The Hoax of Hope

I am skeptical about everything. I collect information carefully and take notes and pictures. I did these things when a video popped up about a new treatment for dementia, Alzheimers and Parkinson’s disease.

Dementia will likely be my fate, Parkinson’s is my sister’s. I desperately search for anything that might interfer with the progression Parkinson’s symptoms and memory loss.

We slowly lost parts of our mother over many years. It was heartbreaking to watch. I do not want to drain my family’s energy and resources by becoming a burden. We have worked really hard for what we have.

The video included two famous doctors that I respect. It also included a mention of indigenous population with high dementia incidences in Guam. Two famous actors were interviewed who claimed they had been helped by the supplement.

The cause of supposed memory decline was caused by numerous pollutants, especially cadmium chloride. Cadmium is a toxic metal. The video claimed the metal could be removed by a special honey and damage restored by an herb. Too good to be true!

Then a white and purple bottle appeared. I took a screen shot of it. Thank goodness I did this. I tried to save the video, but it disappeared. I sent it to my sister.

I searched for the bottle on the internet. The purple and white bottles looked slightly different than the photo I took. The fake FDA sticker strategically covered the brand name.

I researched backwards… Gupta, Collins, Guam, honey… FAKE, FAKE, FAKE, FAKE.

Wouldn’t it be great if REAL hope only cost $19.99 a bottle!

What a cruel way to make a buck.

FLOW