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Anonymous

Indeed one should be very mindful of anonymous testimonials and especially those that stand to benefit somebody. That includes T.S. Wiley's profits and ambitions. One should closely examine testimonials that paint a picture of unblemished success with a vendor's product.

In this case, one should closely examine cavalier dismissal of all the women who've testified to having unfavorable and even terrible experiences on the Wiley Protocol, their dismissal as nothing but paid lackeys of pharmaceutical companies. It's very common, and you have to wonder why.

If T.S. Wiley, like a responsible researcher/businessperson, had actually tested her protocol and her idea of extreme hormone dosages, before selling it to menopausal women, and if the results had proven to be an unqualified success, then perhaps there would be at least some basis for doubting the words of all the women who've actually tried her product. But she didn't. It's been years now and it remains untested. The only evidence is from "the field". That consists of the testimonials of women who've actually tried the product and of those who are selling it.

If one time, just one time, one of these people who are claiming that all these women reporting horrible results are being paid off by pharmaceutical companies -- because they and supposedly so terrified of T.S. Wiley -- if they offered just a single shred of evidence in their favor of this claim, it would blow me away. That's all it would take. Just one ounce of substantiation.

I've talked to a great many of these women directly, and I'm confident it doesn't exist.

(And I have their contact info. Anyone who's serious about investigating this issue should contact me.)

Deborah Vanderstadt
Wiley Watch

August 18, 2009 - 1:33am

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