CC, check out this thread, where we discussed testing. The good stuff is expensive.
I just started a new sales job and I sell a product that is expensive, but it's very effective at what it does and people usually spend more on things that make up for what it does. Just let me know what the test is and what it tells you and how it can be good for your health. If I took my product to most people who didn't know what it was and told them the price and said, "do you want to buy one?" it wouldn't sell. I have to explain what it does, how it improves your life, and what you're already buying doesn't do. Then everyone wants one and it comes down to whether or not they want to make the commitment for it. There are cost savings and additional benefits to spending smart. Having an expensive price tag doesn't mean it's expensive, if it's worth it, it saves you money elsewhere. This is someone's body we're talking about. If people will spend $490 on a domestic case of C60 that will last 10 months, or $590 buying it month to month (plus shipping), they may just spend the money on the test. What it comes down to is finding the best and most cost efficient way for our volunteer to spend their money on their health and help others at the same time.
From what I understand so far, this is what we have:
* Provides baseline test results for tests that could be beneficial to have depending on your health in the future. The tests can also identify the existence of diseases that would otherwise go undetected until you had symptoms.
* Helps us to understand how C60 extends lifespan and improves health.
* Helps us identify mechanisms that could be exploited to improve longevity and prohealth supplements which in turn will make more supplements available which do the same things or support those benefits to achieve even better results.
These are all things worth spending money on if you want to live forever, have the curiosity or inclination to know that it's doing something for you (how long are you going to take this supplement at $490/year before someone does a test and determines it doesn't do something vital in humans as opposed to rodents?), and you have the money to do so. This is the kind of thing people have been waiting on the sidelines for. How many people bought something else they thought was good for them and it turned out to be a scam or just didn't do what they thought it did? Would you want to make that mistake twice or would you want to invest in tests with reputable testing companies and know you are achieving results or even be able to come forward and say "it doesn't work for humans or creates a potential side effect."
What does it take for a good samaritan to be a good samaratan? Intention to help and capacity to help. Some want to and some can, and sometimes they are the same person
Personally, I've been mulling around the idea of investing in a few dozen mice. I wouldn't keep mice as pets normally, but if I had them for the benefit of life extension, it would be worth it to me and that's money AND time. It only came down to wanting to know how C60 effects reproduction and finding out that breeding mice isn't easy and that males smell bad.