![]() ![]() ![]() I was also warned that later availability could not be guaranteed, since the eye care industry is expected to mount a fierce campaign to prevent the sale of this sensational breakthrough, fearing it will take a bite out of its exorbitant profits.Ī Google search found no hide nor hair of David Lewis, who in the video projects an image of being an expert by wearing the obligatory white lab coat. ![]() Next, I learned that this ocular panacea was being offered “only today,” for the special price of $69 a bottle, a curiosity since the video can be viewed at any time. This wonder product, claimed to be based on Nobel Prize-winning research, was discovered by Lewis, who reveals that he was almost blind, and even considered suicide before he saved himself with his breathtaking discovery. I had to submit to forty-five minutes of mental torture before I learned that the magic was to be found in “SightCare,” a revolutionary stem cell-enhancing dietary supplement. You can discard your glasses and forget about LASIK surgery! Macular degeneration, cataracts, glaucoma or retinitis pigmentosa? No problem! All can be cured!Īt the beginning of this abominable presentation, I was promised that the secret to “never having to visit an eye doctor again” and “seeing better than an army sniper,” would be revealed in seven minutes. I learned about this purported miracle through an interminable video in which David Lewis, identified as a “former eye specialist,” spews out a host of claims about curing every possible eye problem. One of the most outrageous ones entices people to fork out money for a nutritional supplement that claims to induce stem cells in their body to turn into cells that will cure all, yes ALL, vision problems. Being in the business of separating sense from nonsense for several decades, I have across many contemptible scams. ![]()
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