http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/23/national/23DIET.html
Well worth the read - shows how Hydroxycut and Xenadrine marketing was based on some very questionable "scientific" research practices and coersion - even when it came to product safety and risking the health of customers. This isn't to imply that ECA products have been proven dangerous, but it sure shows that the companies selling the stuff don't give a shit, and will go as far as hiding research findings before letting the public know about potential dangers.
It requires nytimes registration. For those who are incredibly paranoid and think everyone is WATCHING you on the internet (I never understood that one, how boring would that be to watch 3 billion people surf the web), enter fake registration info.
freag34
Well worth the read - shows how Hydroxycut and Xenadrine marketing was based on some very questionable "scientific" research practices and coersion - even when it came to product safety and risking the health of customers. This isn't to imply that ECA products have been proven dangerous, but it sure shows that the companies selling the stuff don't give a shit, and will go as far as hiding research findings before letting the public know about potential dangers.
It requires nytimes registration. For those who are incredibly paranoid and think everyone is WATCHING you on the internet (I never understood that one, how boring would that be to watch 3 billion people surf the web), enter fake registration info.
freag34