Skin Care Sales, Consumer Report 75% of all medicines and cosmetics are derived from nature

Cosmetic companies like Erno Laszlo, Estee Lauder, and Lancome train their sales associates to sell unsuspecting women hundreds of dollars worth of unnecessary skin care products.

SELLING SKIN CARE, TELLING LIES – 75% of all medicines and cosmetics are derived from nature.

One of the lies, which builds the sale, is that the eye area is too fragile and delicate for your face moisturizer. “Only an eye cream will work on the eye area,” another lie. “You must use our cleanser” to receive the full benefits of our moisturizer. “You won’t get all the anti-aging benefits if you don’t use the entire system.” All lies.

Try cleaning your skin with baby shampoo, milk and sugar, in equal parts. Want to look younger, add cornmeal to the cleanser. Acne has problem, add aspirin. Splash to rinse 10 times with very warm water. You need a toner, use Green Tea or Orange Juice or Aloe Vera. Moisturize with a capsule of vitamin E or soybean oil (vitamin e). For melasma or brown spots, an over-the-counter fading cream (under $10.00) twice daily after cleansing replaces the in-office procedure.

Erno Laszlo doesn’t even sell individual items, they insist you use everything from Erno Laszlo, alcohol, mineral oil, and petroleum.

The media won’t tell you that cosmetic companies like Erno Laszlo use petroleum and mineral oil to clog pores and charge the consumer up to $100 a jar for sugar, castor oil, and fragrance. Can you imagine being a magazine writer trying to tell the truth about your advertisers’ skin care products?

There is no market for the truth. Cosmetic companies use sugar or glycol acid in antiaging products because sugar penetrates the skin and skin cells. This means that yes, you can bathe in sugar and you will look younger. Your skin will appear more supple because the sugar fills in the skin cells.

If a cosmetics company creates a chemical that penetrates the skin and skin cells, it would be considered a drug, not a cosmetic, and would require a prescription. Nature provides plant-derived aspirin (salicylic acid), the active ingredient in Proactive and Erno Laszlo acne-treatment skin care products.

The grape seed extract in the Erno Laszlo and Estee Lauder eye care products is Thompson Seedless Green Grapes and the green tea is green tea. How can women spend so much money buying such inferior skincare? Just bad copies of natural (food) ingredients.

Fruit acids in cosmetics are made from: apples, oranges, grapefruit, berries, all very good for the skin. Cosmetic companies make chemicals that mimic the action of the fruit on the face. Honey contains a natural peroxide and is an excellent care treatment for dry skin.

Where can a woman go for a true education on her skin, not the department store cosmetics counter, they have consumer lies.

The media do not protect the consumer against cosmetic companies because they are afraid of offending their advertisers or even their shareholders. How about a book you say exposes the fact that cornmeal peeling will make your skin look younger and aspirin can replace a prescription-only product? Same problem, who would publish the book, a publisher owned by a corporation that owns a skin care company. Where would such a book be advertised?

Can you literally rub out the lines and wrinkles with a washcloth and water? Yes. This is a very inexpensive treatment to get rid of “crow’s feet.”

Aloe vera smells very bad, but it penetrates the skin without a prescription. Natural ingredients like milk, sugar, and aloe are synthesized, preserved with chemicals, and mixed with mineral oil and water for $65.00 from Erno Laszlo.

The same corporation that owns the skin care company owns the newspaper, the magazine, the book publisher, and the television station. Did you know that garlic kills lung cancer cells in a test tube?

“SECRETS SKIN CARE COMPANIES AND DERMATOLOGIST DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW”

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *