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I've always thought they were a waste of time but my mum's mate just won on them & bought herself a swanky new house & car! Honestly!

2006-06-07 10:34:36 · answer #1 · answered by bee 1 · 2 0

They are real but keep in mind the many many people that enter and your chances of winning but then somebody wins maybe just maybe it'll be you. You don't have to buy to enter sweepstakes and your chance of winning does not increase because you buy It's against the law to run phony sweepstakes and Readers Digest also has a reputation etc to uphold. Good Luck

2006-06-18 17:22:31 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

They are mostly real, but you will probably spend more money trying to win a prize at those odds then the prize will be worth when you get it. Also, if you win a large prize you must pay taxes on it which will probably mean you will have to sell the prize to pay the taxes. Learn what this means:
Proverbs 13:11, Wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished: but he that gathereth by labour shall increase.
God Bless You

2006-06-16 12:46:41 · answer #3 · answered by barbimine 1 · 0 0

I too am fascinated by the way they waste so much of paper on each subscriber..but I have seen them giving out the list of winners of the sweepstakes in one of the digest books..though Ive never responded to those sweepstake offers..

2006-06-06 20:01:27 · answer #4 · answered by Deep 4 · 0 0

The prizes are real, but your odds on winning them are something else. I enter their contests, same as Publishing Clearing house but I do not buy anything, just say 'no' to the additional prizes.

2006-06-20 05:50:41 · answer #5 · answered by tamerisk11 3 · 0 0

i do no longer possibly do analyze on Muslim charities, because of the fact i do no longer could see issues to have confidence that somebody from a faith could be stable. apart from, different than the middle East, maximum muslim worldwide places are those in want of help, they don't have the money to do charity on a international point. you could watch Al-Jazeera, you will get surely techniques on the Islamic international there. They suggested on a Muslim help organization as quickly as, which BBC and CNN all refused to broadcast. i will supply you with an occasion of a muslim state nonetheless. I stay in one, the place there's a pair of two% minority of Christians, Hindus, Jains, Buddhists, and different religions. each and every thing from Eid to Buddha Purnima gets a countrywide trip right here, and the form, aids, healthcare, taxes, is all equivalent for each man or woman. surely no bias. of direction, fundies emerge now and then, yet its no longer merely from the Muslim edge, and the govt.constantly manages to preserve it. Edit: if your going to forget approximately approximately posiitive comments merely because of the fact there are no supplies or hyperlinks provided, in step with hazard you're able to do your man or woman analyze, extremely of asking human beings on an solutions communicate board.

2016-11-14 07:40:49 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The prizes are real, but you have a very slim chance of winning anything.

2006-06-13 19:54:28 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Of course you are wasting your time along with millions of others, more chance of being run over by a steamroller springs to mind. Don't get sucked in by them, or you will have books coming out of the roofspace..

2006-06-06 20:12:49 · answer #8 · answered by cheltenham4 2 · 0 0

Actually your odds of winning are better than the lottery. I won $25k a few years ago and my mom won a diamond watch about 12 years ago.

2006-06-13 09:22:50 · answer #9 · answered by anywho 1 · 0 0

Prizes are real?, Yes

2006-06-16 21:39:43 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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