• Treczoks@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    In a restaurant in Brussels. At the next table, two people discussed an upcoming minister-level EU meeting. One person was in charge (or at least had influence on) the meeting agenda, and was urged by the other person to drop a particular item off that list. They argued about possible excuses for not having this item on the meetings agenda, until the bureaucrat agreed, and the lobbyist handed him an envelope.

  • QuantumField@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I worked for a Penske car dealership that had an annual Christmas giveaway to employees.

    We found out that the GM had been removing parts from vehicles and selling the parts for profit. Some of those profits went to his pockets. Some of those profits bought the company Christmas gifts.

    I have a very nice $200 MSRP knife set that was received as a Christmas gift one year.

    So yeah basically all the gifts were bought with money stolen from Roger Penske. Can’t say I care. Roger Penske is an evil fuck.

  • Saigonauticon@voltage.vn
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    1 year ago

    Usually some form of business plan that amounts to sanctions / regulatory avoidance presented with a straight face to a panel of VCs / investors / potential partners. Then the underlying structure is a Ponzi scheme.

    My strategy so far has been to ask “how is your business plan different from just doing crimes?” with a voice loud enough that people outside the meeting room can overhear – like in some cartoon where some character says all the quiet parts loudly and the loud parts quietly.

    Hopefully with time, people will stop bringing this kind of crud to the table, or at least stop inviting me to the meetings.

  • chumbaz@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Upper Deck was the king of sports trading cards and even though they were making hundreds of millions in the 80s, they got caught creating counterfeit versions of the most desirable cards to make even more money. Once they got caught there wasn’t much to be done as it wasn’t actually illegal for them to do so. It soured the collectors market for a long long time.

    Circle back around to around 2000 and upper deck somehow got a license to print Yugioh cards in Europe. Only, they decided to start also making counterfeit cards of the 10 most desirable cards and made 50K of each of them and started seeding the collector market in the US by selling them in the states to make even MORE money. It wasn’t long before they got caught and then sued and settled out of court for some insane amount of money.

    Somehow they’re still around and printing sports cards. It’s kind of mind boggling.