Saturday, July 10, 2021

He should use the money he stole for the doctors

 When my grandmother wanted to curse a thief, she would say - he should use the money he stole for the doctors.

This is especially relevant today.

On behalf of all people who lost money or did not get paid or got conned by Mister Never Give Up to steal Alain Horoit

we wish him to spend everything on medical expenses.

We all know Yiddish curses are extremely powerful ;)

Saturday, August 3, 2019

New victim found the blog

Unbelievable but still new victims of Alain Horoit keep finding the blog.

This is the email, I am not publishing the name before agreeing with him.

BEWARE OF THE SCAMMER
“I am victim of Alain Horoit between 2009 and 2013.
He helped me with organizing an event but in fact he didn’t do anything but asked me to sign a paper to give him 10.000 euros and all rights of future events would go to him while it’s my own event.
He asked me to pay 5.000 euros for no reason.
Refering to events: ‘Bal der Bals & Bal du Zoute’
Also he hacked my page of ‘Bal der Bals & Bal du Zoute’ (100.000+ fans) and refused to give it back.
At all his debt to me is 15.000 euro and damage of stealing my events, pages, etc.
I know he has debts everywhere and alsco scammed friends of me. They all own money from Alain.
It’s a scammer first class!”

Friday, June 17, 2016

Scientists find link between people impressed by wise-sounding, 'profound' quotes and low intelligence - people impressed my Mister Never Give up are just stupid - how surprising!


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/12031212/Scientists-find-link-between-people-impressed-by-wise-sounding-profound-quotes-and-low-intelligence.html?sf28942094=1


Scientists find link between people impressed by wise-sounding, 'profound' quotes and low intelligence


new study has shown that there is a link between these people and low intelligence.
It found that those who are receptive to pseudo-profound, intellectual-sounding 'bulls***' are less intelligent, less reflective, and more likely to be believe in conspiracy theories, the paranormal and alternative medicine.
PhD candidate Gordon Pennycook and a team of researchers from the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, published a study entitled 'On the reception and detection of pseudo-profound bulls***'.