Have You Been A Long-Time Loyal Customer With Bank Of America? (Or Citibank, Discover, Chase, Capital One Or Another Big Credit Card Company?)
This Shocking True Story Reveals What’s Really Going On Behind The Scenes…
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This story reminds me of a common complaint I hear from my clients…
Many of us have been long-time loyal customers of big banks like Bank of America, Citbiank, Discover, Chase or the like. After paying on time for many years, many of my clients say they expected their creditor to help them out when they found themselves in a tough situation. To their surprise, most of these big creditors not only REFUSE to help, but many times take advantage of the situation by racking up interest rates, adding on fees, increasing payments and lowering limits. This often triggers “universal default”, starting a chain reaction for others creditors to follow suit and do the same. This negative snowball often forces consumers to consider bankruptcy.
- Has something like this happened to you?
- How do you feel about how these big creditors treat their customers?
- Have you been a loyal customer to your creditors?
Here To Be An Asset To You,
Jesse Niesen
DebtGoToGuy.com


Right On princess!!!
BofA, like many others, is a predatory corporation. They don’t make anything, they don’t cure cancer, but they are the vampires of our society.
You did the right thing. Bad things happen to all of us. Maybe the policy writers at BofA will experience this reality.
I’d hire you, but I went out of because (banks) my main customers,
refused to pay their bills when times got tough. I was told that I was too small of a company to win in court. They were right.
Use your education in a better field. The money changers of this world do not deserve you.
Kenny
Very courageous – thank you for that.
Thanks for sharing this video. As a former bank employee, I’m very glad to see that I’m not the only one that was disheartened by the banking system. We’re in a recession for crying out loud, and still bank employees are pressured by upper management into making referrals for extra bank accounts customers clearly don’t really need. It was part of my job to talk someone into needing something they really didn’t need. If I was in their shoes, I wouldn’t go for it, but I was trained to frame the product or service in such a way that the customer believed that they needed it. At the end of the day, bank employees are nothing but dollar signs. I’d much rather focus on providing quality customer service than offering customers solutions they really didn’t need to be adding to their financial portfolio.