
I keep seeing this, and thinking it looks too good to be true. As a general rule, things on the internet that look too good to be true are too good to be true. I am not going to click on it anyway...
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@ 06 Jul. 2008 – 14:39:01

I keep seeing this, and thinking it looks too good to be true. As a general rule, things on the internet that look too good to be true are too good to be true. I am not going to click on it anyway...
I expect they have the draw once they have dragged in ten times the price of the car.
You should email them and ask for a cash alternative!
Heck, even if I won it, I still couldn't afford it, not with New York state taxes, title, license fees, no-fault insurances, etc...and, of course the price of petrol, let's not forget that...probably use my whole week's pay cheque just putting gas n the blinking tank.
I keep getting a company writing to me telling me I haven't replied to their last six letters and I'm missing out on a great prize...and they list about six or seven prizes...one is of course money and the rest smaller but decent prizes and then there's two more minor ones, one having 10,000 possible winners after it and I know it's one of those useless things I'm going to get so don't bother...HLOL...
Yes, a tedious scam. Mrs wife keeps getting the ones that want her to phone a premium number and listen to a long list of numbers to see what her prize is. We believe it is always the unusable holiday voucher...
Yup, that's one of them....you can post a request for the number with a stamp addressed envelope enclosed for the price of two first class stamps instead of the £1.50 and more the call costs...LOL...I've done that a couple of times and got crap back so don't bother at all now...
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Think the clue is in the word 'possible'