Every swindle is driven by a desire for easy money; it's the one thing the swindler and the swindled have in common.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
My opinion is that he's a swindler and you're a sucker.
Doesn't the fight for survival also justify swindle and theft? In self defence, anything goes.
A successful swindler has to be a great salesman even more than a great actor.
The party of swindlers and thieves is putting forward its chief swindler and its chief thief for the presidency. We must vote against him, struggle against him.
The whites, who are educated and civilized, swindle me, and I am not hard to swindle because I do not know how to read and write.
The average investor does significantly worse than a simple index... It's literally because of the way our brains are wired.
Once I really got into securities fraud prosecutions, I came to realize how central they were to the maintenance of a free market and how, in many ways, they are far more important to the welfare of our society than many of the more sensational criminal cases that one hears about.
Undoubtedly there are, in connection with each of these things, cases of fraud, swindling, and other financial crimes; that is to say, the greed and selfishness of men are perpetual.
The desire for money may be an indication of greed, but I want to argue that greed is a much more subtle vice than simply the desire to be rich.
Not surprisingly, troubled economic times often beget proselytizers of wacky, extreme ideas.
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