Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
It wasn't the card option per se that was the issue, though I'd like to see where the card company's profits all come from. The issue was sending this letter to students who had no refund due, implying they had a refund they weren't aware of and if they completed the card application they would get money. If it were an honest ad, they would have given the students information on how to check if they had refund due BEFORE applying for the card and then offering the card in a clear statement it was a credit card application even if no refund was due.My college ID is used to buy from the college store from my Pell grant, and my refund is on a Mastercard debit card with the college logo.
That card is on a HigherOne account.
And this is all from St. Charles Community College.
Is this wrong?
Separate false advertising (pet peeve again) came today from AAA who carries my auto insurance. In very large font on the envelope it said POLICY ENCLOSED, and in very tiny print above it said "use this envelope to story your policy". It was an ad for life insurance. The wording on the envelope was intended to trick the recipient into thinking the envelope contained policy documents when it really was no more than junk mail.
It's easy to see, one just needs to look at the postage. Policies don't come as bulk mail rate. But why do they do it if not to deceive the recipient? I don't like to do business with people who think nothing of using purposeful deception.