Josephal
Granite City,#2Consumer Suggestion
Sun, October 05, 2008
Call the FCC and FTC and whatever other agencies may be appropriate. Be calm and follow their instructions. They probably will tell you you must notify her to stop these harassing actions. If she persists, they may allow you to file a report. If she calls and leaves harassing messages, record them and call your local law enforcement and file a harassment report each time. If she asked for money in exchange for removing your personal and stolen information, this is extortion. Report it to the FBI. When contacting government offices, be calm and rational. They did not do these things to you, so try not to take it out on them (I say this because it usually helps if yo are calm and rational). Nothing may come of it, but at least you will have reported it. Then, if something does happen in the future, you will have records on your side. Record all message she leaves, if any. Save the e-mails (probably print them out too) and file them. Keep complete records. Do not listen to those who say just ignore it. Document it and calmly report it. Do not expect GoDaddy to do anything about it. If they take down her sites, it could be construed as them taking responsibility for her harassment of others. It could make them an accomplice if she refuses to stop. Make sure to keep GoDaddy current on any complaints you have filed with the government and the responses to these complaints. You might want to try taking this tack with GoDaddy: Explain to them you think she is falsely claiming affiliation with and support by GoDaddy, Inc. and that she may be using GoDaddy's name and information without permission to falsely promote her personal opinions as opinions supported and endorsed by GoDaddy, Inc. They might not take down her sites, but they may force her to remove references to GoDaddy.
Sal
Tucson,#3Consumer Comment
Mon, June 30, 2008
Cat Breeders Complaints Info seems to have the world by the tail! Sheltered folk think, anyone that has been abused, should just pull themselves up by their boot-straps and get on with life. You see, a person like Ms Meaow, believes there is such a thing as Closure! Ha! Thinks it's all about mind over matter! Ha!! Some good insense and mood music can cure an ailing world! Ha!!! Like the psychic that can't prevent their own problems, Ms Meaow sees everyone elses problems clearly, and has no clue otherwise. The kind of person, that will tell you eveything your doing wrong raising your kids, and does not have one! Ha!!!! Please, spare us your Self Righteous Dogma and find a hobbie!!!! Ha, Ha , Ha, Ha!!!!!! SAL
Cat Breeders Complaints Info
Watch Dog Public Alert 4 Cat Buyers,#4Consumer Comment
Sat, June 07, 2008
How Melanie Lowry of Catinality Cattery Whines Her Way To Sympathy Successful Failures If we lived in a time when personal accountability and responsibility were held in high regard, a time during which choosing victimhood from a list of social options would seem utterly stupid, it would suffice to say that successful people aren't victims. But those are not the times we live in, and to some people, perpetual victimhood of one kind or another actually seems an attractive option. When one examines the lives of successful people, one is impressed by the absence of traits they share in common (which is why self-help books that promise to make you successful don't really deliver). But there is one trait that all successful people have in common they are not victims. Victims do not inspire confidence, they inspire pity. Seasoned investors don't buy into victimhood, because it is a losing proposition. Successful people don't become victims for another reason they know if they won't take responsibility when things go wrong, they lose the right to take credit when things go right. This is a statement, one among many, of the symmetry principle. Perpetual victims are subject to the symmetry principle also, but because of their utterly negative outlook on life, they don't expect anything ever to go right, so being a victim has no downside. Successful people are able to read positive signs in a bleak landscape, and they can act on what they see in a creative, constructive way. Victims, by contrast, look out at the same landscape and only see opportunities for further victimhood. Successful people and victims both create self-fulfilling narratives. Here's a case history of success. A young man is diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome, thought to be a rather serious condition, but also one that is very controversial, both in deciding who has the condition, and in how to proceed (more on Asperger's here). There is a lot of latitude in Asperger's, and the more responsible researchers counsel skepticism as to both diagnosis and treatment. An individual could take this diagnosis and use it as an excuse to be a lifelong victim (some have done just that). Or, because those diagnosed with Asperger's tend to be bright, one might choose to take it as a sign of superior ability. What did our young man do? Did he try for sympathy and start a pattern of self-victimization that might have lasted his entire life? Or did he accept the cards he was dealt and find his place in the world? Well, he did the latter. He became the richest man in the world: Bill Gates. Most successful people learn how to be successful, they are not born with an instinct for success. By the same token, perpetual, professional victims are trained, not born. Where do they get this training? Copyright 2006 P. Lutus