enthusiast of many trades
Oakland,#2Consumer Comment
Thu, March 28, 2013
A fraud or scam indicates that the business model intentionally or recklessly deceives consumers. The Tarot Certification Board of America helps standardize tarot practice, which itself is a very different field from law. The complainant raised a comparison between the tarot certification exams and the state bar exams. The two cannot be compared and the argument that "the TCBA exam is nothing like the bar exams or other licensing tests, therefore it is a scam" is deeply flawed. The TCBA exam is nothing like the bar, or any other common professional licensing exam because tarot practice is nothing like those professions.
The complainant most likely disagrees with the approach for certifying tarot practitioners that the TCBA has adopted, and that's good-- it can be the start of robust dialogue or debate. However, to call it a scam because the complainant's opinion differs from the TCBA's approach is misguided. It's like me filing a rip-off report against the LSATs for being a scam because the questions are phrased in such a way that a higher percentage of Caucasians will do better on it than African Americans (true sociological study results; go read about it).
I've taken the certification exams and I, too, have fundamental disagreements with the testing approach. However, those are opinions on procedure. That doesn't mean the TCBA is a fraud or is set up to rip you off. It isn't. The complainant's perception of his/her exam results as requiring 100% accuracy or being 80% right is also misguided. I do think it is important that you fully understand every one of the 78 cards of the tarot deck to pass the first few levels. The argument that "it's expensive, so it's a fraud" is also flawed. Again, it is a disagreement of perception on value. The complainant does not agree that the tarot certification is valued at the exam fees. I don't think diamond rings are worth even a fraction of what other people seem to be paying for them but I'm not going to file a Ripoff Report against Tiffany's.
Analyzing the complainant's own words, there is insufficient facts or even allegations from the complainant's own mouth brought forth to deem the TCBA certification exams a "scam." There were no grounds for filing this Ripoff Report. The complainant merely disagrees with procedure and approach, and that's okay. He/she didn't like that the examiner asked for corrections, and didn't like that the examiner expected prompt replies to all requests, and didn't like one person's professionalism, who was a Board member. Not to mention, if that Board member was close to the complainant and the complainant applied for certification, of course that Board member should remove herself from the testing process. That is a clear, indisputable conflict of interest, so I'm not sure why the complainant was so bothered by that.
I am not affiliated with the TCBA, but I am certified through it as a tarot reader. I, too, have several critiques of the approach adopted. I also acknowledge that the notion of certification among tarot readers is contentious and hotly disputed. However, as I have said throughout this response, the TCBA is not a scam or fraud. It is a legitimate non-profit that seeks to bring some level of modern-day standardization to a centuries-old art form.