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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Meet Holly
Hello my name is Holly I have been on Skinny Fiber about 8 months now and I have went from 291lbs to 186lbs I have lost 105lbs and still going strong!!!! you should know I am in a wheelchair and I have been since I was 18 due to my RSD ( a nerve dystrophy)..and I have still lost a great amt of weight without exercise .I have went from a size 26 to a size 12 and in some pants an 11.. But not only have I lost weight but My health has made a huge change.. I No longer have Acid Reflux issues, my IBS is GONE, Plus some of the pain has went away.. Skinny Fiber has really given me back my life without it I don’t know where i would be. I just wished I would of started it sooner. So if you are trying to figure out if Skinny Fiber is for you all I have to say is YES it is… Remember the 30 day money back Guarantee !!!!!!
Look at my Photo the Girl in the first photo was SAD , UNHEALTHY, EMBRASSED about her self, and over all just unhappy
www.fityourjeans.com
Look at my Photo the Girl in the first photo was SAD , UNHEALTHY, EMBRASSED about her self, and over all just unhappy
www.fityourjeans.com
Lucrecias Success
WOW!!!! Thankful for promoting a product that works!!!!!!
Sensa Products LLC promoted the powder through major retailers like Costco and GNC and with infomercials on the Home Shopping Network and other television networks. The company sold a one-month supply of Sensa for $59 and urged consumers to "sprinkle, eat and lose weight."
But Federal Trade Commission officials said Tuesday the company used bogus clinical studies and paid endorsements to rack up more than $364 million in sales between 2008 and 2012.
The FTC will also collect $7.3 million from LeanSpa, a company that promotes acai berry and "colon cleanse" weight loss supplements through fake news websites. Also swept up in Tuesday's action are skin cream maker L'Occitane and HCG Diet Direct, which sells unproven hormones for weight loss. The companies will together return about $34 million to consumers to settle the federal charges.
Sensa Products LLC promoted the powder through major retailers like Costco and GNC and with infomercials on the Home Shopping Network and other television networks. The company sold a one-month supply of Sensa for $59 and urged consumers to "sprinkle, eat and lose weight."
But Federal Trade Commission officials said Tuesday the company used bogus clinical studies and paid endorsements to rack up more than $364 million in sales between 2008 and 2012.
The FTC will also collect $7.3 million from LeanSpa, a company that promotes acai berry and "colon cleanse" weight loss supplements through fake news websites. Also swept up in Tuesday's action are skin cream maker L'Occitane and HCG Diet Direct, which sells unproven hormones for weight loss. The companies will together return about $34 million to consumers to settle the federal charges.
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