If you are suffering from severe distress due to Bronchiectasis and if
you=92ve really been looking for a treatment option to get rid of it
then here you=92ve come to the right place for it=92s cure because the
treatment option that we offer is one of the best herbal treatments.
Here, at this platform you can find a solution for your problems
related to Bronchiectasis treatment. It took us a really elongated
period of time to come up with an all natural, one of its kind
treatment option to cure this disease. We have at our backend some
very hardworking and highly talented herbalists who have mastered the
science of botanical extracts and they exactly know what product will
cure what disease.
If you in actuality want to get rid of it then don=92t worry our experts
have done it for you. Our expert herbalists who have invested all
their efforts and precious time in researching organic plants in order
to figure out which natural ingredients will actually be required for
Bronchiectasis treatment have come up with a wonderful, highly
efficient treatment alternative known as Creseton which is made of
pure natural ingredients extracted from natural botanical plants. Our
product is manufactured after conducting a detailed scientific
research on all the ingredients used in it. Our team of dedicated
herbalists has researched the benefits and side effects of each and
every ingredient used in the medicine so that the product does not
have any negative impact on the patient.
Wish to know the results? Here we inform you about them; take a look!
You must be wondering what results will be witnessed after using
Creseton! You will see an unbelievable difference after using Creseton
because it cures Bronchiectasis completely and a patient using this
medicine will get rid of the disease permanently. It has no side
effects because the ingredients used are purely natural.
So what do the results tell us? Having doubts? What if Creseton
doesn=92t work?
If, in case Creseton doesn=92t really work for you the odds of which are
really low so, in that case you don=92t have to worry because the
product comes with a money back guarantee. If in case it doesn=92t suit
you then you can simply send it back to us and you can claim a return
within 40 days of receiving the product.
http://www.herbs-solutions-by-nature.com/Bronchiectasis.php
In article <[email protected]>,
Larry Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey! A new (at least to me) source of spam - posted from Pakistan.
> Of course, the website is the same old Chinese crap, this one from a
> server owned by "Domain ID Shield Service" - hows that for a name?
> Sometimes it's fun to track these things down :-).
Pity you can't physically track him down and put a few bullets through his
head, or at least his server.
--
Stuart Winsor
Only plain text for emails
http://www.asciiribbon.org
In article <8a58b33f-976b-42b9-85a5-
[email protected]>, [email protected]
says...
--Ingredient list says it contains cinnabar -- mercury sulfide.
Mercury was once used as an antibiotic until safer antibiotics were
found.
http://www.medsafe.govt.nz/hot/media/media2009.asp
Medsafe Warns of 65 Overseas Websites offering Unapproved Herbal
Products
23 November 2009
Medsafe today warned the public of 65 overseas websites that purport to
be based in New Zealand and are touting unapproved herbal products.
"We would like to warn the public that these websites are selling
products that have not been assessed for quality, safety and efficacy in
New Zealand. Neither has consent been given to the advertising or
distribution of these products in New Zealand," said Mr Derek
Fitzgerald, Medsafe's Manager for Compliance Management.
Following complaints from consumers here and overseas, Medsafe's
Investigation and Enforcement team began investigations in August into
an Internet-based business operation known as "Gordon's Herbal Research
Centre" (GHRC).
The company operates at least 65 websites offering "cure alls" for
various illnesses and medical conditions. It claims that the herbal
products had undergone clinical trials conducted "under the regulations
of FDA and the New Zealand Health Authority". The websites also provide
details of a New Zealand-based postal box, giving the impression that
the company is based here.
"Our investigations indicate that all 65 websites are operated from
overseas and are a money-making scam," according to Mr Fitzgerald.
"Contrary to the information on these websites, this operation has no
physical presence in New Zealand but is run by an individual based in
Pakistan."
Mr Fitzgerald cited that one of the products promoted on these websites,
Reneton, purportedly can successfully treat polycystic kidney disease, a
condition for which only symptomatic relief is available.
He also advised consumers "not to purchase medicines over the Internet
because it is very difficult to determine whether the products offered
are effective, safe, and legally supplied. The quality of medicines
purchased over the Internet cannot be guaranteed and consumers may be
exposed to poor quality, counterfeit products that carry serious health
risks."
ENDS
Background
Medsafe and NZ Customs took part in an international operation from
16-20 November 2009 targeting the online sale of counterfeit and illicit
medicines.The International Week of Internet Action was coordinated by
INTERPOL and the World Health Organization's (WHO) International Medical
Products Anti-Counterfeiting Taskforce (IMPACT) to highlight the dangers
of buying medicines online, and was supported by the Permanent Forum on
International Pharmaceutical Crime.
The Permanent Forum on International Pharmaceutical Crime (PFIPC) is
an international forum formed in 1998 that aims to encourage inter-
agency cooperation in combating the serious threat to public health from
the various forms of pharmaceutical crime. The PFIPC works in
cooperation with a separate Forensic Group, which provides scientific
expertise, and with other interested bodies including the World Health
Organization, the World Customs Organization, and INTERPOL. New Zealand
is a member of the PFIPC.
Medsafe has so far identified at least 65 product websites operated
by Gordon's Herbal Research Centre:
(List of websites intentionally left out.)
Richard wrote:
> On 3/1/2012 11:27 AM, Larry Blanchard wrote:
>> On Thu, 01 Mar 2012 08:47:46 -0800, dree man wrote:
>>
>>> If you are suffering from severe distress due to Bronchiectasis and
>>> if
>>
>> Hey! A new (at least to me) source of spam - posted from Pakistan.
>>
>> Of course, the website is the same old Chinese crap, this one from a
>> server owned by "Domain ID Shield Service" - hows that for a name?
>>
>> Sometimes it's fun to track these things down :-).
>>
>
> How do you do that?
>
> What do you use?
For Windows, a couple of sites I use are:
DNSstuff
http://www.dnsstuff.com/
Domain Tools
http://www.domaintools.com/
On Thu, 01 Mar 2012 08:47:46 -0800, dree man wrote:
> If you are suffering from severe distress due to Bronchiectasis and if
Hey! A new (at least to me) source of spam - posted from Pakistan.
Of course, the website is the same old Chinese crap, this one from a
server owned by "Domain ID Shield Service" - hows that for a name?
Sometimes it's fun to track these things down :-).
--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw
On Thu, 01 Mar 2012 12:59:55 -0600, Richard wrote:
>> Sometimes it's fun to track these things down :-).
>>
>>
> How do you do that?
>
> What do you use?
All you have to do is tell your email reader to show the full header.
There's usually a line like: NNTP-Posting-Host: 71.97.75.115. That one
is from your post. Then in a terminal window you type in "whois 71.---"
or "traceroute 71.---" and it will tell you the server used to post.
This is usually not the website that the poster wants you to buy from,
but he has to give you that if he wants the business. Lots of websites
will give you the location of the website servers from the name. There's
probably a way to do that from a terminal as well, but I don't know it.
There are times the spammer is smart enough to hide the origin of his
post or he posts through an anonymous server - then it takes a smarter
man than me to track it down :-).
I'm using a terminal in Linux, but IIRC things like whois and traceroute
exist in Windows as well.
--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw
On Sun, 04 Mar 2012 08:36:03 -0500, phorbin wrote:
> "Contrary to the information on these websites, this operation has no
> physical presence in New Zealand but is run by an individual based in
> Pakistan."
Interesting. Probably legal in Pakistan. I couldn't find anything about
anyone in Pakistan going after him. I did find that someone had done
some research on him:
<http://onesickmother.typepad.com/my_weblog/2009/07/gordons-herbal-
research-center-scam.html>
--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw
In article <[email protected]>,
Larry Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, 01 Mar 2012 08:47:46 -0800, dree man wrote:
>
> > If you are suffering from severe distress due to Bronchiectasis and if
>
> Hey! A new (at least to me) source of spam - posted from Pakistan.
>
> Of course, the website is the same old Chinese crap, this one from a
> server owned by "Domain ID Shield Service" - hows that for a name?
>
> Sometimes it's fun to track these things down :-).
Instills this warm and fuzzy level of confidence, right, Larry?
On 3/1/2012 11:27 AM, Larry Blanchard wrote:
> On Thu, 01 Mar 2012 08:47:46 -0800, dree man wrote:
>
>> If you are suffering from severe distress due to Bronchiectasis and if
>
> Hey! A new (at least to me) source of spam - posted from Pakistan.
>
> Of course, the website is the same old Chinese crap, this one from a
> server owned by "Domain ID Shield Service" - hows that for a name?
>
> Sometimes it's fun to track these things down :-).
>
How do you do that?
What do you use?