Quote Originally Posted by redtails
While some products don't work, I've PERSONALLY used 3 different "magic" elixers that have worked and have several friends who also passed with them & others(even military intake drug tests). Most have some sort of guarantee, at least a full refund if it doesn't work. The way they work is to temporarily stop your body from burning fat so the THC isn't released into your bloodstream.
A prime example of what Ive pointed out. Nothing but a pure sales pitch to woo the uninformed and gullible. If you take the bogus claims of these potion peddlers at face value, then I've got some oceanfront property in Kansas for sale. If you notice the directions of these magic potions, they often instruct the consumer to avoid exercise when taking the product. Its the avoiding of exercise that stops the fat burning - not the product itself.

All of these magic potions work on the principle of dilution (that is, when they do work). That means they work because of the amount of water that you are required to drink with them. You can spend $50 - $200 on a magic potion and accomplish nothing different than you would accomplish with just vitamin B2 and water. The so-called "guarantees" offered by these peddlers are of no insurance that the snake oil works. Often when a consumer fails after using the product, and makes an attempt to exercise the guarantee, the consumer is often told that...

A) "You did not follow the instructions, therefore the guarantee is void"

B) "Cannabis is illegal, and our products are not to be used for lawfully administered drug tests, therefore the guarantee is void"

In summary, magic detox products are a big scam to capitalize on the so-called "war on drugs". They only exist to seperate the credulous from their hard-earned cash. Cannabis users are victimized enough by the so-called "war on drugs" without these leeching scam artists entering the mix.