|
Hoaxes and Urban Legends: Forwarding email will help child with cancerWhenever you receive an email that urges you to immediately forward that mail to everyone you know, there is a very good chance the email is a hoax. Please take the time to verify the message by doing a Google search before you send it on to anyone else. In most cases when you take an arbitrary sentence from the message and google for it you'll end up with many hoax warning pages as the result.The following email is one such hoax. It says the Make A Wish Foundation will donate seven cents toward the medical bills of a child dying from cancer for every address you forward this email to. This is completely fake. Amy Bruce does not exist. Please forward the URL of this page to teh person who sent you this email. The Foundation has made no promise of donating money for forwarded emails because it has no way of knowing if or how many times anyone forwards any email. Whoever came up with this sick joke is taking advantage of the good will of helpful people. The story pushes all the right buttons: A sick, innocent child, the double victim of abuse and cancer. Yet it's all a lie. This hoax has been around since 1999 and is documented as a hoax on several websites. If you want to help cancer victims, get out your credit card and donate to a cancer charity of your choice instead of clicking the forward button for this hoax mail. Please review:
Amy Bruce Charity Hoax (urbanlegends.about.com)
Known email hoaxes: Example chain letter:
Subject: Cancer in Children (please do not delete!)
|