Chain letters
If you take the time to actually read the majority of these annoying chain letters, you will realize just how ridiculous they actually are.
Round conference table
When he explained to me why he uses the round ...
Olympus digital camera accessories
In order to show my lovely item my appreciation I ...
Article on poverty
Typically those who suffer from poverty are ...
Dollar stores
Dollar stores receive their stocks from grocers ...
International calling cards
If you want to use international calling cards ...
Ordering a birth certificate
People usually only need a birth certificate ...
Small claims court
Even if you are a law-abiding citizen, you may at ...
Cushion covers
There was more than enough of the remnant fabric ...
If I had a dollar for all of the chain letters I've received in my lifetime, I'd be a millionaire.
When I was younger, chain letters used to arrive via the regular postal mail. Remember them?
You had to copy the letter so many times and mail it out to others.
Modern day technology has converted those chain letters into emails. Now, I get tons of them.
I normally delete them before I even open them, but I wish that my friends would just stop sending them to me. I don't appreciate them.
If you take the time to actually read the majority of these annoying chain letters, you will realize just how ridiculous they actually are.
I mean, do you really think that Bill Gates is going to send you money for forwarding an email so many times?
Have you ever actually known anyone who has had something tragic happen just because they don't forward an email?
If someone does get bad luck, it is simply coincidence. There are so many things that can happen through email chain letters.
Viruses can be hidden and forwarded. Spam can start to occur more. And, your friends may start to get upset.
Let's face it, no one really likes to get chain letters.
Some people take the time to read them while others, such as myself, simply kill them immediately.
I don't pass them along to annoy others. 9 out of 10 chain letter that enter your mailbox or circulate the internet are complete hoaxes.
Just as the Microsoft email that promises you'll receive money if you forward it to others, they are simply fake.
Some chain letters make threats of viruses attacking your computer if you don't pass it on to so many people and some threaten years of bad luck if you destroy it.
I've destroyed many chain letters and my computers have always survived and any bad luck that has occurred is simply life.
The creators of chain letters dote on people's fears of having bad luck.
No matter what the hoax of the chain letter is, they are illegal.
Someone creates them, usually, just for fun or to see how far they actually can go.
Sometimes it'll be a warning for people to watch out for, such as needles taped to gas pumps, and have official sounding names attached as the originator of the email.
Most often, if you do some research, the official names listed do not really exist.
Nor does the actual situation that is being described. Do yourself a favor, next time you get a chain letter, don't pass it on.
No one wants to receive them and why continue to give someone the satisfaction of knowing it still continues to circulate.
I promise you won't have bad luck.
Related Articles:
Yahoo! News Search Results for chain letters
Yahoo! News Search Results for chain letters
Letters to the Editor - Bellevue (La Vista Sun)
Leave the Royals alone Why is Sarpy County trying to steal the Omaha Royals? We aren't trying to take your Air Force base.
From A To X, by John Berger (Independent)
John Berger has always defied conventional genres and boundaries, mixing and blurring art criticism and autobiography, poetry and letters, diaries and drawing. His first novel purported to be a diary of a previously undiscovered Hungarian painter; in From A to X, long listed last month for the Booker Prize, prior to publication, he punctuates the story with line sketches of human hands.
letters (Southfield Eccentric)
No easy oil solutions The headlines and airwaves are full of talk right now about what to do about rising gas prices. It all shows just how much Americans still love their fairy tales and urban legends. Americans are lining up behind the solution du jour of their political persuasion. Republicans and Democrats alike are offering quick-fix remedies ... a gas tax holiday; drilling the offshore ...
Newsfeed display by CaRP
Read books
Self-Advice
Learn from Home at Mc2elearning.com
When I was younger, chain letters used to arrive via the regular postal mail. Remember them?
You had to copy the letter so many times and mail it out to others.
Modern day technology has converted those chain letters into emails. Now, I get tons of them.
I normally delete them before I even open them, but I wish that my friends would just stop sending them to me. I don't appreciate them.
If you take the time to actually read the majority of these annoying chain letters, you will realize just how ridiculous they actually are.
I mean, do you really think that Bill Gates is going to send you money for forwarding an email so many times?
Have you ever actually known anyone who has had something tragic happen just because they don't forward an email?
If someone does get bad luck, it is simply coincidence. There are so many things that can happen through email chain letters.
Viruses can be hidden and forwarded. Spam can start to occur more. And, your friends may start to get upset.
Let's face it, no one really likes to get chain letters.
Some people take the time to read them while others, such as myself, simply kill them immediately.
I don't pass them along to annoy others. 9 out of 10 chain letter that enter your mailbox or circulate the internet are complete hoaxes.
Just as the Microsoft email that promises you'll receive money if you forward it to others, they are simply fake.
Some chain letters make threats of viruses attacking your computer if you don't pass it on to so many people and some threaten years of bad luck if you destroy it.
I've destroyed many chain letters and my computers have always survived and any bad luck that has occurred is simply life.
The creators of chain letters dote on people's fears of having bad luck.
No matter what the hoax of the chain letter is, they are illegal.
Someone creates them, usually, just for fun or to see how far they actually can go.
Sometimes it'll be a warning for people to watch out for, such as needles taped to gas pumps, and have official sounding names attached as the originator of the email.
Most often, if you do some research, the official names listed do not really exist.
Nor does the actual situation that is being described. Do yourself a favor, next time you get a chain letter, don't pass it on.
No one wants to receive them and why continue to give someone the satisfaction of knowing it still continues to circulate.
I promise you won't have bad luck.
Related Articles:
Yahoo! News Search Results for chain letters
Yahoo! News Search Results for chain letters
Letters to the Editor - Bellevue (La Vista Sun)
Leave the Royals alone Why is Sarpy County trying to steal the Omaha Royals? We aren't trying to take your Air Force base.
From A To X, by John Berger (Independent)
John Berger has always defied conventional genres and boundaries, mixing and blurring art criticism and autobiography, poetry and letters, diaries and drawing. His first novel purported to be a diary of a previously undiscovered Hungarian painter; in From A to X, long listed last month for the Booker Prize, prior to publication, he punctuates the story with line sketches of human hands.
letters (Southfield Eccentric)
No easy oil solutions The headlines and airwaves are full of talk right now about what to do about rising gas prices. It all shows just how much Americans still love their fairy tales and urban legends. Americans are lining up behind the solution du jour of their political persuasion. Republicans and Democrats alike are offering quick-fix remedies ... a gas tax holiday; drilling the offshore ...
Newsfeed display by CaRP
Read books
Self-Advice
Learn from Home at Mc2elearning.com
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