For the past several weeks, I have been receiving phonecalls
from a number with a Washington DC area code (202-311-2618) informing me that I have been
selected for a government grant. The amount varies slightly, but is generally
in the neighborhood of $10,000. The caller follows a general script:
Hello, you have been selected to receive a $10,000 government grant. I bet you are asking yourself how you were awarded this money; correct? (Here they pause for you to respond in the affirmative)Every year, the United States government sets aside money to be awarded to citizens who pay their taxes on time. This money can be used for education, home repairs, to pay down debts or even to take a vacation. For the government record, how are you planning on using the money?
The first time I received this call, I informed the gentleman
on the other end of the line that I had been eyeing a black-market fully-armed
predator drone and I planned to utilize it in a quickly escalating feud with my
next-door neighbor. He requested that I be placed on a brief hold, but I had to
hang up as I was getting another call.
The second time I received this call, the pitch was the same
but the delivery was much different. Instead of a self-assured male voice, I
heard a meek and shaky feminine one. It just so happened that during the interim
time between these two calls, my Sunday school class was discussing a book
about how to show grace in unique ways and one of the featured stories involved
a woman who ministered to telemarketers. She reminded us that telemarketers
were people just like us with hopes, fears, a history and a future and while
they might be annoying, they deserved grace just as much as we did.
So, in hearing this young woman’s fragile voice, those words
began to echo in my head. Instead of informing her that I planned to utilize
the money to fund my social networking site for human traffickers, I politely
played along. After several minutes, I even began to imagine a backstory for
Sara. She had become ostracized by her step-family after her mother’s untimely
death and now shared a one bedroom walk-up in a decomposing area of our
nation’s capital. She had been given the number of this telemarketing firm by
her roommate and although she would never initiate a conversation with a
complete stranger, she now found herself forced to cold-call random citizens
and convince them that the Federal government had been tracking them down in an
attempt to distribute money it cannot afford to spend.
I even went so far as
to imagine my own infant daughter, nervous and intimidated on her first day as
she slipped on the headset and clicked the next 10-digit number almost
guaranteed to provide her with verbal abuse. So when Sara finished her entire
spiel, I politely thanked her for taking the time to call me but regretted that
I did not wish to participate. I then requested that I be removed from her
company’s call list.
Upon hearing this, meek and naive Sara transformed into
grizzled and jaded Marge. Gone was the demure countenance that evoked sympathy and
patience. One-bedroom walk-up Sara was no more; quickly replaced by a woman whose
narrow avoidance of a manslaughter charge in Topeka spurned her eastward
migration. The volume of her voice increased exponentially and I could hear the
years of chain smoking nipping at the edges of her range:
WELL THANKS A LOT FOR MAKING ME GO THROUGH THAT ENTIRE
RIDICULOUS PITCH FOR NO REASON!!! YOU COULD HAVE STOPPED ME AT POINT BUT
INSTEAD YOU CHOSE TO WASTE MY TIME!!! (with as much sarcasm as she could muster) HAVE A GOOD ONE!
*click*
I am proud to say that I did not return the sentiment and suggest
a new location for her headset (mostly because when I called the number back I
was informed that it had been disconnected) but I couldn’t believe it. My
coworkers were beside themselves, even suggesting that the “naïve newbie” was
nothing more than a vocal ruse designed to evoke sympathy and keep suckers on
the line.
I can only speculate that it was a phishing scam and at some
point they would request bank routing information in order to award the “grant.”
Are there really that many people who
hear that pitch and think to themselves, “This turn of events is so fortuitous
it has to be true!” Either way, you need some serious chutzpah to make an unsolicited
call to someone and then yell at them for wasting your time. I may have a new target for my predator drone once my
government grant comes in….
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