Thoughts on numbers

BooneDonk

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I’ll preface this with I am an actual “scientist” with papers from a college to back it up (lol) and gainfully employed in the “chemical” business. I use lab data to sell millions of dollars in products and services every year and back that up with monitoring data for my customers.

This whole testing thing is a crap shoot if we are being honest. Even for completely US made/packaged/tested/consumed products. Think about it like this:
I make 10,000gals of chemical in a batch to sell in oilfield. I take one 6oz bottle from somewhere in the blend and perform specific gravity, color, pH, even performance testing in the lab and that’s what my entire batch is based on. We are talking about less than a thimble full of the peptide “batch” to base the whole run of 20 kilos of product that is bottled and lyophilized to be shipped around the world and used for research. The testing destroys the sample submitted so who knows? It is, however, the best methods we have.
Cap color? Maybe. Batch number? It’s what the sellers say it is. They don’t want to mess up their business model either, but I doubt they throw the last 8 vials away because a new batch showed up. They add two and make a make a kit if the caps match.

I’m not saying don’t read tests and base reconstitution and dosing off the information. It’s frankly dangerous to not, reckless is putting it mildly. Do the suppliers have an interest in the products matching what is advertised/sold? Absolutely. Should we do our own testing, group or individual? Absolutely. Trust, but verify. Hold them to task! My customers do it all the time to my product and it better perform to standards.

Keeping these sorts of forums open so we consumers have a place to cuss and discuss is value far beyond what @ZippityDooDah currently lays out financially. Thanks to those that came before us and figured this all out. There’s a reason why, it wasn’t just made up. Thank you for coming to my Ted talk.
 
So you’re telling me the sketchy Chinese peps made in what I picture is a dirty, sketchy Chinese garage and purchased from literal drug dealers might be sketchy? News to me

These suppliers don’t give a fuck about you or me. They care about making money
 
So you’re telling me the sketchy Chinese peps made in what I picture is a dirty, sketchy Chinese garage and purchased from literal drug dealers might be sketchy? News to me

These suppliers don’t give a fuck about you or me. They care about making money
Its like that all over, money comes first you come last. Even here in the US some products are not what they claim to be.
 
So you’re telling me the sketchy Chinese peps made in what I picture is a dirty, sketchy Chinese garage and purchased from literal drug dealers might be sketchy? News to me

These suppliers don’t give a fuck about you or me. They care about making money
I don’t disagree completely. They do care about their money and continuing the flow of it.
Its like that all over, money comes first you come last. Even here in the US some products are not what they claim to be.
Some? All I’m saying is don’t get too bogged down by numbers.
 
So you’re telling me the sketchy Chinese peps made in what I picture is a dirty, sketchy Chinese garage and purchased from literal drug dealers might be sketchy? News to me

These suppliers don’t give a fuck about you or me. They care about making money
What you said honestly comes off as racist — it’s not about “dirty Chinese garages,” it’s about unregulated production and shady suppliers anywhere in the world. People cut corners when profit is the only motive, no matter the country.
 
What you said honestly comes off as racist — it’s not about “dirty Chinese garages,” it’s about unregulated production and shady suppliers anywhere in the world. People cut corners when profit is the only motive, no matter the country.
I agree. Chinese labs may be far cleaner than other labs. They may not be..We just dont know.
 
What you said honestly comes off as racist — it’s not about “dirty Chinese garages,” it’s about unregulated production and shady suppliers anywhere in the world. People cut corners when profit is the only motive, no matter the country.
Come on now. He didn’t say anything racist. That’s a hard accusation.
 
What you said honestly comes off as racist — it’s not about “dirty Chinese garages,” it’s about unregulated production and shady suppliers anywhere in the world. People cut corners when profit is the only motive, no matter the country.
The comma after garages made me quote this even more than the terrible take. We don’t put commas directly before parentheses. Ever.

Thank you for coming to my second Ted Talk of the day.
 
I don't see much difference between the companies that make the "real" ozempic and the grey market. The worst thing to worry about seems to be dosage .. and we are the ones making those decisions anyway. If we take a dose too strong or too weak we are already making the adjustments.
 
Come on now. He didn’t say anything racist. That’s a hard accusation.
It’s not a “hard accusation,” it’s just pointing out how it came across. Using “dirty Chinese garage” as shorthand is a stereotype. If the point is really about unregulated, unsafe production, then say that — because it’s true no matter the country.
 
The comma after garages made me quote this even more than the terrible take. We don’t put commas directly before parentheses. Ever.

Thank you for coming to my second Ted Talk of the day.
You mean quotation marks. Parentheses look like this ( ).

If you can’t tell the difference between punctuation marks, no wonder you’re out here confusing racism with insight.

TIP: If you’re going to come at me trying to defend a racist take with distraction, at least get your terms right. Always.
 
You mean quotation marks. Parentheses look like this ( ).

If you can’t tell the difference between punctuation marks, no wonder you’re out here confusing racism with insight.

TIP: If you’re going to come at me trying to defend a racist take with distraction, at least get your terms right. Always.
I’ll take your advice as just the tip going forward. I trust you will have a pleasant day!
 
The comma after garages made me quote this even more than the terrible take. We don’t put commas directly before parentheses. Ever.

Thank you for coming to my second Ted Talk of the day.
Enjoyed your insights and perspective on manufacturing and testing ... but I feel obliged to tell you that the punctuation used in @Jfrick11's garage pushback was accurate. Uncommonly so, in fact.
 

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