Beware Of Fake Viagra Impotence & Erection Correction Pills
Half the Viagra sold on the internet is fake.
There are many web sites that sell Viagra and similar drugs. Many of them are outright thieves. Many of them sell counterfeit Viagra to unsuspecting people at highly inflated prices.
When you buy Viagra on the internet, there are lots of people trying to rip you off. For instance, you may order Viagra 50mg, but they sell you 100mg tablets broken in half. Sometimes you get a little baggie of half-tablets and Viagra crumbs. And when you call the "1-800" on the site you brought the pills from to complain, all you get is the run-around.
Another common scheme is that people try to sell you sell so-called generic Viagra. Generic drugs made in foreign countries outside the US and Canada are highly likely to be substandard. Third World countries do not have the quality control like we have in America.
For instance, if you live in India or Cambodia or China, there is nothing to stop you from opening a pill factory to manufacture a blue pill that is supposed to be Viagra. The authorities may take years to catch on to scammers if they catch on at all.
The poorer the country is (such as China and Mexico, two major sources of counterfeit Viagra) the easier it is to bribe local officials to look the other way. One hundred dollars goes a long way out in the boondocks of China or Mexico.
In fact, wealthy people in poor countries often buy their medicines from America because they know not to trust the medicines that come from their own countries!
It is very common for people visiting poor countries such as India or Russia to buy a year's supply of medicine and take it back home with them for their ailing parents.
Be very careful and avoid buying Viagra from Asia, South America, Mexico and the Caribbean because that's where a lot of the fake Viagra comes in from.
Another reason to avoid buying Viagra from outside the United States and Canada is that the shipping is more unreliable and the pills might be confiscated when it reaches Customs. This is happening more and more each day as the FDA and the DEA crack down on the illegal importation of drugs into the USA.
In general, the farther away the Viagra seller is, the easier it is for them to rip you off.
Things To Be Suspicious Of:
You want to make sure there is a return address on the web site. It should be a real address not a P.O. box. If there is no address that is a bad sign. They might be in India or Peru for all you know. Why would someone want to hide their address? No address means that they do not want you to know where they are and that they are hiding something.
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They should have a toll free telephone number. If something goes wrong you want to be able to speak to a real live person. It is a pain-in-the-neck to be only able to communicate by e-mail.
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Test the telephone number before you place your order. Ask the person who answers the phone where the product is shipped from. If they don't answer to your satisfaction, it's a bad sign.
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Ask them if they do the shipping and handling or if they only do the billing.
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There is a good chance that the person on the other end of the phone is just a go-between; merely a clerk in front of a credit card machine, doing the billing for 100's of Viagra websites as well as other websites selling everything from diet drugs to rubber blow-up dolls.
Their job is answering the phone and ringing up your sale. After your credit card has been charged, the relationship is over. In many instances, they have no idea who the Viagra merchant is; all they know that once a month they get a commission check from someone they have never seen or met in person.
You get what you pay for. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is too good to be true. You are better off paying $10.00 per pill and getting the real thing than paying $6.00 per pill and getting a fake.