. READ YOUR MAIL CAREFULLY.
Image credits: RecentLingonberry821
#22
My kid’s school charges a $3 “internet fee” if you want to refill their cafeteria cards via the website. If you do it in person there’s no fee.
If they feel they have to charge a fee shouldn’t it be the other way around since if you use their website you aren’t taking up anyone’s time?
Image credits: akeoGaming
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