Glyco Renew Ben Carson Scam – Avoid Glyco Renew Blood Vessel Support Reviews Scam Feat. Ben Carson!

Опубликовано: 12 Март 2025
на канале: Jordan Liles
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This video is all about a product called Glyco Renew from "Ripped Brands," supposedly for blood vessels or blood support, with claims that Dr. Ben Carson has some involvement with this bottle of pills. However, all of this is a scam. Dr. Ben Carson has never endorsed any such Glyco Renew blood vessel or blood support products.

If you see any online articles talking about how Dr. Ben Carson has just come out with some new bottle of pills about reversing dementia to help your blood vessels become cleansed or cleaned, and it has something to do with glucose, gluco, glycogen, or something related to blood sugar or blood vessel cleaning or cleansing, it's going to be a scam. Don't believe anything you see that claims Dr. Ben Carson has endorsed a brand new medicinal product. If you have a medical issue, definitely go talk to your doctor. Don't simply buy something online just because you want to believe it's real.

There are so many scam products out there being advertised on Facebook and Instagram, meaning that Meta, the parent company of both social media platforms, is making a lot of money by accepting cash from scammers. The reason they do this is because they know they can get away with it. If they actually wanted to invest in credible moderators with the tens of billions of dollars they have in quarterly revenue, they would do that, but they don't. Instead, they allow lots of ads—thousands, in fact—that they shouldn't allow based on their own policies. All they do after that is say users should hit the report button, as if we are on the Meta payroll. But of course, none of us are on the payroll for the company.

And now, you have these Dr. Ben Carson scams that have been going on in paid advertising on Meta, meaning Facebook and Instagram, for years. If you see any claims out there about Dr. Ben Carson endorsing some sort of Glyco Renew product or anything similar, it's not true. Don't believe any claims that Nature magazine or Nature publication came out with an article talking about blood vessel cleaning or cleansing. Those are all scams. It's sad to think that the scammers claim this, but they actually claim you might be able to become 120 years old by taking their pills, curing chronic and incurable diseases, cleaning dirty vessels, etc. It's all scammy, untrue, and false as can be. Age-related hypertension is also mentioned.

Do not order Glyco Renew from websites including Vitamin Place, eBay, Amazon.com, Walmart.com, or any other websites. Again, go see a doctor if you have any questions about a medical condition. Don't trust weird online ads to help you with serious issues.

Finally, don't trust "sponsored" online articles from Sound Publishing, such as the Covington-Maple Valley Reporter. Such articles are sponsored content, meaning that Sound Publishing accepted money from scammers in order to allow articles written by scammers to be placed on otherwise credible blogs located in Alaska and the state of Washington. It's unclear why Sound Publishing is engaging in this sort of scam content, other than that they get paid for it. My hope is that they have no idea that the content consists of scams and that they put a stop to it one day. But with the way things go these days, with so little hope in every corner of the world, I really don't see that happening.

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