Thursday, 17 July 2025
Wednesday, 16 July 2025
Avoid These Scam Courses at All Costs – Protect Yourself & Your Family!
Tuesday, 15 July 2025
Run! These Beggars Are Coming for Your Wallet & Marksheets!!!
Educational Institution Based Beggars in Every Campus You Need to Avoid
There’s one species that seems to exist in every educational institute — the Institutional Beggar. Usually disguised as a peon, admin staffer, or self-proclaimed “important” employee, this person acts like they’re running the entire college on their own two hands… yet can't even hand over your result without a 10-minute sob story.
You walk in needing your result or admission form, and this uncle is already ready with his classic starter pack:
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“Itna kaam hai mujhpe, sab kuch main hi karta hoon!”
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“Woh staff kuch nahi karta, main hi madad karta hoon sabki…”
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“Tu toh samajh sakta hai na, thoda madad kar de…”
By “madad,” he obviously means: cash, alcohol, or sometimes even “family holiday help.” Yes, really.
🍾 The Great Indian Khambaa Theory
One of our contacts recently visited a college in Mumbai where this particular species of peon didn’t even hide it. The moment the paperwork was handed over, the peon whispered:
“Kya ek chhota Khambaa ho jaaye?” (Translation: “How about a small bottle of booze?”)
The student thought he was joking. He wasn’t.
The guy sulked for 15 minutes like a disappointed child who didn't get a Happy Meal, until the student offered ₹50. The look of disappointment on his face could’ve won an Oscar — it was as if someone had flushed his last bottle of dreams straight down the sewer. His teeth had the remnants of 3 paans from the morning, and his breath was a combination of last night’s leftovers and hopelessness.
Every time the student passed by that office, this man looked at him with the hope of being "sponsored" again — like a 53-year-old version of a college influencer begging for subscribers.
🇺🇸 Western Example: The Passive-Aggressive “Helper”
In the U.S., the same breed exists — just dressed better. A student at a community college in our beloved location Vermont shared how the front-desk admin at their records office would hold their transcript hostage with endless excuses like:
“Oh, our system’s been tricky today. I might be able to rush it... unless you'd rather wait a week?”
Translation: “Bribe me with Starbucks or gift cards.”
Instead of saying it directly, they drop subtle cues like:
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“We do appreciate small tokens of kindness here.”
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“Oh you brought donuts last time, that really helped speed things up.”
Begging, but make it corporate.
🇵🇭 Asian Example: The Lowkey Extortion Expert
In Manila, a university student once told us about a security guard who took it upon himself to "facilitate" faster hostel room allotments — if and only if he received his “service fee” (₱200 cash and one pack of cigarettes). If you didn’t pay up, your application mysteriously vanished into a pile that “never arrived.”
When someone finally called him out, he said:
“I’m just helping! But no one respects effort these days.”
Classic move. Emotional blackmail, Asian edition.
🚫 How to Avoid These Beggars:
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Don’t react emotionally. They thrive on your empathy.
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Don’t engage in long conversations.
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Stay polite but firm: “Sorry sir, student hoon. Khud ki struggle chal rahi hai.”
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Never give money out of fear or guilt.
And most importantly: Don’t feel guilty for not giving anything. You’re already paying fees, struggling with deadlines, and trying to survive exams — you don’t owe them anything extra.
That’s it. Stay safe, stay broke, and let’s normalize saying “NO” to emotional blackmail in college corridors.
Monday, 14 July 2025
Unsubscribe These YouTube Channels Right Now!!!
Let’s talk about the bottom-of-the-barrel content creators — those mentally bankrupt, morally hollow YouTubers who proudly dump daily garbage online with titles like:
“Earn ₹20,000 daily from home!”
“No investment, only phone needed — Make ₹1,00,000 easily!”
“Instagram 2019–2025 New Trick 💸🔥”
Zoom into their ugly mug next to these headlines and voilà — your daily dose of false hope, clickbait, and recycled lies is served.
These clowns prey on the most helpless and desperate people — the ones barely making ends meet, looking for even ₹100 a day. And what do these frauds offer?
🛑 Fill Captchas for 6 hours straight.
🛑 Watch ads and earn 1 rupee.
🛑 Join some shady app with a referral link and help them get rich.
Oh, and let’s not forget their latest garbage dump:
“Become a voice-over actor today! Just upload your voice and wait for projects to come flying in!”
Really? Bro, you sound like you recorded it in your bathroom during a power cut on a ₹2 mic, and you think Disney+ is gonna call you?
These YouTubers are modern-day cyber beggars — disguised as motivational mentors. They make money not from helping others, but from:
- Ad revenue from millions of poor souls watching their videos
- Shady brand deals with trashy apps
- Referral bonuses from every signup and click
And what does the viewer get?
Zero.
Not even zero. Negative returns.
They lose time, data, money, and most importantly, hope.
These frauds don’t teach you how to earn — they teach you how to waste time chasing illusions, while they sit back and count your clicks.
🚨 Wake up before it’s too late.
Unsubscribe. Report. Block.
If you’re serious about making money, start by not watching idiots who profit from your desperation.
— Main Writer from MoonPure Entertainment