Welcome to yet another exposé uncovering the pseudoscientific snake oil being peddled under the guise of wellness and opportunity.
This time, we’re digging deep into Nu Xtrax — a deceptive multilevel marketing (MLM) scheme wrapped in the warm glow of family values, miracle recoveries, and quantum nonsense. At the centre of this circus? Kare Possick and her son Joshua Possick.
Miracle Claims, Mother and Son Style
Kare Possick, the self-proclaimed “visionary artist, quantum wellness educator, and metaphysical expert,” claims that she was once wheelchair-bound — until her miraculous discovery of iHeRQles, a mysterious “quantum wellness spray” that apparently reversed her age, restored her mobility, and helped her float through life like a Tai Chi Gung swami. She now credits her recovery and spiritual awakening to a blend of botanical sprays and Tibetan energy practices, all while running an MLM health empire from sunny Florida.
But Kare doesn’t scam alone. Her son Joshua Possick is a second-generation MLM prince, homeschooled on cruise ships and trained in the fine art of “compassionate compensation.” The Possicks are now pushing Nu Xtrax and its lineup of completely unverified health patches, sprays, and “high-frequency” iTech nonsense as both a health miracle and an income opportunity.
The Video That Says It All
In a video titled “The Secret to Wealth and Wellbeing…Compensation for Compassion“, Kare and Joshua outline their supposed miracle business. Here’s what we learn:
- $3,000 in 15 Days? Joshua claims that by simply sharing Nu Xtrax with 10 people, anyone can earn over $3,000 in their first two weeks.
- $470 for Referring Two People? They market it as a “just share with two friends” kind of game — classic MLM math designed to draw people in.
- “Compassion With Compensation” is the phrase they use to mask the predatory recruitment tactics typical of Ponzi-style MLM structures.
Even more disturbing is the testimonial inserted mid-video by a woman who says she’s been taking Nu Xtrax for 2.5 years and no longer needs glasses. That’s right — vision restoration via a spray sold through an MLM scheme. Welcome to the pseudoscience Olympics.
The iHeRQles Scam Formula
The flagship product, iHeRQles, is a bizarre plant-based spray and a series of stick-on “frequency” patches supposedly infused with Earth frequencies, ivermectin, fenbendazole (a dog dewormer), and something called “macrocarpo tree” to “help with negative energy.”
Kare’s websites — thehrq.com, karepossick.com, kareshighfrequencywellness.com and karespurplericeproducts.com — are filled with testimonials, pseudoscientific health claims, and metaphysical sales pitches. On thehrq.com, she promotes iHeRQles as a ‘quantum wellness spray’ that can reverse aging by over 20 years and includes unverified botanical ingredients allegedly able to regenerate cells. Karepossick.com is her personal hub where she brands herself as a ‘quantum wellness educator,’ sharing stories of playing with fairies, pioneering biofeedback, and using ancient Tibetan practices to restore her health after being wheelchair-bound. On karespurplericeproducts.com, she markets ‘Micronized Purple Rice’ with grand claims that it can reverse chronic illness, restore vision, and even regenerate organs — all without scientific validation. These websites work in tandem to build an illusion of credibility through mystical anecdotes, miracle transformations, and spiritual jargon — all aimed at selling unregulated health products through MLM recruitment.
Hidden and Misleading Compensation Tactics
The compensation model is carefully veiled using terms like “compassionate compensation” and “abundant success,” while the actual structure appears to reward recruitment far more than retail sales. Earnings examples such as ‘$3,000 in 15 days’ and ‘$470 from referring two people’ are prominently touted, but the finer details of the plan — including autoship requirements, binary qualification tiers, hidden restocking fees, and an obscure refund policy — are buried deep in fine print. This deliberate obfuscation makes it difficult for recruits to see the true costs and risks, while giving the illusion of simplicity and generosity. It’s classic bait-and-switch MLM strategy dressed in spiritual fluff.
Selling the Dream While Living It
Kare and Joshua love to flaunt the MLM lifestyle: over 300 cruises, homeschooling in kayaks, raising a family from the beach, and never having to get a “real job.” In their video, they make it crystal clear: they’ve built their lives around getting others to buy into the same fantasy — a fantasy carefully crafted with sun-soaked visuals, cruise ship anecdotes, and the promise of total lifestyle freedom. By showcasing their at-home business, global travel, and homeschooling-from-kayak adventures, they’re not just selling products — they’re selling an escape plan to financially struggling families who are desperate for hope. “Don’t you have two friends who need this?” Kare asks, as if joining their pyramid is as casual as grabbing coffee.
They talk about 26,000 people in their “group” — a euphemism for downline — as if that alone validates the legitimacy of their business. It doesn’t. That just shows how many people they’ve recruited into a scheme that disguises spiritual jargon as science and financial manipulation as compassion.
Red Flags All Over
- Unverified Health Claims: Vision repair, pain elimination, anti-aging, emotional rebalancing — none of it FDA-approved or supported by clinical trials.
- MLM Compensation Model: Rewards recruitment over product sales — classic pyramid structure.
- Spiritual Manipulation: Use of metaphysical language, ancient Tibetan secrets, and quantum buzzwords to confuse and disarm vulnerable audiences.
- Income Hype: $3K in 15 days, $470 per referral — pure bait.
- Family Legacy MLM: Kare passed the torch to Joshua, creating generational MLM promoters.
Final Thoughts
Nu Xtrax is not a path to wellness — it’s a well-polished scam. And Kare and Joshua Possick are not health educators — they are experienced MLM marketers exploiting fear, faith, and financial desperation.
This blog aims to serve as a warning to anyone being drawn in by miracle stories, high-frequency wellness claims, and income promises that sound too good to be true. Because they are.
Let’s call this what it is: Compensation for Deception.
Stay tuned. Stay skeptical. And whatever you do — don’t buy the spray.
About the Author
I’m DANNY DE HEK, a New Zealand–based YouTuber, investigative journalist, and OSINT researcher. I name and shame individuals promoting or marketing fraudulent schemes through my YOUTUBE CHANNEL. Every video I produce exposes the people behind scams, Ponzi schemes, and MLM frauds — holding them accountable in public.
My PODCAST is an extension of that work. It’s distributed across 18 major platforms — including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, and iHeartRadio — so when scammers try to hide, my content follows them everywhere. If you prefer listening to my investigations instead of watching, you’ll find them on every major podcast service.
You can BOOK ME for private consultations or SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS, where I share first-hand experience from years of exposing large-scale fraud and helping victims recover.
“Stop losing your future to financial parasites. Subscribe. Expose. Protect.”
My work exposing crypto fraud has been featured in:
- Bloomberg Documentary (2025): A 20-minute exposé on Ponzi schemes and crypto card fraud
- News.com.au (2025): Profiled as one of the leading scam-busters in Australasia
- OpIndia (2025): Cited for uncovering Pakistani software houses linked to drug trafficking, visa scams, and global financial fraud
- The Press / Stuff.co.nz (2023): Successfully defeated $3.85M gag lawsuit; court ruled it was a vexatious attempt to silence whistleblowing
- The Guardian Australia (2023): National warning on crypto MLMs affecting Aussie families
- ABC News Australia (2023): Investigation into Blockchain Global and its collapse
- The New York Times (2022): A full two-page feature on dismantling HyperVerse and its global network
- Radio New Zealand (2022): “The Kiwi YouTuber Taking Down Crypto Scammers From His Christchurch Home”
- Otago Daily Times (2022): A profile on my investigative work and the impact of crypto fraud in New Zealand
I have not joined this company yet but I am currently using their products. The pain patches work. The cream works. I had a cold sore. I put it on my lip and it pulled the toxins out of my lip in 1 hr. I wiped it off and put the cream back on and my cold sore was gone. I have also used the spray and it has fixed my fibroids in less than a month. I don’t know yet if it’s the miracle cure they say but it does work. Instead of blasting this woman’s zoom meeing, I wish you would give proof of her being a scam and not just yelling on her zooms. Take her product and have it analyzed. I’d love to know what you find because the spray tastes like red wine to me. I know you want to keep people safe but is this really the way? You are really no more legitimate in my eyes than she is.
Thanks for your comment. I understand the appeal of testimonials — especially when you’re in pain and searching for solutions. But that’s exactly why these types of health MLMs are so dangerous.
You say “the spray fixed your fibroids in a month” and “pulled toxins out of your lip in one hour”. That’s not just personal experience — those are medical claims, and they carry serious legal and ethical implications when used to sell unregulated products. If Nu Xtrax had real clinical studies or FDA/MedSafe-approved trials backing these claims, don’t you think they’d be shouting that from the rooftops?
I don’t need to swallow a mystery spray or analyze it in a lab to spot a textbook pseudoscientific scam. I just have to follow the red flags:
No peer-reviewed studies, only testimonials
Miraculous claims that appeal to the chronically ill or desperate
MLM-style income promises that shift the focus from health to recruitment
A product that can’t be bought in stores, only through a friend or “affiliate”
A leader claiming divine intervention or spiritual healing, as Kare Possick does
You’re right — I do want to keep people safe. That’s why I interrupt the sales pitch, because these schemes don’t offer evidence — they offer emotion, coercion, and false hope. If that makes me “no more legitimate than she is” in your eyes, I’m okay with that. My goal isn’t popularity — it’s protecting people from being lied to, manipulated, and financially exploited.
When a miracle cure needs a monthly subscription and a downline, it’s not a miracle. It’s marketing.
Stay skeptical — and stay safe.
Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
I do stay skeptical. I didn’t join the company, just trying them out. I don’t get swept up with other people’s testimonies. I want to experience things for myself. I used to be a nurse so I think I know a few things and I’m almost 60. My husband is awaiting a double knee replacement so after 5 knee surgeries he knows all about pain. Their patches didn’t completely remove the pain but it made the pain bearable when he’s riding bone on bone. That’s not wishful thinking. I’ve had many cold sores in my life and have used hydrogen peroxide (best remedy yet) so I know what works and what doesn’t. I’m not saying this was a cure but there is some validity to it. I’ve been battling with female issues since 18 and I also know what works for them and what doesn’t and all I can say is since taking this product the bleeding has stopped. Yes these are “just my testimonies” and they do not carry any legal implications if I tell my story and what happened to me. I’m not saying I’ve been “cured” from anything, I’m just telling you what happened when I took the product. For me the jury is still out and I get that you want to safeguard people. As a former nurse, this is why I try stuff before exposing the general, unsuspecting public to things. I don’t want to sell anything to anyone based off of other people’s claims. I have done blood work consistently for the last year and know what I started taking and when. I’ll have proof of what the product did or did not do soon enough. I’m not into woo woo and abracadabras but I do have to say, from your side I would like to see some actual proof of something. I know it’s difficult. I know you’re frustrated. I know you’re frustrated. Rushing into a zoom meeting and making yourself look like a crazed lunatic isn’t going to stop any of these people from buying anything. At the end of the day it just makes you look crazy, unfortunately. I know you’re not turning people away because I’m in the group and see the discussions afterwards and everyone pities the crazy guy who has lost his mind and has no manners. You turn yourself into a laughing stock when you barge into a meeting. Quite the opposite effect of what your goal is I’m sure. I myself would love to know more about this company that is shrouded in mystery and if I could afford to I would have the product analyzed. I didn’t see red wine in the ingredient list and that’s exactly what it tastes like. Does it freak me out? A little? If it works do I care? Not at all. We are all just searching for something that works regardless of what it is. Stay blessed.
Hey there Nurse Nearly 60!
Appreciate the thoughtful (and theatrical!) reply. Sounds like you’ve lived a few lives already — nurse, product tester, medical detective, cold sore assassin, and now unofficial sommelier for Nu Xtrax’s house blend: *Château iHeRQles, 2025 vintage*. Tasting notes: quantum woo with a hint of placebo and a finish of Merlot mystery.
Now don’t get me wrong — if your husband is bouncing around on bone and those “magical” patches took the edge off, I’m not here to rip the bandage off his knees. Relief is relief. But let’s be honest, “makes pain bearable” is not exactly a scientific breakthrough. That’s called **Panadol**, not *miracle botanical quantum fusion spray* sold by a woman claiming she spiritually regenerated after a rice cleanse and a business deal with a lama.
You say you’ve done blood work? Great — I’d genuinely love to see what it says once you compare pre-spray and post-spray results. But let’s not pretend anecdotal experience equals verified clinical evidence. If Kare’s secret sauce is fixing fibroids, joint pain, cold sores *and* cash flow all in one, I’d expect to see it next to the insulin and not behind a paywall, wrapped in affiliate links.
Now about me being “the crazy guy who lost his mind”… let’s be real. If barging into a Zoom full of MLM recruiters pretending to be healers makes me the *lunatic*, then I’ll proudly wear the tinfoil crown. Better that than quietly watching people get love-bombed into a monthly autoship of *high-frequency wine drops*.
You’re right though — we’re all just searching for something that works. I just think that “what works” shouldn’t come with a downline, testimonials from your dog, or a compensation plan disguised as spiritual enlightenment.
Stay skeptical. Stay fabulous. And next time you feel a cold sore coming on, try some Sauvignon Blah. It pairs well with false hope.
Cheers,
Danny de Hek
*The Certified Crazed Lunatic, aka The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger*
Danny
Thank you for sharing the Nurse’s story. I have a close friend/customer who has asked me to join. FDA approval may not mean a product is 100% safe but no FDA approval and not knowing what is in a product is worse. What the Hell are people putting in their bodies for months at a time anyway?
This product sounds too much like an Elixir. I wish you well. Keep up the good work.
Skeptic Francesco in Toronto.
Thanks Francesco — I really appreciate your thoughtful comment.
You’ve hit the nail on the head: just because something isn’t FDA-approved doesn’t automatically make it harmful, but the absence of any oversight, coupled with mystery ingredients and miracle claims, should raise serious alarms — especially when it’s being pushed through a multilevel marketing funnel disguised as wellness.
“Just try it” isn’t good enough when we’re talking about sprays, creams, and patches people are ingesting or applying long-term — sometimes while managing serious health conditions. And yes, the moment we hear testimonials that sound like they came from a 19th-century snake oil commercial, it’s time to pause and ask who is really benefiting here?
Stay skeptical, stay sharp, and keep asking the hard questions — we need more voices like yours.
— Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
Hi Danny, The first thing I want to say is, you should try not down play a product that you have not personally experienced or scientifically evaluated. You can downplay the MLM and how much they’re making, no problem, if you have that knowledge. However people are getting benefits from this product. I am one of them.
The words that you are using may cause a person who could benefit from these product, to not use them. Please watch what you say because words have power. If you haven’t tried it you may not want say it doesn’t work. You may want to say it doesn’t work for you, after trying it. I can and I am saying it has worked for me. You also may want to speak to people who are using the product and see if it’s working for them before you call it a scam. The definition of a scam is “to deceive and defraud (someone)”. The MLM aspect may be a scam. I cannot speak to this because I have not examined it, however the product does work for many people. Yes, I have spoken to many people who have tried the products. Unlike the nurse, I am a customer. I have been using the products going a few months now and I have experienced very good results.
Thanks, Nurse Dora for speaking up.
Hi *DrBev* (and I’m using the “Dr” very loosely here),
Wow, thank you SO much for your brave defense of the miracle spray! I mean, how dare I suggest caution when people like you are clearly out here solving global health crises one MLM patch at a time! Cold sores? *Gone!* Fibroids? *Vaporized!* Wi-Fi radiation? *Neutralized with a sticker!* Who needs clinical trials when we’ve got testimonials from *random strangers on Zoom*?
You’re absolutely right — shame on me for warning people about a product being pushed by people claiming to regenerate organs, reverse aging, and walk out of wheelchairs thanks to *magic mist.* I should just shut up and start sniffing the “red wine” flavoured miracle juice until my third eye opens.
Also, I must have missed the part of your medical training that included “believe everything someone says in a Facebook group” as a diagnostic tool. Must’ve been right between the modules on “Energy Frequencies” and “Quantum Chakra Patches for Male Pattern Baldness.”
Look, if your glowing review helps even *one more vulnerable person* get lured into a pay-to-play pyramid funnel, then your job here is done, right?
But thanks again for the warning that my words have power. I’ll make sure to use them wisely — like this:
*This is snake oil.
This is not medicine.
This is not science.
This is a marketing funnel for overpriced nonsense.*
With all due respect and a dash of NO SCAM,
— Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
RESPONSE TO A SHALLOW HIT PIECE MASQUERADING AS “INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING”
It’s truly astonishing how bold someone can be from behind a keyboard—writing off thousands of real people’s health journeys, healing testimonies, and lived experiences without ever having touched the product, spoken to the community, or explored the science with an open mind.
Let’s start with the most laughable part of this so-called “exposé”: the mention of FDA approval as a benchmark for truth. You’re really citing an organization deeply embedded in Big Pharma as the gold standard of wellness? The very same system that greenlights products with deadly side effects, but demonizes anything natural, holistic, or disruptive to the status quo?
Let’s be honest—if iHeRQles didn’t work, it wouldn’t be such a threat. You wouldn’t be writing about it. And Big Pharma wouldn’t be investing millions into smear campaigns like this to discredit natural healing options.
You call it “quantum nonsense.” I call it cellular nourishment with high-frequency plant molecules—something our bodies not only recognize but thrive on. When you cleanse the blood and flood the body with pure, vibrational nutrition, the body does what it’s biologically designed to do: heal itself. That’s not a miracle. That’s nature.
Let me tell you my story—because unlike you, I speak from personal experience, not paid skepticism.
I spent four months fully cleansing my blood. I no longer have Type 2 diabetes. My brain fog is gone. I sleep better than I ever have. I feel stronger, lighter, and more alive than I have in years. And guess what? I didn’t expect to share any of this—I just wanted to get well.
But when something works, you share it with the people you love. Now my product is free, I’ve helped people I care about feel better, and yes—I’ve created a very real side income that didn’t require me to deceive or manipulate anyone.
As for the compensation plan? It’s completely transparent. No smoke and mirrors. You share something that works, people see results, and word spreads. That’s not predatory—that’s how truth moves in a world that’s spent too long being lied to.
So shame on you for mocking those who are genuinely healing, growing, and reclaiming their health. Shame on you for trying to strip people of affordable, natural alternatives—just to keep them trapped in the same broken system.
I’m not here to convince you. Your mind is clearly made up. But I am here to speak truth to those who are looking for hope and haven’t given up on the body’s God-given ability to heal.
We see you. We see through this. And no—none of us are going back.
Stay in your lane. Go collect your next check from Big Pharma. We’ll be over here helping people actually get better.
Hi Avery,
Wow. What a sermon. I half-expected you to offer communion with that “high-frequency plant molecule” Kool-Aid.
Let me get this straight:
You’ve cured your diabetes, cleansed your blood, reversed brain fog, and built a residual income stream—all thanks to a mystery spray that tastes like red wine and somehow evades any scientific scrutiny? That’s not a health journey. That’s an infomercial.
You accuse me of “writing from behind a keyboard,” but here you are—parroting classic MLM rhetoric from the Herbalife School of Delusion:
• “I’m not a doctor, but I FEEL better.”
• “Don’t trust the FDA, trust my anecdote.”
• “I healed myself using vibes and Instagram science.”
Let’s talk about your “completely transparent” compensation plan. That’s the part where people pay money upfront, are pressured to recruit others to make anything back, and end up stockpiling overpriced snake mist in their garage. Sound familiar? Because that’s not “truth spreading”—that’s a textbook pyramid scheme with a vitamin-scented disguise.
I’m not trying to strip people of “natural options.” I’m trying to stop vulnerable people—many of them sick, elderly, or desperate—from being manipulated by miracle-cure merchants who’d rather sell a dream than a product backed by any peer-reviewed science.
You say “we see through this.”
Yes, Avery—we do see through this. That’s why I made the blog.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to go collect my Big Pharma check, pet my Illuminati lizard, and microwave some 5G while I mock another fake wellness cult.
– Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
Defending common sense since before “vibrational nutrition” was a thing.
Well said. I haven tried it yet but intend to. After a heart bypass I am on drugs that have multiple side effects, but hey TGA or FDA approved.
Hi Bernadette, thanks for your comment.
It’s important to be cautious when a product claims to work well but you believe it has official approval. I checked—there’s no evidence that Nu Xtrax or iHeRQles is FDA-approved (US) or TGA-listed (Australia) in any public database. Their marketing website makes broad “quantum nutrition” and reverse-aging claims, but doesn’t cite any regulatory authorization.
If you or anyone else wants to confirm, you can search the FDA’s and TGA’s official lists using the product’s name or active ingredients. Without approval, a product is not recognized as safe or effective by health authorities.
Approval isn’t the only measure—but it demonstrates a level of oversight and testing that’s crucial, especially post-surgery, to avoid unknown risks.
Always check for regulatory status before putting anything in or on your body. It matters—no matter how expressive the testimonials.
Stay safe and informed,
Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
Lol you’re dead wrong about this. The spray and cream works very well! It changed my life!
Hi Dylan,
Glad to hear that spraying something under your tongue and rubbing on cream has completely changed your life. Sounds like a miracle — or at least a marketing department’s dream.
The thing is, life-changing results need life-changing evidence — not just a personal testimonial that could have come straight from a Nu Xtrax brochure. If these products are really doing what you say, they should be able to pass independent testing, peer-reviewed studies, and regulatory approval without hiding behind Zoom calls and recruitment pitches.
Until then, I’ll keep calling it exactly what it looks like: another “miracle” spray sold through a multi-level marketing pipeline.
– Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
Hi Danny,
I agree with you but your review would carry so much more weight if you actually tried the product.
Hi there,
This is where people keep missing the point. I don’t need to eat a rotten strawberry or chug a bag of vomit to know it’s bad for you — and I certainly don’t need to try a spray sold through a multi-level marketing recruitment funnel to see the red flags.
My work is about exposing the business model, not pretending that anecdotal testimonies equal science. If a product has no peer-reviewed studies, no FDA/TGA approval, no transparency about ingredients, and is only sold through an MLM structure — then it doesn’t matter whether it “tastes nice” or “feels good.” The real product is the recruitment, not the bottle.
So no, I don’t need to “try it” to call out what it is: a cheap, nasty product being used as bait to pull more people into a pyramid-style scheme.
– Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
Danny “The Mighty Detective and Spiritual Advisor!
Obviously you are blinded by the nice salary you are being paid to debunk and destroy any product that Big pharma doesn’t profit by.
What you are Marketing is negativity and until you ACTUALLY try a product you Do NOT know the benefits..
Danny you sound like a young man. There’s going to come a day in your life you will be looking for a NATURAL product like this when pharmaceuticals and their side effects make you even sicker. Only then will you WANT to reach out and research the truth.
Hi Vel,
Let me set the record straight — I haven’t received a cent from anyone to write about this. No “nice salary,” no Big Pharma cheques, no secret backhanders. What I do get are constant messages from people who’ve lost money, health, and trust because of scams exactly like this one.
This isn’t about being “anti-natural.” It’s about being pro-truth. If a product really works, it should be backed by independent trials, regulatory approval, and transparent science — not MLM hype, miracle stories, and staged testimonials.
I don’t need to swallow the spray or stick on a magic patch to see that this business is a disgusting scam dressed up as wellness. The only thing being “healed” here is the bank accounts of those running the scheme.
– Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger
Wow Danny!
You’re a mean mofo! Seriously, it’s one thing to warn people and that’s a good thing, but you don’t have to after people for using a product that some here are saying it’s working for them. I haven’t tried the product, but the BBB doesn’t have this business listed as accredited, and that’s enough for me. I came on here because one of my friends has been taken in by yet another MLM—NuXtrax. She wants me to try some weight loss patches, but I was trying to do some research and find some reviews on them first. That’s how I ended up here. She came back from a NuXtrax convention yesterday, and told me all about the testimonials, and they were cringeworthy. I even think they marched a 1 year child that was allegedly born paralyzed, but with that spray, that baby was able to toddle across that stage like any normal one year old—right up their with Benny Hinn faith healing! So, I get it! I agree with what you said, just not the way you said it. Honestly, I think my friend is being taking on a ride, I just don’t want this stuff she’s taking to hurt her. It’s suspect when a company sells a product that is not an accredited business, it has not been tested, and I wonder why that is? Just saying! It does mean whatever there aim to help people, bilk people or both, it’s a gamble nevertheless, and for the people with their testimonials I would think you would encourage the owner’s to get their products tested, and become an accredited business. It NuXtrax is really what the defenders of it say it is, with science to back it, is when I’ll try it. I’m gonna tell my friend to keep the patches. For now it’s all snake oil to me.
Hi Grace,
Thank you — genuinely — for one of the most thoughtful and honest comments I’ve seen on this topic. You’ve hit the nail on the head. The testimonials, the conventions, and the staged “miracle moments” are all designed to tug on emotions, not deliver evidence. When you start seeing babies being “healed” on stage and products that magically fix everything from pain to paralysis, that’s not health science — that’s performance art.
I completely understand where you’re coming from. My goal isn’t to attack people who’ve been misled — it’s to expose the system that profits from them. These MLM setups prey on good, hopeful people who just want to feel better or help their loved ones. Instead, they end up trapped in a cycle of false hope and empty wallets.
You’re absolutely right — if the product really worked, there would be independent testing, regulatory accreditation, and peer-reviewed studies. But all they’ve got are stories, sales links, and slogans. And that’s not science; that’s marketing.
You’ve got sharp instincts, Grace. I wish more people did the kind of due diligence you’re doing before getting involved. Thanks again for being so honest — you’ve perfectly summed up the real danger of this whole thing.
– Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger