A FREE DIAMOND!

h0vic

Senior member
Feb 12, 2001
735
0
0
Not very small...extremely small.

<< Hi my name is Brent and I am the owner of Smalldiamonds.Com?.

Thanks for your interest in our giveaway. I just want to stop you here and take a quick second of your time to let you know EXACTLY WHAT YOU ARE GETTING INTO. We have had an overwhelming response to this giveaway, and we just want to be VERY UPFRONT about the deal. The diamond you will be receiving is very very small. It will be a real natural round polished diamond that is about 1.1-1.3 mm in diameter. It will weigh approximately .005-.01 carat (about 1 point). You must send us a Self Addressed Stamped Return Envelope. Envelopes without return postage will not be processed. Just put a regular first class stamp on the return envelope, with your address on it and we will take care of it from there.

Mail your S.A.S.E. to:
Smalldiamonds.Com
100 W. Cen. Tx. Expswy #202
Harker Hts. Tx. 76548

This giveaway is mostly for fun and to help the general public to realize that not ALL diamonds are that expensive, especially when you know of a great source like Smalldiamonds.Com ! If you want to stop now we understand. If you decide to continue?GREAT!! There are only 2 steps to finish this Giveaway.
>>

 

GnatGoSplat

Golden Member
Apr 5, 2001
1,155
1
81


<< This giveaway is mostly for fun and to help the general public to realize that not ALL diamonds are that expensive >>



Diamonds wouldn't be expensive at all if it weren't for DeBeers.
 

GtPrOjEcTX

Lifer
Jul 3, 2001
10,784
6
81


<< Diamonds wouldn't be expensive at all if it weren't for DeBeers. >>



if it weren't for Debeers then they would be a lot more expensive because there wouldn't be anyone to go mine for them since DeBeers does about 80% of the mining. if they stopped prices would skyrocket
 

kingz

Golden Member
Nov 7, 2000
1,623
0
0
Well, if people didnt feel like paying so much, diamonds wouldnt be so expensive
 

manko

Golden Member
May 27, 2001
1,846
1
0


<<

<< Diamonds wouldn't be expensive at all if it weren't for DeBeers. >>



if it weren't for Debeers then they would be a lot more expensive because there wouldn't be anyone to go mine for them since DeBeers does about 80% of the mining. if they stopped prices would skyrocket
>>



No, it's a DeBeers marketing thing over the last 100 years. There was a PBS documentary about it a while back. DeBeers created an image of diamonds as valuable, by giving and loaning them out to Hollywood celebs, etc. There are actually tons and tons more diamonds in Russia than Africa, but DeBeers made an agreement with the Russian mines to stop them from flooding the market and putting DeBeers out of business. It's a combination of great marketing and artificial market (supply/demand) control.

One heck of a scam and they've got all the ladies on their side...
 

GermyBoy

Banned
Jun 5, 2001
3,524
0
0
Diamonds are worthless rocks. Why someone would ever want something as useless as a diamond is a mystery to me. It's just primative that people want to have gold and diamonds and platinum because it's pretty. Evolve a little people.

If Africa was stripmined for diamonds, then diamonds would be less valuable than loose-leaf paper. $0.19 for a 200pack.

That's my $0.02.
 

Wah

Golden Member
Oct 16, 1999
1,799
1
71


<< Diamonds are worthless rocks. Why someone would ever want something as useless as a diamond is a mystery to me. It's just primative that people want to have gold and diamonds and platinum because it's pretty. Evolve a little people.

<<

You obviously haven't faced the wrath of woman!
 

walrus

Golden Member
Dec 18, 2000
1,544
13
81
Don't buy (or accept free) diamonds. They are traded for guns in Africa where they chop arms off babies, children and adults to create terror. IF you need an engagement ring go with a saphire or other gem.
 

GermyBoy

Banned
Jun 5, 2001
3,524
0
0
There you go Walrus!
I loved Home Simpsons engagement ring, an Onion Ring! Any woman who nags for a diamond is just going to nag you when you walk in a 3:00 smelling like your secretaries perfume.





j/k LOL
 

MrCornell

Member
Jun 15, 2001
84
0
0
Random information about DeBeers:

DeBeers was founded more than 100 years ago. They used to hold a world monopoly on the mining and distribution of diamonds (80% of the market at one point!). Recently, their monopoly has been threatened to the point that under enormous industry pressure they relinquished what used to be exclusive contracts to mine and distribute diamonds in most African countries. They now presently control roughly 40-50% of the world diamond trade. Not too shabby still. However, diamond prices have been plummetting recently due to the political instability and chronic warfare in African nations where diamonds are mined.

Random information about diamonds: [courtesy of Britannica.com]

a mineral composed of pure carbon. It is the hardest naturally occurring substance known; it is also the most popular gemstone. Because of their extreme hardness, diamonds have a number of important industrial applications.

The hardness, brilliance, and sparkle of diamonds make them unsurpassed as gems. In the symbolism of gemstones, the diamond represents steadfast love and is the birthstone for April. Diamond stones are weighed in carats (1 carat = 200 milligrams) and in points (1 point = 0.01 carat). In addition to gem-quality stones, several varieties of industrial diamonds occur, and synthetic diamonds have been produced on a commercial scale since 1960. See also industrial diamond; synthetic diamond.

Diamonds are found in three types of deposits: alluvial gravels, glacial tills, and kimberlite pipes. Only in kimberlite pipes, such as those at Kimberley, S.Af., are they present in the original rock in which they were formed, probably lying at depths of more than about 75 miles (120 km). Diamonds found in alluvial and glacial gravels must have been released by fluvial or glacial erosion of the kimberlite matrix and then redeposited in rivers or in glacial till.

Diamonds vary from colourless to black, and they may be transparent, translucent, or opaque. Most diamonds used as gems are transparent and colourless or nearly so. Colourless or pale blue stones are most valued, but these are rare; most gem diamonds are tinged with yellow. A ?fancy? diamond has a distinct body colour; red, blue, and green are rarest, and orange, violet, yellow, and yellowish green more common. Most industrial diamonds are gray or brown and are translucent or opaque, but better-quality industrial stones grade imperceptibly into poor quality gems. The colour of diamonds may be changed by exposure to intense radiation (as released in a nuclear reactor or by a particle accelerator) or by heat treatment.

A very high refractive power gives the diamond its extraordinary brilliance. A properly cut diamond will return a greater amount of light to the eye of the observer than will a gem of lesser refractive power and will thus appear more brilliant. The high dispersion gives diamonds their fire, which is caused by the separation of white light into the colours of the spectrum as it passes through the stone.

The scratch hardness of diamond is assigned the value of 10 on the Mohs scale of hardness; corundum, the mineral next to diamond in hardness, is rated as 9. Actually, diamond is very much harder than corundum; if the Mohs scale were linear, diamond's value would be about 42. The hardness of a diamond varies significantly in different directions, causing cutting and polishing of some faces to be easier than others. For detailed physical properties, see native element (table).

In the atomic structure of diamond, as determined by X-ray diffraction techniques, each carbon atom is linked to four equidistant neighbours throughout the crystal. This close-knit, dense, strongly bonded crystal structure yields diamond properties that differ greatly from those of graphite, native carbon's other form.

--------------------

There is a reference to DeBeers in the game Deus Ex. Find it if you can!
 

MrCornell

Member
Jun 15, 2001
84
0
0
BTW, the real reason they are giving these diamonds away is that they are completely worthless. They have no use either as gemstones or for industrial use. They are useless in every way. But they are pretty and shiny, so....
 
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