On 10/31/07, Ed Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Seems my signature has made quite a stir.  In my defense of my
> loooonnnnnggggg  signature, the bottom 2 links refer to tech related areas
> and my top refers to medical breakthroughs.
>
>    - I keep them at the bottom of the email so if the reader is not
>    interested at such information, they can just stop at the end of the
> body of
>    the email and resume their life.
>    - Unless I'm responding to specific points within an email, all the
>    body data will be at the top of the email (with no subliminal data
> either).
>
>    - If someone is having health issues, needs a website, or needs a
>    secure place to order a pc/book/nutritional items/etc...., and they
> happen
>    to catch the bottom part of my email, then I have done someone a favor.



Let's not get ahead of ourselves with the fake science.  Also, if you're
really just spreading the good word, why is your username in all of those
URLs?  The website builder one is fine.  It's advertising a relevant skill
and is of reasonable size.  The "Endless Shopping Experience" is probably
less relevant and the way-too-long "Medical Breakthrough" is just another
username-based referrer URL to that Market America thing.  Ah, Market
America, advancing medicine one cellphone purchase at a time.  The
advertised product descriptions make no mention of the FDA, and an all caps
warning that we can't buy it in the state of New York.  Yea, that's gonna
save some lives.

-Jay
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