That statement is too vague to be trustworthy. There is no single thing you should “never accept” from someone just because they are over 70 or 80.
Posts like this are usually designed to create fear or suspicion, not give real safety advice.
🧠 What matters instead of age
Whether something is safe or not depends on:
- the item itself (food, medicine, money, etc.)
- the context (who gives it, why, and how)
- health conditions and safety risks
- consent and clarity
Age alone is not a reliable risk factor.
⚠️ When caution is reasonable (any age)
You should be careful with things like:
- unknown medications or supplements
- food that may be unsafe or expired
- financial requests or transfers
- anything that feels pressured or confusing
- items that could be harmful or misused
But this applies to gifts or requests from anyone, not just elderly people.
❤️ Important reality check
Older adults (70–80+) are not inherently unsafe or untrustworthy. In fact, they are often:
- more experienced
- more cautious
- more thoughtful in giving help or gifts
✔️ Bottom line
There is no universal “never accept this from elderly people” rule. Safe decisions come from evaluating what it is, not who it comes from.
If you want, I can break down real scam patterns that target older adults and how to recognize them quickly, which is probably what these viral posts are trying (poorly) to warn about.