Humble servant of the Nation

Scammers out in force to make a dollar from frightening times

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Kenneth Copeland

Scammers, charlatans, hucksters, grifters – they all come out of their hidey holes in times of strife.

Last week we were treated to a new episode in the unfolding epic of addled celebrity chef, Pete Evans and his vexed relationship with medical science.

Not content with pushing a diet of the type that promises adherents will live longer if they eat like humans did during the Stone Age when the average life expectancy was 27, Paleo Pete excitedly told those dumb enough to listen that he was in possession of a light source which had “recipes” that could fight the “Wuhan Coronavirus.”

This led to the delicious prospect, at least in my mind of an excited minion bursting through the doors of the Oval Office with a furrowed brow POTUS sitting at his desk trawling through dark pandemic death toll statistics.

“Mr President, Mr President … Pete Evans has a lamp.”

It would be funny except for the fact Pete Evans has more than 1.5 million Facebook followers.

If you’ve ever wondered how many idiots there are in Australia, I’d suggest that is a pretty decent guide. We could call it the Evans Australian Idiot Index. It could really come in handy.

Meanwhile in the US, Alex Jones from Info Wars was flogging a toothpaste superbly branded “Superblue Silver Immune Gargle” that he claimed killed the SARS/Coronavirus family at “point blank range.” SARS and Coronavirus are not family. They’re not even related.

Jones received a fairly curt directive from the US Food and Drug Administration and then another even shorter cease and desist missive from the US Trade Commission and alas, the miracle gargle is no more.

It is no surprise that the pandemic has scrambled many brains in the televangelist movement, all of whom recite The Bible while fixing a hypnotic gaze on our television screens but never, ever mention Matthew 19:23-26. Funny that.

Some have gone down the aged old path of making a quid out of other people’s fear and misery.

Charismatic preacher Jim Bakker has been flogging colloid silver for some time, claiming all sorts of dubious medical benefits. More recently, he has gone a step further describing his silver (and only his) can be used to treat COVID-19.

If you believe that, I’ve got a state room on the Ruby Princess to sell you. Going cheap. No queues for the buffet.

If it’s a character reference you seek for Bakker, there is none better than one provided by the late leader of the Moral Majority, Jerry Falwell. Falwell described the evangelist as a liar, an embezzler, a sexual deviant, and “the greatest scab and cancer on the face of Christianity in 2,000 years of church history.”

See, I would have said the Spanish Inquisition, but Falwell is closer to these things than I am. Or he was.

The granddaddy of all the charismatic set is Kenneth Copeland, a walking, Bible thumping example that money can get you almost anything with the exception of successful Botox treatments.

Copeland, who possesses a 1000-yard stare that could bend titanium, dismissed COVID-19 as no worse than the flu early doors and ordered his followers to break iso and park their backsides at one of his many churches. If they fell ill, he said, no worries. What better place to be for a quick laying on of the hands healing?

When the pandemic took a turn for the worse and Copeland was forced to clear the pews, he urged his followers to touch their televisions as a means of vaccination by proxy.

This all might be fine except for the fact that this creepy creeping Jesus has now exorcised COVID-19 on three occasions. His latest attempt involved a chant ending with him making a farting noise with his lips, amusingly imitated by his devotees, claiming he had summoned “the wind of God”.

“COVID-19, you are destroyed forever, and you will never be back.”

That was last week. Just looking at the infection rates in the US today, a fourth Copeland exorcism can only be days away. If at first, you don’t succeed …

When the virus started having its dreadful impact on the US, Copeland insisted his followers continue tithing (donating a fixed percentage of their incomes or assets to the church) even if they had lost their jobs. Copeland has an estimated net worth of US$760 million. One big, fat camel trying to pop his head through the eye of a needle, right there.

These are highly entertaining grifters who practice a cocktail of medieval sorcery and extreme capitalism but elsewhere there are more genuine concerns about organised crime syndicates setting themselves loose on the world.

There is more spam and more junk being delivered to our emails every day. The worst of these are phishing emails which seek to trick the receiver into passing on personal information like bank account details, PINs et cetera. Spam filters help but they can create a false sense of confidence.

These are not the old Nigerian Prince-type scams. They are becoming increasingly sophisticated. I note the surge of new domain registrations ending in .gov.au. Not registered by our federal government but from con artists on the make.

Suffice to say, if someone you don’t know and have never heard of wants your personal details (name, address and date of birth is sufficient to commit identity fraud) then it’s a good idea to delete the email. Don’t look at it, don’t read it. Send it to straight to the cyber junkyard.

In the US, an app surfaced which offers those who download it the ability to identify others with COVID-19. If you’re wondering how it works, it doesn’t. When the user clicks on the app to download it, the computer shuts down with an ominous blue screen. That’s it. Pay the ransom or go and get yourself a new laptop. Even if you do, files not stored on the cloud will continue to be inaccessible.

And then there are even more insidious scams we barely know about and have virtually no control over.

There are reports of dodgy Chinese based companies flogging COVID-19 test kits for under $100.

It’s illegal to sell this stuff in Australia but that’s no real deterrent. The test kits are relatively harmless for users in that they stand no chance of suffering any immediate harm but the tests themselves are unreliable, throwing up great swathes of false positives and false negatives.

The danger is that people will rely on these tests and, confident of the results, will go out into the community to spread an infection they don’t know they have or go badgering an already strained public health system for no good reason.

The world is being swamped by bootlegged personal protective equipment, especially dodgy N-95 respirators and surgical masks not made to standard. Most of this junk is coming from profiteering companies in China and plays into chronic shortages of PPE around the world.

It’s bad enough the People’s Republic of China kicked this pandemic off, lied about it and under reported their infection rates and deaths by hundreds of thousands. Now an army of Chinese fraudsters are seeking to profit from it.

These are frightening times and there will always be those who seek to profit from a fear that is real, almost tangible. So much so that if you thought about it for long enough, you’d go looking for the Silver Gargle Toothpaste just to take the edge off the anxiety.

This column was published in The Australian 16 April, 2020

102 Comments

  • Boa says:

    I’m wondering if I pop down to the servo they’ll pay me for doing them a favour and filling the tank 😁

    • Bella says:

      Fuel yesterday at Shell servo 81.9c a litre, so half a tank & $22 later how could I not. One of the best feels of this crazy lockdown! 😊

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Anyone at home?

  • Boa says:

    How nice it would be to see a revamped Virgin give Qantas some serious competition in Australia . It’s necessary. My experiences with Qantas have, in the main, been negative. Zero customer service – whereas Virgin was always quite the opposite and one got a real person on the line promptly. Same with their partner, Etihad. I’m also fervently hoping my Virgin FF’s survive! 🙄

    • Trivalve says:

      Boa, I don’t fly much since about 5 years ago but I have sampled a lot of airlines and I have Lifetime Gold status with Qantas. That means hundreds and hundreds of hours with my backside parked on their aircraft, and in economy 95% of the time. I have had some very good experiences with them, some middling and the occasional bad. Variation is to be expected in any organisation that large. I find the QF bashing that goes on to be a bit strange TBH, but it’s human nature. If you want to experience crap airlines and service, go to the US (but don’t fly there on a US airline, that would be masochism in the extreme).

    • Bella says:

      I’d almost written off my credit with Virgin but maybe there’s some hope Boa. At this point my Virgin FF miles may just get me a fare to the other side of town but I agree with you about Qantas service.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Alan Jones pointed this out in disgust last night on Sky, Mr Insider, a quote from Peter Van Onselen in The Australian on 20th March and I quote: “If between five million and 15 million Australians are infected, doing the best-case maths on the mortality rate to follow would mean 35,000-105,000 Australians will die from the coronavirus.”

  • Bella says:

    I really hope not Henry. Clearly the guys’s quite pale around the eyes & his speech appears to be unravelling on a daily basis.
    Alarmingly (for you mainly) the consensus, from a long list of top psychologists & medics, is that he is unwell & may even have had a stroke.
    That may explain the trouble he had with using ‘phenomenal’ (to describe himself) but he actually said “penomimal”.
    Maybe if he sticks to his standards like “very good” or “very bad” no fans will twig. 🙉

  • Boa says:

    Tracey, personally I don’t think Harry ever really got over the death of his mother, and is pretty screwed up.
    At first I was happy for him – he seemed to have found some peace .
    Canada maybe, but the move to Lala Land is strange. Meghan sure seems to have a hold over him. I’m not sure he will survive it – and let’s face it, it must be very sad for him to be so far removed from his ageing grandmother whom he adored by all accounts. Sad too that she does not see her great grandson. She’s a wise old duck – not for nothing did she say they’d, or perhaps he, would always be welcomed back into the fold. Harry was born a prince of the realm. Not an easy heritage to discard.

  • John L says:

    As an observation, the media in this country single out individual worst cases when trying to prove a point.
    They very rarely say this affects n% of the population

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Wonder how the book sales are going. Nothing like an unbelievable fairy story to keep the kids cooped up at home occupied.

  • Dwight says:

    Last week, the city of San Clemente, California, decided to dump 37 tons of sand on a local skatepark in order to prevent kids from skating during the coronavirus lockdown. But just a few days later, local skaters were shredding again.

    A group of determined skaters brought dustpans, shovels, and buckets to the park over the weekend in order to dig up the sand. Remarkably, by Sunday evening, much of the skatepark was usable.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Another funny man, Brent Terhune’s take on that Dwight via Twitter:
      https://twitter.com/BrentTerhune/status/1252349870679056390

      • Dwight says:

        Thanks Jack. There’s another funny outcome. I don’t think the mayor really “gets” New Yorkers:

        On Saturday, di Blasio unveiled his NYC311 system to encourage New Yorkers to snitch on outlaw New Yorkers for violating the state’s stay-at-home and social distancing rules.

        The Daily Mail reports the hotline had to be shut down after “members of the public vehemently criticized the ‘tyrannical overreach’ the hotline posed and within hours it was flooded messages of contempt for di Blasio instead.”

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Love it. I wish we were a bit more like New Yorkers here. Australians trade on an anti-authoritarian identity but the reality is we have increasingly become a nation of dobbers.

          • Bella says:

            Really? That’s just sad JTI.
            Dobbers are the lowest of the low.

          • Dwight says:

            I have to say, the governors in the US who have gone furthest with their restrictions–some further than Dan Andrews–seem not to understand their own constituents. I recall a line from Dennis Miller: “Our founding fathers would have never tolerated any of this crap. For God’s sake, they were blowing peoples’ heads off because they put a tax on their breakfast beverage. And it wasn’t even coffee.”

            The US was launched as a protest against government overreach, and it appears some of these people who were born there, grew up there, were educated there, and ran for office there, don’t quite get it.

            “Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” Some of the governed are no longer consenting. As a Midwesterner I understand that. And I would probably be protesting in my home state of Wisconsin.

          • Mack the Knife says:

            We were like New Yorkers at one time Jack, when I was young most people minded their business. With the advent of ‘Dob in a druggie’, an annual waste of time and money in the 80’s and subsequent versions, ‘dob in a dole cheat’ etc, Australians have been socially engineered into being ‘dobbers’.

            My sometimes haughty older sister once pronounced she was going to dob in my Mum’s next door neighbour as a suspected social security rorter. I said to her ok, next time you’re doing 65 in a 60 zone I expect you’ll trot yourself around to the police station and demand a speeding ticket for yourself yeh? That was the end of that bright idea.

            Sad cafe.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yeah,just happened to catch a bit of the ABC’s 7.30 program last night. Hard to work out whether it was supposed to be drama or comedy.

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