>>>This isn't a chain letter. It was a valid request for a survey. I filled it out and am interested in the results.
>>
>>The request to "send it to all your friends" certainly makes it look like a chain letter.
>>
>>While the intention may have been a good one, I have a deep distrust of any message with a clause like "send to all your friends".
>>
>>Hilmar.
>
>Hilmar,
>
>Survey seemed valid. No request for money, personal information was optional and no promises of good luck or prosperity. Just a simply survey for what seems a valid purpose.
>
>Check it out... :)
>
>Renoir
I probably would have checked it out
if it weren't for the "chain letter" aspect. And I believe the message that started this thread
is a chain letter, despite its good intentions (probably; my point is not to question the intentions of the writer): simply because of the request to forward to all you know. This request will, of course, be included when you forward it, and the chain continues.
I firmly believe a chain letter is
not an appropriate method to distribute information, whether it be a (fake) virus warning, or a (more valid) request to help women in Afghanistan.
Hilmar.
Difference in opinions hath cost many millions of lives: for instance, whether flesh be bread, or bread be flesh; whether whistling be a vice or a virtue; whether it be better to kiss a post, or throw it into the fire... (from Gulliver's Travels)