Rice puller

Rice pullers are a specialty of scammers on the Indian subcontinent. They are metal objects which are purported to attract grains of rice. And, seriously, that's about it. It is this magical property that makes such items extremely valuable, though it is unclear how it could be especially useful.

Style over substance
Pseudoscience
Popular pseudosciences
Random examples
v - t - e
This page contains too many unsourced statements and needs to be improved.

Rice puller could use some help. Please research the article's assertions. Whatever is credible should be sourced, and what is not should be removed.

What are they?

Rice pullers can be any old metal object such as cutlery, bowls or jewellery. The most prized of all rice pullers is a cheap, crudely faked Anna coin dated 1616, allegedly minted by the East India Company (they minted no such coin in 1616).[2] Scammers will demonstrate the "power" of these objects through unimpressive illusionist techniques.

Claims are made that a unique mixture of copper and iridium accounts for the metal's magical powers in an attempt to science it all up.

The scam

The scam usually works like this:

  1. The "trader" will attract numerous "buyers" who are merely shills. This gives a public appearance of the metal being easily saleable at premium prices (up to Rs500,000 for an old spoon (that's 9,000 USD)).
  2. Interested parties will come forward with their old cutlery and request that they have it appraised and if interested, that the "trader" might purchase it.
  3. The "trader" will respond that he's had a major crisis of some kind and is no longer buying but instead needs to sell his stock at bargain basement prices.
  4. The target, believing there is a ready market, will leap at the opportunity at making a quick profit and snaps up the "bargain".

The advent of the Internet has enabled this scam to flourish as "traders" flood forums and business directories, making it look like a vibrant and respectable industry.

gollark: Interests field?
gollark: Mwhahahahaha. My red army grows. Soon, I shall *incubate the world*!
gollark: I used mine to make that prize hatch faster, though it is admittedly sick now.
gollark: Well, the *AoND* tool doesn't allow ARing >2d stuff, but there are probably browser extension versions, plus my shellscript.
gollark: (plus there's https://dragcave.net/click/[code] - seeeeeeeecret)

References

This pseudoscience-related article is a stub.
You can help RationalWiki by expanding it.
This article is issued from Rationalwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.