Question:

Deal to good to be true?

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Please note that I am not in anyway selling this product or affiliated with this company. I am in fact mocking it. I heard a commercial on coast to coast last night that reminded me of paranermals "q-link" question a week or so ago. Apparently you send your money to this company and they send "harmonic frequencies" in your direction. Buy one year, and get six months free? What's the catch?

http://www.energeticbalancing.us/

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  1. duh, you have to buy the receiver, but only they manufacture it, it's not sold in stores and if you order within the next ten minutes they'll send you TWO receivers and throw in another six months of harmonic frequencies

    ...and a ginsu knife, vegamatic, pocket fisherman, some oxy-clean, one of those rub on headache sticks and some super putty.

    operators are standing by.


  2. Big Scam. Prayer works best, and it's free.

  3. Awesome, truly awesome.

    Note the use of "quantum".

  4. see if all this worked then all the hospitals wl shut down and this will be the next big thing

  5. Interesting post by Jeff G.

    On the one hand if you choose to spend some money on BS, and you can afford to spend the money and due to your imagination it makes you feel a bit better then no harm is done?

    On the other hand your money is also supporting a company that will gladly exploit the most needy in our community that can often afford it the least by encouraging them to spend money on a cure that at best is a placebo.

  6. Not trying to be mean but anyone stupid enough to fall for this deserves to be scammed.

  7. I am a life long customer and consider it money well spent.  I was either going to waste my money on this or more stupid psi experiments, and believe me, this has more tangible results.

  8. listen to Tom E he will guide you to freedom.

  9. To a skeptical person, this wont work. To a believer, it probably would. I see that the person above me is a lifelong customer and so we can assume it worked for them.

    This is similar to that Q-Ray bracelet and other things that are essentially placebo (ie. in your head). The brain is a very powerful tool. Many studies have been done showing how simply believing in a remedy is often more powerful than the actual medication involved.

    Commercials (like the Q-Ray) where they don't ever actually tell you what it does, they just have a whole bunch of non-scientific people saying how their life has changed, isn't actually considered lying. They've managed to make these people believe that they should feel better and these people actually feel better because they believe they should. It's cyclic.

    The harmonic frequencies is a scam. Everything on earth has a harmonic frequency - the point at which sound will cause it to vibrate with increasing amplitude. Bridges have collapsed because the wind has cause them to vibrate at their harmonic frequencies. However, the name sounds so pleasant that people are willing to give money away for the small chance that it might make them feel better.

    BUT, if the commercial makes you a believer, and you spend your money, and you truly believe it makes you happier or healthier or whatever they promise, then hey, money well spent. Because in the end, it's all in your head and your brain is a powerful thing! If buying it makes your brain believe you've done some good for yourself and the result is you being happier, I say do it! If you're a skeptic and too much of a realist to buy into the bullshit (I guess the shortened version of that would be "educated"), then it's probably a waste of money.

    Hope that helps!

    JRG

  10. Look, I'll send you some harmonic frequencies to you for free. Right now.

    Ready?

    Here they come…

    Okay, did you get that?

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