@fern-tv

Watch part 2 here: https://youtu.be/KB5VNL6VvEE

@minminoppa4652

16:02 the friend of my mum had breast cancer. She got real treatment and had to use only a few pills for her whole life. I know it‘s not the best solution, but she would have been able to live. After some time she stopped taking these pills because of some esoteric shit. After one year, the cancer was back, this time untreatable and she died 4 months later, leaving behind a loving husband and two kids. My mum is also still struggling. And the worst part is that those people who advised her to let her treat herself differently, won’t get any punishment. It’s unbelievable.

@PawFromTheBroons

As a rule of thumb, any health product offering real proven benefits does NOT need to be sold through Multi Level Marketing

@Riotakanaka

apart from all the seriousness, the company proposing a chess game instead of providing tangible proof was hilarious 😂

@MrTVx99

The fact that I've never heard of this device means I must be doing something right in my life.

@schildkreacker0

The worst thing is that the people who would really buy this device would never voluntarily watch such a video

@johannheinken7160

I actually worked on a university project for this company in 2018.
Our lecturer knew Markus Schmieke personally. We were asked to develop a mock-up marketing campaign. While working on this project we quickly noticed, that this device was a total bogus. A friend of ours even developed a copy of the device in three days with the most simple equipment - no surprise since the product is just simple electronics.

We also met Mr. Schmieke in person. At the end of the project we were asked to present our work to him. I am shocked, by how much this project company grew and what it became.

@nyx019

My grandfather was treated by a "doctor" similar to Doepp. Here in Germany. He died, obviously. When he finally opened up to traditional medicine and wanted to comply with any treatment, it was too late.

@T4n15

My grandma trusted "medical devices" like this one, she didn't visit a doctor over her heart problems. In the end she had a heart attack and now her life only consists only of waiting for death. Had she just visited she could have lived alone as she did.

@christophsiebert1213

How this is not illegal, is baffling. As the comapny, THEY are responsible for all of their marketing and sales force. THEY have to approve marketing material, presentations, the claims made, etc. If any of those connected to their MLM make misleading statements, then those are statements from the company. There should be no defense or disclaimer that protects them from that. Just because you disclaim something, doesn't mean you can act completely contrary to it. That's absurd, completely ludicrous!

@trueberryless

I love how hard Jonas (or is it David - I'm sorry) tries not to laugh during explaining the absurdness of this "magical device"... 🤣

@GreenPlanetFacts

Ive actually never heard of this device

@Jaiden_45

When she said "you can add frequenzies to water" I fucking lost it 😂😂😂

@AbsurdistAsian

I'm often tremendously amazed that people believe devices like this would work. Forget that it claims to heal so many things, let's start with questioning how can such a small device can, say, cure your fever, and with what, "frequencies"?

@Yahula1edits

The cliffhanger is something i always wonder about, are the people harming /scamming their friends and family out of greed or because they are just idiots?

@epimorphism

"That's a controversial marketing scheme that is built like a pyramid" is some very precise wording

@thegatek33p3r3

Just the idea of a "quantum healing device" sounds like the biggest grift ever.

@brodoxl

I can get so angry about stuff like this. It's just a bunch of corporate greedy villains, who mislead their customers, and profiting of their potential suffering. If Healy provided clear information about their claims, it would be common knowledge that it does not work, and if it was common knowledge it doesn't work, no one would buy it. This company cannot operate without misleading vulnerable people.

@arg1051

I was diagnosed 20 years ago with MS, and I've seen it all with this type of garbage. MS, it's highly variable from person to person. Some people have few symptoms and episodes and they can be mild, but with others it can be a near constant and rapid downward progression to disability and eventually death. I'm somewhere in the middle, not the best case scenario, not the worst, but pretty awful and it was certainly worse in the first 6 years after diagnosis as compared to now. I've seen Montel Williams selling blenders all-liquid diet scams, "doctors" in Scandinavia selling their fish only diet books, other strange diet fads, healing crystals, incense, marijuana or marijuana extracts, diluted homeopathic trash, special surgeries to widen the arteries in your neck and carry a high risk of sudden death, etc. and of course this crap. It's all garbage, none of it works. Those that claim to be "cured" are just lucky and are experiencing a prolonged remission, and for some people they may never relapse again in their life. I mean, generally, anecdotal evidence is piss poor proof of anything, but with MS it is utterly meaningless given the high variability of disease progression from person to person. The people selling this crap to desperately ill and dying people and marketing it as a cure, deserve a fate worse than death. Eternal damnation and burning in hell is not enough for these assholes.

Your best and only bet for treating MS is to find a real neurologist, hopefully one that specializes in the treatment and mitigation of MS, and find out which drug combination works for you. We live in the time of monoclonal antibodies, and right now because of that, people are living longer and living with less disability. That is the one and only thing that has meant a significant change in the lives of people with MS in the last 15 years. If that doesn't work, I'm sorry. There are options for suppressing the hell out of your immune system, and of course steroids when you have new lesions on the brain and spine but that, though shitty, is far and away more effective than giving your money to con artists and scammers.

@nikolainyegaard

”What’s it called?”
”Healy”
”Does it heal?”
”For legal reasons; no”