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- Aug 27, 2011
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You're 20% correct. You're 80% wrong.
Did you try to sound smart?
You're 20% correct. You're 80% wrong.
No it's not. Whey protein and caffeine etc. also have proven effects in medical studies. Yet they are legal. I don't know about creatine but I assume that's legal too. It definitely helps with muscle and recovery.Who are you quoting?
Also I guarantee that if I make lemon carrot and potato juice injection that adds 5% muscle mass it will be banned.
Anything that works gets banned.
Oh and look up the definition of drugs.
Supplements are unregulated because they don't work legally.
I was going to ask you the same thing.Did you try to sound smart?
Doesn't mention it in the manual.Anybody know when the USADA contract with the UFC expires?
I was going to ask you the same thing.
High school drop out, marginally successful experience on junior varsity soccer team. Are you sure you're the guy to be telling how PEDs work?
Besides, many of us work out and use supplements. We know they work. We have years, decades of experience.
We don't need the guy who shovels popcorn part-time at the local movie theater trying to sell us some bullshit conspiracy story about how all supplements are fake or on the banned list.
See Paragraph 36So is Fight Milk cool or no?
You don't know what you're talking about. And you're shift at the movie theater is about to start.What's the second paragraph about?
Supplements don't work. If they did, they would be regulated drugs and/or banned. A drug has a clear physiological effect and can be marketed and sold with having that effect. You cannot sell shit as a supplement if it has that clear effect. End of story.
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/informationondrugs/ucm079436.htm