Sounds like you just ran into a bunch of shitty people. I would have helped you out, bro.
I wouldn't, guess that makes me a shitty person.
Sounds like you just ran into a bunch of shitty people. I would have helped you out, bro.
You were honestly better off going into a nearby shop (either a bar or a 24 hour newsagents) and explaining to an assistant there your predicament (in terms of requiring a charger, not money). You'd have been more likely to get an empathetic response.
I've lived in London for years. 95% of people who ask you for money are clearly destitute.
If a person approached me who very obviously wasn't, I'd be more than willing to help them out. As I said, I have done in the past (lending phone, lending charger. I once even let a person use my laptop to send a quick email they needed to send urgently).
I have done on numerous occasions and never had an issue.
Of course it's a possibility, but that wouldn't stop me from helping someone. If I was really concerned, I'd at least offer to make the phone call or send a message for them.
I edited my post a minute later after posting... This situation happened almost exactly to me about 8 years ago, and it was a nice, honest looking, middle-class guy who convinced me he was in a tough spot. This guy even flashed me his Veterans authority card (mentioned he was a veteran)... He was convincing enough and I was feeling charitable enough.
Unfortunately, it's just really common. And, sadly, this guy was also a predator, going after the elderly as they left a super market.
Also with regard to using phones, that's a common refrain unfortunately too. "Hey, can I use your phone, I need to make a call to my buddy to pick me up..." and then when you say "sorry, man," they say, "Oh, well do you have a few bucks so I can use a payphone?"
It's too bad, but honestly if you approached me I'd likely have done the same or not given you the time of day because it just sounds so familiar.
OP, just because you are clean and look presentable doesn't make you special.
It doesn't make you more worthy of someone else stopping their attempt to survive every day to help you.
It doesn't make you somehow different than anyone else asking for money on the street.
You fucked up. You forgot money and let your card run out.
That's all on you.
No one else has a moral obligation to help you because you look middle class or are willing to let someone hold your phone.
This sense of entitlement that you're more deserving of help because of the way you looked is really pretty gross.
The train station attendant helped you, that was very nice. But instead of appreciating that, we get whining about the people that didn't, probably because they were scared, broke themselves, or tired from being asked for money the other 5 times they were asked on the way by you.
Lets be honest, OP would have found a way to score a massive own goal in that scenario too.You should have offered to design their website in exchange for using their phone. Odds that a scammer is going to create a website for someone is also very low.
People keep saying "what if it's a scam?" and sure, I wouldn't have lended my phone. I don't ever lend my phone.
But why does it matter if someone's running a scam for a few bucks? If you're that hard-up for money yourself, sure! That money is important to you. If not? Is it really that big of a deal if you toss someone a small amount of money and a week later, or even a litte while later, you see them doing it again?
That's what I legitimately don't understand. If someone asks for 2 bucks and I have 2 bucks I'll toss it over to them--especially if they look like they need to be somewhere.
When did you move to London?
Lets be honest, OP would have found a way to score a massive own goal in that scenario too.
Well, you're just using the thread to seek validation and argue with anyone who doesn't give it to you.If you're just going to use this thread to tell me how stupid I am without bothering to do it intelligently, please don't bother posting.
To all those saying "oldest trick in the book, etc..", does it not make any difference that:
1. I was clean, pretty damn presentable, articulate, etc...
2. Offering for people to hold my passport/own phone (both of which are pretty new and in great condition).
3. It was in a brightly lit area with tonnes of security.
I mean, I get the scam is real, but I wouldn't even think twice about helping if presented with all of the above.
It was poor use of it.
I think OP is honestly baffled that affluent class privilege is denied when you don't have money.
Well, you're just using the thread to seek validation and argue with anyone who doesn't give it to you.
Problem is I don't think people are reading into it that much. They are seeing some person, who they don't know, asking for change and they are simply ignoring or dismissing you because you're probably the 10 person that begged them for money that day.
People simply don't want to be bothered with this.
People are super willing to help, from my experience. And I ask for help all the time. Never ask for money though.
As others have mentioned your situation has scam written all over it.
Ie: what are the chances, honestly, that a person who is very clearly /not/ destitute, is wearing clothes that show they're pretty well off, offering very hard to fake collateral, etc... is going to be a scam?
I'd say it's higher than someone who is clearly homeless.
While many people might think the homeless person may spend the money on cigarettes, drugs, alcohol instead of food that they claim the money is for many won't think it's a scam.
Someone who is well presented asking for money, and then starts offering their passport when someone is reluctant screams scammer more I'd say.
But anyway the title of your thread is absolutely accurate, many people are unwilling to help simply because of bad experiences or the fear of bad experiences.
I just like helping people. Letting him talk to his friend over speakerphone or spending three dollars on a train ticket to help him get home isn't that hard.I wouldn't, guess that makes me a shitty person.
No offense OP, but this seriously the oldest train station scam. The odds of it being someone who actually needs help are low enough that I suspect no reasonable person would help. Its a little cold, but its a necessary self defense mechanism in a big city.
OP, are you familiar with big cities?
I'm baffled why you're shocked.
I just like helping people. Letting him talk to his friend over speakerphone or spending three dollars on a train ticket to help him get home isn't that hard.
I know. I've been approached by countless people asking the same, but they'll almost /all/ been obviously destitute.
Feel free to add me to your ignore list. That's what it's for, Zakalwe. Your threads are so fantastical that I just think you're attention whoring at this point. Nobody is that unlucky, hence why I come at you with the Ol' Gil jokes.I've lived in London on and off for 15 years. A few months here and there back at my parent's house outside of London, but vast majority in London.
Continue to use this thread snipe at me and ignore my responses then, you're posts are drive-by low effort quality.
If you're just going to use this thread to tell me how stupid I am without bothering to do it intelligently, please don't bother posting.
That's utter nonsense.
It's very clear what I mean.
Ie: what are the chances, honestly, that a person who is very clearly /not/ destitute, is wearing clothes that show they're pretty well off, offering very hard to fake collateral, etc... is going to be a scam?
This has got to be incredibly low.
It's right to be cautious, but you can also use a little intelligence to assess a situation. Too many responses here stating "I would think it's a scam" without thinking, imo.
No, that's not what I'm doing at all.
Exactly. They're not reading into it enough.
This is what I'm arguing against.
Unless people run into scams where the person has all the things I've listed covered often enough for the idea it's a scam to be more likely than a person stuck asking for legitimate help?
Well, you're just using the thread to seek validation and argue with anyone who doesn't give it to you.
I definitely wouldn't have lent the OP my phone. I don't let anyone touch my phone, not even friends or family. It's not just a $1000 piece of tech, but it's got a hell of a lot of personal info and sentimental value attached to it. I probably wouldn't have even taken it out in front of him, I've had 'respectable' men snatch my phone from my hands before (to use it to ring their phones so they would have my number).
If I had some spare change in my wallet? Yeah, in this situation, I'd probably have given a few bucks. But, I really don't carry spare change.
I'd be most likely to lend a charger, in this case, but, I have an android phone, charging cables for this thing are a dime a dozen.
I'd honestly be even more suspicious of person if they offered me their passport. I don't know of people in my country who just carry their passports on them all the time (everyone I know keeps them under lock and key until they're flying overseas/need high tier ID). I certainly couldn't tell a fake, and it's so strange to me that you just had it, I'd have turned you down entirely and then probably talked to friends about how weird it was.
Fair enough this happened to you, but I'm very sceptical that these kinds of committed scams happen anywhere near enough to write off someone in a situation like mine.
Of course, remove any of the three things I had
1. Clean, presentable, articulate.
2. Offering hard to fake collateral.
3. in a brightly lit area with tonnes of cameras security.
and it immediately becomes much lest trustworthy, but all of the above? I find it very hard to believe people have run into scams like this enough to warrant this kind of response.
Well, you're just using the thread to seek validation and argue with anyone who doesn't give it to you.