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National Banks chain letter

This is a chain letter that urges you to forward the message to everyone you know, explaining that you somehow get $10 for every message.

Here's a copy of the chain letter:

Need some extra $$$ for the summer? Sure, everyone does. This program has been going on for 15 summers, by mail, then e-mail. It is really very simple. Attatched to this message is a tracking program. Every person you send this message to, you earn $10.00. If they send it to someone else, you earn another $5.00, so on and so on. So basically, the more people you send this to, the more $$$ you will earn. This is funded by National Banks everywhere, that believe that summers should be fun for children, the world's future and should learn how to manage $$$. Real stories: "Okay, I was 19 when I recived this letter two summers ago. I was just starting up my own DJ business, and I needed some extra money to get my buisness started. So I thought, 'What the heck, I'll send it to my friends'. I sent it to only 10 of my friends, who each sent it to their friends. I never send these letters, because I don't believe in them. The next month, I recived a check for $500.00 in the mail. Now my DJ buisness is well known throughout Kentucky, and I've had a great life, ever since I sent this to my 10 friends. All it took was five minnutes!" Russell Wayman, age 21 "I recived this letter ten years ago. I had just gotten my e-mail account, and I hated these letters I kept getting, so I deleted this message. In a week, my mother came down with a serious case of skin cancer. I was pretty poor at the time, and had just gotten fired from my job. My mother needed money for her operation, or else she'd die from cancer. My husband and I didn't know what to do. His monthly income just paid our neccesary bills, like electricity and water. That day, when I checked my e-mail again, this same letter had been sent to me again. My mom was about to die, so I decided I'd try anything. So that day I sent it out to 100 people I had met online , and my friends. My mother had been moved into critical condition, and was at the brink of death. A week later, I recived a check in the mail for $1,000,000.00, enough money for my mothers operation. She is well now, thanks to this letter." Sarah Thomasman, age 43 As you can see, all you need to do, is send this out to as many people as you can. From a week to a month later, you will recive a check in the mail for a certain amount of money, depending on how many people you sent it to, an d who they sent it to. Good luck, and await the check!

Please do not forward this chain letter.

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List of known hoaxes:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z 

 

Welcome to my hoax section if you encounter a message about a virus please send to [email protected] or call me on ICQ#22015420

I do not spread hoaxes! these pages are simply to inform other users that they are hoaxes. Please to not spread hoaxes. Hoax warnings are typically scare alerts started by malicious people - and passed on by innocent users who think they are helping the community by spreading the warning.

Do not forward hoax messages. There have been cases where e-mail systems have collapsed after dozens of users forwarded a false alert to everybody in the company. Corporate users can get rid of the hoax problem by simply setting a strict company guideline: End users must not forward virus alarms. Ever. If such message is received, end users could forward it to the IT department but not to anyone else.

 

 

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