“Try verifying a couple of their sources yourself. But don’t stop when you see that the search results show up many links - also don’t just look at the first few pages of the search results (which sometimes even includes unreliably sourced Wikipedia articles written many years ago with links to important real people - again for the veneer of credibility - who have no actual association with it). Try verifying some of the search results and you’ll soon see that the details only go 2 levels deep. They really start falling apart at level 3. For example, the 75 year old author of this article who claims that he “has for almost five decades worked at the highest levels with various governments around the world” and that he has “authored or co-authored more than 35 books” produces a grand total of 81 search results on Google and only a handful of photos can be found. I could go on and on…”
You don’t even have to make it that hard. As soon a mysterious “they” knows something they aren’t telling you, it is guaranteed to be hogwash. Letting someone in on a fake secret is Confidence Game 101. Now you are both insiders. Your good buddy trusted you with valuable info, and so obviously you can trust him. In fact, you kind of owe him one…
Despite my better judgement, in a moment of weakness I clicked on the click. It is hard to describe how stupid that article is. It was a series of random facts that were unrelated to any of assertions the author was making, along with a few painfully obvious statements.
It reminded me of the Nigerian price email phishing scam. The scammers include obvious errors and red flags in order to weed out the smart people. That’s how that article was written. They clearly don’t want intelligent people to take it seriously. So what’s the scam? I didn’t investigate it further, but there are tons of adds screaming at you to sign up for free investing advice worth $100s. If you are dumb enough to believe their articles, you just might be dumb enough to take their free investing “advice” too. I bet it doesn’t remain free for long, though…
…Like I say, Confidence Game 101.