Monday 9 November 2015

Oh, the Irony


So according to Jenny (well, not her exactly, considering she just copies and pastes whatever her fellow distributors post or she finds herself), having a typical job is a "scam". It is a "scam" because you make "someone else richer", you work for 40 years and you retire on a poor pension.

The solution? Join Juice Plus. Oh, the irony.

Give up your job and join Juice Plus for the benefits of:

- an income that is not guaranteed as it is wholly dependent on your own sales and recruitment figures.

- a company where you are encouraged to recruit anybody, including customers, whereby you are shooting both of your feet by reducing demand and increasing supply at the same time.

- harassing your friends and family and potentially alienating them from your social circle.

- making other people richer because they benefit from your sales, whose uplines also benefit from your sales, whose upline also benefit from your sales, etc, etc, etc.

- getting bored off your pants because your "job" can be done in a matter of minutes, depending on how many posts you feel like spamming in a day.

-  going to conferences where you have to pay for tickets, travel and accommodation to hear people tell you you're going to get rich. Only you never really seem to get rich, let alone make much of a profit.

To date I am yet to see anyone from JP tackle the issue of the company being a pyramid scheme, aka, a scam. The best I have seen yet is a cutesy doodle video Jenny posted where they claim that JP isn't a pyramid because they want to "help" everyone become national marketing distributors, even though that is impossible and would require a never-ending demand for the products.

Sensible, rational people know that JP is a scam. If Jenny truly believes a proper job is a scam and being a JP isn't, then I dare her to quit her day job and focus solely on her distribution sales. Go for it, Jenny, put your money where your mouth is.

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