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Mister Elon Musk pushing to repair lungs...

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Good day.

Somehow intruded in my phone an almost endless video promoting to fast cure, -not relieve- pulmonary diseases, with a product 'Gluco health' at $39 and of limited availability. Good part of the video emphasizing the pharma profiting by not curing anyone by keeping the current medications that make them billions.

If the name and price am telling above after swallowing a long time watching the video is deleted from this post, I have no inconvenient, am not advertising it. Anyone knows about this space age fix formula ? He mentioned three compounds in it to achieve the cure.

Sounds like the 'beets based' and the 'NewZealand green mussels' business models.

Edit... another artificial imbecility scam ?

Edited by Externet

As one snarky Australia commentator observed, suspicion of conventional medicine and 'doing your own research' always leads to... supplements. I believe Trump's recent pick for Surgeon General (Saphier)... has a successful business selling supplements .

First, these people build their unscrupulous business on a foundation of mistrust, then they come along with their supposedly all-purpose formula. Let’s not beat about the bush if something could really cure lung diseases quickly, it’s hardly likely we’d be seeing it as a mobile phone video with a contrived sense of urgency.

Especially when it comes to the lungs, this is no laughing matter, because shortness of breath, chronic coughs and other conditions are, in my view, things you shouldn’t just experiment with. These clips still don’t provide a proper study about where talking about, a clear dosage or a genuine explanation... even after a quarter of an hour. Just some blah, blah, hype and big but dubious words.

Was there a specific mention of these substances, or did it stick to the typical “the pharmaceutical industry doesn’t want it” line, or is there also any reliable data on this?

In the US you can advertise supplements that aren’t considered drugs, and have not undergone the tests that drugs do to show safety and efficacy, but you can’t promise a cure for anything. So they always use weasel phrases; people will say it worked for them (but not that it works in general), they will say clinically tested (but not that the tests showed anything), the ads will tout how many have tried it and people will give anecdotal remarks like “I’ve used it for ten years and I feel great”. Basically they can sell placebos as long as they don’t overstep.

If they do overstep they pay a fine which might be a small fraction of their profits, so it’s not necessarily a deterrent

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