Saturday 17 November 2012

Of Incompetent, Lying Bankers

There are many good things when you live in the E.U., and there are a few idiotic things.
Today's topic is: bankers and their arrogance (and irremediable stupidity).

I've had three banks in my life. Let's use no name, and just call them 1, 2 and 3.

Bank #1 became my bank as soon as I came of age. 
It was Mother's bank (as well, it was down my street and that was very useful).
Things began going south when I gave them a cheque and they credited it... on Mother's account. I sent a scathing letter to the director, and he apologized (I still have that letter somewhere; perhaps I should frame it and display it proudly).
Things went from bad to worse, and I went to Bank #2, but… I never closed my account at Bank #1 (I left about £4 on it).

Bank #2 is still my main bank. At one point, I had a lot of hourly paid classes, and I saved a bit of money (I saved enough to not quiver with fear now that I’m down to one teaching job with few hours. However, I’m not worth abducting – except if you take books as a currency). So, since my main account is never in the red, and I’ve got a few pennies on a kind of savings account, my bank advisor is blissfully leaving me alone (that’s going to be important in a few paragraphs).

Not wanting to keep all my eggs in the same basket, I opened a third account in Bank #3. This one had a bank advisor who promised me that he’d do some trick, bank thingy, magic, book cooking or I don’t know what (and I don’t care what!) so that I’d never pay the bank fee to manage my account (it’s one of my principles: I leave my hard-won money in banks so they can make some profit by lending it to people who need it, but I don’t pay them for the “privilege” of having an account with them. I’m no frelling sheeple).

Three things happened at Bank #3. First, they treated my mother, who had an account there, too, as if she had the plague for daring to ask her advisor to be polite, then (according to some E.U. new thingy to make sheeple think that the states a looking for, and hunting, terrorists and criminals) they asked me to give proof of my identity (you know, that thing I’d done when I opened the account three years earlier), and I was told that I’d have to pay some fee for my account management. I closed that account at the speed of light, after some rock’n’roll adventures: the gal I had on the phone told me to write a letter and come give it to my advisor.
I met that advisor for the first time the day I closed my account. She was, it may be said, charming; all the more since her colleague had forgotten to give me half the info I needed! She did her best, and that account has been closed since last August. Since that account was a bit like a piggybank with a real safe, I transferred the money to… Bank #1 (where I’ve been, I remind you, since I came of age, and that wasn’t five years ago).

And now, for the list of lies and proof of incompetence:
Four years ago, Bank #2 sent me some bumph in order to give proof of my identity, tell them where I work, and other personal stuff (you’d think that the wages sent to my account would be a clue). I never answered, and since it was back when I had three decent jobs, you bet that my advisor left me alone.
I’m neither a terrorist, nor a criminal, and a quick look at my account will tell you that.

Four years ago, Bank #1, with my £4 on my dormant account, didn’t send me anything. No sign of life from them. With £4, we’ll say that it might have been logical.
Was it?
No.
There’s about £200 on that account now, and my brand new advisor would like to meet me (to get the E.U. thingy info, I bet). I was the one who had to contact her. Perhaps she’s being slaved and has thousands of accounts to manage (not a clue, and I seriously do not care), but I’m a bit shocked that an account being used again after so many years didn’t raise a single flag. Cherry on the cake: I’ve been too unwell to contact her for a third time, but she’s not bothered at all, and I haven’t heard from her (then again, with £200, I’m probably just barely plankton in her ocean).

Another branch of Bank #1 (Mother’s) has lost the mandate I signed to be allowed to operate her account last year, and the director is trying to pretend that I never signed the bloody thing – he also tried to say that it might be because I didn’t give proof of my identity that the paper wasn’t archived (he never asked me to give proof of my identity in any way, and I’m so going to read him the Riot Act on the phone if he keeps pretending that he did or that I didn’t sign the proper papers).
They just all love bumph (and they love to lose it!).

I was also shocked when I had to give my signature again at Bank #1. Explanation: they didn’t have it on computer (apparently, they’ve been eating the papers I gave them and the things I signed when I opened that account). In consequence, and because of the stupidity at the other branch, I’m going to have to check that they haven’t lost my mother’s mandate on my account…

It’s very cute to make sheeple believe that the 1984 adaptation is to fight terrorism and crime when it’s really to control people. Those people (terrorists and criminals) don’t use banks that bother them; they use banks that as long as you’ve got the references to an account allow you to deposit cash in vast amounts (Switzerland, Cayman Islands, places like that…). In fact, a few E.U. banks were caught red-handed asking too personal questions to clients. Why? In order to sell lists of info to commercial partners and/or to invite sheeple to the bank and have them invest money in bank-ish stuff. It’d be so nice if they didn’t take us for nuts (then again, if we consider the number of sheeple and the number of people who are too afraid to yell at them, they’d be silly to be bothered).

One last cherry on the icing on that particular cake? I just got a letter from Bank #3 (the one where I closed my account last August).
Are you with me? Someone there tried to charge my dead account for some current running costs. My former advisor caught it and rectified the BLUNDER, but it meant that a balance had to be sent to me. Guess who’s going to phone her former advisor in order to ask her to whom she should read the Riot Act… Yep! First thing on Tuesday after I’m caffeinated (I wouldn’t want to yell at the poor gal).
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got an e-mail to send to the lazy Bank #1 advisor in order to check that her branch isn’t completely managed by incompetents (yea, I know… I’m too optimistic).

Sunday 11 November 2012

Writing News

Plot bunnies, it seems, need to simmer.
The one character in my P.I. Sci-Fi plot, who was being secretive and elusive, has finally deign to tell me who she is, and what she's going to do in the plot. That silly bunny took her sweet time, but it was well worth the wait!
No kidding! Initially, I thought she could be some sort of local animal, but I came up with something much more twisted, and completely linked to the general backdrop I've got in mind for that universe.
I could have pushed the plot bunny, but it would have been... not as good.

So, that's one thing settled.
I've got other short stories being written (three plots simmering, one being typed).
My second play is nicely taking shape as well (strangely, I seem to need to have two stories to work on at the same time, and I alternate days writing one short story and the play). I honestly don't know if it's going to be as good and/or interesting as the first one, but since it's a literary testimony and testament, this changes everything (at least, for me).

I have ideas for other plays, but I'll definitely need to do a tad of research.

Happy One Year Anniversary to Me... Or Not...

Back in Autumn 2011, I decided to launch a blog (and a Twitter account to go with it) in order to train my new literary voice and share things with readers.
I decided to launch both on 11/11/11. It would be, I thought, a good date...

So what's the general assessment?
Two friends and my brother are talking to me. The rest of the world is merely clicking and hopping by in complete silence (naming my blog counter "I Can See You" was a good idea: I can see clicks, but no one takes a moment to say anything).
The silence used to take its toll, but now... Now, I just know that communication is mostly dead, and it's not that I no longer care; I merely got used to the absence of communication. I mean, after my last post about that young artist who died, which is something that still makes me feel extremely sad and empty, something happened in Real Life that warped me at the speed of a neutrino into a nasty bout of Void (definitely getting used to that particular Sword of Damocles that, one day, is going to get me for good). When the Void strikes and takes me, I stop trying to interact on the Internet, and what happens then? Nothing. I was off Twitter for a fortnight, off here since my last post, and, in another literary incarnation, off another site since October 19th... and all I got is silence.
I've sent two SOS over the past months. It is now clear that my being here (I mean, on Earth, and alive) or not is uninteresting to most people.
A little something has changed in me; I'm not planning to walk back to my prior incarnation's haunting places. I'm done with that.
From now on, I shall be focussing on this new part of my life.

P.S.: BBH! If you read my posts and you're not my brother or the two aforementioned friends. Take a few seconds to say something. I. Can. See. You. (And normally, I don't bite, but I feel as if I'm living above rivers of slime and I'm the only one around being - remotely - unaffected.)