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Have you ever seen the play SPAMALOT?  Good play.  Bad life choice.I'm a vegetarian ---- I avoid Spam.  But people still insist on trying to shove it down my throat......I've asked this question before but no one ever seems to want to respond. Maybe DanaHenson;  You'll be the first:

 
Is this sort of work profitable for you? What alls involved in it? Is all you have to do it join random sites and post a quick link to the product and then leave it behind? What sort of follow up are you required to do? Do you ever feel weird doing it? Do you just get paid for every click the link receives? Is that how it works? Or do people actually have to buy the product before oyu see any profits?
 
The reason I ask is because lots of folks with RA and simular illnesses are homebound, and many more of us are looking for extra income. We've all read the advertisements for "Making money the easy way" on the internet; but few of us know much about it. Can you shed some light on the whole issue for us? We've heard and read so much about it all just being a scam. Have you found that claim to be way off base?
 
Did you have to pay a fee upfront to have to learn more about the opprotunity? We really are curious.

oh well slow learner.

It's a typical MLM scam - when you go to the website, the focus is on selling "opportunities" and has no real science or information about the "products" which appear to be run-of-the-mill vitamins and supplements readily available at any corner drug store. I've looked at the "information" and it just goes to prove there's a sucker born every minute. Apparently the product produces a delusional state! [QUOTE=DanaHenson]

Your response has been overwhelmingly positive and I thank everyone for your orders and for trying the product.  I look forward to hearing your testimonials on what the product has done for you. 

[/QUOTE]

it has positively given me a good laugh.  Thanks!
At least he came back; I'll give ya that one. It wasn't a total hit and run."

Informer

'Top' Financial Planner Honor Less Than It Seems

William P. Barrett, 05.03.09, 06:00 PM EDT

Consumers' Research Council of America is an elusive stalking horse for a pricey plaque seller.


SIMI VALLEY, Calif. -- Last month, the grandly named Consumers' Research Council of America touted its new 2009 edition of "Guide to America's Top Financial Planners" to the public and especially to financial pros who learned about their big honor in a mailing offering them award plaques costing as much as 3. The council, which says it produces 30 "top" guides, mostly covering medical specialties, lists a tony Washington, D.C., address on Pennsylvania Avenue, four blocks from the White House.

But the real action seems to be at the far-away office here of an outfit called S L D Industries, Inc. Its rented space is located on--we kid you not--Easy Street, near the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in this distant and dusty Los Angeles suburb.

The saga of Consumers' Research and S L D Industries is a cautionary tale for financial planners, doctors and other professionals, and for any consumer who relies on a list or ranking to choose among professionals, without looking deeper.

Here's what Forbes found:

--That prestigious Consumers' Research address in Washington is just a rented mail box in a UPS ( UPS - news - people ) Store, with no Consumers' Research workers located there.

contains the .org extension usually associated with nonprofits, there's no entity with its name registered with major U.S. charity regulators, or listed in the Internal Revenue Service's online database of 1 million-plus charities. Nor, for that matter, does there appear to be a for-profit corporation, partnership or doing-business-as registration with that name in the country, including the District of Columbia. Callers to the phone number listed on the Consumers' Research site get a tape telling them to go to the site for information."


http://www.forbes.com/2009/05/02/americas-top-financial-planners-personal-finance-consumers-research-council.html


I must say, I am completely underwhelmed with his credentials!

the fact that DanaHenson keeps coming back spells desperation to me....... nothing more.
 
go peddle your BS where someone MAY listen........
 
and FYI: It's not here.
[QUOTE=DanaHenson]Don't throw the baby out with the bath water!  His resume reads like a Who's Who in Medicine and his product works.[/QUOTE]

Then why the need to claim recognition from a fake "consumer" group?
Obviously you are truly impressed with the products you are touting. However, continuing to push you products in this rheumatoid arthritis forum is not going to influence members and in fact is, as you may have noticed, alienating them.

If you are insistent on advertising how about contacting those responsible for placing ads on this site?
You really are fan of this person.  You almost sound as if it is along the lines of a cult.  You try and try to convience us of this product as if you have been brain washed to continue even though no one wants what you are selling.
 
Have you said, do you have RA or just selling this stuff.  I personally don't believe one word you have writen and I am not going to pay the price wanted for these products.  They are way too high and I have to buy meds that my real doctor wants me to take for my real illness.
 
Send me a 3 month supply free and let me see for myself if you are lying or not.  3 months is the norm to seeing if meds are going to work or not.  If you believe in it so much you should be willing to get it out there so people can try it and by word of mouth let others know it is not a scam. 
Dude, just give it up and move on.http://www.ebm-first.com/?cat=65
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