T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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491.1 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | No final answers here | Thu Sep 17 1987 19:01 | 16 |
|
I believe I may have recieved a copy of that very letter.
I also broke the chain. Even if no money gets sent, imagine
how much this must tie up the mails..... Just think of all
the *really* down and out people, who may *need* the luck, but
waste their money on postage stamps + such.
I think such letters must be composed as jokes, or by enemies
of the postal system. And, yes, I think these letters often
embody negative manipulations. I wonder what percentage of
people are motivated more by the promise of good luck, and what
percentage are motivated by fear of the bad luck ?
alan.
|
491.2 | | DV780::WILSONP | alias DVWPS::WILSON | Thu Sep 17 1987 20:13 | 8 |
| Don't forget that anyone sending chain letters though interoffice
mail can get in big trouble. A while back some clown from back
east (not sure exactly from where) sent about 20 copies of a chain
letter through interoffice mail to our office here in Denver. Talk
about sh*t hitting the fan. Sounds like the letter in .0 was real
close in content to the one we received.
Pat
|
491.4 | Consequences of breaking the chain? | DONNER::LEVETT | They're all a bunch of Baggums! | Fri Sep 18 1987 00:06 | 23 |
| It's been quite a while since I did any "looking" or replying
in this notes file, so pardon my butting in...
A couple of years ago, 2 or three days after my mother died,
I was going through my backed up mail and there was a similar chain
letter. This particular letter expounded on that fact that if you
didn't send off copies within 3 days something terrible would probably
happen to you, and it listed many examples of people commiting suicide,
losing million dollar lotteries, etc. I thought this was a terrible
practicle joke being played on me by some poor joker who really
believed, but also knew of the state of my mothers health. The
letter was postmarked the day after I informed my manager that my
mom had passed away. I tore it up and threw it away. Six months
later my "healthy" sister found out she had terminal cancer and within
3 months was also dead. Coincidence? I also had a chain letter
similar if not exact, cross my desk here in Colorado in July and tore
it up also. Dad died on the 22nd of July, yes he had been ill for
awhile and while us kids "new" he probably wouldn't make it through
the year, he was in one of his healthier periods when he died.
I really don't believe in the chain letters but still...it makes
you wonder.
_stew-
|
491.5 | Break up the Chains! | MIST::IVERSON | There's a seeker born every minute | Fri Sep 18 1987 00:24 | 11 |
| I have probably broken three or four chain letters and I and all
my near and dear ones are still alive and kicking:-)
I just can't understand why anybody would send anything so threatening
to a "friend". I think chain letters really prey on inner
ancient strong *fears* and should be squelched.
Their effect can be summed up in the words of an "ancient" philosopher:
"I know there ain't no heaven and I pray there ain't no hell." :-)
Thom
|
491.6 | A sneaky way to get 20 people... | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Fri Sep 18 1987 09:20 | 15 |
| Well Fredrick, considering that you typed in the mail for everyone to
read, I guess that you've reached more than twenty people. You did
send it out within four days, too. Is this what you meant by
manipulations? 8*D
I think that chain letters is superstition. There might be something
behind the action, but that something has been lost long ago.
Personally I think that junk mail and mail-order catalogs swamp
the post office more than chain letters. At least if you get a
chain letter you know it was sent by a person and not a computer.
I'm curious about what will happen in the next few days. The letter
can be a way to "blame" bad or good news in your life.
Dave
|
491.7 | Don't get chained | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Fri Sep 18 1987 10:10 | 12 |
| If you send out enough letters to enough people, than some of the
recipients are going to have good things happen to them, and some
of them are going to have bad things happen to them.
I've probably received 20 or so chain letters over the years, and
have ignored them all. I had nothing happen; I had good things happen
and I had bad things happen.
The mere fact that Event B follows Event A does not mean that A
caused B, or even that the two events are related.
-bs
|
491.8 | | CURIE::TZELLAS | | Fri Sep 18 1987 10:41 | 9 |
|
I received the same chain letter last Friday at my home address.
I did not do anything with the letter and am not planning to
do anything. That Friday night I won $70.00 at Bingo and the next
night I won $50.00 at Bingo. I think the letter ended up in the
trash that weekend.
Kathi
|
491.9 | The scam which swallowed itself. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 18 1987 10:57 | 35 |
| Keep in mind how "chain" letters started.
Originally, the instructions for chain letters were:
1. make 10 copies but remove the bottom name from the list of people
and put your name at the top.
2. Send those 10 copies to friends.
3. Send 1 dollar each to the 10 people on the list on the original
letter you got.
Now it is pretty clear, (if you don't think about it much) that
if NOONE BREAKS THE CHAIN, you will spend $10 plus postage for 20
letters and get back $10,000,000,000 dollars! Wow! Everybody gains!
Nobody loses!
The feds, via the post office, cracked down on this HARD. The result
was a substitution of other things than money (prayers, post cards,
whatever) and general good luck as an eventual consequence. (I
believe that *any* kind of chain letter is illegal, by the way,
but prosecution is lax if no money is involved).
Since many people resent getting chain letters, and office copiers
aren't real good at changing names, the recipients of the "gifts"
(in this case, a kiss) are other than the sender.
So you see, there is not even any good "occult" reason to believe
in these things -- they're simply a scam which won't die. And they
won't as long as their is at least one person in each generation
willing to propogate them. (There are some interesting analogues
to viruses, evolution, etc. here, but I won't persue them. You
can probably figure them out for yourselves.).
Topher
|
491.10 | Whoops. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 18 1987 11:26 | 11 |
| RE: .9
Actually the "obvious" amount you would get back from a chain is
$11,111,111,110 but who's counting.
RE: .8
Maybe the letter's backwards, and you get the good luck if you *DO*
break the chain ;-)
Topher
|
491.11 | | NONODE::JOLLIMORE | | Fri Sep 18 1987 13:07 | 9 |
| Hmmm .. the letters are always the same. The gift changes ( a dollar a
kiss, a card, a prayer) the names change (so and so won this, or had this
happen to him). But the letter is always the same. I've always broken the
chain and so far, no bad luck.
Interesting that in 1953 Constating Dias won a $2m lottery. Isn't that
BIG bucks for those days? And imagine his secretary, no copier or word
processor! She had to type 20 letters. Where's her good luck?
Jay
|
491.12 | You've only seen this one _once_?? | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Sep 18 1987 14:29 | 11 |
| I've received that very same letter a total of 4 times over the
past 7 or 8 years. I've broken every one and nothing has happened,
good or bad. For yucks I once made 20 copies of one and tacked it
up on my office wall in a folder that said Take One; a lot of people
did and we yuck-yucked our way through the deadline after which
nothing happened.
I agree that the letters tend to prey on our fears and are best
left alone (even if they weren't illegal--which they are).
Marcia
|
491.13 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Sep 22 1987 12:05 | 1 |
| I hate being forced into things so I ALWAYS throw them away_:-)
|
491.14 | Don't perpetuate the chain | FLOWER::HADRYCH | | Tue Sep 22 1987 12:51 | 15 |
| Chain letters like that; whether or not you follow-through,
still carry some type of aura or energy--just like any
object. I wouldn't carry through on those letters--that
would be maintaining the circle and impacting people who
can't (or won't) protect themselves from the influence.
I wouldn't want to blame a chain letter for what happens to me--
nor would I want to be responsible for sending a letter to someone
else and have that good luck/bad luck blamed on me.
I agree with the others who say, "don't perpetuate the chain"--
that just continues a negative stream.
--E
|
491.15 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:19 | 9 |
|
re: Mary..."I ALWAYS throw the away"
Yes, and look at what happened to *you*, dear!
;^)
Tananda
|
491.16 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:46 | 2 |
| Shhh Tananda.... (we mutations can't tell the earthlings all of
our secrets_:-)
|
491.17 | A sad experience | SYOMV::CARNELL | I gotta get another hat | Tue Sep 22 1987 20:26 | 12 |
| I received this same chain letter about 4 years ago. As many of you
have, I simply ignored the warnings and threw the letter away. Unlike
many of you though, bad luck did strike at me. Within 2 weeks I
receive 4 more copies of the same da*n letter! :-)
Paul.
Also, about this time last year a chain letter was being circulated
around the ENET via VAXmail. The net police were VERY pi**ed and a
couple of folks got repremanded. So PLEASE don't go shipping these
things around within the company.
|
491.18 | a chain of a different color | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Mon Sep 28 1987 12:30 | 15 |
| I have received many several chain letters over the past N years,
but I only really responded to one of them. It was started by
entrepreneurial women and was designed to be copied and sent on
to 10 of your entrepreneurial women friends. You would send a dollar
to the person at the top of the list. You would add your name to
the bottom of the list. You would also add, as the others did,
the reason why you want the money the letter could yield.
It never paid me as much as it promised, but it was a good idea,
and held no pretense of luck or whim.
Honesty is the best policy...
-Jody
|
491.19 | history repeats, often | INK::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Mon Sep 28 1987 14:24 | 29 |
| Re .18:
>to 10 of your entrepreneurial women friends. You would send a dollar
>to the person at the top of the list. You would add your name to
>the bottom of the list. You would also add, as the others did,
>the reason why you want the money the letter could yield.
That's how chain letters started in the first place, as a
get-rich-quick scheme. The idea's workable only as long as there
are more people left who are willing to send in a dollar. For
instance, suppose everyone sends a dollar to ten people at each
"chain" level. If there are six names between you and the first
name, then when your name comes up on top, you'd in theory get $1
million ($1.00 X 10^6), _if nobody broke the chain_. But such a
scheme would require one million people sending letters at the sixth
level (yours), ten million at the next level, 100 million at the
eighth, and one billion at the ninth. Thus, between the eighth
and ninth levels, one would exceed the entire population of the
United States. Two or more levels more, and one would more than
exceed the entire population of the Earth.
The "solution"? Get in early, and get out early. Money chain letters
have a history that goes way back; they were popular when I was
young, and I've seen variants of them over the years (one involved
savings bonds instead of cash).
They are illegal, of course.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
491.20 | .But I do prefer chain letters to chain smokers... | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Mon Sep 28 1987 21:06 | 7 |
| This might well fit in with the "Wild Theory of the Week" topic, but I propose
that a chain letter is a quasi-living thing like a virus. Think about it: they
replicate themselves, require a host, and never really go away. Thus one might
well consider them a kind of "postal virus."
John M.
|
491.21 | Speaking of scams... | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Tue Sep 29 1987 11:20 | 11 |
|
A friend called last night asking me to join what she called the
Airplane Game (for a mere $1,500!). I've heard of this as the Infinity
Process. Intuitively, I know that it won't work; can someone supply
a logical analysis of the reason it won't?
If you're not familiar with this scam, let me know and I'll post
the scenario.
Tananda
|
491.22 | Do not touch! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Sep 29 1987 11:56 | 14 |
| I've heard about this somewhere. The flaw is the same as for
monetary chain letters and pyramid sales schemes. It works fine
for the first few "tiers" but soon there is no more people available
who are willing to fork over $1500 and people start loosing money.
I would advise you to only get into it for the fun of the "game"
(expensive entertainment!) but I can't even do that. The Justice
Department wants to prosecute this under the laws forbidding pyramid
sales schemes. There seems to be some disagreement as to whether
the wording of the laws covers this case, but there is a good chance
they'll figure out how to do it. You could end up with a stiff fine or
even a jail term on top of your lost $1500.
Topher
|
491.23 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Tue Sep 29 1987 12:21 | 9 |
|
Yes, I thought that was the case, although this new scam embellishes
somewhat the pyramid scheme. It's unfortunately too late to dissuade
my friend from plunking down her cash...she got extremely agitated
(unfriendly, even!) when I suggested she call the NH Attorney General's
office for information.
Tananda
|
491.24 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Tue Sep 29 1987 12:31 | 10 |
|
I heard from a third party that the Massachusetts Attorney General's
office has looked into the Airplane Game. They apparently were
able to convince them that they are selling a product. Can you
guess what it is?
Carole
|
491.25 | some people don't want to learn | ERASER::KALLIS | Get into Halowe'en Spirit. Say `Boo!' | Tue Sep 29 1987 12:41 | 22 |
| Re .23:
> ...............................she got extremely agitated
>(unfriendly, even!) when I suggested she call the NH Attorney General's
>office for information.
An interesting point of psychology. Back in the 1960s, when I was
in Huntsville doing Space Things, there was an outbreak of a savings-
bond pyramid scheme that caused a lot of local agitation at the
time (it was _not_ done through the mail; it was done, if memory
serves, through house parties, vaguely akin to Tupperware Parties),
including a couple of front-page newspaper stories. When I pointed
out both the flaw in the practicality (running out of tiers) and
the probable illegality of the scheme, I got a significantly hostile
reaction. Some people want to believe in get-rich-quick schemes,
and woe betide any messenger who brings them bad news! Like as
not, they'll ignore advice and invest anyway [One of my Huntsville
friends said, "I know what you're saying, Steve, but when my wife
visited <the person who'd gotten a return on the scheme> and she
saw her riffling those bonds in her hands ...."].
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
491.26 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Tue Sep 29 1987 13:27 | 11 |
|
Yes, my friend was definitely glassy-eyed. I could tell that she
was beginning to have doubts after about ten minutes of conversation,
and that obviously scared her. She concluded the chat by asking
me not to "introduce any negative vibrations into the akash" about
her investment (new-age-speak for "don't call the cops"). I agreed.
Please think only happy thoughts when reading these replies.
Tananda
|
491.27 | What sort of "game" is it? | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Tue Sep 29 1987 14:07 | 1 |
|
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491.28 | WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY | PIPPER::STURNER | | Sat Sep 12 1992 02:54 | 15 |
| RE: 0
WOW, 1992 and this thing is still around. I got it in the mail
the 10th. The wording is almost exact except some of the names and
dollar amounts were slightly different. I'm going to trash the sucker.
And as far as good luck or bad, let me tell ya, if I find out who sent
this letter to me their going to have some REAL bad luck.
One thing I found curious was the address lable. It was put in the form
that my name is listed in the phone book which is just my initials and
my last name. This letter says to send it to friends and associates you
know that might need good luck. Obviosly this person just looked up
names in the phonebook.
Scott.
|