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Thread: Bill Collectors (rant warning)
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06-17-2010, 03:57 PM #1
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06-17-2010, 04:12 PM #2
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06-17-2010, 04:20 PM #3
No it has not been and that is the sad part. Ownership and control are two different things. While nobody owns the government, I do agree with you that "private interests" control the government. Again, I still blame the government for allowing it to get to that point. However, to be fair, it is the people who elect their representatives and their leaders. So "the people" are not completely free from blame.
FWIW, I am a minarchist, so you get where I'm coming from.
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06-17-2010, 04:59 PM #4
OK, someone in his thread sated that paying early is just as bad as paying late. That is how you know banks suck. Just by that mere statement.
I Have NO credit card/ debt. Why? because credit card companies
SUCK THE LIFE OUT OF YOU!
I would be happy to pay reasonable fees for bank/credit card services. The problem is that they are no longer reasonable.
I stand by my statement.... Oh....I forgot, the BANKS forgot to live by their own standards, they spent too much and the US Government (my substantial tax money) had to bail them out.
I do business with a bank that did not take money from the government.
That is all!!“Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe.”
Albert Einstein
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06-18-2010, 05:56 AM #5
Banks can only accept money if they know it is coming and what they have to do with it. They are not old western style Scrooge McDuck vaults where the director takes a swim in the cash.
Banks accept millions of transfers every month via automated systems. Those automated systems can only handle money if they know what to do with it. They only know what to do with it if they expect it. They can only expect it if they know in advance when it will come, how much it will be and where it has to go.
Let's make the analogy with a Bakery. The baker needs x amount flour to make bread for a week. He gets weekly deliveries in order to have enough to support his business. The flour supplier can't just say 'hey, I know I am way too early, but here is your flour for the next 2 months'. The baker won't know what to do with that flour either. He can't accept it because he simply doesn't have the space to store it.
With bank payments, the problem is space as well. if money comes in way too early, the automated systems have no idea where the money should go. So they forward the transaction to a human being. This costs money. If thousands of people start doing this, the bank needs to hire extra people, just to process payments from people who fail to live up to the terms of the contract. If those people then also refuse to answer letters and phone calls, the whole thing get more time consuming and costly.Til shade is gone, til water is gone, Into the shadow with teeth bared, screaming defiance with the last breath.
To spit in Sightblinder’s eye on the Last Day
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06-18-2010, 12:54 PM #6
This is standard procedure for EVERYONE I know. Due to the high volume of random sales calls etc, I don't know anyone who picks up the phone for an unknown number. Usually if it's a "pressing problem" the caller is smart enough to leave a voice mail.
payments for utilities like water, electricity, etc all expect to be paid exactly on time, for the exact amount. Otherwise the automated systems will require human intervention.
I have 3 credit cards and a home loan, and for a short time had a car loan... I've never had a problem with any of them taking my money.
By your theory it would clearly be impossible to pay off a credit card every month, pay off your home loan before the term is up, or to pay off a mattress in 6 months, because all would require more than the "minimum" payment that the banks expect. I'm really confused at how you think paying early is such a problem.
Incidentally the one experience I had where I definitely screwed up regarding an early payment. When I got my first credit card I was trying to set up the online pay feature, but for whatever reason (I don't remember anymore) I sent a payment from my bank to the CC company rather than authorizing the CC company to debit my account. Somehow (again I don't remember why I did this, but it made sense at the time) I sent them a payment greater than my balance, and well before it was due. The payment posted to my account, and it showed a negative balance. I was a bit confused, so I called the CC company and got things straightened out for the future, but the early payment gave me a negative balance until I charged enough to that card to offset it. When I called the CC company rep said that since I sent it as a check (online bill pay from my bank sends a physical check), they just posted it to my account like they always would and since it was more than the balance it just posted a credit. Didn't make any comments that it was a problem, and they didn't charge some "early payment" fee.
I can invest my money at about 10% not 1%, although there is obviously a bit of risk involved.
Regardless of that, yes I agree that I made a mistake, as I was unaware the payment had to be made AFTER a certain date. Anything I'd done before only had a "due date" not a "pay after" date. Obviously this was only relevant because it was the first statement period.
I work in a large (70,000+ employees) corporation and I'm aware how many policies and such make it impossible to apply logic and reason to a situation so I understand the caller was just doing his job. I'd just never encountered a situation before where paying early didn't count towards the minimum payment (though it did post against the outstanding balance).
In any event, I learned something, it didn't cost me anything other than a bit of frustration
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06-18-2010, 05:52 PM #7
Well the moment you take a risk you turn it into something completely different from a simple arbitrage, so that's a very different thing. You are not very consistent in seeking profit though, obviously you are willing to forfeit about 18% of your gains by paying a month earlier than necessary (if somebody are good enough to play this game they should be good enough to not need a month of cushion time).
See, you're still not understanding the terms of your contract. You failed to make a payment BEFORE the due date. When you were sent a bill it contained a payment amount and a due date and you didn't make it. The fact that at some point in time BEFORE that bill was even generated you made a different payment is irrelevant, it has nothing to do with the bill you received and which you failed to pay. As I said it may seem strange to you, but logically it's perfectly sound.
There is a causality gap in your logic, you are attaching a payment you made to a bill you received after that payment was made, and they have to be time-ordered in the reversed manner. You probably expect that once you make payment you make should have an effect on subsequent billings and that's very likely still true but not to the extent you expect - may be if you hadn't made the payment you weren't required to make, the bill would've been for more than $15.
As far as logic and reason goes, their policies seem perfectly reasonable to me - in order to not alienate customers they forgive the first mistake, while still sending a rather strong warning. You didn't have to escalate the situation and find a person with the authority to override the penalty due to your specific circumstances, it was automatically dropped for you.
It just seems that your frustrations came primarily from your misunderstanding of your obligations, rather than from some inherently odd terms of the contract.Last edited by gugi; 06-18-2010 at 06:18 PM.
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Bruno (06-21-2010)
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06-17-2010, 04:59 PM #8
You guys.
All this talk of "buy only what you can pay for". Don't you know we live in a consumer driven society. If you don't spend, spend , spend how's the economy going to recover. How are rich guys like me going to be able to get our dividends and great interest rates and returns on our investments. Heck I just put a deposit down on another new Jet Aeroplane I gotta be able to pay for it on your backs afterall.No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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The Following User Says Thank You to thebigspendur For This Useful Post:
majurey (06-18-2010)
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06-17-2010, 05:27 PM #9
Every month the credit company will run a monthly billing, sending the customer a bill with a total balance, minimum payment and a due date.
The outstanding balance on that date determines the new payment due.
I still don't understand the objective of this thread
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06-17-2010, 05:47 PM #10