Back in the early 2000s, the phrase “soft bigotry of low expectations” was leveled at the crumbling American education system, a jab at the creeping apathy toward quality that is poisoning society. Today, that same apathy has metastasized, enabling a cesspool of fraudsters and charlatans to peddle shoddy, often outright fraudulent services. These swindlers thrive on the illusion of competence, preying on trust across industries critical to survival—healthcare, legal services, financial management—and even in the escapes of pleasure we seek from a world teetering on chaos.
Take the world of classic car restoration, where passion and precision are supposed to reign. For those who’ve scrimped and saved to own a piece of automotive history, the stakes are high. Restoring a classic isn’t just about reviving faded glory; it’s a can be savvy investment with serious returns. Yet, across the United States, a wave of deceitful restoration shops is fleecing collectors, leaving them financially gutted and emotionally shattered. These scams, cloaked in slick websites and silver-tongued sales pitches, exploit the nostalgia and trust that define this community.