KINOKI CLEANSING DETOX FOOT

There are purportedly two types of foot cleanses: ionic foot baths and detox foot pads.  Both are frauds.
Detox Food Pads
Foot pads were initially sold through infomercials and the Internet, but they have grown like a plague since those early days. They are now being sold inside major retail chains, including Walmart and Walgreens.  We have been researching long enough to know that their presence inside major retailers is allowed solely because they do not perform as claimed.  Conversely, legitimate and effective alternative therapies are categorically banned in retailers, without exception.
These foot products are allowed because they effectively satisfy the pharmaceutical agenda of ultimately destroying the reputation of alternative therapies, amongst the already brainwashed masses.
Victims of the con are told to stick the pads to their feet at night, and that the pads will pull toxins out of their soles, alongside removing candida (gastrointestinal yeast), mucous, and parasites.  The pads actually do become brown in most cases, which is claimed to be from the absorption of toxins.  However, the pads turn brown even when in contact with 100% distilled water, as shown in this Youtube video.  Commercials have claimed that the pads lighten in color every night, which supposedly proves that there are less toxins in the bloodstream.  However, users of the foot pads usually report no change in color from one night to the next. Their feet sweat about the same amount of salt water every night, in other words.  The fact that there is a small portion of people who do actually get a reduction in color concerns us greatly.  For them, the pads are releasing a water-based chemical that is absorbed into their skin, and it subsequently impairs the sweat glands.  Something toxic is being put into their bodies, instead of being taken out, in other words.  This is why the F.D.A. blesses this sort of "alternative medicine", because their chemical partners could not ask for better competition.

We searched for the ingredients list for the foot pads, but we could only find partial lists.  Whenever some ingredients are listed, the product's marketers tend to boast about the presence of tourmaline.  Tourmaline is a boron silicate mineral compound that contains impurities, such as aluminum, iron, sodium, lithium and potassium.  Boron, by the way, tends to be toxic and inflammatory to the body as well, and chemically extracted silica is a carcinogen.
Here is typical advertising from an Amazon.com seller of these pads:
"Utilizing only the highest purity of ingredients and the optimum blending ratios for maximum results - the Detox Foot Patch provides the one-two punch of the powerful detoxifying ingredients, in conjunction with tourmaline (the negative ion & far infrared producing mineral) to provide an unparalleled and effective external cleansing experience."
We can read above that It creates "negative ions" and generates"far infrared" energy?  The secret ingredient is obviously kryptonite.  If these pads were really producing "far infrared", then this type of energy is more appropriately called 'microwaves'.  Even if those claims could be true, in some krypotonian comic-book universe, do any of us really want our feet microwaved -- for the sake of health?  What specific toxins would the microwave radiation really cleanse?  We can be sure that it would produce benzene compounds in the blood, like those which are always found inside microwaved meats.
The pads often contain mushrooms too, as if victims were not already getting enough heavy metals from the tourmaline. The mushrooms' metals will leach into the skin, but the mushrooms' usual natural antidote, selenium, is very unlikely to get transdermally absorbed in enough quantity to help, as it normally does in foods.  We can expect the usual result to be an amplification of heavy metal toxicity, and likely stimulated candida too.  Fraudsters claim that the pads remove toxins from the body, but in actuality, they increase exposure to heavy metals.  Most of the original Internet sales sites have disappeared, but the Internet is still riddled with foot pad cleanse products and smaller sellers.  The imitations of the original Kinoki pads contain the same disturbing ingredients, and all have the same outrageous claims.
Ionic Foot Baths
These devices generally cost in excess of $1,000, and they are said to remove not only toxins from the body, but also candida, mucous, lung congestion, and joint pains.  Sessions with these devices are available at some health food stores and chiropractic offices.  If you are getting "help" from such people, then please locate a more ethical practitioner.  In most cases, about a cup of salt is added to the water.  Next, the victim is told to place his feet into the water, just before the device is turned on.  It starts with bubbling, and a hazy material appears (which is explained to be "candida"), and during a period of about an hour, the water turns into a brown sludge.
To somebody with no background in electronics, the carnival like charade can seem very impressive.  Victims believe that toxins have been cleansed from their bodies, and they often feel better due to the powerful faith effect.  However, whenever the water is actually tested, the only thing that is found inside of it is iron rust, or some other metal in colloidal/hydroxide form.  This will happen regardless of whether a person's feet are placed inside the tub.
In reality, the water turns brown due to electrolysis (like electro-plating).  Electricity runs through the water, and it is in contact with the conducting metal probes.  This causes the probe metals to combine with the water, turning it dark and hazy.  Even in cases where salt is not added, there is salt on the skin and naturally-occurring minerals that are already inside of the water, which makes the water conductive enough for this effect to be produced every time.  The same result can be obtained from a glass bowl, two metal rods, salt, (tap/spring) water, and a DC power supply.  No feet are required at all!  In fact, this sort of electrolysis is how we routinely electrically combine copper with water to produce our elite colloidal copper lotion.
Not only are no toxins or candida removed through the feet, which is physically impossible, but these products actually increase the amount of foreign metals inside the body, due to skin absorption.  Iron accumulation, the type that is most likely to occur, is largely responsible for the high rates of heart disease in men.  In addition, the organic iron that women and children need is, of course, much better obtained from dietary sources than ionic foot baths.  The random and impure inorganic iron compounds that saturate the water inside of these devices is mostly useless, and is generally more harmful to the human body than good.  The safest source for safe and usable iron is organic, range-fed beef.
Prologue
The toxins of the human body rarely reside inside the feet, nor do they gravitationally fall when people stand up.  Instead, toxins are stored inside fatty tissues, and inside the liver.  In order to cleanse the body, a legitimate heavy metal and liver cleanse needs to be done, and a parasitic cleanse too.  Please read our article, Techniques For Cleansing The Body and Detoxifying for more information about this topic.
Special Price: You can get Kinoki cleansing detox foot with the general price of Rp 29,000. But when you become a member Paloma Shopway (PS) will get the goods at a price of Rp 23 000 contains 10 pads. PS registration is served through this website.
You can see the description in this link.

 

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