Krez stfu i admit u owned me with 3 times my ping i dont deny the truth.
a cheaper price because it eliminates the middle man.
peewee post the links on walmart.com of the cheaper products
Quote from: krez on January 11, 2009, 04:07:15 PMpeewee post the links on walmart.com of the cheaper productsyeah, cuz walmart.com (i don't think any retail site does) doesn't list baby food.$23 for 24oz doesn't sound any higher/lower then @ the local super market/walmart/target/bj's. I was just there the other day too & checked the prices, but now I forget!
Pyramid scheme. Your success depends on the failure of others instead of earning your success through work.. but I'd do it too if I was certain that I'd make money.
FORBES MAGAZINE REPORTS THAT FORMER TOP GUN AMWAY RECRUITER NOW RUNNING SAME SCHEME AT MONAVIEJuly, 2008Orrin Woodward, a former top level distributor at Amway/Quixtar made millions recruiting consumers into Amway, 99% of whom lost money. He told them if they bought his special “marketing tools” they could make money in Amway, and they could earn additional money by selling these tools to other recruits. The tools scheme was called “Team.” 99% of those who bought into the “Team” income scheme lost money. So, 99% of Woodward’s recruits never earned a profit in Amway/Quixtar. And of those who invested in his separate "Team" marketing business, 99% of them never earned profit from that scheme either, compounding their losses on top of their losses in the Amway scam. Now, Woodward is running exactly the same scheme at the MLM scheme called Monavie. A recent Forbes magazine article details the scheme and documents that 99% of the consumers who are buying into Woodward's Team income plan never earn a profit selling Team "tools"... More…
Near midnight on a recent June evening Orrin Woodward, cofounder of a company called Team, took the stage at the Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio. Music blared. Lights flashed. Seven thousand people, who'd paid $90 each to get in, cheered wildly."Struggle is a part of every great victory," intoned Woodward. "Leaders," he went on, "are dealers in hope."Hope, for most of Woodward's audience, is a fruit juice gussied up in a wine bottle labeled MonaVie and sold for $39. Unload enough of this stuff on friends, recruit them to do the same, and you can be rich.Woodward, by contrast, doesn't have to sell a drop of the concoction to make a killing. Team, rather, sells things that help people sell things like MonaVie. Team sells "tools"--$258 sets of motivational compact discs, $69 Team shirts and books like Woodward's Launching a Leadership Revolution, all of which filled the Nationwide Arena's hockey rink. Outside, a black Mercedes-Benz gleamed next to a sign saying "Work hard, go black diamond, get one of these!"...
FREE enterprise @ its finest.Individuals chose to participate, and some make a lot of money.