Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Re: [MLM Survivors Club] On researching MLMs

I haven't known of the "MLM world" for that long. Does requesting
to see business tax returns from the upline/or recruiter work? That
tactic makes sense to me when deciding to join a "business." I
would guess that not a lot of MLM recruiters are willing to give
that information.

--- In mlmsurvivorsclub@yahoogroups.com, Hal Vaughan <hal@...> wrote:
>
> On Tuesday 28 August 2007, academy team21 wrote:
> > Chandra nova,
> >
> > there are positive and negative info wherever you go. The key is
> > where did you get the negative and positive info from? If you
got the
> > negative and positive info from the qualified sources then its
> > worthed to be considered before you make any decision
further.But if
> > you got the negative and positive info from the mess , some one
or
> > something pretend know everything, then you also going to be the
> > mess.
>
> Sources aren't everything. They are important, but, as I've said,
even
> a broken clock is right twice a day. One important thing to
remember
> about sources is their bias. For example, if an IBDrone has quick
> dismissals for all the negative, are they a good source about how
valid
> a complaint is about their own organization? No, they are not.
>
> People in any organization have a bias. That's important to
remember in
> any critical thinking issue. People that hate the organization
also
> have a bias. Because of the bias, the statements from both sides
> should be viewed with skepticism, but that does not necessarily
mean
> the statements are wrong.
>
> Hal
>

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