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Mark Manno's avatar

An implication of this analysis is that erythritol is probably best NOT consumed orally. This would then discourage the use of most monk fruit sweetener products - since their first ingredient seems to always be erithritol, and NOT monk fruit! By the way, most of us know by now that an FDA designation of "generally recognized as safe" is no longer a reliable endorsement!

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Inisfad's avatar

If you are concerned about erythritol, then just buy Xlear. Frankly, the Wellness Company’s nasal spray is pretty much a copy of what Xlear has been doing for years…except that Xlear doesn’t have erythritol. Everything else is the same.

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JENNIFER PRICE's avatar

Is Big pharma causing concerns if so i would double up on what they were warning about . Give me dr mccullough and drs marik and coreys info anyday. They lost their livelihoods for speaking out and standing up for people worldwide. Keep questioning but dont doubt the ones who put their heads above parapets.

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Ionedery2's avatar

Your analysis of this ingredient erythritol was interesting and reassuring. It's so easy to get caught up in the hype around supplements and treatments. When money is involved it seems to be the motivation for deception.

You're so right about the "genetic vaccination debacle". The lesson here is question everything, and follow the money to find the truth.

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Allie's avatar
1hEdited

How much do you trust “Generally Recognized as Safe?” Can’t blame us for questioning. We’ve been warned about conflicts of interest in industry supported “research.” Can’t blame us for being skeptical when TWC tells us their product is “safe and effective.” Perhaps your product is not selling as well as you’d like. Perhaps you’re correct, Dr. McCullough, but, if you’ve taught us anything, you taught us not to accept things on blind faith, but to question and do our own research. This is a risk you took when you became commercial.

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ROBERT M GEFFKEN's avatar

Thanks for clearing this issue up! I was one of your subscribers who had expressed concern over the use of erythritol in the Wellness nasal .

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Inisfad's avatar

Buy Xlear instead. No erythritol and it would appear that, frankly, the Wellness Company added this ingredient to Xlear possibly due to legal issues. Xlear has all the same ingredients, except the erythritol. I’ve been using it for years, and it’s great.

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AMV's avatar

Me too. It works, no negative side effects and no virus’. 👍

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JENNIFER PRICE's avatar

Best of all stop all sweetners we dont need them. Eventually even the alternate health producy wont have them either

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