Is Hoodia A Scam?
I’d like to take just a moment to shed some light on all the controversy that is spread all over the internet about Hoodia. If you surf around you’ll find blogs, articles and complaints from people who bought Hoodia and didn’t lose a lot of weight. 
The problem isn’t Hoodia. The problem is much of the advertising that went into the initial promotion of Hoodia was false (scam), or at least, misleading.
The fact is that Hoodia was an African plant that was used by hunters to help them avoid hunger while searching for food. The extract from the Hoodia Gordonii plant (in liquid or pill form) will do exactly that for anyone who purchases legitimate Hoodia. The problem was that many promoters were advertising Hoodia as a weight loss supplement. You would see advertisements like “Use Hoodia To Drop 30 Pounds In A Month!“ That is false, and the people promoting Hoodia Gordonii as a weight loss/diet supplement were scammers.
Hoodia Gordonii is not a scam. It is a simple product that does one thing. It suppresses your appetite.
For me, starting a healthy eating plan or getting on a diet is easy. Then, a few days in, the cravings and hunger usually get the better of me and I “cheat”. I feel terrible, try again, and then get depressed when the cravings take over again.
Taking Hoodia for a few days will reduce your hunger and cravings. It won’t boost your metabolism (you need to exercise or take a metabolism booster for that). It won’t shop for healthy food choices for you, and it won’t slim your body.
That is what the Hoodia scam promoters wanted you to think it does, but it doesn’t.
Hoodia is an appetite suppressant. It does that one thing very well. And, that isn’t a scam!
To read more facts about Hoodia, where to find legitimate Hoodia,
and how to avoid the Hoodia scam products click here
(read more Hoodia Gordonii facts here (avoid the scams))


