Added: 3 years ago
From: BeanMeister22
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  • Do you really think an intelligent person would believe your poor speech? Think again, and give some proof of your words.

  • The University of Michigan has been running studies on the foot detox baths. FDA is on a population/Greed control mission with pharma's driving the FDA approved drugs. Ever here of hydro Oxygen drops or Collide Silver why does the FDA NOT tell us about those and how cheap they are??

    If your sick and on your back what will you try to get well? I like prayer and detoxing and drinking trace minerals and taking small doses of Collide SIlver and drinking lots of alkaline water. Your Agenda please??

  • Comment removed

  • Ionizing the water pulls out the copper (Green) Iron (Red) Calcium (white)

    It does not seem to work. there is a movie that shows the water changing color with a Carrot in the water. hope this helps

  • people dont realize that the toxins are not meant to soak out of your feet into the water. the machine is meant to send the electrical current through your body to remove the toxins from your cells so your kidneys and other organs can dispose of them through your bodily waste. the foot bath is so you dont recieve an electrical burn. in this society of instant gratification people are too quick to judge something that they have no concept of how it is supposed to work.

  • lol the fda is as corrupt as it gets bud... lose some weight! or eat more aspartame! how about high fructose corn syrup which the FDA says is safe... lol it contains MERCURY!

  • Are you desperate for another video to post? One thing for sure you don't need to worry about being "seemingly intelligent". What does the FDA know? plthhhh!

  • @roughout Listen, I hate the FDA. I just used it as an example of a more unbiased entity looking into whether these claims where true or not. Just so you know, I've done a lot of research since posting this video, and the claims about how this works are all false. This is simple chemistry, and any fool paying money for one of these, or paying to use one, is just that...a fool. BTW, I also bought one of these as part of my research; but I'm not a fool :)

  • @BeanMeister22 that last response of yours ("and any fool peying money for one of these, or paying to use one is just that... a fool) well guess what ;if you trruly put this out to help people, you would never berate people who may be ignorant or not know better by labeling them as fools. at one time or another we all have learned and so the delibertaly ignorant person is you which qualifies for very mcuh as a fool. enjoy your "bliss".

  • @BeanMeister22 if you think FDA is a good reference just look at "Dr Burzynski movie full version" Also look at "The Burzynski Movie Clip - Sgt. Schiff's Testimony" it is a very interesting testimonial.

  • FDA approves anything that keep people sick; Fuck the FDA!!!

  • Finally a great video on this scam.

    The sludge and the color are actually products of oxidation of the electrodes. Mainly iron(III) insoluble compounds. Oxide, hydroxide, maybe some carbonate, too.

    If you turn on the woo woo device without putting your feet inside, there'll be no difference. The electrodes will slowly corrode and you'll get the same ugly looking fluid.

    This is simple electrochemistry and no one who even had a brush with it won't be fooled and not recognize electrocorrosion.

  • if you do some research youd know that the fda will never regulate any type of natural product. WhY? because then there wouldnt be ppl taking medications. go on and keep taking that poison the fda does regulate. ill go with natural remedies any day. please do ur research ppl. A

  • if you do a little rese

  • These things are just more proof that mind over matter works. The chemistry behind these machines are simple: iron + na (salt) + electrical current + time = ionized metal (rust).

  • @spicyinmyeyesdave How's the corrosion proof that "mind over matter works"? What do you mean? Do you even understant what you've said?

  • You are ruing the sucker-system. Stupid people buying things they don't need is the foundation of this country's economy, and letting people know how stupid they're being undermines the whole damn thing. Frankly, sir, I find it profoundly un-American that you would try to educate youtubers like this when you could be developing your own detox system and selling it it to dopes for exorbitant fees instead. Maybe you should make a hand-based version.

    I forgive you. This time.

  • My friend, if you know anything about the FDA you would know that they are totally influenced by the big pharmaceutical companies. How many times have I met people who used natural means to achieve a cure that my doctor and their doctor knew nothing about. ? Hundreds.

  • "Seemingly intelligent people" learn all they can about something before posting videos to the world. Also interesting that this guy is not a fan of government but is a fan of the FDA. I would say that "scam" is a powerful word to promote narrow minded viewpoints about the efficacies of something neither tried not researched. Get off the pedestal. It's wobbling.

  • It is amazing that this Dumb Ass has so much faith in the FDA which will let thousands of Pharmaceutical Drugs on the market that have pages of bad side effects. He can continue to get his poisonous vaccinations and pop the pharmaceutical poison pills that do not ever cure a disease but only hide the symptoms. Most illness is the result of bad diet or deficiencies in your diet and will not be cured by some new magic Pharmaceutical Pill. I have tried these foot baths and I feel better doing it.

  • Not a rep for ionic baths or anything but bring it to the FDA? LMFAO! - What you think the FDA cares about people? lol.. haven't you heard? .. In today's world it's called being "Awakened" lol and many are waking up to the "Real" World around us..... I am just saying, i do not own ionic pads, have thought about it, and technically it makes sense, but like i said not for or against so no unjust attacks folks.Che

  • @multidimensionalman What exactly does "technically" make sense? Did you do an experiment? Do you know the electrochemistry behind this scam?

  • @endimion17Seriously? You have to be kidding me? you don't care or believe it so why question it like you have an interest? You don't know the science behind it? i mean do i have to be a teacher at this particular moment? i mean whats the deal here? i'm a guy voicing my opinion why ask me? why not research it? why not ask the person who posted this vid? or the folks that sell these things? why not go straight to the source instead of harassing me about it? how is that sensible?

  • Testimonies under FDA Foot bath as key words in google

  • 3 0f 3 Maybe there are no Toxins, maybe its the IONS, or the electrolysis, maybe its the placebo effect but it worked.!!

  • @LifeAndHerbs It did what exactly? "Made you feel better"? Some people feel better after wife beating, but does that mean its's a cure for anything?

    "It made me feel better" must be one of the stupidest arguments ever, especially when you invest in a costly rusting bathtub plugged into the mains. You could just as well connect nails to a battery and soak them in the tub.

    Try vibrating foot massagers with bubbles. They cost a whole lot less and actually do something - massage your feet.

  • 2 of 3 on women and now they have a new remedy cause the first one...OOppps sorry for giving you cancer. Read Testimonies

  • it did not let me finish my comment

  • 1 of 2. A man that stands in front of a camera and only shows his upper body cause he is so fat can't and should not stand and make claims against Naturopath and Holistic treatments. To many claims are pure proof of the benefits against Ionic Foot Baths. All Doctors can say "it must be a Placebo" cause they don't understand it. Also DOCTORS gave thousand of proscriptions of hormone therapy to women which they knew it would eventually cause cancer....

  • I wonder what motivates this guy to take time to make this video. At the end of the video it is clear he is afraid of something. his laughter isn't believable . he has been paid to mock this product and it shows. 

  • I wonder what motivates this guy to take time to make this video. At the end of the video it is clear he is afraid of something. his laughter isn't believable . he has been paid to mock this product and is shows.

  • It is definitely a scam. It turns brown when you turn it on and put your feet in it because you complete the circuit so a redox reaction takes place. It think it's Iron that's in a solid form which loses electrons, it's oxidized, forming Fe2+ which creates that lovely brown color, not toxins. Then the H+ ions are reduced, they gain electrons, forming hydrogen gas.

    Their "science" is BS

  • @ihatenames2 It is a scam, but you're wrong about the details. The body never completes the circuit. That could very well kill a person. There is a completed circuit, between the electrodes and salty water. And the color is Fe3+. Fe2+ is way to unstable, and is greenish. You're right about the hydrogen, though.

    So yeah, it's a scam. It makes "toxins" even when there aren't any feet inside the water. A New Age scam for stupid people having problems with lumps of money in their pockets.

  • You didn't persuade me AT ALL.

  • If you think the FDA is looking out for the good of the American public you're even dumber than you sound on this video. Do some research.

    It's not a "magic solution". It's salt in tap water. You should try one. Get some toxins out of your brain.

  • If you think the FDA is looking out for the good of the American public you're even dumber than you sound on this video. Do some research.

  • See "Homemade detox footbath" on YouTube. No feet, same color change.

  • I can recommend reading "Bad Science" by Ben Godlacre. The Detox-Baths produce a placebo effect and have no physiological basis. "Toxins" are ill defined and the water turns dark because the electrodes oxidate. It also turns brown if you put nothing in there at all. It is a scam. Just employ a little doubt and ask the right questions, than you will get it.

  • Search for the A Major Difference website and click on “Research” at the top of the page. You will find substantive research regarding the Ion Cleanse detox foot baths including blood and water tests. They also has a 30-day money-back guarantee for their foot baths. Any unsatisfied customers can return their machine for a full refund. Check their BBB score. That’s what I did. If they were promoting snake oil, I’m sure that would be reflected in customer complaints.

  • Most people say that it does not work through your feet because that is the job for your liver and kidneys, but why then does your body push toxins out through your face and nose as in blackheads, etc?

  • ya its garbage and a hoax its called i feel bad my sis bought one at a huge price probably 1500to 2000 its called positive ion charged its a basic thing commercial fishboats used to use to attracr fish to there steel trolling wires called a positive voltage charge the fishing boat is charged negative and the zincs on the vessel are sacrificial anodes same thing they use in the baths the colour of the water change is the minerals in the sacrificial anode in the footbath due to the slight + charg

  • Well It does to work, yes the array has Iron In It & You wear a wrist band that sends a small signal to the array which activates a relay & more current then goes to the array then the Iron Electroplates the Water & the Water turns a brownish orange but feet but the body & feet sweat to try to get rid of Infections & during a little bit of time Your feet as a conductor In the Water & a Electromagnetic polarization Is going through Your feet drawing out metals & other conductors, Not work well?

  • Not approved by the FDA???? you may want to check the vitamins you purchase at your local drugstore because even Centrum vitamins are NOT approved by the FDA. That doesn't mean jack!!! Also, most herbal supplements are not approved by the FDA!!!

  • i WATCHED you video, all I can say is I have spent over $2 grand on out side the box curse for my ringing ear, everyone promised if it doesn't work, they would send my money back, not one worked sadly, and yep not one, not one gave me a penny back.

    now days i just offer, I will give $2,000 cash for anyone that can cure my ear, but no money up front, and not one,not one ever takes me up on the offer.

  • You seem to be Rush Limbaugh's mentally challenged little brother. I don't know anything about these footbaths, but I'm not making youtube videos saying I don't know how it's supposed to work but I THINK i'ts a hoax. You wasted my time and the time of ANYONE who watched this video.

  • Bean, your probly right, however; the FDA has conscistently failed to provide adequet food and medical research for law. Do some research on RGBHT, Vioxx, Celebrex, Thalidiamide, and check out the patent process. Its ileagal to patent organic or botanical remedies and treatments which means the synthesized versions are the money makers, also realize that the less complicated and more efficient a treatment is, the less the corporation will make, period. This is probably snake oil, but...

  • Although I think the footbaths are a scam, I disagree that the lack of FDA approval is significant. It costs $250,000,000 to do all of the studies needed for FDA approval. Unless there is a patent available, no one is going to speend that kind of money. For example, there are lots of claims about the health benefits of garlic. There is no way someone could generate enough profit selling garlic to justify the expense of the studies needed for FDA approval.

  • i would say try one simple experiment and that is to run it without putting your feet in it.

  • @moss1transcendant

    and surprisingly there isn't a single video that i can find where somebody does that!

    i can find barbies and carrots but nobody is smart enuf to do it with just the water tub

  • search the words "foot detox scam" and click the first one that pops up at the top of the page on youtube. Someone posted a video showing exactly why the silly foot bath produces brown water. its rust forming in the water. so technically your sticking your feet in rusty water. LMAO

  • Bean Meister22...Why would intelligent people waste time listening to someone that hasn't even used one...You are wrong....When you do several different people and their water doesn't look the same, does that tell you something? Probably not. All the people that used mine ended up with several different colors of water. My wife had metal pulled out of her. Her water was almost black, mine was an orange color. We used warm tap water and a little salt...You are the joke here....

  • @gummachines this guy is goofy and unable to articulate but he's right in one respect, the foot detox bath is a scam. it's simple science. its proven in at least 10 videos Ive found on youtube alone not including all the other proof I've found on the internet with simple experiments.

  • @gummachines Black and orange are typical colors when you do electrolysis of salt water using iron electrodes. YOU are the joke here. Skippin' science classes as a kid, right?

  • Sear,

    I do believe that what you have said is might be true. I do believe that you have made a research on that. Now I didn't make any research. But how can you explain to all 38000 thousand people that have watched you that you didn't gave any logical reaserch soluttion your self?

    and I do believe that I heard a lot of "I think" in your words but no claims and facts.

    But I dont judge the other side becouse I dont know them both.

  • @zozikas Because I made this video before I did the research. After I posted this video, many people have contacted me with their claims, and many people contacted me and explained how this scam works. There has never been a single bit of proof that this works, and there has never been a double blind study done on this mostly because the people who are promting these are people who make money by selling them and if the truth came out, they would lose money.

  • These detox machines work so well, you don't even have to put your feet in the water for it to change color with "toxins"!!! Let me find my credit card!

  • I have proof. I just had one, I was skeptical. I watched the technician put water in the bath from MY sink and added regular salt into the water. When the water came out and it turned orange to brown to black with floaties. After I was done I felt drained, much like how you feel after a massage. NEXT my feet were dried off, I went on my way. She told me that sometimes debris continues to come out, as it does. I have black heavy metal particles still coming out of my feet.

  • i just watched one of these foot baths and the water changed without any feet in the bath!

  • Fuck the FDA. They are the biggest bunch of crooks and liars. But other then that flawed point... I agree that it is crap.

  • The ionic footbath WORKS. First time I tried it, the water actually had huge globules of thick light blue substance. After I kept using it I realized it was the Downy fabric softener I used in my washing machine.

    I recommend the poster not worry about how others spend their money. He should care as much as I care about his balding head or fat body or unpleasant attitude. It appears to be he's just groveling for some free products. The skin is the largest organ of the body and excretes toxins.

  • @RussiaversusIsrael YES. Right on. The footbath works and my recently cured ailments is proof enough for me.

  • You are totally right! I have a regular old foot $20 spa because my feet get swollen and achy and I can tell you that my plain old tap water gets sludgy and turns colors after 20 minutes. From what I've seen, it's a combination of dirt and dead skin cells, the same stuff that you clean out of your tub. I also feel better when I use it because it is relaxing and mine has a heat/massage function, nothing magic there - heat and massage has long been accepted physical therapy.

  • It's fairly simple to explain the scam. The unit placed in the water contains a metal anode and cathode and the water bath contains salts. The power supplied drives the electrolysis of water and the oxidation (rusting) of the anode. The color of the water is from the corrosion products (rust) of the anode. Feet are just spectators in the electrochemical reaction, and it works the same without any feet at all. Switching the current direction or using a metal array can also give different colors.

  • @Octoschizare Part 2:

    The electrolysis produces NaOH from salt water, which reacts with skin to produce soap, and this causes the frothy bubbles. Darker colors (like black) can come from small amounts of silver in the anode.

    Most toxins are neutrally charged, (unaffected by a current in the body), colorless, and there is no evidence that toxins can exit through the skin like sweat does.

    I have looked for peer-review scientific publications about this topic and there are zero. No surprise.

  • @Octoschizare Part 3:

    This is nothing but a warm salt-water rusty foot bath. Any "positive result" is entirely from the act of taking time from a stressful day to soak your feet in salt water and a placebo affect (sense of hope and positive thought).

    You can create your own test as I've done and verify the color with a car battery, 2 pieces of metal, salty water, and no feet.

    Ion Footbaths are 100% snake-oil scams. Any healthcare "professional" selling this "service" should be in jail.

  • Whomever it is who sent me the nine inch dick comment, I would really like for your comments to stop. I really wanted to simply garner some technical information, and perhaps have a civilized and intelligent debate on the topic. Suffice it to say, this was a frightening experience to say the least. I was assaulted with emails with some pretty foul accusations. As of yet, I have not seen any valid research presented as to why this does or does not work.

  • Don't know how valid this foot detox is. I understand your point but the other side is that the FDA and the big wigs cannot be trusted. Yeah, they want to make money but they never want to release products that would keep people from ever really getting sick. They need us to get sick to make profits off of health care and treatments to sustain ourselves. There are some products out there they will prevent sickness and they will never support this, no matter how profitiable the product is!

  • I know that is is just water,, no tricks you need to just go get your own water and try it your self,, ,,

  • the FDA is only there to bank off your ass...there is NOTHING good about the FDA.....THE FDA WILL NOT ALLOW REAL REMEDIES TO PASS

  • @stephenTHEDESTR0YER You are completely correct, did you know the FDA did allow once to a s

    o Call synthetic Vit E to be sold as Vit E in the market? It was a waste that was being sold as Vit. E. Look it up online. DNA testing was done on this oil waste and the FDA said if it looks like it, than it is.

  • explain why i have had worms come out. and it pulled the crap out of my lungs. i felt the difference. then explain to me why people take medicines that cause other MAJOR problems in the body.?? if people are SOOO smart. i don't take medicines. i do things the non invasive/non side effect way. 90% of diseases grow in an acidic environment. the more acidic your body the more inclined to get sick. after the detox. your system is more alkaline which 90% of diseases can't thrive in.

  • @kknjon

    ...

    What the fuck are you on about buddy.

  • how the hell r u going to talk if you havent even done it.

  • @jokerswifey Because unlike you, I have investigated the science, and it has all been proven to be a lie. There are no toxins in the water when you are done, and if you think that there are, you had better do some REAL investigating for yourself, and stop listening to the clowns who are trying to sell you this treatment.

  • @BeanMeister22  And unlike you, I've actually DONE the footbath. THAT IS "REAL" investigation. Wow. Nice work.

  • Your hateful name calling might be because you are not attractive. Ugly men tend to attack beautiful women, and it gets worse when we have an IQ as high as mine.

  • @peggygenoway People who brag about having a high IQ, are usually morons. As for beautiful, you will have to prove that one too.

  • @BeanMeister22 I would tell you what a douche nozzle you are but comparing you to a douche nozzle would be an insult to douche nozzles. at least they serve a purpose and have a higher IQ

  • @peggygenoway beautiful women tend to get things far more easily in life,including

    the craziness that comes from taking things for granted.

  • @plutoplatters I completely agree. I am not quite so young anymore, and it is a rude awakening to be in college and older, and busting my not so young ass. I did used to take things for granted, and it becomes like a curse of sorts, coasting through life on your looks. It certainly can be a spiritual awakening of sorts, working on vanity.

  • BTW if these things did work, they would beneficial electrolytes out of your body faster than "toxins".

  • You may be quite surprized at whom you are calling that. My IQ is a very generous 153, and my coursework includes physiology, microbiology, anatomy, and fairly extensive psychology. However, that does not matter. When you meet someone who believes they are correct, no matter what, you are not anticipating an intelligent conversation, you are expecting them to be debasing. I had hoped to exchange technical info.

  • @peggygenoway I believe you to be full of Cr@p! Not a liar huh? There is no credible info to be exchanged on this device, it has been proven to be nothing more than a placebo, time and time again. If you were looking for info on this, you should try looking at credible sources, which DOES NOT include the people who are trying to sell them. Never has there been a successful double blind study on these, and you will never see one.

  • @peggygenoway Umm.....only 2% of people in the world have an IQ over 130, there is a 98% chance you are lying.....

  • @peggygenoway If everyone who claimed to have a nine inch dick on the internet was telling the truth, there wouldn't be so many unsatisfied women around.

  • @peggygenoway " you meet someone who believes they are correct ,no matter what " ... what if they ARE CORRECT ?? then what ?

  • So, you pretty much have narrowed it down then...I am a lying bastard or a retard. No other possible options hmmm? What are your credentials?

  • Actually I am neither a lying bastard nor a retard.

  • @peggygenoway I could be wrong; you just might be the standard run of the mill moron too.

  • You made this video, and you haven't tried it yourself! Where did you get the idea that the skin on the feet has larger pores, or that gravity has some influence on toxic accumulation within the body? Have you analyzed the residual water? Are you aware of the actual cost as far as submitting a product to the FDA (which might make it prohibitive cost wise for a product that is not pharmaceutical)? The FDA is now owned by the big pharmacy. You need more info.

  • @peggygenoway Listen, this is a proven scam. Since making this video I have done a lot of research on the topic. There are two types of people who take the position you are taking; one are the bastards who are lying to people saying that this works, and the other is the retards who fall for this crap. So tell me, which one are you?

  • If you are someone, that does not understand that putting your feet into a tub of warm water will increase blood circulation allowing your body to get blood to the most abused, underapreciated, aspect of your body, which WILL provide enhanced blood flow to allow good exchange of energy and waste for the muscles, ligaments and tendons in your feet, then the foot bath detox is NOT a scam its a wake up call. But for everyone else that knows this stuff, yeah its a fuking scam =P

  • @shadowwbn It is a scam because they are saying that the electric current passing through the water will leach toxins from your body, and that the color change is actually toxins that came from your body.

  • @BeanMeister22 I know I was just trying to be a smart ass and point out that only a dumbass would even believe that crap.

  • @shadowwbn Fair enough. Can you believe how many fools actually fall for this crap? Some of them are normally pretty smart, but when they see this, they suddenly become stupid:)

  • @BeanMeister22 Oh trust me, this is no surprise to me. There are about 3-4 different scampany's that will send you purified dirt that when consumed with detox your body and supply it with all the nutrients and minerals that mother earth intended us to have!

    You dont have to reread this, I said DIRT, people are buying dirt to EAT! So, thats why the foot bath thing, isnt that big a deal so joking with it is okay, because its not going to f'ing kill you or make you sick like eating dirt will!

  • I don't know if this really does work but I must say me and 5 family members have tried this and every time, the foot bath seems to react to us in the same way individually, like I seem to drink more alcohol then anyone else on this planet and after I'm finished in the foot spa mine always seems to be the worst lol I'm not a proofessional in this area I'm just another musician but this really does seem to have an effect..

  • @fr3sk01 It does not work, it is a scam. You can get the same results, which is a feeling of well-being, by soaking your feet in warm salt water.

  • As you know, BeanMeister22, the scam foot detox bath water turns brown WITHOUT your feet in it.

    This SCAM took quite a few folks to the cleaners, no pun intended!

  • @exposefraud And the little squiggly things people are told are parasites that were removed from the body as a result of the detox (which also appear if done without the feet in them). Amazingly some people are defending this...some people are just waiting to be taken. It proves the old saying "there's a sucker born every minute."

  • I think you over reacted. You might be right but no actual conclusive proof has been presented from what I've seen on both sides. The big corrporations want to also keep people sick too so they can keep selling drugs and perform operations tests check ups etc. So they do and are suppressing natural cures. The natural stuff can't be patented so all companies can sell it. That means that its not as profitable to sell. So they don't By the way did you know snake oil contains Omega 3 oils.

  • Try this experiment...

    Get some bottled H20 at your local pharmacy, fill a glass with the water, drop in a pinch of salt, get 2 iron nails, wire them up to a regular 9 volt battery and drop the nails in the water making sure they are not touching. And they dont have to be close together either. Wait half an hour. Watch the nasty colors grow before your very own eyes.

    You know what this means? Yup, you've guessed it, i had toxic nails!!!

    Try it, see if your nails are toxic too.

  • typical AMERICAN scam to fool the rural southerners.

  • Well, I have been in alot of pain and I can say and my son say we feel alot better. I am going to get another. When you are in pain you will try anything. And this works for us. Sorry, I can't agree with you on this topic.

  • HHO . All they are doing is separating the H20 into H2 And 0 ... In the proccess is a simple solution is added to change the color of the water when it electrified. HHO

  • I have one of these myself, and many other devices as I'm a practitioner. I can't respond to your video until you make it clear what device you are criticizing. Are you saying "Detox footbath" generically (like people use the word "iPod" meaning an Mp3 player), meaning all devices that fall into this footbath category, or are you referring specifically to this IonCleanse machine, that says it detoxes? I own a Q2, not one of those.

  • hes smart, but he should try it himself.... has he? the points he makes do make sence, but there is also a little thing they attach to your finger that attract the chemecals in your body... and also, about the color of the water, there are those machines that u buy- so how could sombody be changing the color w/o ur knowledge?

  • @pangaea611

    It is a reaction between the electrodes that changes the color of the water. Go on, try it without your feet in there - the water will still change color. Most people never think to try the obvious.

  • Did this today, worked, feel great. The color of the water is irrelevant as to it's effectiveness, it is a reaction between the electrical charge and the salt in the water. As I am a person who does not respond to placebo I will not conclude that is what I reacted to. The medical community makes money off from sick people not people getting well. There is room for differing methods of healing so don't let ignorance cause you to dismiss what could improve the quality of life for many.

  • A SUCK ER IS BORN EVERY MINUTE PEOPLE

  • I have to agree with you on this one. I did some research and found that a detox foot bath will produce a yellow color when connected to an organic carrot. Also, the yellow color came from the electrode, not the carrot (or the person's foot, for that matter). The color comes from a process called "electrolysis." Electrolysis is what happens when you pass an electric current through salt water. The water and salt both break down and react with the metal, giving off a yellow color. It's a scam.

  • The FDA knows all the lethal effects of the same medicines they approve, everything is controlled by it! I trust 1k times alternative medicine than medicines "approved" by the FDA.

  • Comment removed

  • But the big difference is in ppl who had an unhealthy lifestyle, whether food or smoking. The smokers waters were dang near black. Several overweight ppl had some pretty nasty looking water as well. Their diet probably answers this question. I really enjoyed the procedure, will likely try it a few more times to see if it will help with the psoriasis (even chemo and radiation for cancer dont work the first time, but that doesnt mean you should quit after one treatment)

  • There were about 25-30 ppl who did this at the same time i did and you could notice a significant difference in the water depending on the individual. I work out 5 or 6 days a week and run 3 of those days, so i sweat out a great deal of the toxins i take in. My water was only copper colored and had almost no particles in it. Several ppl (most definitely in good shape, or who i knew) had water that was very similar to mine.

  • I have used the foot detox before and was skeptical. It didnt really do much, i was looking for something to help with my psoriasis. But i did notice higher energy levels for a few days after it. I have heard chemists, nurses, and other ppl argue both ways on this thing. One question nobody has been able to answer for me is the differences in colors, amounts of debris, and bubbles that are created.

  • hello sir.

    I was just wondering what do you do for a living ? also what do you have a degree in, your educational background an. if you have done research on the product or talked to the actual companies making the footbath ? this information will be much appreciated.

  • My degree is in management, so you can probably guess that I have quite a bit of experience when it comes to getting people to fall for worthless ideas and products. I have been self employed for many years, and I have also worked for 2 major international corporations.

  • Regardless of my opinion on this product, detox footbaths have been scientifically proven to be nothing more than a placebo. Check it out for yourself, the only positive info out there about these comes from people who are making money off these units, or from gullible people who have fell for it.

    Basic science disproves the claims being made about these products, that is why you will never see an independent evaluation of these products by a respected university or organization.

  • @BeanMeister22 Stupid, arrogent, unqualified, cum face covered, meat sack! the science of the ionic foot baths is so simple even you shud be able to understand it, guess not. all you have done is made allogations based on something you obviously have no knowledge on. everything has a positive and negative charge, what they do is force negativly charged energy into your system and it forces out all the toxins and other shit out because 2 negatives cannot occupie the same space, stupid cumface!!!!

  • @megaspasm man are you mis-informed! nice vocabulary too. pick up a book or look it up. it IS a scam and the proof is SO easily found.

  • So, I'm just saying, I don't believe the discoloration is toxins, but you should know a little more about your subject. It will make you more believable. Thanks

  • However, if you don't have a machine, or haven't even tried one, I don't know how you can make such comments about it. You said something like, "maybe they put minerals or chemicals, or emulsifiers in there". You take the machine home, and fill the tub with water yourself, and it is just as cloudy and brown. However, you can turn the machine on and decide not to put your feet in, and it will still turn cloudy and brown.

  • I'm not saying the foot bath works. I have one, and have used it. It did do something, my multiple sclerosis symptoms became worse. That is, I had tingling in both my legs for over 24 hours. It scared me off from using it for the last year. There is something to it, but that is not to say I believe the discoloration in water is from my body.

  • This idiot is just that! an idiot, it would not hurt him to detox at all especially his mouth. It does work and do not let this uneducated poor excuse of a human tell you otherwise.

  • Hmm...where to start...I am very educated both formally and in the ways of the world. You, on the other hand are squarely on the side of a proven scam. So tell me...which is it, are you the fool falling for the scam, or are you the scammer herself? Oh, I'm sorry, you won't be able to answer that because you are banned from my channel☺☻☺

  • This guy is an idiot......people who have no idea what they are talking about shouldnt talk...what is he going to try and convince me next that sweating doesnt detoxify you? I dont need a scientist to tell me what is and isnt good for me

  • Apparently you do, because you are a moron being scammed, or you are a moron scamming people, or there is a third choice...you are just a moron. BTW, you are banned from my channel. Have a nice day☺☻☺

  • Don't know about it being a scam. All I know is that I haven't had to take pain pills for my arthritis in 3 wks. As for the FDA just remember that the device used at school of shock is FDA approved. Also if aspirin were presented for approval today it would never pass.

  • I am not a fan of the FDA, but the foot detox has been proven as a scam. If you don't believe me, do the research yourself; I did. Any benefit you may have had has simply been the placebo effect, and you would have still seen that if someone gave you a sugar pill and told you that it was a cure. There is really nothing wrong with a placebo, the problem is that this is all based on a lie and that people are paying thousands of dollars for nothing.

  • Youcan't get a placebo effect when you are not expecting any results. I had one done just to see what it was about. I had no expectations what so ever. The pain relief was an unexpected bonus.

    AS for the units, they cost as little as $200

  • I am one of the so called "morons" who have had an ionic detox foot bath. After the treatment I felt re-energized, alert and focused, no longer exhausted and dizzy. It has been two days since my "treatment" and I have not been dizzy and nauseous or exhausted. I feel wonderful for the first time in two months. I have to say that it is fabulous. Placebo or not, it worked for me.

  • @mthyde, STFU nigger. You're just a dumb fuck who fell for this sorry shit.

  • So sorry cacaman. I did not mean to offend you. LOL and please have a better day.

  • Soak your feet in water and epsom salts.

  • Big Pharma is not in the business of creating health.....but in supporting illness .... so that it's industry continues to flourish. Traditional medicine debunks all forms of alternative medicine from chiropractic, to homeopathy, to the simple "Stevia" plant - a natural sweetner with no glucose impact, and no chemical derivative. Try a couple of foot baths for yourself. Notice if you experience anything different. It won't hurt you! The machine may well be selling itself! Best wishes.

  • So the argument is that, the products reviewed by the FDA are legit, and the ones that aren't evaluated are hoaxes? I'll give two examples. FDA passed Vioxx, which an NSAID linked to heart attack. FDA has NOT reviewed Melatonin supplement, and the molecule ITSELF is responsible for the circadian rhythm and sleep cycles in the body. Your argument is weak. Also - The reason the Ionic foot bath water becomes dirty is because of chemical corrosion the electrodes in the water. It's a parlour trick.

  • My sisters had my mom go for these foot bath treatments to help cure her of her liver cancer. Guess what she wasn't cured.  They gave false hope to my mom. What a shame this product is out there. Why aren't these foot baths in the hospitals to help cure people? Can't believe intelligent people fall for this.

  • It is sad that the FDA has so many people trusting them. Many of their agents are paid off by big pharma. Not all of them are bad, but all it takes is a few bad apples to spoil the whole batch. The same can be said for naturalists. Some of their stuff works some doesn't. I have used one product that I know works and that is Black Salve.

    All I can say is just be prudent and be wary of people who are too opinionated like Mr.Beanmiester.

    Hell, be wary of me for talking about Black Salve.

  • I half agree with what you are saying, there are snake sales men but, to get approval from the FDA you would need to pay at least half a million $ and unless you can patent it you can't make money off it. That's why vitamins/supplements have that writen on the side label. So, I believe and have experience great results from natural cures. But, like I said, you are right about some of these products.

  • ok brother for the sake of time i am not going to explain how it works. Just that we use straight water (no salt) and it still becomes many colors and impurities.

    If we weigh water before and after it truly weighs more. There is just too much evidence and thousands of testimonials that say it works. Dont knock it until you try it. All people that jump on the scam wagon have not tried it or given it a chance to work. Who is the fool?

    God Bless you.

  • There is no evidence for what you are claiming, so you are the real FOOL.

    Testimonials mean nothing you imbecile!

    BTW how do you sleep at night? I talked to a chemist, and I know exactly what is happening to the water and I know that you are a fool who is at best living in a dream world, and at worst a lying turd.

    BUZZ OFF TURD!

  • If you run an electronic current through tap water (electrolysis) it turns brown. I am guessing this is all the bacteria that dies. Try it yourself!

  • I would like to win Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2

  • Thanks for seeking me out for a comment.Here goes...the feet, just like all moist (perspiring) body parts can have an unsavory mix of bacteria, viruses and fungi.Their activities - inside and out - lead to the need to detoxify.We can kill, repel or neutralize them.

    Having done the foot detox bath, my guess is that all situations are covered.

  • very interesting

  • i want borderlands please

  • borderlands rule

  • .

    That the foot emits toxins (normally) should be no surprise to you. Have you ever experienced a smell from your feet or shoes?

    .

    Western medicine has suppressed so many health modalities until many of us are ready to reject them .Plus for many, cleansing, therapeutic bathing, detoxing are all fairly new concepts.Without having experience with these older cultures,these ideas must seem crazy. .

    . If you ever- God forbid - do get ill, I'm sure you'll start looking FOR REAL.

  • Where in science is it ever the responsibility of the detractors to prove that a device does not work, when no proof that it does work has ever been offered by the promoters of it?

  • @justenashville ... That's not the smell of toxins but of fungal activity.

  • Oh and by the way it's not dumbest and stupidest. It would be dumbest and most stupid. Is stupidest even a word?

  • ☺☻☺☻☺☻☺☺☻☺☻☺☻☺

  • First off I would like to acknowledge that everyone is entitled to their own opinion. You have definitely given yours, but for the sake of refraining from sounding ignorant it would probably be a good idea to actually research what the machine does and how it works with the body before claiming it is a scam. I do not think you realize how ignorant you sound, especially after admitting that you have never used the device before. Please get facts before you speak about something.

  • I find it quite humorous that you use the word ignorant when describing how I sound. I know I can make this next comment without regret because you have clearly not read through my replies to comments that were made here.

    The world does not revolve around you and your own narrow vision of reality. You are so quick to dismiss me, when you know nothing about the LACK of science behind the claims being made by the producers of these devices.

  • Please take the time to go back and read my replies before you leave a comment showing how self-centered you are.

    Hmm...who is the one that sounds ignorant now?

  • The FDA has NOT cleared the flu vaccine! So what about that?

  • I'm certainly not a fan of the FDA, I only mentioned them here to draw attention to the idea that no one legitimate is accepting the false claims being put out there by the producers of these so-called detox footbaths.

    As for the FDA not approving the flu vaccine, I would have to do a little research on that one before I could comment on that; but I will look into it.

  • Comment removed

  • How do we know what is 'good for your body'? Every illness, disease etc has a subjective element element . A critical element of treatment is how the patient feels at the end. Yes, the placebo effect may come into play, but it may not

  • From Wikipedia:

    "Stephen Barrett of Quackwatch described Aqua Detox devices as medically worthless and a scam lacking any scientific basis."

    "Aqua Detox machines have been the subject of false advertising complaints based on testimonials suggesting it had cured brain tumors, hypertension, and hammer toes; such claims were withdrawn by the advertiser."

  • I have also noticed from your posts is that when valid questions do arise, you do not answer their question, you just simply assert your position as the correct position. This is no way to gain credibility in your argument. You claim that people who promote these footbaths cannot answer the simplest questions on how they work, yet you yourself cannot answer why they do not work.

    Also you stress that it has not been scientifically proven to work, however how do we classify what 'works?'

  • Before you leave comments like this, you really need to go back and read the comments that have been left here over the last year or so. You will find that several people have left comments explaining exactly how this works, and that it is scientifically impossible for the claims being made to be true. As I have said before, no matter how much we want these things to work, the science does not lie...and the science solidly shows that these are a scam.

  • When I first made this video, I did not know how they worked, but with my basic science education, I knew that the claims being made were more than too good to be true...they were an out and out scam. Any benefit a person gains from this so-called treatment is simply from the Placebo Effect. Now yes, a placebo often times will help a person, but since a placebo is all in the mind, a simple sugar pill would give the same results as this expensive footbath does.

  • ALL IN THE MIND! The people taking footbathes BELIEVE in the item. Do you really think they would believe a sugar pill? No! so they probably won't have the same results as the footbaths. Let people spend their money on whatever they want to spend!

  • The main point I am getting at here, is that since the benefit is a placebo at best, then a 5 cent sugar will do just as well as a $75 treatment or a $1500 unit. And you already know that you cannot tell the person that it is only a sugar pill, otherwise it would not work. If someone want s to try a treatment, so be it. But when they are being told falsehoods by someone who stands to earn a profit off them, then how is that fair?

  • To prove my point Pink2Party 8 months ago asked you to explain the difference in results when her and 2 friends took the footbaths at the same time. Here you just said there is nothing to explain, it has proven to be a hoax. You didn't even answer the question! What no possible explanations? you could've suggested that the detox apparatus contained different metals to produce these different results!

  • It would have been silly of me to address an anecdotal experience such as that.

    This comment was posted by: Ovedya2006

    There is no medical science to back up their claims. Besides, the process is called "electrocoagulation." It's been used for decades as a cost-effective means of treating wastewater in 3rd world countries. The only thing the machine does is coagulate - combine - collide minerals and organic material that's already in the water, causing them to rise to the surface.

  • Could you please be kind enough as to post links to this science that is on your side, that you also continuously claim to have. If you post links to all knowledge and data you have gathered on this product, perhaps this will once and for all confirm the issue. Assume that Im computer illiterate, and dont know what to look for when researching such a topic.

  • From Wikipedia:

    Aqua Detox has been described as a scam by a number of reviewers. Ben Goldacre found that the brown discoloration resulting from Aqua Detox treatment was simply rust produced by the metal electrodes, rather than any sort of toxin removed from the body. As a result