How to reply to a telemarketer..

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FreeFloat:
Could you post or PM the text, please, as the site doesn't seem to want me in. (I am not registering for something I'll probably use only once)

Sorry it took me so long to respond, guess I thought I was done with this thread. You shouldn't have needed to register for the site, but here's the text:

Posted on Sun, Oct. 05, 2003
So what's their hang-up?

DAVE BARRY

I've been writing columns for a long time now, two or three centuries at least. I've written on topics that touched a nerve among you readers -- the moronic-TV-commercials nerve, the loud-cell-phone-talkers nerve, and of course the low-flow-toilet nerve. I even touched -- and I regret this deeply -- the Barry Manilow nerve.
But I've never touched a nerve like the one I touched when I wrote about telemarketers. To review: In August, I wrote a column about the National Do Not Call Registry , which allows you to go to an Internet site (www.donotcall.gov) and register your phone number. The plan is that most telemarketers would then be prohibited from calling you.
The Do Not Call Registry is wildly popular with the human public. More than 50 million households have signed up. This displeases the telemarketing industry, which believes it has a constitutional right to call people who do not want to be called. Several telemarketing groups have filed lawsuits to block the registry.
So in my August column, I printed the toll-free telephone number of one of these groups, the American Teleservices Association. My thinking was: Hey, if the ATA feels its members have a constitutional right to call you, then surely the ATA feels that you have an equally constitutional right to call the ATA.
Well.
It turned out that a lot of you were eager to call up the telemarketing industry. Thousands and thousands of you called the ATA. I found out about this when I saw an article in a direct-marketing newspaper, the DM News, which quoted the executive director of the ATA, Tim Searcy. Here's an excerpt from the article:
''The ATA received no warning about the article from Barry or anyone connected with him,'' Searcy said. ``. . . the Barry column has had harmful consequences for the ATA. An ATA staffer has spent about five hours a day for the past six days monitoring the voice mail and clearing out messages.''
That's correct: The ATA received NO WARNING that it was going to get unwanted calls! Not only that, but these unwanted calls were an INCONVENIENCE for the ATA, and WASTED THE ATA'S TIME!
I just hope nobody interrupted the ATA's dinner.
Anyway, you can imagine how I felt. I would have called the ATA myself to express my feelings, but the ATA finally had to disconnect its phone number.
Really.
I myself received approximately seven billion phone calls, letters and e-mails on this topic. About 99 percent came from consumers who are wildly enthusiastic about the idea of calling telemarketers. Many of these consumers wanted me to publish more telemarketers' numbers, including residential numbers. As one e-mailer put it: ``I think we should call them at home and try to sell them the idea of not calling people at home.''
The other 1 percent of the response came from people in the telemarketing industry, who pointed out that I am evil vermin scum, and -- even worse -- a member of the news media. Their main arguments are that (a) telemarketers are hardworking people, and (b) if they're not allowed to call people who don't want to be called, telemarketing jobs could be lost, and the U.S. economy would suffer. Tim Searcy of the ATA was quoted in The Los Angeles Times as saying that the impact of the Do Not Call Registry would be (I did not make this quote up) ''like an asteroid hitting the earth.'' Yes. An asteroid!
As I write these words, lawyers and politicians and lobbyists and judges are swarming all over the telemarketing issue, so I don't know what the legal status of the Do Not Call registry will be when you read this column. But it appears that the telemarketers plan to continue their efforts to save the planet by fighting for the right to call people who do not want to be called.
I realize that this makes many of you angry. I realize that many of you would like to, once again, let the telemarketers know how you feel. And I am, frankly, tempted to reveal to you here that the American Teleservices Association (www.ataconnect.org/) seems to have a phone line working (at least for now) at 317-816-9336.
But would it be right to reveal this? I mean, yes, you could call the ATA again. But the ATA surely doesn't WANT you to call again. It's inconvenient! And to insist on calling somebody who doesnt want to be called, even if you have the legal right to call, well, that's just plain rude.
So I am taking the high road.
 
3dent:
Sorry it took me so long to respond, guess I thought I was done with this thread. You shouldn't have needed to register for the site, but here's the text:
You didn't used to have to register, but the Miami Herald started that a few months back. (I hate to register for these types of things too, but if you're a Dave Barry it's worth it. Besides all the regular columns which are there 1-2 weeks before my local paper, there's other columns you may not see otherwise, like recently whole series on the Olympics and the conventions.)
 
Damselfish:
You didn't used to have to register, but the Miami Herald started that a few months back.

Funny, I just clicked on the link that I had supplied in order to copy-paste the article here, and I've never registered with 'em. Hmmmmmm.
 
Interesting, I just tried a different browser that wouldn't have my login for there, and it's not asking me now either but I know I had to register awhile back. Wonder if they've stopped that permanently, or maybe it's a hurricane thing.
 
dave barry rules, thats great
 
My personal favorite is to answer in a little kid's voice and say that I don't know if my mommy or daddy can come to phone and that they should probably ask them. That's when I hang up. It also helps if you answer in German.
 
Back long ago my parents purchased an 800 number to promote a rental property they owned, well it turned out that if you spelled the digits out it was a less than PC word with a few numbers left over. Apparently some not so PC company decided to print an add but put the wrong number on the flier, for a few weeks we got tons of phone calls, especially late at night from random men. There has to be nothing worse than calling a phone "chat" line and getting a 16 yearold kid on the other end... some callers got mad but most were very, very appologetic. This of course all ended when we informed the phone company, I would imagine all of those numbers are gone now anyways but this was back when they didn't have 877 or all of those (I think).

Not that it has anything to do with telemarketing but its close enough...
 
aaaah! the zombie lives!

welcome, dude, but no need to resurrect the dead...though it was nice to 'hear' from some of them again.
 
I act like i am hearing impared and try and see if i can get the to yell!!
 
aaaah! the zombie lives!

welcome, dude, but no need to resurrect the dead...though it was nice to 'hear' from some of them again.

It was :spam:

Deleted. :D
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

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