mlm guru doug Allen thread closed. Why?

Discussion in 'Feedback' started by Sushi, Mar 4, 2009.

  1. I'm not sure the why the thread was closed. I'm not selling anything... I'm looking for traders to possibly trade accounts for me. I have no idea why people think I'm selling anything. Just curious what anybody thinks the scam was? Actually I wish I had something to sell...lol.

    What do you think was exposed? That I have a UPS mail box so I don't put my physical address online? lol.... the level of pathetic "gotcha" comments has reached a new low when people scrutinize where a person's UPS store mailbox is located. (And btw... surf is right... Fox Chapel is a pretty nice neighborhood... Teresa Heinz and John Kerry keep a home there, as well as Chip Ganassi, and some others you may know...)

    Anyway....

    Doug

    PS... to all of you who answered the questionnaire...

    It is truly and honor and a privilege to have the opportunity to connect with you and help you on whatever level I can. I read all the answers to the questions and I can see that as a group you are "Elite People," not just "Elite Traders." It's obvious from reading the threads which group people fall into. :) I'm not about to let the "naysayers" detract from my outcome here, which is to find a trader or two and help those who might benefit from a little coaching.

    And to those of you who have misjudged me I can understand your fear. Fear of not being enough. We all have it to one degree or another. I used to make myself feel better by insulting others and acting superior too. But at the end of the day that's not a very fulfilling way to go through life.

    What's far more gratifying is feeling good by helping and contributing to others. There's no amount of money that you could ever make that will make you feel fulfilled unless your purpose involves contributing to other people.

    And just a thought.... people who go through life and trade from a place of fear usually aren't the happiest or most successful people in the world. Just something to think about if you've noticed your trading isn't where you would like it to be. :)
     
    #11     Mar 4, 2009
  2. <i>"Yet, many many many fell for the scheme. Let this be a warning!"</i>

    They did? What exactly did everyone fall for? How can they possibly recover from the damage?

    Oh wait... there was no damage done. People got invited for a risk-free offer that was bait & switched. Beats falling for an in-person timeshare pitch, which a lot more people on this collective board have done for their "free vacation".

    I spent $4 on megamillion tickets in exchange for $212 mil jackpot or something lesser in last night's drawing. That is more than everyone who responded to the bogus offer lost, combined. I was not one of those, but whoever did respond suffered nothing at all.

    Time either promotes or exposes anything. In the process, the only one who lost anything was Doug... his pride. Good to know that ET has such passionate, hard-working saviors that can set aside a volatile trading session in order to right the world's wrongs. Pretty active tapes today, for those elite traders who were actually plying their profession with focus.

    *

    fwiw: I was 98.5% sure he was promoting the mental coach so heavily touted. Sure seemed that way on its face. Turns out it was just a red herring in the mix?
     
    #12     Mar 4, 2009
  3. trendo

    trendo

    Please elaborate. The bait I understand. What exactly was the switched part of the bait and switch?
     
    #13     Mar 4, 2009
  4. Sushi

    Sushi

    you seemed pretty excited about the offer Austin.

    Whatever. Truth is the guy is a stealth Internet marketor tring to get one over on our brethren here.

    It's great the way elite works together to out the bad and nasty fish.

    Wonder what his end game was. I guess we will never know

    The rolls Royce from 1983 was just toooo much.
     
    #14     Mar 4, 2009
  5. Sushi

    Sushi

    Your not selling anything!!! Give us a break. Your all over the place selling stuff to get rich quick gamblers. Get real man. Tony Robbins mantra ain't gonna help
     
    #15     Mar 4, 2009
  6. Do you care to explain what your "miracle" website asking for $260 is about? It promises to "easily earn $2500 - $5000 monthly" for a "one time investment". Sounds familiar to me and not in a good way.

    Also, I reviewed your websites and you go out of your way to mix Christianity in with it. What does that have to do with your business anyway? Just curious.

    It also strikes me as strange that you went to Mardi Gras after I started thinking about it. Were you there for the usual festivities or something more along these lines?

    <img src=http://farm1.static.flickr.com/50/109310658_640a436fef.jpg>


    I've been to Mardi Gras tons of times and these folks are always a constant nuisance. Thanks for answering my questions and hope you went down to New Orleans for a good time and not bible thumping.
     
    #16     Mar 4, 2009
  7. <i>"It's great the way elite works together to out the bad and nasty fish."</i>

    Whoo boy... if this forum were cleaned up of all the vocal vermin, it'd remove 4/5s of the active posters. You've got a lot more weeding out ahead of ya's for that.

    Reread my posts carefully. I asked numerous times directly if the core focus was mental coaching. Unsubtle probing.

    I also gave the man a chance to prove himself, same as I checked my megamillion numbers today before booting up the charts. Had I won $212 mil or any large chunk of that, no trading for me today.

    There is zero need to go around chest-thumping how all the suckers fell prey. Why make anyone else feel bad about taking a chance which cost them nothing? Does anyone here really need to make themselves feel superior at others' expense?

    *

    Cautious is key to survival. Jaded is not. Someday an offer that seems too good may indeed be true. Approach such situations with caution, and no harm done. This was simply another one of those.

    Please don't tell the person(s) who won last night's $212mm jackpot that buying a $1 ticket is simply too good to be true. I'm pretty sure that person ain't listening to such worthless drivel tonight;
     
    #17     Mar 4, 2009
  8. Well sure, an old baldy scam artist dreaming of making it bigtime before he kicks the bucket. Absolutely sweet to f**k. And hes signed up 100 dummies who don't know their asshole from their elbow. LMAO
     
    #18     Mar 4, 2009
  9. dinoman

    dinoman

    Maybe thats how we arrived at this situation?

    VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

     
    #19     Mar 4, 2009
  10. Hi Sushi,

    I'm still curious for you to elaborate on what you think I'm trying to sell?

    The end game is the same. Trying to find traders to trade my money.

    And the Rolls Royce was a gift I bought my father for father's day. I think it's a 1992 or 1993. He liked the older style. I originally did the video showing the RR because people said I was lying about driving a RR to my favorite fishing spot. I wanted to do the video to show that even though something might seem unlikely, it might be true. And I think it only cost something like $65,000... it's not like I was trying to make a big deal about it. But giving it to my dad as a gift on father's day was truly a magic moment.

    My offer still stands. I would like to personally invite you to be part of what I'm doing with it. You can be on the "inside" and see exactly what goes on with the 100 people who signed up, and report back to our "brethren" here if it's anything fishy.

    You have zero to lose. If you actually know how to trade and are good at it, I'll give you trading authorization on one of my accounts.

    Doug
     
    #20     Mar 4, 2009