Posted by Cam W. on January 7, 2002, at 0:03:44
In reply to Re: Recovered and Happy! No More Drugs for Me!! » stjames, posted by Dolphin on January 6, 2002, at 19:48:32
Dolphin - Please back up your statements with scientific evidence. "Opinions" don't hold much water when placed next to randomized placebo-controlled clinical trials (although they, in themselves are not perfect).
What are "sea vegetables"? What you are describing sounds like manna, or more frighteningly, "Soylent Green". If these "vegetables" are what the company claims, don't you think some scientist, or more likely some major food manufacturing conglomerate, would have us eating these "vegetables" three times daily, to improve our nutrition?
Secrets like this cannot be kept, especially by those who have to use Amway-like marketing to ditribute their product. Why not sell retail? If the product is as you have described, the owners of the product, or it's extraction process, would be billionaires within a week, if placed on the open market.
It also seems highly unlikely that "every vitamin, mineral, bioflavinoid,...." would be found in one or three "sea vegetables". Surely, a find like this would have made the cover of Nature, or at least, NEJM. BTW, most toxins and all heavy metals, are heavier than seawater, and would appear in even the soil of the Arctic Ocean. Also, plants such as "sea vegetables" would require photosynthesis. I'm sorry, but this also leaves me in the dark. Although there is some plant life below the ice of the Arctic Ocean, it would not be in the form of vegetables.
All I ask is that you provide the names of these "sea vegetables"; just the genus and species. If the company cannot do that, then they are bordering on fradualent activity. I will stake my reputation on it. - Cam
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." - Carl Sagan
"There's a sucker born every minute." - P.T. Barnum
"Doh!" - Homer Simpson
poster:Cam W.
thread:13781
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20020103/msgs/89136.html