The political and financial world is in support of the
cashless society for one purpose only that being the total control and
monitoring of financial transactions of the masses, and not the ruling elite or
even criminal drug cartels.
Various methods are employed to expedite the policy, flybuy
rewards, petrol vouchers, free product vouchers upon purchases over certain
amounts.
The authorities as a result will never punish the
multinational corporate for deceitful practices under Australian consumer law,
as the authorities are part of the equation.
The standard line given to the ‘sheeple’ is that all the
effort into customer data collection is for ‘marketing purposes’ or to ‘better
understand the consumers needs’, which even though the official version ‘may’
be partially correct, the unofficial agenda is kept secret.
Companies in Australia are involved in a large scale
consumer fraud.
This fraud is carried out but not limited to service
providers, like utility, telecommunications companies, internet service
providers, where account details MUST be given to the corporations, and automatic
withdrawal from the consumer is taken out of the account at periodic intervals.
Even when a service has not been provided or even cancelled,
the companies still withdraw funds from the consumers account, which is theft,
and therefore a punishable crime with the real possibility of incarceration.
Instructions from the managerial hierarchy are that if the
customer is aware of the ‘fraud’, the financial recovery process is to be made
deliberately difficult, in cases months pass by before the fraudulently obtained
monies are refunded.
The pooling of public monies results in millions of dollars
in interest to the corporation, and therefore larger pay packet to the
managerial hierarchy.
Citylink (illegally) requires its customer to have a minimum
account balance in the magnitude of $20.
An example of a telecommunications company committing fraud
is Pennytel on the whirlpool forum http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies.cfm?t=1914443
No comments:
Post a Comment