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It's not legal, it's about enforcement. Perfect enforcement is difficult, and often lags years behind.
in the US, vitamins and supplements have a different regulatory requirement, very light. Basically can't be poison. So you'll often see many of these miracle cures sold, but when you read the box itself, it's vitamin, it's a supplement, it's not designed to treat any specific condition.
At what point does the TikTok video go from simple marketing puffery into fraud? That's a fun and difficult question
Instead of trying to go after then for selling legal garbage, go after them for false advertisement when they tell you their fake medicine can do this, that, and give you a bigger dick.
I need fake medicine to SHRINK my dick.
Gas Station HRT?
Call it Sheds and have a label showing a buck turning into a doe. It would sell out in Appalachia.
Placebodong pills.
Some of those vitamins can cause harm in sufficient doses as well, so it gets pretty complicated.
The biggest issue for enforcement is Republicans defunding the FDA and other regulatory agencies so they can't keep up.
It's legal also. There's an official homeopathic exception in medicine. For those who don't know what that is, imagine taking 1ml of something (it doesn't have to be medicine) and diluting it to 1% in a gallon of water and then taking 1ml of that and diluting it to 1% in another gallon of water, and repeating that ten or twenty or more times. That's homeopathic "medicine", it's hokey bullshit and it gets a legal pass.
Just to add to the wonkyness: not only is the active ingredient not a medicine, in many occasions it's actually the virus or bacteria or whatever caused the disease. This gets dilluted to the point where it's extremely unlikely that even a single atom of the original brew is present. And then they claim that the resulting liquid has a memory of losing the ingredient such that it has the ability to remove new particles of that ingredient (or something like that).
It's fantastically cartoonish and preys upon people who lack a certain understanding of logic.
Ironically a live vaccine approach.
I am glad the regulators are slowly cracking down on homeopathics. Companies selling those placebos now have to publish disclaimers like this admitting that it's BS:
https://homeoworks.com/disclaimer/
Not that it will stop a lot of people from buying homeopathics, but it's a start.