Tamara
Oklahoma City,#2Consumer Comment
Tue, September 16, 2008
Hi I agree that some of e-bay sellers they sell fake items and looking for tax-free money gain, O agree, I am a Moslem and djinn in our culture are diffrent, King Solemn had an army of djinn he had used long years. I myself the keeper of three djinns , they did not bring wealth to be honest but they make things easy for me.. I talk to them constantly and they are pretty comfortable to deal with , I feel them and I know when they are around and what do they want. It is a cultural thing ,, Though I agree again that some ebay sellers are scammers thanks Tamara
Jack T. Chance
Laurel,#3Consumer Comment
Tue, July 29, 2008
OK, seriously... this is a joke, right? You're pulling our legs, right? Because if you honestly BELIEVED that a ring was "magic" and would make you rich, the problem here isn't the seller... IT'S YOU!!! I know that those popular TV shows you mentioned delve into the paranormal, and may make you believe in the possibility that things like magic and ghosts exist, but still, I've known 5-year olds that were smart enough to know that the only person getting rich from that ring would be the SELLER when he found someone that was actually GULLIBLE enough to BUY IT for a ridiculously high price! The seller may have made the claims you say he made (we can't be sure since we don't have a link to the auction you mention,) and he may even be a con artist, but every eBay sale takes 2 people: the seller, and THE BUYER! Every buyer is responsible for their OWN decisions! YOU are the one that chose to believe the ring was "magic" and would make you rich, and thus YOU chose to buy that ring for a large sum of money! No one held a gun to your head and made you click on the "Bid Now" button, you did it OF YOUR OWN FREE WILL! Before you blame the seller for your obvious lack of common sense, you should take a good, long, HARD look in the mirror, pal! Like P.T. Barnum said, "There's a sucker born every minute!" On that particular day, at that particular minute, that sucker was YOU. The best advice I can give you in this regard, is to memorize the following, and recite it to yourself before you place any more bids on eBay: "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on ME." 'Nuff said.