Added: 1 year ago
From: fredcarillo
Views: 18,220
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  • Ionized water is the real deal. Contact someone near you to try KANGEN water for FREE. The proofs in the puddin'. Everyone who says this is a scam has obviously never tried it before, because if they did, they would know it works, simple as that. Also, click on the username of people who claim its a scam; it's all they ever do on every video they watch. What are you guys trying to sell anyway?

  • Thank you again Fred!!

  • SCAM!!

  • @satterelli1 Because your comment has no merit behind it whatsoever, what are you suggesting people consume?

  • Please don't waste your money on this crap

  • @joyfulnoise123 yes dont waste ur money on water... is it really that harmfull to try? or expensive

  • @lebpride69 I think what you mean is "Don't throw good money at bad water." If not, are u suggesting that it is somehow more ideal to consume and quite literally be composed of acidic, oxidative, expensive, carcinogenic bottled water/reverse osmosis? Or are u suggesting that u should drink tap water, which has FLUORIDE, heavy metals, agricultural run-off, pharmaceutical remnants, etc, in it? Everyone who says this is a scam clearly has never felt ionized Alkaline KANGEN water work in their body.

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  • Kangen Water works....if you dont beleive it...try it!

  • You know Christopher Columbus, the Wright brothers and even Jesus had their debunkers. . .need I say more+

  • @Kehau5050 That statement is so ridiculous in so many ways. First of all, I'd say you didn't use the term "debunker" properly. Sure there were probably many nay-sayers with regards to the Wright brothers' goals, but those people were certainly predominantly the non-science-minded people. Scientists and engineers knew human flight was possible, the question was how to make it viable, and the answer with with R&D, or flat out trial and error.

  • @Kehau5050 Christopher columbus has nothing to do with the earth being a sphere if that's what you're talking about. People long long ago knew it was a sphere. Columbus set out to prove that a ship could reach Asia by sailing west from Europe. He believed that the world was only about 12,000 miles (19,300 km) around at the equator when most people believed, correctly, that it was about 24,000 miles (38,600 km) around at the equator. He was WRONG — he didn't follow science.

  • I had to have this water,it change my life i must say..

  • Also, if you care to, check out Dr. Hiromi Shinya...world renowned endoscopic surgeon, or Dr. Horst Filtzer..Harvard educated vascular surgeon, or Ray Kurzweil, considered on of the top scientists in the country...etc., etc.

  • I am through replying to people I don't even know, that are obviously uneducated about this technology, who do a cursory look @ the technology. I've been educating myself about this for over 2 years and am satisfied we are doing the right thing. Also, if it were possible, I could introduce you to well over 150 families who have had life-changing results by changing the water they put in their body. What makes it worth $2300 more is that it actually works when taken as recommend.

  • @ljharp1230 No you are having a placebo effect or you stopped drinking coffee and soda and replaced it with water, which gave you a benefit. There is no "education" to be had on this machine. The principle violates basic laws of chemistry . Water has no reaction to the eletrolysis whatsoever, the salts in your water do. Those lose their hydrogen atom and form sodium hydroxide and sodium hypochlorite, neither one is good for you and the water is unchanged but has those high PH chemicals in it.

  • @MindofaJedi sounds like you know what you're talking about, but you obviously don't.

  • @ljharp1230 No you are having a placebo effect or you stopped drinking coffee and soda and replaced it with water, which gave you a benefit. There is no "education" to be had on this machine. The principle violates basic laws of chemistry . Water has no reaction to the eletrolysis whatsoever, the salts in your water do. Those lose their hydrogen atom and form sodium hydroxide and sodium hypochlorite, neither one is good for you and the water is unchanged but has those high PH chemicals in it.

  • This machine is sold for $4,000 yet there are other machines such as the Alphion that sells for $1,700 so please explain what makes the Kangen worth $2,300 more? Also, do any of you salesmen and women have a Science Degree to understand the intricate details of how this works?

  • Kangen water is a complete scam, people. If you want evidence ask me. It's a multi-level-marketing scheme, and everyone who buys one can become a salesman and they get a cut of whatever one of their underlings can sell.

    Please listen to me, as this $4000 waste of money will NOT cure you of anything, and if it does, it's placebo I'm sure.

    Look into the names of people, Himoto or whatever (water crystal picture guy) is a fraud, and his experiments are shady and have no valuable information

  • @MrGravityDance you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about...of course it doesn't cure anything...it's just gonna hydrate your body better than anything you may currently be doing.  Do you really think you are doing a service slamming something you have no authority or expertise about? Unfortunately, your ignorance and misinformation will actually be believed by some...shame on you buddy.

  • @ljharp1230 It's a Multi-level marketing scheme. There are literally hundreds of "Water ionizerS" and all that garbage out there. And for $4,000 plus... haha

    Nuff said.

    Water is water. I've had the stuff. Nothing special, a complete waste of money in my opinion. DO what you guys want, but there are no legitimate academic/scholastic articles on the matter. Dr. Himoto is psuedoscience, and all the others I can GUARANTEE are not true, academic articles, but those published in alternative medicin

  • @MrGravityDance you're mistaken....Ever heard of Dr. Shinya? World renowned endoscopic surgeon. Dr. Horst Filtzer? Harvard educated vascular surgeon. Dr. Tim McKnight? Ph.d, N.D., M.D.? etc., etc. Nuff said. I stand by my comments...you don't know what you're talking about....have a great day.

  • @ljharp1230 I'm in the process of looking up your information because unlike you, I remain skeptical until good reason suggests otherwise.

    Have you looked up the multi-level marketing scheme? Or found scientific (non wiki based) articles?

    I go to a prestigious university, and I've researched the effects of alkaline water.. it's not very significant. Plus, you can get the same effect of alkalinity with a little baking soda. Food for thought.

  • @MrGravityDance Skepticism is a good thing. I doubt you are no more skeptical than myself. Once you start looking deeper, you will see there is a wealth of evidence supporting the benefits of drinking a restructured, ionized, high anti-oxidant alkaline water. They happen to be verifiable, measurable properties. Alkalinity is only one of the properties of the water. It's ability to hydrate is actually more significant. Yes and yes to your questions. Good luck w/ school.

  • @ljharp1230 Thank you. I'm no firm believer. I HAVE had the stuff (my friend is a "salesman" or whatever. It tastes kinda funky haha. Especially the 11.5 very basic water.

    Sorry if I went outta my way to try and do this haha. NO matter who is right here, it was wrong of me to do this.

    GOd speed

  • @ljharp1230 I have an Alkaline Water machine and there wasn't any change. verifiable?, measurable? Cite your sources and any peer reviews.

  • @ljharp1230 "It's ability to hydrate is actually more significant."

    Sounds an awful lot like "my water is wetter". Google "Snake Oil on Tap" if you are really interested in the facts. You certainly won't find any science that backs the claims made by the people selling this.

  • @sweetclaire06 Already have the facts I need. Not trying to sell anyone of you anything anyway. This is my last post on the subject as I have better things to do than reply to these silly posts. Have a wonderful life.

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  • @sweetclaire06 Sucks that so many people blindly buy into it.

    I'm a VERY spiritual person, and love believing in things like mind-over-matter techniques or ways to influence the reality around you consciously, but that doesn't mean I'll believe any bullshit someone comes up with. Open-minded skepticism. I've DONE the research (good friend bought a machine) and it is bs.

  • @MrGravityDance open-minded skepticism is normal skeptisism. You seem to be indicating that you believe things that do not have proper evidence, maybe just because "they make sense to [you]", or "seems reasonable". I am inferring from your statement that you're more of a "skeptic" that will take some things by faith, and hence are not a real skeptic at all — especially when you mention that you are a very spiritual person.

  • This is worth looking at for all water drinkers! Got 6 minutes? it's worth your time to really grasp this video!

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