That’s how this is going to go, I’m telling you. Right now the word’s just starting to get out about HCG, but pretty soon it will be all anybody’s talking about. Signs will read, “HCG Sale! Buy one bottle, get the next 26 days half off!” Or something to that effect.
HCG is largely sold online these days. That’s part of the phenomenon: it went from being a high-profile weight-loss treatment in elite clinics, very expensive and hush-hush, to a breakthrough homeopathic treatment available to the common man.
And that’s important, because it’s the common man (or woman), the workaday Americans, who are the ones who bear the brunt of the obesity epidemic. The states in which the percentage of obese citizens has climbed to over 30 percent of the population are Alabama, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Now, I’m not trying to stereotype, but I’m from Oklahoma, so I’m allowed.
What do these states all have in common? These states have a high percentage of not only of obese people, but of rural areas and small towns. They have big cities, sure, but there are wide-open spaces in between. We’re looking at farmers, ranchers, and fishermen, living in remote areas, maybe without much human contact, as there is not a lot around.
These are the people who’ve borne the brunt of this epidemic because they have the least resources at their disposal. There aren’t weight-loss clinics or gyms on every corner out there in the middle of nowhere. Not ones that aren’t hidden away from the “common man,” anyway. While they might know the difference between a healthy lifestyle and an unhealthy one, they may nor have access to the resources they need to lose weight.
My point is, now HCG is available to them. Now information is available. As long as they have the Internet—which I’ll bet most of them do, remote or not—they can see the words HCG Sale pop up and say, “What’s that all about?”—then click on the site and have a world of new knowledge right at their fingertips.













