Health scams are very commonplace and this latest one has all the hallmarks of a scam.
- Message was sent by “Thomas”, but the actual email address looks like random letters and numbers and real people usually have surnames, not just a first name.
- “Medically proven to fortify and increase seniors immunity by 79%”. This is spurious accuracy – the effect of health treatments can never be described that accurately and immunity must be immunity from something specific. It cannot be immunity from everything.
- “Kills all viruses and bacteria on the spot”. Certain chemicals such as found in bleach will do that but they also any human being that ingests them. Anything that doesn’t harm a human will not kill all known bacteria and viruses instantly.
- “This practically floods your body with healing cells!”. That’s a meaningless statement.
- “This cheap yet very effective booster will soon not be available for the general public, once the military will seize it.”. Lots of scammers like to add a touch of conspiracy theory to the mix.
A typical case of overkill – promising so much that it can only be a scam.
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