Harvard honey memory ritual is a scam without scientific proof

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A viral claim that Harvard confirmed an ancient honey ritual restores memory and reverses brain rot is false. Multiple fact-checkers and news outlets have identified it as a deceptive marketing campaign selling an unverified supplement called CogniHoney. The hoax uses AI deepfakes of Bill Gates and fabricated citations of Harvard researchers to create false credibility.

There is no Harvard study validating this claim. Dr. Bruce Yankner of Harvard Medical School was falsely cited in promotional materials. Bill Gates never endorsed CogniHoney or any honey recipe for Alzheimer’s disease. The video footage of Gates and other celebrities consists entirely of AI deepfakes with manipulated lip movements and fake audio.

No clinical evidence supports the claim that honey recipes reverse Alzheimer’s or memory loss in humans. The campaign falsely promises a 91 percent success rate from a 2,100 participant trial that does not exist. The product is sold through long sales videos that pivot from a simple pantry recipe pitch to supplement sales.

The Better Business Bureau, Snopes, and Forbes have confirmed there is zero scientific evidence for honey-based dementia cures. Consumers who purchased the product should contact their credit card companies to report fraud. The scam often includes auto-enrollment in recurring subscriptions costing hundreds of dollars monthly.

Laboratory studies show honey contains antioxidant compounds with neuroprotective potential in animal models. However, no clinical intervention has proven memory reversal for Alzheimer’s or dementia in humans. Experts recommend consulting a medical professional for memory concerns rather than purchasing unverified supplements.

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