Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On principle, I don't buy anything from MLM, and look down on people who get tricked into that. So I would not reply anything at all, and would encourage your husband not to buy.
There it is.
I don't know anything about Pampered Chef, but how do you know if its a scam?
Anonymous wrote:Send him the link. He can buy something. You don't have to. But you told him about it, so next time, say no thanks, then keep your mouth shut and there won't be a problem.
Anonymous wrote:On principle, I don't buy anything from MLM, and look down on people who get tricked into that. So I would not reply anything at all, and would encourage your husband not to buy.
Anonymous wrote:SIL = if your husand wants to give her a sale, it happens
Yes, you were foolish to mention it to him. Admit why you did it -- you were trashing his sister
I agree with your dislike of MLM, but you don't -yet- need to blow-it-up into a big dramatic thing. As of yet, SIL hasn't.
Anonymous wrote:Get your DH to buy something from the catalog if you’re not interested and he wants to. My nephew asked us to buy cub scouts popcorn that was way expensive and his mom (my sil) made it seem like he was learning entrepreneurial skills or something. In reality, he was greedy for the prize they get based on sales. I proposed donating money instead but DH felt bad and bought a few bags of overpriced gross popcorn.
Anonymous wrote:On principle, I don't buy anything from MLM, and look down on people who get tricked into that. So I would not reply anything at all, and would encourage your husband not to buy.
Anonymous wrote:It says to me that she and her husband are probably having money troubles and she is trying to help.