My older neighbor got a call from a guy who called her "mom" and said he'd been in a car accident, and there was a problem with his insurance, so he was in real trouble if he couldn't pay cash for the damage, the other guy was gonna call the cops, and he needed $2,000 to give to the other guy for the damage.
She said "Tim?" and the guy said "yeah mom its Tim and kept repeating he was gonna go to jail for not having insurance cause it lapsed just this week and he needed to run to the store and he was in an accident.
She withdrew 2k from the bank and some guy came and said he was Tim's friend and he needed to go right then the cops were gonna arrest Tim.
Apparently, he snatched the money out of her hand and ran to his car and left. She felt very foolish.
no, the bank apps won't let you use a keyboard app that they haven't whitelisted to type information within their app, such as entering your PIN etc. It's a security "feature" to keep you from getting phished or whatever its called if your keyboard assists someone from accessing your bank account
yeah i know it dawned on me quite quickly where it sounded like that was heading..
these "white magic" paperback books from Borders would have you anoint candles with oil to like, I dont fuckin know, endow them with your intention (Id wish the girl in algebra would notice me, so the book'd tell you to think about her while putting oil on a pink candle so when you burn it your "spell" would go into the air or some crap)
that particular book there though was page after page like that where it said shit like "for protection from your enemies wrap some wire around leaf and put it under your doormat"
i had this book when I was an edgy teenager in my middle class bedroom rubbing olive oil on taper candles from the grocery store and.. wait this is sounding like something different entirely
thats right. letters are just arbitrary little squiggles, and if you look at any of them too long they lose the heuristic you associate with them and the fact that theyre just little squiggles becomes visible.
I dont think one word or another is more or less likely to cause this effect.
don't ever try to stop people from practicing out-group homogeniety (or in this case in-group homogeniety)