Brain Supplements Are a Scam, Warns Harvard Medical School (Have Some Pharma-Slop Instead!), by Ben Bartee

Only regulation protects us from the dangers posed by unregulated supplements, and keeps us on track with regulated “safe and effective” medicines and vaccines. From Ben Bartee at armageddonprose.substack.com:

Harvard Medical School is looking out for us.

Because they love us.

Because they care.

Because mutual trust between institutions and the citizens they dutifully serve is indispensable in this, Our Sacred Democracy™.

Related: The Corporate Media’s Sick Jihad Against Vitamin D

Via Harvard Health Publishing (emphasis added):

The main issue with all over-the-counter supplements is lack of regulation. The FDA doesn’t oversee product testing or ingredient accuracy — they just look out for supplements that make health claims related to the treatment of specific diseases.

In terms of brain health, this means a supplement manufacturer can claim a product helps with mental alertness or memory loss — but not that it protects against or improves dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. This way manufacturers don’t have to back up any claim that their product is effective.”

To prove the thesis that supplements are wastes of time and money and don’t produce any benefits and so you should just Trust the Experts™ and take whatever drugs Harvard is peddling at any given time (more on that later), they shot themselves in the foot and picked arguably one of the most thoroughly vetted supplements out there for brain health: ginkgo biloba.

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One response to “Brain Supplements Are a Scam, Warns Harvard Medical School (Have Some Pharma-Slop Instead!), by Ben Bartee

  1. Because they are helping. (picks nose)

    I don’t take any that are for the brain.

    Turmeric, vitamin D and B 12 would be my main ones.

    Get them before Codex Alimentarius goes live.

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