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I cheerfully disagree.Ī man needs a little madness or else he never dares to cut the rope and be free. The British media were extremely prejudiced about Exegesis and slammed it as a scam and worse. Was it abusive? Did it go 'too far'? I never witnessed that. Once the seminar commenced its four long days in a hotel room, you quickly realized the trainer was not like anyone you had ever met.

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Exegesis seminars were much smaller, more intense and confrontational than est trainings. The year was 1981.įounded, inspired and controlled by the charismatic Robert Daubigny, a master trainer, Exegesis copied the style and content of Werner Erhard's est training – and pushed further. They quickly proceeded to revolutionize telephone marketing in the UK. It was these men and women who launched Programmes in Bristol and later London. Without Exegesis, Programmes would never have existed. Fact: all or almost all the staff seen here are graduates of the controversial - some would say notorious - Exegesis Seminar. If a history of cults in modern Britain were to be written, these people would be in it. Never mind marketing – this is about a phenomenal group of people whose story has never been told.

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No wonder they quickly won Britain's top phone marketing award. These people could sell anyone practically anything, legal or not: they worked insanely hard and made their company the industry leader in about two years. was the UK's sales sensation of its time. The police may apply for an extension.Staff of Programmes Ltd, London, England. “Investigation is under way to locate them and any other victims who have been sent away,” he added.īoth suspects have been remanded until July 26. “The agents are believed to have been paid around US$1,000 (RM4,450) per victim,” said DCP Sasikala.Ī total of 14 Malaysian passports – belonging to 10 women and four men – were found.ĭCP Sasikala said if the passports were still with the suspects, it was likely that the victims had yet to be flown off.

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The local suspect is said to be the driver who brought the victims to the airport. It is learnt that the syndicate has been active since June, with the Taiwanese agent arriving in Malaysia in April on a tourist visa. Police believe the victims would have been sent to Dubai and Myanmar based on the documents that were seized from the house. “The house that was raided on July 22 is where they kept the victims before they were sent to other countries,” he said at a press conference at the police contingent headquarters here yesterday. “Both suspects are believed to have been agents for the syndicate, recruiting locals to work as call centre operators overseas. Selangor deputy police chief Deputy Comm Datuk Sasikala Devi Subramaniam said the locals were deceived by online job advertisements. Police found the men, a local and a Taiwanese, when they raided a house in Taman Setia Impian in Kajang, which was used to keep unsuspecting victims before they were flown to other countries. SHAH ALAM: Two “agents” believed to be responsible for duping Malaysians into working as scammers overseas have been arrested following an investigation into their syndicate.













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