I ordered the information and was pleased to find that it really worked. I
usually pay around $35 / mo for my medication after the insurance. Now I
pay nothing :) And whats really great is that it is not governmental or
Medicade or anything.
I think the info costed around $10 or so.
I highly suggest visiting the url.
http://www.dsinstitute.org/meds/meds.htm
Interesting. What is the catch? Who funds it? Medicine isn't free...
-rt
--
Ryan Tucker <rtuck...@ttgcitn.com> http://www.ttgcitn.com/~rtucker/
GSM/VM/Fax: +15157712865 Box 57083, Pleasant Hill IA 50317-0002
"Personally, I take it as a compliment if someone quotes me, whether or
not they ask permission." - Lionel Lauer, ASR
*On 12 Oct 1998 19:55:32 GMT, CrAnK <cd...@ticnet.com> spewed:
*>I found a place which has information that shows the general public to get
*>free prescribed medication.
*[...]
*>I think the info costed around $10 or so.
*
*Interesting. What is the catch? Who funds it? Medicine isn't free...
Looks like the catch is, you have to send those bozos ten bucks, without
having any proof that what they are offering is real. Plus, they can't
even spell -- and their grammar's not that great, either!
--
hillary gorman http://www.hillary.net in...@hillary.net
"uber vaccae in quattuor partes divisum est."
upenn school of vet med class of 2000
Ryan Tucker <rtucker+f...@katan.ttgcitn.com> wrote in article
<slrn7258mp.b.rtu...@crasher2.ttgcitn.com>...
> On 12 Oct 1998 19:55:32 GMT, CrAnK <cd...@ticnet.com> spewed:
> >I found a place which has information that shows the general public to
get
> >free prescribed medication.
> [...]
> >I think the info costed around $10 or so.
>
> Interesting. What is the catch? Who funds it? Medicine isn't free...
There's not much information there, but my suspicion is that you get the meds
if you qualify for testing programs run by pharmaceutical companies. The way
they're delivered to the doctor's office, not you, and that they're only for
people with chronic conditions tends to support that.
If you don't mind getting untested medicines or placebos I suppose it's a
good deal. It's certainly a public-spirited sort of thing to do.
They also seem to be running the "$0 down real estate" and scholarship
search rackets. I strongly suspect a few minutes on the phone with your
own doctor will give you all the information they have to offer for free.
Please observe followups...
--
This is The Reverend Peter da Silva's Boring Sig File - there are no references
to Wolves, Kibo, Discordianism, or The Church of the Subgenius in this document
> We must make sure our momentum aligns with our value-added distribution! <