Articles Lifestyle Mr Old Man Age Doesn’t Make People Foolish. It Makes Them Vulnerable to Scams By Mr Old Man Posted on 1 minute ago 4 min read 0 0 0 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Reddit Share on Pinterest Share on Linkedin Share on Tumblr Over coffee this morning, I shared a story with a friend about a group of elderly people who had lost substantial amounts of money to a vacation ownership scheme. Some lost tens of thousands of dollars. Others lost far more. One woman reportedly spent the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of dollars after being persuaded that her contracts would generate attractive returns and could easily be resold for a profit. When I finished, my friend’s immediate reaction was: “How could they be so naive?” It is a common reaction. But I think it misses the point. The victims were not foolish people. Many of them had spent decades building successful careers, running businesses, raising families, and accumulating savings. They had navigated economic crises, market fluctuations, and life’s countless challenges. People do not suddenly become foolish at the age of seventy. What changes is something else. As we grow older, we may become more trusting. We may be less familiar with new forms of deception. We may be more susceptible to persuasive sales tactics disguised as investment opportunities. Meanwhile, scammers continue to evolve. Years ago, fraudsters were often easy to spot. Today, they operate from impressive offices, present polished marketing materials, speak the language of finance, and know exactly how to build credibility before asking for money. The sophistication gap is growing. And unfortunately, many older people are trying to navigate that reality alone. What struck me most about these stories was not the money lost. It was the human cost. Behind every financial scam is often a person who genuinely believed they were making a sensible decision for themselves and their family. A person who wanted to remain independent. A person who wanted to prove they could still make good financial choices. A person who trusted the wrong people. So perhaps the question should not be: “How could they fall for it?” Perhaps the better question is: “Who was there to help them question it before they signed?” Scammers thrive on isolation. Families, friends, and simple conversations are often the strongest line of defence. The victims were not foolish people. They were capable people who had simply grown older in a world that was changing faster than they could keep up with. ____ Mr. Old Man