Internal Server Error

The server encountered an internal error or misconfiguration and was unable to complete your request.

Please contact the server administrator, webmaster@uniquearticlewizard.com and inform them of the time the error occurred, and anything you might have done that may have caused the error.

More information about this error may be available in the server error log.


Apache Server at www.uniquearticlewizard.com Port 80
Research On The Acai Berry Diet Scam | Acai Juice

Research On The Acai Berry Diet Scam

| June 22, 2011 | 0 Comments

There have been a lot of reports about an acai berry diet scam. It is a very popular new diet, but most of the information presented on the internet on the acai berry diet is from marketers of the product. So, this raises the question “is the acai berry diet really a scam?”

At www.storiesofweightloss.net, we have been looking for a true success story from anybody who has had good results with this sort of diet approach. However, the only success stories submitted to the web site have been from marketers attempting to reach more markets, not from customers who have tried it.

Bloomberg news reports that because of the growing demand for acai in the U.S., it resulted in the “depriving Brazilian jungle dwellers of a protein-rich nutrient they’ve relied on for generations.” Google Wiki had this to say about the acai berry: “monoculture aa farming is a threat to the rainforest, aa has been used to successfully reforest already degraded regions.”

Google Wiki also mentions how MLM companies “misused celebrity names like Oprah Winfrey and Rachel Ray to promote aa weight loss pills online.” This has been one of the main reasons the acai berry has become so popular, not because of any viral success stories or breakthrough studies.

It mentions how: “Marketers of these products make unfounded claims that aa and its antioxidant qualities provide a variety of health benefits, none of which has scientific confirmation to date. … As of June 2010, there are no scientifically controlled studies backing up any of these claims. …Specifically, there is no scientific evidence that aa consumption affects body weight or could promote weight loss.”

Also, the CSPI (Center for Science in the Public Interest) have release a notice of caution to people before they invest in any acai berry supplements or diet plans. According to the CSPI, thousands of consumors have reported issues with recurrent charges they had trouble preventing after accepting “free trials” of acai based products. Another warning from Google wiki states “Even some web sites purporting to warn about aai-related scams are themselves perpetrating scams.”

Of course, not all acai berry diets are bad or out to scam you. However, this should open your eyes to the dangers and caution that should be kept when looking into any new diet trend. If you are looking for “miracle supplements” you will never find them. But there are very powerful ingredients that have been proven to work. Try EGCG from green tea, multivitamins, and purple corn extract.

New diet solutions, programs and miracle drugs come out all the time from greedy marketers out to make a quick buck. Rather then read everything they tell you, look for some true success stories from people like you. The natural, organic method is usually a good choice too.

For more information about the acai diet scam from others that used the acai berry weight loss pillsand the acai berry flush, visit “stories of weight loss” and see what else you find.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Category: Acai Berry

Leave a Reply




If you want a picture to show with your comment, go get a Gravatar.

*