Do you this the weight lost product Sensa works ?
I tryed it and it was a waist of money .And they say they will give u the money back if your not satisifed but 30 days is not long enough to lost weight. Its just another SCAM to make money !
a waste of money !
Best answer:
Answer by ClickMaster
Well, you just joined a very big club of people who have spent money on supplements and found out they don’t work.You’re not alone.
Dietary supplements do not have to conform to the stringent standards applied to pharmaceuticals or food products by the US FDA. The result of this absence of oversight has been a scammer’s dream and the scammers have made the most of it. A huge and powerful supplement industry has grown up around this lack of government oversight which was designed to give people the freedom to explore homeopathic, naturopathic, and alternative remedies. That was the purpose of the 1994 DSHEA. Details are here –> http://www.fda.gov/food/dietarysupplements/consumerinformation/ucm110417.htm
Here’s how the scammers work. They flood the internet with ads, bogus reviews, fake articles, fraudulent scientific white papers, phony blogs, scam articles, and even scam stories designed to expose the competition while promoting their products as the only “real” supplement that works. Their strategy is to drown out the truth and dominate the search engines so no matter where you look on the web you’ll find only good things about their products. Check out this link about the big Shakeology scam —> http://trek2befit.com/shakeology-scam . Did you notice how it’s really just an ad for Shakeology. The reason you find it when you search for “Shakeology scam” is because they want to be everywhere you’re looking with advertising. That’s how scammers dominate the internet.
Watch this investigative report from CBS News to see how one scammer works. –> http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5196740n&tag=related;photovideo (you’ll have to sit through a quick commercial message first).
Scammers target the young and credulous demographic because they know they can sway them with greater ease than the older, wiser buying public. But, there are some easy questions you can answer using simple logic to be able to qualify a scammer as suspect. Here are some examples.
• If there was an easy way to do hard things like burn fat or build muscle, why doesn’t the whole world know about it? How could that be kept secret when that’s what so many people desire?
• If there were supplements that could help burn fat or build muscle, why haven’t the huge and powerful pharmaceutical companies taken them over? Why let the scammers like GNC and Weider continue to make $ millions off the public when they have a much greater capacity for providing such products?
• If there was a supplement that helped people shed pounds, why doesn’t your doctor know about it? If you’re overweight, why doesn’t your physician just give you the pill or recommend the acai or HCG diet or whatever? Why are physicians always telling the same story about obesity and how to cope with it?
• Why do people pay big bucks to have liposuction or stomach stapling if supplements could really help them to lose fat?
• If protein supplements, creatine, nitrous oxide, etc. really helped build lean muscle mass, why don’t Olympic athletes use them? Why don’t they feed them to our military personnel in boot camp or billets around the world? Why are they not used in every police department or correctional institution around the US? Why don’t the scammers tell you their success stories? You will never see an endorsement of a supplement from the military. You will, however, find many military articles warning their people away from such trickery. Here’s one example –> http://military-fitness.military.com/2011/03/sneaky-muscle-supplement-scams.html
There is only one good answer to all of these questions. Most of the supplements which are supposed to make you lose fat, add muscle, grow taller, kill appetite, gain weight, bulk up, get ripped, etc. just don’t work. It’s really that simple.
Check out this list of over 60 dangerous supplements products sold with bogus advertising claims which scam-site bodybuilding.com was forced to recall and take off the market –> http://www.usrecallnews.com/2009/11/bodybuilding-com-supplements-recalled-may-contain-steroids.html . Does the human race really need 60 supplements just for muscle building and thousands of other supplements for other things? Can 100,000 years of evolution and eating food really be that wrong?
When surfing the web for supplements, be skeptical, use critical thinking, and always validate your information before believing it to be true. The golden rule for intelligent consumerism is still…
If it sounds too good to be true, it’s probably a scam.
Last but not least, read this –> http://www.cspinet.org/nah/09_07/mfj_supplement.pdf
Good luck and good health.
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