To all bald guys out there, just get some onions, no need to cry about it

TairikuOkami

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I can’t confirm from here whether that specific site/video is safe or unsafe, and I also can’t validate the “86.9% regrowth success rate” claim without seeing the underlying peer‑reviewed clinical paper(s). What I can do is outline safe, practical ways to assess both the security risk and the credibility of the claim before you interact with it.

Security: how to check the link safely
  • Do not enter any personal details, email, phone number, payment info, or install any “recommended” downloads from the page.
  • Check the URL on multiple reputation scanners (this reduces risk of missing a newly‑registered or low‑reputation domain): submit the full URL to VirusTotal’s URL scanner and review results cautiously (false positives and false negatives happen).
  • Open the page in a more isolated environment if possible (a secondary device, a non‑admin Windows account, a hardened browser profile, or a disposable VM).
  • If the page asks to allow notifications, install extensions, or download a “PDF/study/app,” treat that as a high‑risk indicator and avoid it.

Credibility: how to evaluate the “clinical studies” claim
Health/beauty marketing pages often cite real studies loosely (or not at all). A quick credibility check:
  • Look for a full citation (authors, journal name, year, DOI/PMID). Vague wording like “clinical studies show…” without a citation is a red flag.
  • Confirm the study exists in PubMed/Google Scholar and check what it actually measured (sample size, control group, duration, and whether it was onion juice specifically or a mixture).
  • Be cautious with exact‑looking percentages (like 86.9%) used for marketing; real clinical outcomes usually come with context (confidence intervals, limitations).
  • If the page is also selling a product, assume bias and verify independently from the original paper.

If you’re worried the site might be malicious
If you already visited it and you’re concerned, the low‑risk next steps are:
  • Run an on‑demand scan with a reputable security product already installed on your system.
  • Check browser downloads and extensions for anything added recently; remove anything you don’t recognize.
  • Clear site permissions (notifications, popups, camera/mic) for that domain in your browser settings.

Sources
 
Anyone tried this method? Interesting!
Onions cost like $2 per week, unlike other remedies. I tried it on my head, it did not actually smell bad at all.
I cut my hair short to avoid dandruffs already, but those patches look nasty, so I am trying to remediate that.

I use Remington RX5 Ultimate XR1500 once per week on hair and armpits. It is pretty neat. 🙂
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Mother Nature offers us treasures for many needs. I personally don’t have hair problems, but I always like to rinse my hair after washing with a rosemary decoction. From what I’ve read, it strengthens the hair follicle, and in my experience it leaves the hair with a very special shine. 🌿✨💧
 
I personally don’t have hair problems, but I always like to rinse my hair after washing with a rosemary decoction.
Nice. I actually take cold showers, because warm dry out the skin and hair and remove the protective oil layer. I use the product on hair only once a week to clean it.

 
I hear you, US prices for groceries are insane. Onions cost like 40 cents per 1kg here. Still, onions are cheaper that so called remedies offered online for a hair regrowth.

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The price here is insane too; it is 1,300 EGP; the largest fraction income monthly is 4000-6000.
But for an American tourist it is cheaper compared to his/her monthly income.
 
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The only guaranteed prevention of cancer is good genes; anything else may work or may fail.
I guess that depends on the definition of a cancer. Doctors treat it as an illness, not as an symptom. Cancer is caused by an inflammation, which is fueled by carbs.
People, who beat cancer, did not do it by a miracle, they simply did, what the body expected them to do. Like by using fermented products and avoiding sugar.
 
I guess that depends on the definition of a cancer. Doctors treat it as an illness, not as an symptom. Cancer is caused by an inflammation, which is fueled by carbs.
People, who beat cancer, did not do it by a miracle, they simply did, what the body expected them to do. Like by using fermented products and avoiding sugar.
With good genes, I can smoke for decades without lung cancer.
With bad genes, I can get lung cancer without a single exposure to smoke, living in healthy climate, eating healthy food, and exercising.
 
They did not teach us this piece of data in the school of medicine.
You can treat diabetes by using hundreds of dollars worth drugs or by eating sardines worth "pennies". People using AI have a choice thus far. But people chose "experts".

 

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