They claim to have hucog and I know alot of people use that here
Most bullshit diet ever. Anyone will lose weight on 500 calories a day. It's retarded. My doc said she had people coming in asking for Hcg for the diet. Why is it so hard to accept the fact that calories in/calories out is the law of nutrition and thermodynamics?

Funny thing is that the FDA banned the use of the term HCG Diet and the actual sale of it for that purpose like 40 years ago and yet folks are STILL pushing that cockamamie b.s. on the internet. Thanks "Dr." Oz or whomever it was that made all the fat housewives excited to inject for buns of steel.
The Second Law of Thermodynamics clearly shows that you could add work into the equation (exercise) to change the outcome of the change in internal energy. Durrrrrrr.
Sorry, couldn't resist.![]()
Funny thing is that the FDA banned the use of the term HCG Diet and the actual sale of it for that purpose like 40 years ago and yet folks are STILL pushing that cockamamie b.s. on the internet. Thanks "Dr." Oz or whomever it was that made all the fat housewives excited to inject for buns of steel.
The Second Law of Thermodynamics clearly shows that you could add work into the equation (exercise) to change the outcome of the change in internal energy. Durrrrrrr.
Sorry, couldn't resist.![]()
I'm not saying that HCG is effective as a diet aid, but I get a bit weary of the old "calories in, calories out" crap. Nobody really cares about weight loss. People care about fat loss. Hormones have everything to do with fat loss - they have far stronger influence than caloric balance does. Saying that a hormone can't be an effective diet aid because the only thing that matters is "calories in, calories out" is just misguided.
I'm not saying that HCG is effective as a diet aid, but I get a bit weary of the old "calories in, calories out" crap. Nobody really cares about weight loss. People care about fat loss. Hormones have everything to do with fat loss - they have far stronger influence than caloric balance does. Saying that a hormone can't be an effective diet aid because the only thing that matters is "calories in, calories out" is just misguided.
True. But think about people who are overweight. Its not their hormones to blame, its their horrid diets of fast food and oversized portions. Yes some people actually have a medical problem. The majority just stuff their faces with crap food every night.
I'm going to go out on a limb and claim that obesity due to metabolic syndrome involving insulin resistance (often caused by a bad diet) is more common that obesity from just plain overeating.
..Hormones certainly don't hold a far greater effect on fat loss than caloric balance does!! Try eating 5000cals with a maintenance of 2000 with the best hormonal profile. Then eat in an actual calorie deficit (with proper macros) with a horrible hormonal profile. You think the former is more effective?
Effective at what? For improving body composition absolutely the calorie surplus + "optimized" hormones will give better results and bodybuilders do it all the time. At the same time, it is possible through hormonal manipulation to make someone gain fat on a calorie deficit, even if they have to metabolize their muscles and organs to do it.
Of course, in the long run calorie balance does matter, but focusing on the concept of "calories in vs. calories out" to the exclusion of all other factors is a gross simplification that has become a roadblock to understanding and addressing the obesity epidemic.
Widespread repetition and blind acceptance of this mantra has led to the popular notion that the only difference between thin people and fat people is that the former have more willpower and are somehow morally superior.
Well who has more willpower? The body builder using a scale to ensure proper portion sizes of his chicken rice and veggies, or the obese person super sizing his soda and fries at the mcdonalds drive thru? Its pretty self explanatory.
Effective at what? For improving body composition absolutely the calorie surplus + "optimized" hormones will give better results and bodybuilders do it all the time. At the same time, it is possible through hormonal manipulation to make someone gain fat on a calorie deficit, even if they have to metabolize their muscles and organs to do it.
Of course, in the long run calorie balance does matter, but focusing on the concept of "calories in vs. calories out" to the exclusion of all other factors is a gross simplification that has become a roadblock to understanding and addressing the obesity epidemic.
Widespread repetition and blind acceptance of this mantra has led to the popular notion that the only difference between thin people and fat people is that the former have more willpower and are somehow morally superior.
That's kind of a straw man... what about the bodybuilder dirty bulking on grams of AAS and the post-menopausal pre-diabetic who stays fat despite counting every calorie?