(October 2, 2023, 7:16 am)napoleon I dont understand why folks scam. It is such a weird and strange behaviour. If they are inclined to act this way, it is very likely that they would inappropriately creep on women on social media or youtube. Folks like these give the rest of us a bad nameSomething to be noted is how fast some members on here jumped at the first sign to Like her, praise her and, as she had mentioned in a previously deleted thread, contact her about buying content. Makes me think a few of you were close to paying her for content, if not already. If there was a reason to scam people here, its that we often dont have enough blood left in our brains to make logical decisions and its probably a bit easy to fool us.
General Pictures
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
How unfortunate. Just goes to show why a lot of us demand verification and details now...
There are those of us who know better than to believe everything we read on the internet. Then there are others who see a post made by an anonymous person and instantly assume they’re telling the complete and honest truth without question. We’ve had far too many scammers for this to keep happening lmao
I wonder where the pics I downloaded came from then? I reverse searched them and found nothing.
Lots of people here may not like me but: at least I don't scam people. Scammers are the worst.
No legitimate doctor's letter would ever be that poorly stitched together or include that type of language. Not to mention missing a letterhead!
(October 2, 2023, 1:24 pm)BroHarrison No legitimate doctor's letter would ever be that poorly stitched together or include that type of language. Not to mention missing a letterhead!I can't decide. It's definitely odd. The address/clinic information is top-centre instead of the normal position. If it's legitimate, I'd be very curious as to why it was written. Why was "vaginal delivery" included lol? Who would that possibly be aimed for? (October 2, 2023, 1:26 pm)pregphilFor sure, a proper letterhead would have the clinic info (and logo) in the upper-right corner. That would avoid the doctor having to insist they're affiliated with that particular hospital (which is totally easy to look up). Probably even more damning is the DOB and contact info for the supposed patient. Hospitals closely guard all info related to patients and DOB is a primary means they verify identity. Nobody would leak that for a letter doing little but weirdly assuring the recipient that it'll be a "vaginal delivery" lol(October 2, 2023, 1:24 pm)BroHarrison No legitimate doctor's letter would ever be that poorly stitched together or include that type of language. Not to mention missing a letterhead!I can't decide. It's definitely odd. The address/clinic information is top-centre instead of the normal position. If it's legitimate, I'd be very curious as to why it was written. Why was "vaginal delivery" included lol? Who would that possibly be aimed for? (October 2, 2023, 1:35 pm)BroHarrisonHmm now that I look at it again, I can see that the address/name is definitely up there (it's for the individual practitioner). John Lee also appears to be an actual OBGYN at that hospital too. The other thing is that there are no spelling errors, which would be rare for a model (often not the brightest).(October 2, 2023, 1:26 pm)pregphilFor sure, a proper letterhead would have the clinic info (and logo) in the upper-right corner. That would avoid the doctor having to insist they're affiliated with that particular hospital (which is totally easy to look up). Probably even more damning is the DOB and contact info for the supposed patient. Hospitals closely guard all info related to patients and DOB is a primary means they verify identity. Nobody would leak that for a letter doing little but weirdly assuring the recipient that it'll be a "vaginal delivery" lol(October 2, 2023, 1:24 pm)BroHarrison No legitimate doctor's letter would ever be that poorly stitched together or include that type of language. Not to mention missing a letterhead!I can't decide. It's definitely odd. The address/clinic information is top-centre instead of the normal position. If it's legitimate, I'd be very curious as to why it was written. Why was "vaginal delivery" included lol? Who would that possibly be aimed for? The whole thing is weird. It might be a real letter. In any case, she has a terrible attitude, registered multiple accounts and scammed multiple people. (October 2, 2023, 1:48 pm)pregphilHow did she scam people? Did dudes order stuff & the stuff never came? To be fair most girls like her act like that. When people think they're "all that" they act that way. No scammer or roleplayer would go that far to make a letter (I've seen a lot). I once followed a girl that got 10K followers on IG. She used pics from a old YT vid & when 1 person found the video she turned off comments & later left. I met another girl that roleplayed (she was 14). She even bought a fake belly using her mom's credit card & it looked TV show realistic. She went on IG live & filmed herself in the shower with it on & pretended that she was having a water birth (used a baby doll). Apparently her mom was paying the bills & found a 400$ charge, busted in her bathroom to find her daughter red handed. She later went on live while she was grounded & explained everything.(October 2, 2023, 1:35 pm)BroHarrisonHmm now that I look at it again, I can see that the address/name is definitely up there (it's for the individual practitioner). John Lee also appears to be an actual OBGYN at that hospital too. The other thing is that there are no spelling errors, which would be rare for a model (often not the brightest).(October 2, 2023, 1:26 pm)pregphilFor sure, a proper letterhead would have the clinic info (and logo) in the upper-right corner. That would avoid the doctor having to insist they're affiliated with that particular hospital (which is totally easy to look up). Probably even more damning is the DOB and contact info for the supposed patient. Hospitals closely guard all info related to patients and DOB is a primary means they verify identity. Nobody would leak that for a letter doing little but weirdly assuring the recipient that it'll be a "vaginal delivery" lol(October 2, 2023, 1:24 pm)BroHarrison No legitimate doctor's letter would ever be that poorly stitched together or include that type of language. Not to mention missing a letterhead!I can't decide. It's definitely odd. The address/clinic information is top-centre instead of the normal position. If it's legitimate, I'd be very curious as to why it was written. Why was "vaginal delivery" included lol? Who would that possibly be aimed for? I miss the good ol days when people just used pics & vids they found online to scam people. Sadly most people don't know something is fake until they are told about it. People believe what they want. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Related Threads | Author | Replies | Views | Last Post |
24 weeks now - back from the maternity home | playboypreggo | 345 | 135,208 |
January 2, 2024, 10:35 pm Last Post: ryuoki |
Wife About 38 Weeks | OverdueBubba | 11 | 12,144 |
September 18, 2023, 4:44 pm Last Post: OverdueBubba |
30 weeks | alternatefever | 2 | 3,099 |
January 20, 2023, 7:39 am Last Post: User 37475 |
Wife is 28 weeks and getting big | alternatefever | 8 | 6,672 |
January 7, 2023, 9:52 pm Last Post: ShadowMaster969 |
Hi it‘s Emily! 12 weeks with twins and already big lol | emilyjoy | 43 | 34,024 |
November 22, 2022, 1:57 pm Last Post: subthresh15 |
Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
|