As i have mentioned I am getting up there in age. Because of that I have to tell you I have become more alert to the proliferating number of scamming operations that are swirling around my fellow saliva-droolers and blue-haired walker-pushers. One thing I’ve personally been confronted with lately is magazine double-billing. This sounds like a scam, but in my case I can’t say that is an accurate assumption. My wife and I subscribe to three magazines- Time, The Week, and Consumer Reports. For the most part, I have always considered the content of all three to be factually accurate and suitable to my needs. No problem there. But all three at one time or another have had some sort of accounting wire-crossing episode when it came time to send me a bill. Recently I even had two copies of the same magazine sent to me every month for an entire year. I’m forever getting billing notices four or five months after I have already paid for an annual subscription. WTF! Admittedly, one problem might fall squarely on my shoulders. Actually I should say my wife’s shoulders. It was her sister who talked us into purchasing some magazine subscriptions from one of her kids who needed to score a cub scout badge or something. You know that routine. And I’m not saying I am totally blameless. We’ve all been there- doing groundwork for our kids when they should be the ones pounding the pavement for those sales.
You know, come to think of it, I am blameless. I was a shitty salesman as a kid and I am pretty sure I passed that right on down to both of my kids. I hated knocking on doors and pandering to crotchety old geezers, especially Old Man Smith who lived in the house next to us when I was growing up. He was an asshole with all the trimmings. Because of that I really can’t say I recall ever badgering friends and neighbors on behalf of my kids and their sales projects. I have always tried to avoid hypocritical conduct when forced into an example setting situation with my children. I can’t claim to be the perfect parent, of course. I admit there were those times when I had to take the “college amendment.” That’s the thing when you tell your kids to do as you say, not as you did. It exempts you from those mistakes you made in college that involved massive amounts of alcohol. But overall I tried to parent by example and did a pretty good job if I do say so myself. I have two great kids who overall haven’t given me too much grief. Neither of them pursued a career in sales, but they’ve certainly done all right with the career paths they have chosen. In the end I think I probably did them a favor. It was ok with me if they only sold a couple boxes of Thin Mints or a bag or two of microwave popcorn. The real lesson for them I suppose was dealing with the scorn of respective scout masters and mistresses, but so what? No pressure from old dad to overachieve. I think that is retroactively important.
Now back to this billing thing. Maybe, just maybe, there were those rare situations where we had one subscription going and then along came the plea to buy another from a relative or pathetic looking Camp Fire Girl. But god damn it. These magazine people have computers by now don’t they? Can’t they do some cross-referencing. I mean you match up 3 or 4 pieces of identity data and you have the same person. Come on! It’s not rocket science. When I was a practicing pharmacist we looked for personal identity duplication all the time as we entered patient information. It’s basic computer safety and common sense. And don’t forget etiquette. Don’t leave that out. For Pete’s sake you have a phone on your desk, and another one in your pants pocket you set on vibrate, not because your boss told you to, but because you hope you’ll get a long series of robo-calls that will bump your dick and keep it occupied for awhile. Pull it out (NO NOT THAT!) and give me the courtesy of a call if you’re not sure the data your looking at is repetitive.
So maybe all this isn’t exactly a scam. but man it does piss me off.