Do this trick at bedtime and wake-up with insane levels of energy. Just takes 45 seconds per day. Sounds ridiculous and it is.
At many holiday resorts and city centres you will find people selling fake designer goods. One such person sent a mass emailing – claiming to have thousands of expensive leather briefcases at very low prices. This scammer must have bought a scam email address list as a flood of the emails turned up at the radio station each to a different made-up email address that we’ve seen before. His email address is ratudjakalenoleda @aol.jp and that name doesn’t sound very Japanese. All fake of course.
Mr. Anthony Kananga (that’s the name of the bad guy in the James Bond film Live and Let Die) tells me I have won $850,000 in a recent LDR lottery and I just need to forward my name, address, phone number occupation etc. to him for confirmation. He doesn’t know my name so I cannot have won but then I didn’t enter the lottery in the first place – even assuming such a lottery exists. Pathetic.
An email claiming to be from Amazon says that further information is required and a statement of account is attached for me to download. However the link is to a web page not a document and the actual sender is a ridiculous address (kaosdkoqwko723tnxo9qwndgksjdh-74102 @n.urtgasdop.org ). All fake of course.
“Can you imagine putting on a weird sound and have your baby enjoy restful sleep in minutes without waking up once?” is the sales pitch from a dumb scammer. For some reason, scammers love using the word ‘weird’ in their scam product descriptions as if it magically confers believability on whatever their greed has led them to try selling. There is no such weird sound and it is understandable that parents can become desperate to find a way to get their baby to sleep, but hopefully not so desperate as to believe a word of such rubbish.
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