Speed Impletation - ways to be Rich - Read article

in #resteem6 years ago (edited)

A Quick Action - 1 minute is 60 seconds of the time which means we breath 12-20 times per minute. Over the course of a day, that adds up to 17,000-30,000 breaths per day — or more!

Yes Exactly. That"s what it means. Nobody of us spend time on making ourselves better on thinking, better on living or better than blah blah blah. Because if you don"t understood what i mean now then you exactly have to do one thing stop reading this post, you just wasting your time.

In a world where "Nigerian princes" had yet to utilize email, one crafty foreigner figured out the best way to swindle wealthy people out of their money: by promising them a ridiculous rate of return on investments. Charles Ponzi (also known as Charles Ponei, Charles P. Bianchi, Carl, or simply 'The Ponz') promised his clients a 50% return on their investment in a ridiculously short amount of time. He initially acheived this by paying his past clients with the investments of future clients. This evil genius tactic has become known as a "Ponzi Scheme," and was most famously utilized in recent history by Bernie Madoff. He eventually went to jail, because duh.

Here's some proof that great schemes aren't reserved for the past, or the slammer. In 1999, David Phillips realized that the return on a mail-in-rebate outweighed the price of Healthy Choice pudding snacks. So he bought 12,150 cups of pudding (and spent $3,500), and sent in the rebate netting over a million frequent flier miles from American Airlines. To avoid suspicion, he claimed he was stocking up for Y2K. And since all the pudding was donated to charity, he also netted a hefty tax-break. And since these stories rarely go untold, the scheme became part of the plot of the 2002 romantic comedy Punch-Drunk Love.

Frank Abagnale Jr.'s schemes were at first the knee-jerk reactions of a frightened 16-year-old, but soon turned into one of the largest check fraud scandals in history. Before his 21st birthday, he successfully posed as a pilot, an attorney, a professor at a university, and a doctor, in addition to cashing $2.5 million in fraudulent checks in EVERY US STATE AND 26 OTHER COUNTRIES. His life was immortalized in the book and the movie about the book, called Catch Me If You Can (you've probably heard of it). And to top it all off, he's now clean, and one of the world's most respected authorities on check fraud. Not surprisingly, his life story has also inexplicably become a Broadway musical.

James Frey wrote a book called A Million Little Pieces about his criminal past and struggles with addiction, and it inspired millions. Literally. Millions of dollars. To be spent on his book. Which was essentially a bag of lies. Naturally, people felt very betrayed, but Frey got his fortune and fame, despite being shamed by Oprah.

Sometimes you need to take advantage of the situation. Stella Liebeck, a 79 year old woman from Albuquerque, New Mexico, spilled an entire cup of McDonalds coffee on her lap and suffered third-degree burns as a result. She sued McDonalds, but refused to settle for the cost of her medical bills and was eventually awarded over a million dollars in punitive damages. It has since become the poster-child for frivolous litigation.

So guys this all what the stories are, we can be one of them if we really wanna. Please upvote and resteem .

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