It is not I who is creating a controversy, but the OP. The OP claims (see the title of this thread) that C60-in-oil does not cause longevity. In effect, he says that my product and the product of "Carbon" and Revgenetics only work because they are "contaminated" with his patented homeopathic product. If we let this stand, the next step may be that he'll claim that we (3 companies) are frauds and that we'll have to pay him licence fees.
Now, if Mr. Andrievsky had been a reputable scientist, we would not have much to work with, in terms of our defense. However, someone who dresses up like a cult leader, uses childish style all over his writings, "corrects" a Nobel prize winner, believes in Homeopathy and charges half a million dollars for a liter of his mother tincture which contains three dollars worth of C60 but claims he never had the money to do a small-scale rat longevity study with his product, someone who has no other evidence to prove his (illegal all over the western world) health claims than his own research, there are so many holes in his story that it was easy to mount a defense.
Note that in the 18 years of his "extensive C60 research", he never had the money to buy 18 rats and feed them for half a dozen years. He states in this thread that he wanted to do a similar study as the Baathi study, but that he never got the money together for 18 rats, a cage, a bag of food and a little of his own hydrated fullerenes. And neither will he have the funds in the future. Yet we have to believe his claim that hydrated fullerenes caused the longevity, not the lipofullerenes?
Pulling rank and saying: "Because he studied fullerenes for 18 years, you have to believe him" is not a valid argument. In science, it is studies that count. He never produced any evidence for his claim that he presents in this thread. Pointing out the lack of evidence is not "being nasty" or "mentally ill", it is being sceptical.
Edited by SarahVaughter, 30 December 2012 - 03:32 PM.